“Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand!” This is the warning given by John. John wanted the people to reflect on their way of life, about their priorities, and change for the better. He had a mission, and this was to prepare the people for Jesus’ teachings.
To be able to listen to John, the people left the towns and villages and went to the desert. Advent calls us to go to the desert too. The desert is where there are no distractions, a place where we can meet God. In the silence I meet not only God, but also myself. The rushed life we live, family commitments, work, and home, leave us with little time on our hands. However, it could also be that we are deliberately not making the time to spend in silence. Could the silence frighten us? Could it be that we are afraid to look at ourselves in the mirror and meet the real us? This is what the Church is offering us, at this special time. The Church is inviting us to stop, stay awake, as the Gospel asked of us last week, and look at ourselves the way God does, and repent. When we repent, we not only ask for forgiveness of our sins, but it also means that we decide to change for the better and walk more purposefully in the way of the Lord.
Today’s Gospel asks us to repent, since sin does not allow us to live as God wishes. Sin burdens us, it does not allow our relationship with God to grow, it hinders us from knowing him more, it does not allow God to love us and to forgive us. We cannot achieve this on our own. We need to ask the Holy Spirit to give us the strength and will to change and live a life with joy and hope as children of God.
The Pharisees and the Sadducees considered their salvation assured, because “we have Abraham as our father.” John warns them that this was not enough. We too may fall in such a trap, we may believe that since we are baptised, and we go to Sunday mass, we are saved. Our life must bear fruit; the way we live needs to witness our faith.