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Word of Life - December 2005


The Word of Life: a sentence of Scripture offered to our readers as a guideline and inspiration for daily life.
The commentary to the Word of Life is translated into 90 different languages and dialects,
and reaches more that 14 million people worldwide through the press and radio and TV programs.


“Prepare the way of the Lord! Make straight … a highway for our God!”.
(Is 40:3)

  
By Chiara Lubich
 

Isaiah’s cry of hope was heard by the people of Israel who had been in exile in Babylon in Mesopotamia for 50 years. At last the Lord was sending one of his messengers to announce that they would be free to return to their homeland. Just as had happened when they were slaves in Egypt, God would put himself once again at the head of his people and lead them back to the Promised Land. The roads needed to be repaired, the potholes filled, the obstructions removed, as was customarily done when a king travelled to one of his territories.
Five centuries later, on the banks of the Jordan, John the Baptist took up the Prophet Isaiah’s joyful cry again, this time to announce the coming of the Messiah himself.

“Prepare the way of the Lord! Make straight … a highway for our God!”

Every year, as we draw closer to Christmas, we hear this same invitation. God, who in every age has shown his burning desire to be with his children, now makes “his dwelling among us” (Jn 1:14). Today too he stands at the door and knocks because he wants to come in and “dine” with us (see Rev 3:20).
We ourselves often long to meet him, to have him as our companion on life’s journey, and to be filled with his light. For him to enter our lives, we first need to remove the obstacles in his path. It is no longer a matter of clearing the roads, but of opening our hearts to him.

05_12 wol

“Prepare the way of the Lord! Make straight … a highway for our God.”

Jesus himself identified some of the barriers that close our hearts: “theft, murder, adultery, greed, malice, deceit, licentiousness, envy, blasphemy, arrogance, folly” (Mk 7:21-22). At times these barriers may be put up by grudges against our relatives or friends, prejudice against people of other races, indifference to the needs of our neighbors, or a lack of attentiveness and love in our families.
Faced with so many obstacles that impede our encounter with God, once again we hear the invitation:

“Prepare the way of the Lord!
Make straight … a highway for our God!”

How can we do something practical to prepare the way of the Lord?
By asking his forgiveness each time we realize we have put up a barrier that obstructs our communion with him.
With this sincere act of humility and truth, we stand before God as we are, acknowledging our fragility, our mistakes and our sins.
With this act of trust, we recognize his fatherly love, which is “merciful … and abounding in kindness” (Ps 103:8).
With this act we tell God we want to improve and to begin again.
In the evening, or before going to sleep, is perhaps the best time to stop and take stock of the day just gone by, and ask God’s forgiveness.
We can also be more aware and heartfelt in our expression of contrition when we pray for forgiveness as a community such as at the beginning of the celebration of the Eucharist or during other moments of worship together.
Then individual confession or reconciliation, the sacrament of God’s forgiveness, can also be of enormous help. It is an encounter with the Lord when we can hand over to him all the mistakes we have made. We leave confession with a sense of our salvation, of being made new, and we experience the joy that comes from discovering that we are truly children of God.
It is God himself who, through his forgiveness, removes every obstacle, who “makes straight the highway” and establishes once more a bond of love with each one of us.\

“Prepare the way of the Lord!
Make straight … a highway for our God!”

This is what Louise experienced. She had a tragic life, with the wrong sort
of friends, with involvement in drugs and an immoral lifestyle. She struggled to break free and finally managed to overcome her addiction … but it was already too late. After a hasty civil marriage, she began to recognize the first symptoms of AIDS. At that point her husband left her.
Louise found herself alone, carrying the burden of all her mistakes. Then one day she met a group of Christians who were living the Word of Life and sharing their experiences. She discovered a whole new world. Soon she came to know God who is a Father, who is Love. When she began to believe in his forgiveness, she could no longer hold on to her sins. Her life took a completely new turn. Knowing that she had been forgiven gave her a joy she had never experienced before, even though she was ill and suffering. Her face shone with a beauty that even the progress of the disease could not disfigure. The doctors were surprised that she was so peaceful.
She was experiencing a new life.
The day she died, she was dressed in white, as she had asked to be. The road had been cleared for her to reach heaven, for her encounter with the Lord.


   
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