On the Solemnity of the Nativity of St. John the Baptist, celebrated on June 24, we are reminded of his very inspiring example on how to prepare our heart so that divine love can enter.
He clearly shows us that we just cannot jump straight to divine love without going through the process of repentance. That was the main mission he pursued as the forerunner of our Redeemer. He preached repentance and baptized the people, showing them how to welcome Christ by making sacrifices and overcoming the tendency to hypocrisy and inconsistency.
In short, he is asking us for a real conversion, a proper preparation for the coming of Christ into our lives. He modeled this kind of conversion by showing how love is never self-referential. That is why he said, “He must increase; I must decrease.” (Jn 3,30) That’s what happens when human love is divinized --it stops being about us.
We should do our best to follow the example of St. John the Baptist. Especially for us priests, we should be wary of becoming a demagogue, shouting and scolding from the pulpit. That’s because we as a true precursor of Christ would always preach in a humble manner, always pointing to Christ, and never drawing attention to ourselves. We should make Christ, not ourselves, known, appreciated and loved.
If we really want to be truly Christian, we need to appreciate more deeply the role of St. John the Baptist in the whole economy of salvation. He was the one who prepared the people for the coming of Christ, the one who pointed to Christ, the Lamb of God who would take away the sins of the world, to the people. Somehow, we have a duty to follow the example of this saint in preparing people for the coming of Christ.
We know all too well that like St. John the Baptist whose call for repentance as preparation for the coming of the Redeemer was a lonely cry in the desert, we too can be like the voice of God today as well as that of the Church or of any spiritual and moral Christian teaching that has become a voice of one crying in the wilderness.
Present circumstances in the world point to a growing deafness and insensibility to the truths of faith and morals. The prologue of St. John’s gospel already captures this phenomenon: “He came unto his own, and his own received him not.” (1, 11)
We cannot deny that there is a lot of ignorance, confusion, and indifference to the things of God these days. The life of piety seems to be waning in many parts of our country, let alone, the whole world. Many people are hardly praying, and the practice of devotion seems to be facing extinction.
Just the same, we should not forget that regardless of what may appear to be a deep-seated culture of irreligion these days, every man continues in the deepest part of his heart to yearn for God. What the Catechism says about this is always relevant:
“The desire for God is written in the human heart, because man is created by God and for God; and God never ceases to draw man to himself. Only in God will he find the truth and happiness he never stops searching for.” (CCC 27)
Yes, God himself will always draw us to himself in ways that can be very mysterious. And we, on our part, should try our best to discern the directing ways of God. This is where everyone has to do his part in preparing himself to see and follow God’s ways.