Gospel
Jerusalem Bible © 1966 by Darton, Longman & Todd Ltd and Doubleday & Company Inc.
When all the people asked John, ‘What must we do?’ he answered, ‘If anyone has two tunics he must share with the man who has none, and the one with something to eat must do the same.’ There were tax collectors too who came for baptism, and these said to him, ‘Master, what must we do?’ He said to them, ‘Exact no more than your rate.’ Some soldiers asked him in their turn, ‘What about us? What must we do?’ He said to them, ‘No intimidation! No extortion! Be content with your pay!’
A feeling of expectancy had grown among the people, who were beginning to think that John might be the Christ, so John declared before them all, ‘I baptise you with water, but someone is coming, someone who is more powerful than I am, and I am not fit to undo the strap of his sandals; he will baptise you with the Holy Spirit and fire. His winnowing-fan is in his hand to clear his threshing-floor and to gather the wheat into his barn; but the chaff he will burn in a fire that will never go out.’ As well as this, there were many other things he said to exhort the people and to announce the Good News to them.
(Luke 3:10–18)
Did you know?
Points of interest and Catholic lore
- Tax collectors during the time of Jesus were disliked immensely for two reasons: they collaborated with the Roman oppressors, and they skimmed additional monies from the people for themselves.
- The Jewish people of this time were hopeful that a messiah would come to overthrow the tyranny of the Roman Empire and set them free.
- The word 'messiah' in Hebrew means ‘anointed one’; the word 'Christ' has exactly the same meaning in Greek.
Exploring the Word
‘What must we do?’ This is a profound question. The answer does not involve pious gestures or private devotions. John the Baptist clarifies that to be saved, people must respond to the ways of God by being in right relationship with their neighbours and by living justly. The justice of God is forged in right relationship, so that those who have more share with those who have nothing, and so that people are treated fairly and no extortion or violence is used against them. John is inviting his hearers to form a new society, and they begin to suspect that he may be the Messiah. However, he is adamant that one more powerful than he is still to come—one who will bring with him a baptism of fire and of the Holy Spirit. At Pentecost, this baptism became a reality for the early church; it formed its members into the new society who responds to God’s love by imitating the life and love of the Son. They must now live like the wheat and not the chaff, which is fit only to be burned.
- If we were to ask today, ‘What must we do?’, how might John answer us?
Making connections
Opportunities for group discussion and personal prayer
- ‘A feeling of expectancy had grown among the people’. Do you feel an expectancy growing in you as the coming of Christ draws closer?
- ‘What must we do?’ Can you do anything in your life to live more ethically? John’s words deeply challenge how people live.
- Make a special effort to live ethically this week. Various church agencies provide opportunities at this time of year to share wealth or good fortune with those who have little. Share yours.
- Living ethically is not always easy. What are some challenges in the present age that make it difficult to live ethically? How often do we hear, ‘But everyone does it’, and what are some of the circumstances that prompt such a statement? How should Christians respond in such circumstances? Share your reflections.
- Use this week’s responsorial psalm as this week’s prayer:
Truly, God is my salvation,
I trust, I shall not fear.
For the Lord is my strength, my song,
he became my saviour.
Cry out with joy and gladness:
For among you is the great and Holy One of Israel.
Sharing the tradition
The figure of John the Baptist holds a special place in the life of the Church, as he was one of the first people to recognise Jesus as the awaited Messiah.
- You could explore the scriptural passages that provide the information we have on John the Baptist.
- You could discuss John’s withdrawal into the desert and the tradition of withdrawal that is part of the life of the Church.
- What opportunities today allow people to withdraw or retreat into a quiet place for prayer?
- What are the benefits of such a withdrawal?
Symbols and images
The image of Jesus as a farmer who separates the wheat from the chaff is a stern one, and it serves to remind us that the choices we make have consequences—not only in this life but in the eternal life yet to come. Truly living the life of a Christian is not an easy task.
Living the word
- Does your parish community offer any opportunities for people to undertake a retreat program? Could such opportunities be introduced? In the lead-up to Christmas, are there ways in which your group can be encouraged to withdraw from the hustle and bustle of life to a quiet place for prayer and preparation?
- Use the ritual lighting of the Advent wreath candle. You could use some reflective music and spend time quietly contemplating the question, ‘What must I do?’ Pray for each other in your search for an answer. An appropriate song could be the Taizé chant, Wait for the Lord (GA 283). Conclude with an adaptation of the prayer of exorcism in the RCIA at §94G.