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The End of the Year: A Christian Reflection on Time

We are approaching the end of another year. The media is filled with commentaries on the year that will soon be consigned to history, and speculative predictions on what lies ahead.

For me, the end of the year is always a reflective time; a time for taking stock of what I am doing with the time allotted to me.

Human beings have always marked time by important events. The real question is not whether we will mark time, but how we will do so. What events and what messages are we proclaiming in the calendaring of time?

For the Christian, time is not meant to become a tyrant ruling over us. Perhaps, it is intended to be a teacher, teaching and showing us with opportunity and invitations to walk the way of charity.

Instead of being dreaded as an enemy, it is to be cultivated as a friend. Its role and reach is a part of the redemptive loving plan of God. In the Incarnation, the Eternal Word became flesh; breaking into time to change it from within.

The Lord who designed time, now gives us time as a gift. By penetrating into time He took away the curse it held over all men and women by defeating death. In Him, time now becomes a field of choice wherein we can grow in holiness, experience true happiness and find real freedom. We can start to involve in God’s loving plan to recreate the entire cosmos in and through Jesus Christ.

Time is the road along which this loving plan of redemption continues in our individual lives and in the history of this world. We who have been baptized into Christ are invited to involve in this loving plan by living our lives in the Church, the seed of the eternal kingdom. The Church is not some-thing but Some-One into whom we were baptized. The Church is the Body of Jesus Christ. He is the Head of His Body – and we are members. (1 Cor. 12:27)

So, how do we view time? Is it a tyrant ruling over us? Or, is it a tutor, showing us direction to live our lives in this world so that they open into eternity?

Christians declare linear timeline in history. There is a start and an end, an accomplishment, which is a new start. Time is actually going somewhere. That is as true of the history of the world as it is our own personal histories. Do we live this way?

Christians mark time by the great events of the Life, Death and Resurrection of Jesus Christ. We are moving toward His loving return. We mark our Christian culture with events of significance from the ongoing family events, the history of the Church of which we are members.

The members of that family were birthed from the wounded side of the Savior on the Cross-at Calvary’s hill. That family was sent on mission when He breathed His Spirit into them at Pentecost.

We recall them, and walk with them, so that we have models and companions for the journey of life. They are that “great cloud of witnesses” the author of the letter to the Hebrews explains. (Hebrews 12: 1-3) They will welcome us into eternity and assist us now along the daily path.

For Catholic Christians, the Catholic liturgical year follows a rhythmic cycle. It points us toward beginnings and ends and, in so doing, explains a significant truth that can only be grasped through faith, every end is a start.

In our liturgical life, as soon as we celebrate the last Sunday of the Year, the feast of Christ the King, we celebrate the First Sunday of Advent, and we get ready for the birth of Savior. Our Christian faith declares that Jesus Christ is the “Alpha”, (the first letter of the Greek alphabet) and the “Omega” (the last letter), the starting and the end. He is the Giver, the Governor and the accomplishment of all time.

So it is with each day of our lives. There really is a Divine design. Every morning invites us to start again. The very structure of the 24 hour cycle of each day shows the goodness of a God who often invites us – and strengthens us – to start again. Hope is reborn with every sunrise.

Every evening invites our honest reflection, expression of gratitude to the Lord who gave us life, repentance for where we fell short, new decisions to amend our life and the healing, rejuvenating rest in the Lord which awaits all who live in Him.

Then, the sun invites us to start again by saying “YES” to the Lord’s choice and invitation of love. Our time is to be filled with bearing the fruit that stays in the garden of grace called daily living.

These truths relating to time can have great meaning for us as we progress in the life of grace. They are meant to transform us. They invite us into a deeper walk with the Lord and with one another. It is now up to us to respond to the lessons of time and the invitation of faith.

Life is a classroom for those who are willing to comprehend its many lessons – and living faith opens our eyes and shines light on the way. Let’s reflect together on two of the many lessons.

Every End is a Beginning 

As we move from one year to the next, we also move along the timeline of human life allotted to each one of us. We age. The certainty of our death is meant to illuminate our life and the certainty of the end of all time and the coming of the Lord is meant to illuminate time’s very purpose and fulfillment in Christ.

Death can become a second birth for each one of us, through living faith. Francis of Assisi prayed these words in his most popular prayer “it is in dying that we are born to eternal life.” He referred to death as a “sister” implying that he had a relationship with it. So too did all of the great heroes our Church, the saints.

Do we view death in this way? Is death a catastrophe to be avoided, a source of fear? Or, as we age, is death becoming a friend, a companion who beckons us on to a more meaningful, redemptive life? Is death becoming a “sister” whom we will welcome in due time? Do we believe that it is simply a change of lodging, a passage to a new birth in the Lord?

The author of the Book of Wisdom reminds us that “God did not make death and He does not delight in the death of the living” (Wisdom 1:13).

We can recall the tender moment recorded for us in St John’s Gospel where Jesus, brokenhearted at the death of his friend Lazarus, comforts his sister Martha with these words “everyone who lives and believes in me will never die. Do you believe this? I am the Resurrection and the Life; he who believes in me, though he die, yet shall he live, and whoever lives and believes in me shall never die.” (John 11: 25 and 26)

Do we truly believe this? Do we live in a way that such a belief becomes a reality?

Jesus Christ abolished death and brought us eternal life by removing what St. Paul calls “it’s sting”; it’s essential evil, separation from God and the eternal love which is communion with God. He robbed death of its power over us through His Resurrection. He made that tombstone a stepping stone, a portal to eternal life. (1 Cor. 15:55-57)

Jesus converted death, once the “last enemy”, into our friend and sister, a portal to life eternal. We are invited to begin living in the eternal “now” of life in communion with God the Father, in the Son and through the Holy Spirit.

With a few exceptions like John the Baptizer and Our Lady (for whom we celebrate birth and death) we Christians celebrate the death of Saints. That is because our faith proclaims that death is not an end but the beginning of an eternal life in God. In the final book of the Bible we read:

“Here is what sustains the holy ones who keep God’s commandments and their faith in Jesus. I heard a voice from heaven say, “Write this: Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord from now on.” “Yes,” said the Spirit, “let them find rest from their labors, for their works accompany them.

“Then I looked and there was a white cloud, and sitting on the cloud one who looked like a son of man, with a gold crown on his head and a sharp sickle in his hand. Another angel came out of the temple, crying out in a loud voice to the one sitting on the cloud, “Use your sickle and reap the harvest, for the time to reap has come, because the earth’s harvest is fully ripe. So the one who was sitting on the cloud swung his sickle over the earth, and the earth was harvested.” (Revelations 14: 12-15)

Time is for bearing a harvest for the Lord
As the Apostle John recorded in the Revelation he received on the Island of Patmos, our use of time is meant to produce good fruit. We are called to bear a harvest which will lead us into eternity. It will – if we have an intimate relationship with the One who both gives and governs time.

Time is the privilege for the Christian to bear fruit that remains. Jesus reminds us, “It was not you who chose me, but I who chose you and appointed you to go and bear fruit that will last, so that whatever you ask the Father in my name he may give you. This I instruct you: love one another.” (St. John 15: 16, 17).

We decide if we will use time for bearing good fruit or are used by time as a tyrant who frightens us as we fruitlessly try to stop his claim on our perceived youth. This act of selecting rightly assists us to develop a disposition; a way of living that involves the proper practice of our human freedom aided by grace.

 

 

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