News quickly arrives to us today. We have various types of messengers who tell us what is happening around us. It may be that we have too many! It is not easy to recognise if what we are being told is true or not, some may give false thwarted information. In Jesus’ time, there were different messengers, maybe not as many as we have today, but even during those times, there were those who tried to deliver misleading messages. John the Baptist was an important messenger who proclaimed the coming of Jesus, he helped to prepare the people for Jesus’ teachings.
God never abandons us. God always sends us messengers. Our difficulty lies in knowing that it is from God, understanding the message and doing what he wants.
Daily, we are overwhelmed with news and models of how we should live, how to think and how to behave, and this may puzzle us. Who is “the voice of one crying out in the desert” for us? Most probably it will not be someone dressed in “camel’s hair and eating locusts and wild honey.” Every day God speaks to us through his Word, through prayer. We can find John the Baptist, in priests and their homilies, in speakers of meetings and programs which speak about Christian living. God even uses social media to send us his message, or else uses our friends, to give us words of hope. Yet ultimately, we are the ones who need to listen to this message and accept what we are hearing.
Today’s Gospel refers to repentance and forgiveness of sins. Repenting is not just being sorry for our sins. When we repent, we must change. We do not continue doing what is wrong. At times we find ourselves repeating the same list of sins during confession. It could very well be that confession is not accompanied by repentance, with a determination to sincerely try to stop repeating that sin.