Advent, the beginning our liturgical year, always gets me thinking about the celebration of the new calendar year and all of the traditions with which it is associated. The most notable of these is probably the New Year's resolution. For our own part at St Joseph's, we have been working hard this fiscal year to continue to reform the way we go about parish life, always working to become more engaging, loving, and authentically the Mystical Body of Christ. To that end, this liturgical year, we started to coordinate our message throughout homilies and faith formation in order to more consistently deliver fruitful messages to the souls entrusted to our care.
A few weeks ago the Advent season's homilists--and other pastoral staff like our seminarian Jorge and myself--at St Joseph's focused in together on a theme for this first season of the year: "Stay Awake!" We all have put in a great deal of reflection on what is truly meant by the phrase which appears in both Testaments and multiple circumstances. For me, I have increasingly taken it to mean that I need to be more conscious of the Lord, his life, his light, and his love in all that I do. It is all too easy to allow self-satisfaction creep up on the attitude of gratitude. Self-satisfaction is an attitude that doesn't look for where the person can grow. Nor does it acknowledge the need for accountability. It undermines conversion and decays mission. And this brings me back to New Year's resolutions...
New Year's Resolutions have never worked for me. I've resolved several times to start new healthier routines improving diet, exercise, and quality time with loved ones. Sometimes I succeed for days, even months, but the gradual slide back to overworking and other old, bad habits is hard to stop. The yearly regression to the mean is almost as much of a tradition as the making of the resolutions itself! But this year, I do believe will be quite different.
The problem with New Year's resolutions is that they are made in isolation. They are a test of individual will and mettle against the tides of habit, complacency, comfort, and a rather indulgent society. Those who enter into pacts with others to keep their respective resolutions surely stand a much higher chance of succeeding because they have accountability to their partners. The certainty that someone will notice the lack of commitment and follow-through supports the will through fear of embarrassment or letting the partnership down. The weak point of this arrangement, though, is that the object that can drive the person to keep the resolution could just as easily drive him/her to simply cover up and lie about breaking it. The impetus is toward others believing that the resolution is kept, not in the making of the resolution a true reality.
Which brings me to why this year will be different... Fear is an imperfect motivator. It surely can drive a person, even powerfully, but it drives the person to avoid something rather than to encounter something. So, this year, my motivator will be Love. Love impels the person forward with a definite object, the other person. This year, I won't even try to make my resolution an act of will; it will be an act of love. Being Catholic, we start our new year a little earlier: Advent starts on the Sunday closest to November 30th. So we find ourselves in prime position to make a gift of love out of our resolutions.
For my part, I shall be offering new habits of prayer, mindfulness, and evangelism as a year-long gift to Christ in honor of his birth lifted up out of love. There can be no hiding my lack of follow-through from the eternally present God, but there also won't be the desire to fail when He has never failed me. I will want to make this good change in myself because I love the God made Man who gave me all the good already present in my life. And there can be no greater sustaining support than the ocean of Grace, the very life of God, in which we live and move and have our being.
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