The First Sunday of Advent [A]
Isaiah 2:1-5 + Romans 13:11-14 + Matthew 24:37-44
St. Anthony’s Catholic Church, Garden Plain, KS
November 30, 2025
So much of our preparation for December 25th is made up of customs. You have Grandma’s recipe for cookies, the family Christmas stocking to be hung up, and the Christmas tree decorations that have been passed from one generation to the next. These customs are like well-worn slippers: comfortable and without surprises.
However, this comfort stands in contrast to the shocks and unexpected surprises that we hear in the Gospel accounts about the nine months leading up to the birth of Jesus. Unexpected surprises also surround His birth at Bethlehem, and also occur after His birth, as others try to learn more about the new-born king, some for good reasons, and some for ill.
Of course, we might say that that’s all ancient history. But the mystery at the heart of Christmas—which we are preparing for in these weeks of Advent—is not just about history. Advent and Christmas are about allowing God to come into your life, as He came into the lives of Mary and Joseph.
God wants to enter into your life throughout your days on this earth. He wants to enter into your life often, from the day of your baptism to the day of your death. He wants to enter your lives with specific graces, and for specific reasons.
So for a moment, step back and look at the big picture of your life on earth. In your life as a Christian, God shapes your life at three different levels. The first is your baptismal vocation, which of course started on the day of your baptism. This is the most general call that God makes to you: it’s the call to holiness, or you might say, the call to be a saint. The second is a more specific vocation that God asks from most Christians: either the vocation to Holy Matrimony, or the vocation to Holy Orders, or the call to consecrated life. Those vocations give a more specific shape or form to a person’s call to be holy.
The third is what we’re talking about today. It’s the most specific call, and occurs often throughout the course of one’s life. You might say that God calls a specific Christian to carry out a specific mission for God. These are usually temporary, unlike the first two calls, which last until death.
So regarding these specific calls that God makes to you throughout your life, the challenge is that you do not know the specifics of these calls. This is what Jesus is talking about in today’s Gospel Reading: “… you do not know on which day your Lord will come.”
Nor do you know in what form the Lord’s grace will come into your life. Nor do you know how, or though whom, the Lord’s grace will come into your life. God has missions in store for you in the new Church year which starts today. Some of God’s missions may challenge you, some may console you, some may give you needed support, while some of God’s graces may lead you to make difficult decisions. But the Season of Advent is about fostering the virtues that help you to be ready for God, no matter where, when, how or through whom He wishes to be present to us, for us, and finally within us.
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So there are three very practical ways that you can engage with the Season of Advent, in order to be ready whenever and however the Lord wants to come into your life at specific times, for specific reasons. These three practices can help you to recognize and accept the Lord when He chooses to come into your life.
These three are poverty, silence, and penance. Just remember the first letter of each. Poverty, silence, and penance: P-S-P. Not E-S-P: because if you had ESP than you would know on which day the Lord will come. The letters P-S-P stand for poverty, silence and penance. Sacred Scripture and Sacred Tradition both show us how the three practices of poverty, silence and penance can help you as a Christian prepare for God. On this First Sunday of Advent, focus upon the practice of poverty.
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We don’t usually think of “poverty” as something that’s meant to be practiced. Usually we just think of poverty as a state of life for some persons. Likewise, poverty is not usually something that we think of as a means of drawing closer to God. Usually when we think of “poverty”, we think of what in fact is destitution, where individuals do not have food to eat, or shelter from the elements, or clothing to wear. When God, in His Sacred Scriptures and Sacred Tradition, commends the practice of poverty to His children, He’s not talking about destitution. But Jesus does commend poverty to His own disciples, saying to them: “every one of you who does not renounce all his possessions cannot be my disciple” [Luke 14:33].
On the one hand, when Jesus ask us to enter into the spirit and practice of poverty, he’s not asking us to become destitute. But on the other hand, we should never water down Jesus’ commendation of poverty by thinking that it does not connect in any way to our relationship with our material possessions. That might sound like a strange phrase, to speak of someone’s “relationship with their material possessions”. Unfortunately, some people not only have a relationship with their material possessions, but in fact have more of a relationship with their material possessions than they do with the other persons in their lives.
Our standard-bearer when it comes to poverty is Jesus Himself. Jesus never sought material possessions as a way to grow in the sight of Himself, in the sight of others, or in the sight of His Father. This is one of the first principles of spiritual poverty: to realize and believe down to the bottom of our hearts how little spiritual value material possessions hold.
The second principle of poverty is trust: trust in the providential care of God our Father. Practically speaking, we can ask God to increase our trust not by praying a petition asking for trust, but by making a concrete sacrifice. When we make such a real sacrifice, we’re implicitly placing our trust in God to provide what we truly need. So we can grow in the conviction that material possessions hold so little true meaning by making a sacrifice of what we do possess.
Here’s one simple example among many that you might practice this Advent: tithe your wardrobe. Maybe some people have never heard of doing such a thing, but it’s a simple practice, and does not need to take a lot of time. Tithing your wardrobe means giving 10% of your clothes and accessories to the poor.
Although that practical sacrifice is one that the whole family can participate in, I’d like to offer a second challenge just to young people, by which I’m referring to anyone who still lives at home. This may not make me very popular with our young people, but a priest is not ordained to be popular. Young people, when you make your Christmas wish list, put down only three gifts that you’d like to receive at Christmas. And if, for some reason, you receive more than three gifts, resolve now—at the start of Advent—that you will choose only three of the gifts that you receive, and donate the rest to children who are poor, and who might well receive fewer than three Christmas presents if not for you. Maybe you could donate them to St. Anthony’s Pro-Life ministry, for distribution to families that this Pro-Life ministry serves.
Regardless of how you put it into practice, starting or deepening the practice of poverty has just one aim: to conform oneself to the person of Jesus. In other words, poverty is practiced by Christians in order to dispose themselves to the grace by which God wants to make us more like Jesus.
Jesus became one of us when He was conceived at the Annunciation, so that you and I could become like God by opening our hearts and minds to God’s grace. God works the change by His grace. But we have to open our lives to God’s grace, as the Blessed Virgin Mary did at the Annunciation. In our own lives, we accomplish this “opening” through our good works, especially virtuous practices such as poverty.
