Reflection. Lk 1,39-45

Today’s passage from the Gospel can direct my attention to various relationships in my life. Maria rushed to Elizabeth because she found someone who perceived what happened in her life, what happened under her heart, who “heard” her even without words, understood her, and knew how to please her. Maria and Elizabeth are my role models for how we should help each other, encourage each other, and give each other additional strength and courage. Their beautiful relationship is a challenge for spouses to understand what kind of gift they should be for each other. It is also a challenge for parents to find the greatest treasure of their lives in their children and enjoy them.

Every day, I get many opportunities to meet Jesus in another person. I will learn to enjoy every meeting, family, neighborhood, work, or friendship. And just as Mary carried Jesus under her heart, I also had the opportunity to bring Jesus in my heart to the people around me. I will open my spiritual eyes, and in these pre-Christmas days, I will try to let the light of Jesus “shine” through me as much as possible. So that people feel peace, love, joy, and acceptance through me. Who will I bring Jesus to today?
Lord, let me be a light to all around.

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The king Ahas.

 Isaiah and his followers found themselves in the worst conditions ever in the kingdom of Judah. Many who had previously resisted the temptations of idolatry were now persuaded to participate in the worship of pagan deities. The princes of Israel neglected their responsibility; false prophets arose with their seductive prophecies, and even some priests taught the people only for profit. However, the leaders of the apostasy still performed religious ceremonies and were counted among God’s people. The prophet Micaiah, who performed his prophetic ministry in this troubled time, declared that the sinners in Zion who claim to “trust in the Lord” are blaspheming when they say: “Is not the Lord among us? Nothing bad will happen to us.” These people “build Zion with blood and Jerusalem with iniquity” (Mic 3:11, 10). (322) The prophet Isaiah pointed out these iniquities and reprimanded them severely: “Hear the word of the Lord, princes of Sodom, listen to the teaching of our God, people of Gomorrah! What do I need? What is the number of your victims? – says the Lord… Who asked you to tread my courts when you appear before me?” (Is 1,10-12). Scripture says: “The sacrifice of the wicked is an abomination, especially when it is offered for a shameful deed” (Proverbs 21:27). God, “your eyes are pure to look at evil” (Hab 1,13). God does not turn away from the sinner because He does not want to forgive him but because he rejects the grace freely offered, and God cannot deliver him from sin against his will. “The Lord’s hand is not too short to save, and his ear is not so deaf that it does not hear, but your iniquities have become a barrier between you and your God! Your sins have hidden his face from you, so he does not hear” (Isaiah 59:1,2). Solomon wrote: “Woe to you, land, if a child is your king” (Ecclesiastes 10:16). That’s how it was with Judea. By constantly transgressing God’s commandments, its rulers became children. Isaiah warned that the position of the people among the surrounding nations was uncertain and pointed out the consequences of ungodly leaders. He said: “The Lord, the Lord of hosts, will remove from Jerusalem and Judah all the support of bread and all the support of water, the hero and the warrior, the judge and the prophet, the soothsayer and the old man, (323) the commander over fifty and the noble man, the counselor, and the expert in magic (172) and capable spell caster. I will give them boys as princes, and their will rule over them.” “Truly Jerusalem has stumbled, and Judah has fallen, because their language and actions are against the Lord” (Is 3,1-4.8). The prophet continued: “O my people, your leaders are deceivers and make confusion in the way you should walk” (Isaiah 3:12). These words were fulfilled to the letter by King Ahas. We read about him: “But he walked in the ways of the kings of Israel, and even made molten idols for the Baals.” He burned incense in the valley of Ben-Hinton,” “even he had his son lead through the fire according to the abominable custom of the nations that the Lord drove out from before the Israelites” (2 Par 28,2,3; 2 Kings 16,3). This period was difficult for the chosen nation. The enemy will soon scatter the twelve tribes of the kingdom of Israel among the Gentile nations. The prospects for the Kingdom of Judah were also bleak. The number of followers of good was rapidly dwindling, while the forces of evil continued to increase. Looking at this state, the prophet Micah had to declare: “The godly have disappeared from the land; there is no honest man among men.” “The best of them is like a thistle, and the most honest of them is like a thorn hedge” (Mic 7,2.4). “If the Lord of hosts had not left us a small remnant, we would have been like Sodom; we would have resembled Gomorrah” (Is 1:9).  God, for the sake of his faithful and out of infinite love for those who wandered, is forgiving for a long time and admonishes the rebellious to stop doing evil and return to him. Through the called men, he sends them “precept upon precept, precept upon precept, here is a little, there a little” (Isaiah 28:10) and teaches transgressors the way of justice. It was similar during Ahas’s reign. Wandering Israel received call after call to return and be faithful to the Lord. When the prophets compassionately and lovingly admonished the people to repent and improve, their words bore fruit to God’s glory. Micah’s call was admirable: “Hear what the Lord says: Arise! Start a lawsuit before the hills. Let the hills hear your voice! Hear, you mountains, the judgment of the Lord, and you, firm foundations of the earth! Because the Lord has a dispute with his people, he judges Israel. My people, what have I done to you? What have I burdened you with? Answer me! For I brought you out of Egypt, redeemed you from the house of slavery; I sent Moses, Aaron, and Miriam before you. My people, remember what Balak king of Moab counseled and what Balaam son of Beor answered him. Remember your journey, from Shittim to Gilgal, that you may know  the righteous acts of the  Lord. (Mic 6:1-5). The God we serve is forgiving and long-suffering. “His mercy never ends” (Lamentations 3:22). Throughout the time of grace, God’s Spirit begged man (325) to accept the gift of life. (173) “As I live – declares the Lord God – I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked, but in the fact that the wicked turn from his way of life and live. Turn away, turn away.

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Two criteria of love.

There are two criteria for the love that Jesus gave us.
– The first criterion is expressed in words: “Love your neighbor as yourself!” (Lv 19:18). If you do not love yourself, you cannot fully love your neighbor. That is why I have spoken to you about accepting yourself. If you reject yourself, condemn yourself, do not forgive yourself, pull yourself aside, do not recognize your charisma in yourself, and do not love yourself, you cannot love others. You can only love to the extent that you love yourself. If you do not accept yourself, you cannot accept others. If you cannot forgive yourself, you cannot forgive others.
– But then Jesus gives us a second criterion in the New Testament when he says: “The new commandment I give to you, that you love one another. That you also love one another, as I have loved you.” The novelty of this commandment is not in the injunction “Love one another”-we already find that in the Old Testament. The novelty is in the words-” as I have loved you.” The criterion of loving “as yourself” is no longer sufficient. The criterion has become “as I have loved you” (cf. Jn 13,34). And how did Jesus love us? Unconditionally. Next, we will try to explain the word “unconditionally.” This is newness in love.
The difference between secular and Christian love It will be good to tell ourselves the difference between worldly and Christian love. Ordinary love in the world is love based on feelings, attraction, and sympathy. We see this on television or in reading love novels.

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Where are the prophets today?

God does not let the faithful wander in the dark but sends them pardoned people with a special mission to show the way in God’s name.

Where are the prophets today?

Pietro Paolo Azzopardi: John the Baptist (1845). Source: Wikipedia

John the Baptist always seemed a bit extravagant to me. His way of life deviated from the everyday realities of Israeli society. He spoke by Jordan, where he lived. He gave up several civilizational achievements, for which the majority was not ready even then.

What is fascinating about him is his inner freedom, in which he was intimately connected with God. He probably wouldn’t attract much attention if he lived only on the desert’s edge and on cadmium. People with various mental defects have always lived. On the outside, he behaved in such a way that someone thought the same about him.

But when he opened his mouth, it was apparent to the listeners that they had a mature, sensible, and God-filled person before them. That is why crowds, even the Jewish intellectual and spiritual elite, came to him. They understood that John was not crazy but presented exciting ideas to the crowd through his extravagant and unpretentious lifestyle.

He was not a philosopher or a systematic theologian, but something supernatural, something divine, radiated from his words.

The voice of the caller in the desert.

John enjoyed this inner freedom. He spoke openly about inspiration from above. He was not afraid of any social consequences. Interestingly, the Jewish community accepted him, although his language was often offensive, and not all listeners liked him.

The Jews had an experience from the past that told them that God can give messages to his chosen people through various, sometimes even unusual, people. For these reasons, John was truly respected. And John would have lived longer if it weren’t for the vengeful Herodias, who couldn’t bear his public reproaches for being a great sinner.

He had one specific task. Announcing the coming of the Messiah, he called himself “the voice of one calling in the wilderness.” Behind this unusual designation, we can perceive a person who sees what others cannot. Who understands what others do not? A person who not only sees and understands but also talks about it. It convicts, awakens, rebukes, shakes.

The desert is barren without real life, where any voice can be heard far and wide in the silence. John was called to discern the coming of the Messiah and announce it. Others did not see it that way. John’s courage, combined with an authentic lifestyle, appealed to many and awakened in them the desire for purification and life with God.

Every person can be a prophet for someone.

We will find more similar prophetic figures if we look into the Holy Scriptures. As the sacred writings would indicate, God does not let the faithful wander in the dark but sends pardoned people on their way with a special mission to announce further tasks in God’s name and show the way.

After all, there has never been a lack of such people of God in the church community: from the church fathers in ancient times to Pope Francis in the present, through thousands of unknown people who, in their small microworld, passed on the faith and persistently searched for the truth.

It follows that in every age, there are people blessed and gifted by God who see life in more profound experiences and can speak about it publicly. They may be harder to find and believe because, in our media culture, public communication is often just a means of creating a good image of ourselves, not sharing what we believe to be true.

We can safely say that every society needs such prophets. Therefore, their spoken word can have weight for religious, educated, and blameless people.

Where are those today who would have the courage, maturity, and humility to show life in context? Where are the believers today who would point the finger at the current signs of the times?

In a sense, every person has the potential to be someone’s prophet. To the one who tells the truth: not to hurt us, but to move us towards humility, reality, and a fuller life. Some people are afraid to take on this role. Talking about life in the context of such inner freedom as John the Baptist also means risking not being understood and accepted.

Always somewhere in the background is whether I will lose relatives and friends because of honesty and trying to be truthful. Politicians wonder if they will lose voters. Since most (at least in Slovakia) do not have such courage, society is infested with superficial populism on various topics, which may respond to awakened emotions but cannot bring long-term solutions because it does not respect the truth.

With many topics in society and our own little lives, we ask: Where are the prophets today? Where are those today who would have the courage, maturity, and humility to show life in context? Where are the believers today, whether clerics or laymen, who would point the finger at the current signs of the times? Where are the citizens today who, in the flood of endless words in the public space, could distinguish truth from lies and point to the beauty of life and new paths?

John the Baptist was a prophet, a man of God who spoke about God and showed the way to him in great inner freedom, independent of the things of this world. We need such prophets in the church and society today. They are certainly among us because the Lord never leaves his people.

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Come, Lord, our God, and save us! Show us your face, and we will be dedicated. 

Make up your mind at least once, if not more times in your life, that you relied on your forces or circumstances that should have guaranteed you a good result, success, or favorable position. However, sometimes everything turns around, and everything is different, like a snap of a finger. We begin to doubt ourselves and abandon ourselves; our joy gradually fades until we are filled with fear and uncertainty for a specific time (or moment). Why is that so? Because in the matter that was so important to us, we relied more on “how good I am, how I can’t be wrong, but I’m like a fish in water” and similar thoughts that cloud our judgment. We should constantly remember that the Lord is our only hope, NOT our last. He gives us everything we need. He is the savior of the lost. He will provide you with the best because he knows what you require. Therefore, do not be afraid to place your steps daily in the hands of the One who comes and offers you all heaven. Be brave and walk forward with a smile.

Prayer: Lord, I take refuge in You. Help me surrender every step to You; teach me the art of small steps in joy. Let me not be focused on my strengths and abilities because they can betray me over time. But I know that you will never betray me. Let me remember that. Amen.

Questions for reflection: Can you surrender all your today and tomorrow to the Lord without fear or doubt? Why am I surprised if something doesn’t turn out according to my expectations?… After all, I believe in the Lord!

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Third Sunday of Advent,Year B John 1,6-8 19-28

People in today’s world have a tendency to appropriate many things and merits for their own benefit. And today’s Gospel shows us the testimony of a man who did not claim the honors and glory of this world. He dedicated his whole life to the one from whom everything comes.

John the Baptist shows us what a person sent to announce the coming of the Lord should look like. He did not overshadow the person of Christ but illuminated it with his testimony: “I am the voice of one crying in the wilderness: Make the way for the Lord” (Jn 1:24).

At the beginning of the Gospel, a prophet named John is mentioned. God sent him to this world to bear witness to the light. John was a forerunner but also a witness who prepared the way for the Lord. Even before his birth, he was dedicated to God. From his youth, he lived in the desert, where he had time to think and a suitable place to concentrate. The desert is the most challenging test for man. The desert teaches self-knowledge, searching and recognizing what is necessary, identifying values, and searching for God and oneself. According to medieval artists, the one who carries the Spirit of God is not abandoned, even in the middle of the desert. For the righteous, the desert loses its terror. And it was here that John the Baptist developed a warm relationship with God. He could answer many questions in this desert, far from people. At that time, when John returned from the desert, the Jews were waiting for the moment when someone would appear and lead them to fight against the Roman domination. St. Augustin states in his meditation: “John was a voice. But the Lord was in the beginning the Word. John was the voice for a certain time; Christ has been the eternal Word from the beginning. Take the word – what is left of the voice? Where there is no thought, there is only empty sound. The voice without words reaches the ear, but the heart does not improve. But because it is difficult to distinguish a word from a voice, they also considered John to be Christ. They considered the voice as a word. But the voice confessed so as not to offend the word.” John’s testimony began with the declaration, “I am not the Messiah” (John 1:21). “I am the voice of one crying in the wilderness: Make the way for the Lord” (John 1:24). John pointed out the greatness of Christ, lowered himself to his feet. He said, “I baptize with water. Among you stands the one whom you do not know. He is coming after me, and I cannot untie the strap of his sandals” (John 1:27-28). “John saw where he would find salvation; he understood that he was a lamp, and he was afraid lest the wind of pride should extinguish it.’

We, too, have John’s task: to call to the desert in which we live, to the desert of hearts, thrown by pride and material sensuality, and to show Christ’s greatness with our humility and humility. This time of Advent should help us look inside, into our hearts, where we will find places that prevent us from accepting Christ. It is not easy to come out of your heart, from your inside. This requires great courage and faith in Jesus. Who will show us his interior, his desert? Yes, only by ourselves and with the help and cooperation of the Holy Spirit, by praying and preparing the heart for this great gift of announcing the good news about the Messiah. Advent is the preparation; before our proclamation begins, we must get to know Jesus personally. St. Jerome said: “Ignorance of Scripture is ignorance of Christ.” And it is through Scripture that we can acquire a warm relationship with God. After all, how could we testify about someone if we do not know him? Our testimony requires personal experience and living faith with Christ. People who do not live their faith, who are indifferent to the gospel, must look at us and see who we have put first in our lives. And that, of course, is Jesus Christ for us. Our witness requires us to be responsible, firm, and humble in our proclamation. We are not afraid to announce Christ always and everywhere, even if it is not to our liking, because God has entrusted us with a very noble task, which is to promote the message of salvation – the kingdom of God, Christ the King, without the right to be glorified. Every Christian has the task entrusted to him by Christ himself, to announce and give the witness further, not only by participating in church services. It would be wrong if our witness were tied only to the church, where we would pretend to be the most excellent “heralds,” and where we would be required to give the most excellent witness to the truth and Christ, there we would fail.
Our testimony of life must be the same in the church, social life, and in general with every person we meet. So that the words of St. Paul, who says: you know them by their fruits.
It is an exceptional distinction for us that we have this noble task. We have the honor of being allowed to bear the image of Christ within us. Through the witness of our lives, we can draw many to God. The world cannot give us what God gives us. It is essential to realize that everything we have and what we are is a gift from God.

We can also see the attitude of humility, not pride, in the following story:

Bernard Kolnago was once a wonder of learning, eloquence, and holiness. He was famous for his miracles and respected by all. This priest and religious was once asked by his superior what he thought of himself when praised by people and his extraordinary gifts from God, and whether he sometimes had a secret crush on himself.
“Listen, my father,” said Colnago, “if you had in your room a precious treasure of gold and precious stones, which some prince had entrusted to your safekeeping and care, would you be tempted by mad vanity at the sight of this treasure? Or, if others visited you and admired and praised the treasure, would you therefore consider yourself rich, and would you be greedy for it? What is good about me is not mine; it is the property entrusted to me by God. When I do something that shows the power and goodness of God, I think it’s like I’m representing a person on stage who doesn’t say or do anything of his own accord, doesn’t even act like that, but does what the author does or the theater director ordered her to speak and do. And therefore, I also believe that the great God’s honor and glory lies in this, that he uses me, such a poor man, as an instrument for great deeds.”

This story encourages us to be able to bear the image of Christ in our lives without so that we’re overshadowing his person. In the First Letter to the Corinthians, the Holy Apostle Paul makes a humble confession: “… by God’s grace I am what I am…” (1 Cor 15:10). Let us realize that what is good in us is indeed our work. Still, it is not only our merit, but, above all God’s, and therefore, let us try to proclaim it with our lives and words.
Dear brothers and sisters! Let the example of John the Baptist guide us. Let’s allow God to work through us. After all, it is only thanks to him that we are what we are. God invites us to participate in his plan of salvation. And so let’s all pray together: Thank you, Holy Spirit, for choosing and equipping me to carry Jesus in my heart and actions. Help me to be a vessel worthy of this precious treasure.

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Before the judgment in the case of Becciu et al.

 Will the court send the cardinal behind bars? The verdict will be necessary for the entire Vatican. The first-instance judgment in the so-called Vatican trial of the century, which is expected at the end of the week, will be significant not only for the defendants.

Will the court send the cardinal behind bars?  The verdict will be important for the entire Vatican

Cardinal Becciu is on trial at the Cardinal Consistory on August 27, 2022

Secret recordings of phone calls with the Pope, estimated financial loss for the Vatican of 190 million euros, and shifting of blame between monsignors or the Pope in a photo with the case’s actors.

These are just some “ingredients” of the trial of the century, where a cardinal sits among the defendants for the first time in history. After over two and a half years, the court case tangled like spaghetti is heading to the finale.

By the end of this week, the three-member senate of the Vatican City State Tribunal should announce the verdict against the ten defendants, mostly for economic crimes, fraud, embezzlement, abuse of office, and the like. 

There are three main points of indictment in the process.

The largest is related to a luxury property in London, worth roughly 350 million euros. After the Vatican discovered that the London business was not profitable, it tried to withdraw from it. However, the Italian broker Gianluigi Torzi controlled the building through his thousand voting shares.

Vatican officials decided to buy Torzi’s share, and although they considered the contract with him fraudulent, they did not dare to sue. The broker initially asked for 25 million euros for his share but finally received 15 million. Everything closed in May 2019.

However, the prosecutor’s office considers it blackmail, so some of the agreement’s actors face in,” trial. They propose a sentence of seven and a half years behind bars for Torzi.

Another case concerns consultant Cecilia Marogna, who allegedly used the money from the State Secretariat intended for the ransom for a kidnapped nun in Mali for personal expenses. The prosecutor is asking for four years and eight months of imprisonment for her.

Thirdly, there is the “Sardinia case”, where, according to the indictment, Cardinal Angelo Becciu allocated 100,000 euros from the State Secretariat’s coffers available for charitable activities to an organization managed by his brother.

Prosecutor Alessandro Diddi is asking for a total of 73 years in prison for all the defendants and forfeiture of property worth 417 million euros.

Cardinal: The Pope’s recording was already dead

Angelo Becciu, known in Slovakia for the beatification of Anka Kolesárová, had to give up the position of prefect of the Congregation for the Causes of Saints and also some cardinal privileges precisely because of the accusations above.

Vatican prosecutor Diddi is asking for a sentence of seven years and three months behind bars. In addition to the “Sardinia case,” the Italian cardinal is blamed for the business case in London; Becciu was a top official of the State Secretariat at the time.

Recently, the cardinal has given several television interviews where he “irons” his image and repeats that he is innocent.

He even took on the role of a victim, and although he helped the Pope with the financial reform of the Holy See, behind his accusation are the people he stood against. Poor Australian Cardinal George Pell had the opposite opinion on Becciu’s role in Vatican finances.

During the court hearings, it was revealed that Angelo Becciu called the Pope in July 2021, three days before the start of the trial, and asked him to confirm that he had approved the payments for the release of the kidnapped nun in Mali, which is one of the charges.

According to the Catholic News Agency, their conversation was secretly recorded on the mobile phone of a family friend of Cardinal Becciu.

In an interview with Italian RAI television, Becciu was asked why he recorded the phone call with the Pope using another person. “I already explained it to the Pope. And the Pope understood it well. That phone call was already dead. Nobody knew about him. I never used it; some others wanted to publish it instead of me,” responded Becciu, referring to the fact that the recording was pulled as part of the legal process.

In the same interview, Becciu defended himself that he never stole. “I have never improved my economic situation: I have no villas, no houses, no apartments, and my bills are very, very modest,” he said on television.

However, the American portal The Pillar points out that, although the cardinal talks about his bank accounts as very modest, when his agreement with Cecilia Marogna was brought to the attention of Interpol, the Vatican police testified that he offered Becciu the return of money – more than half a million euros – from his account in the Vatican bank IOR and asked the authorities to maintain confidentiality.

Financial records also show, according to Pillar, that the money Beccia sent to Marogna was spent on branded goods, luxury travel and five-star resorts.

It is not just about the guilt and innocence of the defendants

Commentators and observers of the trial have been saying for a long time that the verdict in this case will tell a lot about the entire judicial and financial system of the Vatican.

The process is revolutionary not only because a cardinal is among the defendants, but Vaticanist Andrea Gagliarducci, who reports from individual court hearings, pointed out that the sovereignty of the Holy See may be questioned for the first time.

In London, there is a trial for defamation filed by one of the defendants in the Vatican case, Raffaele Mincione. The Supreme Court has requested the disclosure of emails, WhatsApp communications, and encrypted messages exchanged between some prelates, including Secretary of State Cardinal Pietro Parolin and the “number three man” in the Vatican hierarchy – Archbishop Edgar Peña Parra.

According to the London court, these messages do not constitute a “papal secret.” 

This brings us to another serious topic: the extent to which the defendants before the Vatican Court acted on the instructions and approval of their superiors. Even during the two-and-a-half-year process, the question of what the Holy Father was informed about and to what extent he intervened in the process came up several times.

The defendants steadfastly claimed in the trial that their actions were in accordance with legislative rules and that the Vatican authorities knew about them.

During the  Pope Francis with broker Torzi from December 26, 2018 in the Vatican, which is supposed to prove the Pope’s involvement in the negotiations for the London real estate transaction.

“At first it was denied that the Pope knew about it, then it was said that he was well-informed, and now it is said that he was even manipulated,” Gagliarducci commented on the development in August after the closing remarks.

Historical court with the cardinal and co.  is increasingly absurd

Vatican Seven; Historical Court with Cardinal et al. is increasingly  absurd.

American Vaticanist and commentator John L. Allan Jr. on the Crux portal, prior to the sentencing, draws attention to the fact that in the case of a verdict, it will not only be about answering the question of whether the defendants are guilty or innocent of various forms of financial crime.

Beneath the surface, according to Allan, there is another question that has far more significant consequences than the fate of these ten people. Specifically, “Is the Pope above the law?”

He thus alludes to four rescripts, i.e., Pope Francis’ exceptions, by which he granted the prosecutor broad investigative powers from July 2019 to February 2020 and which eased the way to the opening of this “process of the century.”

These four rescripts were “targeted” in his closing arguments by the lawyer Luigi Panella, who represents the defendant Enrico Crasso, an Italian banker and former financial adviser to the Vatican Secretariat of State.

According to Allan, Panella essentially tried to turn the judgment into a referendum on the limits of papal power.

At first glance, it is tempting to say that such a claim is nonsense, since the Pope is an absolute sovereign, writes John Allan. In the Catholic system, he is the supreme legislator, that is, the source of law, and therefore if he wants to abolish this right in a given case, he has every right to do so.

However, attorney Panella pointed out that modern popes support the rule of law and subject themselves and their assistants to the requirements of laws they have created. In addition, the Vatican is also a signatory to various international conventions and treaties.

However, we can hear the first verdict in this complicated case in a few days. With appeals expected, we’ll be hearing about this dispute for some time. In order not to sound too technocratic, there is an exciting point at the end, which Allan mentions in his text.

The Vatican promoter of justice (prosecutor) Alessandro Diddi also earns money as a defender of a certain Concetta Ferrari, who is accused of corruption at the Ministry of Labor.

As head of the ministry’s personnel department, she is among the seven accused in the case of the collapse of the office for assistance with pensions and social benefits.

Ferrari is alleged to have accepted “gifts” including a job for her son, a vacation to Tropea in Calabria, discounts on boat and car rentals, a Luis Vuitton handbag worth about $800 and a significant discount on an Audi Q3 for another son.

Well, the judicial spaghetti will unravel soon.

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Apocalypse and Advent.

We generally perceive Advent as a preparation period for Christmas, that is, Jesus’s historical first cominarrivesabout—the Therefoworld’s end. However, we were taught in religion that the Advent season is also about the second coming of Christ, when he comes at the end of the world. Can we see a connection between the Apocalypse and Advent?

Yes, it can be linked. I recently wrote an article for our diocesan magazine where I looked at Advent about the second coming of Christ. It is true that during Advent we are very focused on his first coming, which has already happened – so we can remember him as much as possible and give thanks for him – but perhaps it is even more important to remember Jesus’ second coming in the liturgy.

Whether it will be during our lifetime or when we will find ourselves in front of his face after our death, it is always about the fact that at some point we will have to give the account of our dalliances, and therefore it is necessary to prepare for it.

Even the Apocalypse ends with the words: “Come, Lord Jesus!” The Church calls for Jesus Christ to come as soon as possible. And that is Advent.

Most religious laymen probably consider the book of Revelation of the Apostle John to describe the world’s end. But is it really so?

This is the general opinion of the people; many open it wanting to see the hardships and horrors it mentions. Many people then refer to these descriptions in connection with events that are happening in the world, as if the only meaning of the text was to predict this event that occurred almost 2000 years later.

However, when we delve into the symbolic language of this book, we will understand that it wants to describe the whole of human history from the perspective of Easter, that is, the resurrection of Jesus Christ. So, it is not a description of the end of the world, although it is also there.

Well, even the end of the world is not presented in the Apocalypse as a description of what it will look like. Still, instead, it is about the fact that history will reach its end one day and move to the new Jerusalem, to the community of love, where there will be no death, sin, or suffering.

We’ll get to that end of the world later in the interview, but tell me about it personally – why did you choose the Apocalypse to study when there are so many disasters? For some, it might even be a depressing read.

Paradoxically, the hope flowing from the Apocalypse appealed to me. The topic of my bachelor’s thesis was the sources of hope in the Apocalypse, focusing primarily on the end where there is a new heaven and a new earth, the symbols of the river of life, the tree of life, and communion with God.

“It doesn’t work like a person receives an external sign and changes their actions based on it, as some people have told me they will be chipped and go to hell.’

It fascinates me that this book is meant to give suffering Christians hope that God is in control. However, by describing their suffering in the world, it is full of all kinds of horrors, but above them is God, who is in control.

What should we know about the book itself before we start reading it? That is unless we are among those who open it because they want to study what it will be like at the end of the world.

When we go to read the Apocalypse, we must know that we have a book that uses symbolic language before us. Without this information, we cannot even begin to read it.

Everything that is found there is expressed in the literary genre of the so-called apocalyptic. It is a particular style of expression through various dreams or visions, in which the author is accompanied by some heavenly intermediary, most often an angel, who accompanies him from one place to another and explains something to him.

Apocalyptic is also typified by the contrast between angels and demons, spiritual struggle, and tries to answer the presence of evil in the world, the final judgment, and the question of eternal life.

David Taniers: Saint John wrote the Book of Revelation in 17th century.

It is not that John woke up and wrote down his dream, or that he described the vision that he saw before his eyes. Everything in the book is well thought out, it is a literary and theological work that is meant to encourage the readers of the book.

If we do not realize this, we will be like those who interpret the Apocalypse based on a literal understanding and try to fit misunderstood things into some events in the world.

So John did not describe what he saw?

Exactly, with the greatest probability bordering on certainty, Ján did not see those facts.

Things that he had thoroughly thought through, prayed over, and experienced with God, he wrote guided by the Holy Spirit in the form of a vision as a message. So let’s not imagine that he picked up a pen after seeing it all before his eyes. I repeat, it is a literary style typical of other works of that time.

Okay, but unlike the events of the Gospels that he experienced firsthand, how did he know the things he described in the Apocalypse?

From his culture and mustJán wrote itthe Old Testament. Almost all the images in the Apocalypse come from Judaism and the Old Testament. For example, when we want to know what the number seven means, we have to go to the Bible and see what it means. In addition to John’s Apocalypse, there were many similar apocalyptic works at the time that influenced each other.

Do biblical scholars have an answer to the question of why John wrote it?

There is a whole debate about which John wrote the Apocalypse. (Smile.)

We know that it was written by Ján, because he himself signs his name like this in the book, but we cannot say with certainty which Ján. From the first tradition from some church fathers, we have identified this John with John the Evangelist, but there are also traditions that say that he was not John the Evangelist.

“Everyone is interested in the number 666 and also the 144 thousand, but I also get questions like: What part of the Apocalypse are we in today, 2023?”

People casually know that the Book of Revelation features a beast and its number 666. But why are there two beasts in the book?

The devil does everything contrary to God. So when, for example, God appears in the Trinity, the devil is also formed into the so-called the demonic trinity – so there is a dragon, a beast from the sea, and then a beast from the earth.

As it were, the dragon is the opposite of the Heavenly Father: someone, the beast from the sea, represents this, who surrenders his power and gives it to the beast rising out of the sea as the antitype of the Son. Roman ships used to come to the island of Patmos from the sea. The Roman Empire is a symbol of corrupt power based on self-indulgence – this is represented by the beast from the sea.

When the author of the Apocalypse turned to land, there he sees a beast coming out of the earth as the antitype of the Holy Spirit, who causes people to worship the first beast, makes great signs and marks people with his mark. Various pagan religions, cults that do not worship the true God, were present on the mainland.

These beasts are like ambassadors of the devil; each has a role to play, but all three work together. By the way, beasts are not something new in the Apocalypse, because in the Book of the Prophet Daniel, which is a typical apocalyptic book of the Old Testament, we find four beasts and describe them with similar characteristics as in the Book of Revelation.

The number of the beast is 666. Almost everyone knows that.

It is very important because it is attributed to everything possible. In chapter 13 we read that the beast from the earth gives a mark on the forearm and on the forehead of those who belong to it. This is the opposite of God marking his servants on the forehead earlier in the seventh chapter.

God has set apart his people in the sense that they have decided to belong to me and are mine. So the beast goes to mark his own. But it doesn’t work in such a way that a person receives some external sign and changes his actions based on it; as some people have told me they will be chipped and go to hell. So how to understand it?

When a person acts like a beast – which is represented by the mark on the hand – and when he thinks like a beast – this is the mark on the forehead – then the beast recognizes him and marks him as mine.

And on the contrary, when a person desires to think and act like God, he gets a sign on his forehead that he belongs to him. We Christians receive it already at baptism; it is an indelible seal of the Holy Spirit, which we can confirm with our actions during our lives or deviate and lean to the side of the beast. Again, the mark is a spiritual mark, not a physical one – no external chip.

And the number 666 itself?

The number six “wants to be” like a seven, but it didn’t get there. Seven means fullness, so six is ​​similar to it but incomplete. It is the number of imperfection and incompleteness. And when something is multiplied three times in the Apocalypse, it means par excellence, so three sixes mean the maximum imperfection we can imagine.

Satan as a dragon (left) bestows power represented by a wand on a beast rising from the sea in a detail of a panel of the medieval Apocalypse tapestry in Angers, France.

Although the devil does everything to resemble God, he remains only that great imperfection.

How should believers behave when they receive the three sixes, for example, on a car brand or a phone number?

In that case, it can be taken as usual because a number is just a number, unless we ourselves give it a value. Because even Ján chooses average numbers, which he uses to express something with them.

The problem arises when we identify with it. For example, when I identify with the beast’s actions in the Apocalypse and get 666 tattooed on my body. However, when the system randomly generates it somewhere, it doesn’t mean anything, just one of the numbers.

Sure, if there’s an option to not have that number, I’d rather change it so I don’t confuse others who might think I’m admitting to it.

From the Apocalypse, the number 144,000 is still very widespread, which speaks of the number of the sons of Israel marked from all the tribes.

Many people still think that so many should be saved, which makes no sense. It is about symbolism and calculation: 12 x 12 x 1000. This number represents the combination of the people of the Old Covenant (twelve tribes of Israel) and the New Covenant (twelve apostles); the thousand is the number of Easter or resurrection.

Together, the number one hundred and forty-four thousand indicates all the faithful people of God in their maximum development in the Church, that is, there are all who belong to God and who are saved, throughout the whole of human history.

When you mentioned the thousand, that is also interesting, because in the 20th chapter of the Apocalypse, a period of a thousand years is said, during which the devil was bound.

It is a difficult topic; there were different interpretations of it. The so-called millenarianism tries to point out that it is a thousand years from the resurrection of Jesus Christ, and then the end of the world will come, but we know that this is not the case and that it did not happen.

“When we want to encourage someone, we don’t show them a horror film, but we show them hope. Although the book also describes difficult things, it is from the perspective that it is not out of God’s hands.”

Once again we have before us a symbolic number, the number of Easter. We can understand it as the time of the Church on this earth. The devil was already tied to the cross when Jesus died and rose from the dead, but he is still allowed some action. It was common in the Roman Empire to spare the main enemy and not kill him immediately so that he could have a public trial and then execute him in front of everyone.

So it is with the devil: he was released only to be swept away definitively to hell at Jesus’ second, glorious coming, and the thousand years mark the time of the Church on this earth during which he is allowed limited activity.

In the beginning, we talked about color symbols…

Colors are important. For example, when we go to the fourth chapter, we find there four riders on horses.

Horses symbolize a power that is greater than humans. The first rider sits on a white horse. White is a positive color, the color of resurrection, and in chapter 19 the rider on the white horse represents Jesus Christ. So the first to go is apparently Jesus.

The other horse is red – the color of blood or violence; it means something we cannot control. Next was the black horse, which is also a negative color of death and suffering, and then there is the color fawn, pale in some translations, meaning plague or some kind of disease.

The three horses are the different ways of man’s death, but before all of them, Jesus rides on a white horse, representing the resurrection that embraces all, regardless of how a man dies.

A well-known image is the “woman clothed with the sun”, which is generally understood to be the Virgin Mary. But who does the “woman sitting on the scarlet beast” symbolize?

Even with the woman dressed in the sun, it is not so clear. Many people only understand her as the Virgin Mary, and we can really see her in her, but that is not the first meaning of the image.

The first meaning is God’s people who are clothed with God’s graces. We know it, for example, by the twelve stars, because twelve is the number of God’s people in the Book of Revelation.

God’s people bring the Messiah to this world, and the devil persecutes God’s people. Of course, the Virgin Mary is the perfect representative of God’s people, but John sees God’s people in the woman clothed with the sun, and in the prostitute sitting on the beast in the 17th chapter, she sees the anti-God’s people, that is, the people who do not consciously want to belong to God.

Why is he depicted as a harlot?

When Israel was unfaithful to God, for example the prophets Ezekiel, Hosea or other prophets presented her as a prostitute. In the Apocalypse, it symbolizes the whole people who do not want to live according to God’s commands, but only according to their own desires.

Does Babylon also represent an unfaithful people?

The Babylonian captivity was a trauma for the nation of Israel, essentially the most significant crisis they had experienced up to that point. Babylon represented the people who did not allow them to live their religious faith, who distanced them from the meeting place with God, from Jerusalem.

So, if they are to describe a people who oppose God in general, they give it the symbolic name Babylon.

Let’s talk about the structure of the book. At the beginning there are letters to the churches, should we take it only as an introduction or is it significant?

Biblical scholars divide the Apocalypse into two unbalanced parts, the first is the first three chapters and the second is the entire rest up to the 22nd chapter.

In that first part, Jesus appears in glory to John to show him he is in control. In his right hand he holds seven stars, which are seven representatives of church communities. This vision of the first chapter is necessary for John to receive the message that will follow.

A woman clothed in the sun. Clarence Larkin: The Book of Revelation (1919).

In the second and third chapters, Jesus tells John to send a message to seven church communities; seven is like fullness, meaning that Jesus turns to the whole Church and calls it to repentance through his word. So the first part talks about the formation of the Church through the word of God.

In the second part, from the 4th chapter, Jesus invites the whole world to conversion, but no longer through his word, because the world does not know his word, so he invites him through various events and happenings in the world to repent.

Shouldn’t we understand the book’s second part as a description of the end of the world, but rather as the history of salvation?

Basically, we have very little about the end of the world, only at the end. If we talk about the second part of the Apocalypse, we first follow the description of the heavenly hall, it is the entire fourth chapter. God sits on the throne and has everything under his feet and under control.

In the fifth chapter, the Lamb enters, and receives from God the Father, sitting on the throne, a scroll, which apparently contains the entire history of human history. He has to start breaking the seals because each reveals something about the functioning of the world. We understand that only Jesus Christ, by dying and rising from the dead, can give meaning to what is happening in the world.

For example, if we take the twelfth chapter, we see there that the woman clothed with the sun is presented as pregnant, so it is a tense expectation of the Messiah. This is how he presents to us the people of the Old Covenant, who are waiting and preparing for his coming.

This is followed by the birth of Jesus Christ, after which this woman goes to the desert and is nourished by God there for 1,260 days. It is symbolic – three and a half years (half of the number seven) represents the limited time of this earthly pilgrimage.

I want to show that in just one chapter, we have the people of the Old Covenant, the coming of Jesus, and the people of the New Covenant. So those situations do not describe the end of the world, but all the tension between good and evil, between the devil and God’s people, during every single epoch.

Is there anything in the Book of Revelation that can be grasped regarding the end of the world? Something handy?

For example, we also hear about judgment.” in the apocalyptic parts of the Gospels. However, it should not be forgotten that in the Book of Revelation everything is expressed symbolically, not literally “as it will be”.

In the Book of Revelation we also have the final battle described, when the devil in the form of a dragon comes out again with greater power to mobilize all the nations to seduce them. He gathers all the armies and the people who want to cooperate with him in the fight against God’s people and surrounds them, but fire comes down from heaven and consumes them all.

So, before the final battle, God will solve it all. Then the book describes a white throne and the one who sits on it begins to judge. And it is written there: “Earth and heaven fled before his face, and there was no more place for them” (Revelation 20:11).

So this could be a concrete element of the end of the world, which speaks of the fact that at the end there will be a final judgment on evil and its condemnation. Other verses describe only the heavenly Jerusalem, that is, the communion of the people with God.

Well, that new Jerusalem is something do not find in,h abundance in other biblical books.

What does it tell us about heaven?

It describes a joyful community in the form of a city. It acts as a continuation of the Book of Genesis, that is, after God created paradise and placed man there, after his loss and all that drama of human history, God again created everything anew and even differently, renewed, in the form of a city, in the center of which is the Lamb and river of life.

But even here you can’t grasp something concrete in the sense of what it will be like in heaven, right?

No, no, it still remains in the spirit of the Gospel words that “eye has not seen, nor ear heard, nor entered into the heart of man what God has prepared for those who love him” (2 Cor 2, 9).

In the Apocalypse we read about the principles on which heaven will be built, for example, that God will be in the midst of his people and everything will be animated by something like a river of life, which is the Holy Spirit, but we cannot find there how it will work. That remains a mystery.

From the beginning, did people tend to associate the descriptions in the Apocalypse with current events?

It seems so. In the first centuries, the Book of Revelation was interpreted in the spirit of Easter, but even then it was read in the light of events in the world and its texts were explained from a historical point of view, for example, for everyone, the beast was the Roman Empire.

The turning point came when scenes from the Apocalypse began to be painted and depicted; this brought even more confusion and less understanding of this book.

Why?

Because those symbols should be interpreted one by one. When the Lamb has seven horns, it means that he has the fullness of power. When it has seven eyes, it means the fullness of knowledge. It’s Jesus, but I can’t draw the whole thing, or it will turn into a monster. As the symbols of the Apocalypse began to be painted, people were only left with the monstrous image.

At the same time, for Christians at the time when this book was written, it was a book of encouragement to be able to remind themselves that they may suffer and be persecuted now, but Jesus is in control and invites us to persevere in trials and secure the crown life. That is the message of the Apocalypse.

The ThroneRiverVariousJohn’s Apocalypse cannot substantiate the book’s true messagevalid of God, the Lamb, and the river of life by an unknown author from the 15th century.

Currently, various theories are spreading about the enlightenment of conscience, which is said to come before the end of the world. Can people who deal with these dubious considerations seek support in the Apocalypse?

If God wants to do something like that, he will do it out of love for us, but it cannot be substantiated by John’s Apocalypse. For John, “to convert” means to change one’s actions, that is, something very practical. Enlightenment of conscience and similar things do not fit into his theology, but that does not mean that such a thing cannot occur.

What do you encounter most when you talk to people about the Apocalypse? What do you have to adjust most often?

I try to encourage them to read the Book of Revelation with an understanding of the symbolism and to know what the true message of the book is.

When it comes to specific questions that I encounter, everyone is interested in the aforementioned number 666 and also the 144 thousand, but I also get questions such as: What part of the Apocalypse are we in today, in 2023? Or how much have we progressed in the book of Apocalypse in 2023? (Laughs.)

And how much?

A major part of the Apocalypse occurs every year. Every singleEverye will experience everything presented in the Apocalypse, except for the finale that still awaits us somewhere at the second, glorious coming of Jesus.

Otherwise, the whole struggle described in the book – for our soul and life – takes place every year, if not every day.

As for the finale, Apocalypse is nowhere near giving us an indication of when to expect it?

It does not indicate. We find the term “I will come soon” in it. It is usually translated as an adverb of time, i.e. “soon”. But according to some biblical scholars, it is an adverb of manner, so it says, “I will come suddenly”. It matches what Jesus says that day will come as a thief. It just comes all at once, all of a sudden. He will surprise us.

Even now, during Advent it sounds: like “be prepared”. People always tend to research when those things will come. When Jesus is asked about this during the Ascension, he cancels them and says, “It is not for you to know the times and moments which the Father has determined by his power” (Acts 1, 6).

Our job is not to know when it will be, but to witness and be ready when it comes.

Is the book of the Apocalypse also Christmas in some way?

I think the 12th chapter is about the woman clothed with the sun. The dragon stands in front of the woman to eat the child as soon as the woman gives birth to it. We can see in this the efforts of Herod, who, when he could no longer prevent Jesus from being born, wanted to destroy him immediately after birth.

We could see Christmas in this passage. God’s people, in the concrete person of the Virgin Mary, give birth to the world of Jesus, who is to rule over all nations, but not in the sense of earthly kingship, but in that all powers and forces are subordinated to him.

God “raptured” the child to himself so that he would not be killed before the cross. The people then continued their journey, they are and God took care of them.

The purpose of the Book of Revelation is to call Christians to persevere in tribulation, because a great reward awaits them. Therefore, according to some biblical scholars, the Apocalypse is a book of hope. When we want to encourage someone in tribulation, we don’t play horror, but show hope. Although the book also describes difficult things, it is from the perspective that it is not out of God’s hands.

In this context, is the Apocalypse also a book of hope for those believers who may have a sincere fear that things are looking bad for the Church?

Definitely. If someone speaks ill of any pope or bishops, of the sins that are present in the Church and have always been, I always point to the Apocalypse as the key text.

In the very first chapter, as we mentioned, Jesus holds seven stars in his right hand and explains to himself that the seven stars are the seven angels of individual church communities. In apocalyptic parlance, it represents the one who is represented in the given community, that is, its authority.

Let’s notice that Jesus is not holding 144 thousand in his hand, but seven. He has them firmly in his right hand, which is a symbol of power. So the whole Church is figuratively Jesus even tells somecaught by the seven “hooks” in Jesus’ hand.

If we let go of the “hook” we use to hang on the angel of the given local church, whoever it may be, we are actually letting go of the hand of Jesus himself.

Therefore, if we want to hold fast to Jesus, we must hold fast to the authorities we have, even if those authorities are wrong, as the “angels” of some of those local churches are wrong. Some are even told by Jesus to repent. But they are still firmly in the hand of Jesus.

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Trust in God: God is the source of strength.

 Even the Israeli captives in Babylon did not see a way out of their suffering; therefore, they succumbed to hopelessness and lost strength and faith. Young people were also subject to fatigue. It seemed to them that God was not properly caring for his people. Moreover, they were in danger of succumbing to the idolatrous veneration of the stars. The latter was first in the Babylonian Empire, where astronomy was the most widespread. In such a situation, the Old Testament prophet announces the sovereign power of God. To whom can the eternal God be compared? After all, he also created the stars and rules over them. And this God also decides the fate of his people, who are the heirs of the ancient promises given to Jacob and Israel. God never gets tired. On the contrary, he gives strength to the weary and fitness to the helpless. Only those who hope in God will gain new strength, courage, and zest for life. They will be like the eagle, admired in ancient times for its strength, swift flight, and long life. We must place our hope in God if we want God’s power.

Jesus is the source of strength and our model. The Old Testament statement about God giving strength to the weary finds fulfillment in Jesus Christ. He calls all those tired of the burden of life and promises them strength: Come to me, all you who labor and are weary, and I will strengthen you. With this statement, Jesus also confirms his divinity: He is the source of strength. Horoscopes do not determine our fate. Even stars in sports, art, and society have their powers for a limited time. Jesus can apply his power to us on the condition that we learn from him: Learn from me, for I am meek and lowly in heart. If we adopt his silence and humility, his promise will be fulfilled for us: And you will find rest for your soul. Jesus wants to give us peace and strength in life’s difficulties. Which life situations can we accept quietly and humbly so that this year’s Christmas, Jesus will be born in us spiritually with greater peace? We thank God for the gifts with the words of the psalm: My soul, bless your God. Whoever thanks God receives even more from him.

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Lifelong Advent as a lifestyle.

We need time, sitting in silence and dim candles like salt.

Lifelong Advent as a lifestyle

The season of Advent has already found its place in all calendars. For some, it has become the time of traditional lighting of the next and the next candle on the wreath; for others, it has become an alarm that it is high time to get some Christmas presents, and for marketers, the finish line of good profits.

But what about Christians and people who can’t stay on the surface?

You can get to know each other. 

The most prominent Christian holiday, Easter, was preceded by a period of preparation in the form of Lent. A similar model was also considered before the holidays of the birth of Jesus Christ. The ” advent ” period saw the light of day relatively early in Ravenna in the 5th century. However, its introduction around the world took several more centuries.

Advent had different lengths. Finally, it settled on four weeks, except in Orthodox churches, the Archdiocese of Milan, and other areas, where Advent still lasts six weeks.

The perception of Advent was also different from a penitential period similar to Lent to joyful anticipation. Today, in Advent, we can perceive the symbiosis of one another.

Life style

When a senior living alone in a block of flats was asked what he does all day, he replied: “One day, I wait for a lady with a pension and thirty days for a lady with a scythe.”

Everyone is waiting for someone or something. For a day of peace, healing, a new job, reconciliation, finding a partner… But also for a Friday concert, visiting friends we haven’t seen for a long time, for a party… Even those who feel they have everything and don’t have to wait for anything they expect to feel better and be happy.

The several-week pre-Christmas Advent, whose name means both arrival and waiting for it, turns into a lifelong epoch. And suddenly, it’s not just a short preparation period anymore. It’s a lifestyle.

Waiting

Waiting has a passive charge. It reminds me of a sad look out the window, nervously walking through the airport, or tears when parents have no idea where their children are.

Advent before Christmas is also presented as a period of inactivity. But we need moments for ourselves, sitting in silence and the darkness of candles like salt. They are an opportunity to synchronize the running body with the unruly soul to many new beginnings and active waiting.

You don’t have to wait for many things with your hands folded. What we are waiting for can often be met. Sometimes, it doesn’t even happen without our activity.

If we are waiting to meet our life partner, we can do something about it. If we wait for reconciliation, we can come out of our shell. If we look to improve relations, we can start with each other. Advent is also a symbiosis of peace, dust stirring, contemplation and action, and passivity and activity.

, we can wait for what we get under the tree or become someone’s Christmas present ourselves.

A time of hope

Hope is necessarily associated with waiting. “The world will belong to whoever can offer it the greatest hope,” says Pierre Teilhard de Chardin. That’s why many messiahs who offer mountains and valleys appear today, and many people believe them.

And when the visions of the messiahs turn out to be dead ends at best, the people who believed in them cling to new hope in hope. Hope is something that keeps us alive.

Christians believed that Jesus and his message brought them hope. If we look at him from the speedway, we will find that Jesus did not offer a weightless life. Not even answers and solutions to all questions and problems. On the contrary.

“The Advent cry, ‘Come, Lord Jesus!’ means that the whole of Christian history must be experienced in a deliberate emptiness, in a deliberate unfulfillment. Perfect fullness is yet to come, and we should not demand it now,” writes Richard Rohr, somewhat surprisingly. And he explains: “This keeps our lives open to the grace and future created by God, not by us.” And this is precisely where the hope of Christians lies.

It is a hope that does not even look like hope because it does not expect a solution and fullness here and now. But on the other hand, it leaves room for God, who knows best how to fulfill this hope.

Advent allows us to slow down to speed up in life. And to realize that if we don’t have everything, we have a place in ourselves that God can fill.

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