But Advent also is a time of fulfillment – a time when all the things that God promised throughout the ages, have actually come to pass. John the Baptist, as the Voice crying in the wilderness had been foretold, and then he came. Mary, the Mother of our Lord, had been foretold as the Virgin who would conceive and bear a Son, and so she did. Detail after detail was foretold in the Scriptures, and we see each one of them fulfilled, reminding us that when God promises, He always makes good on His promises.
We need to keep that fact in mind: God always keeps His promises. No matter what difficulty we face God doesn’t forget us. He remembers us, He hears our prayers, and He responds in His perfect timing.
He answered the long years of prayer by Zechariah and Elizabeth for a child when they were in their old age. He blessed the young Virgin Mary for her unwavering trust and obedience, when He showed his great love for us in the fact of the Incarnation, that statement of God’s amazing love, a love so great that He sent His only Son to earth, to be one of us, to fulfill the promise given through the archangel Gabriel, that He would save us from our sins.
God doesn’t forget us. He is working out His perfect plan on His own timetable. And this is a message we need to hear and take to heart. Even in the times of darkness or despair, in our times of struggle to have hope, we need to trust that God is working out a new and better future for us, and that His love will never give up on us.
Because we are God’s people, we are a people of hope and love. In being touched by God’s love we can love others. In remembering God’s mercy to His children in the past, we can trust that there is hope for us too.
That is what Advent involves: patiently waiting for God, knowing that He always keeps His promises. This is the Advent message of hope and expectation: that God’s love is given to every single one of us. It doesn’t matter how old or young we are. It doesn’t matter what our situation is. God has come to give us hope, and He asks us to live in faith. He asks us to believe in His promises, even though we might not have all the details.
Zechariah and Elizabeth didn’t have all the details, and yet they believed. Joseph and Mary certainly didn’t have all the details, and yet they faithfully obeyed God. This wasn’t just blind faith. They believed God because of the evidence of history. God had always kept His promises to His people, and there was no reason for them to think He would stop. This is the faith God asks of us – not a blind faith, but a faith based on the evidence of what God has already done.
As Elizabeth said to Mary, “Blessed is she who believed that there would be a fulfillment of what was spoken to her from the Lord.” There is always a blessing for us when we listen to the promises of God, and actually believe them.
We need to keep that fact in mind: God always keeps His promises. No matter what difficulty we face God doesn’t forget us. He remembers us, He hears our prayers, and He responds in His perfect timing.
He answered the long years of prayer by Zechariah and Elizabeth for a child when they were in their old age. He blessed the young Virgin Mary for her unwavering trust and obedience, when He showed his great love for us in the fact of the Incarnation, that statement of God’s amazing love, a love so great that He sent His only Son to earth, to be one of us, to fulfill the promise given through the archangel Gabriel, that He would save us from our sins.
God doesn’t forget us. He is working out His perfect plan on His own timetable. And this is a message we need to hear and take to heart. Even in the times of darkness or despair, in our times of struggle to have hope, we need to trust that God is working out a new and better future for us, and that His love will never give up on us.
Because we are God’s people, we are a people of hope and love. In being touched by God’s love we can love others. In remembering God’s mercy to His children in the past, we can trust that there is hope for us too.
That is what Advent involves: patiently waiting for God, knowing that He always keeps His promises. This is the Advent message of hope and expectation: that God’s love is given to every single one of us. It doesn’t matter how old or young we are. It doesn’t matter what our situation is. God has come to give us hope, and He asks us to live in faith. He asks us to believe in His promises, even though we might not have all the details.
Zechariah and Elizabeth didn’t have all the details, and yet they believed. Joseph and Mary certainly didn’t have all the details, and yet they faithfully obeyed God. This wasn’t just blind faith. They believed God because of the evidence of history. God had always kept His promises to His people, and there was no reason for them to think He would stop. This is the faith God asks of us – not a blind faith, but a faith based on the evidence of what God has already done.
As Elizabeth said to Mary, “Blessed is she who believed that there would be a fulfillment of what was spoken to her from the Lord.” There is always a blessing for us when we listen to the promises of God, and actually believe them.
During the time left in Advent, spend it preparing for the great Solemnity that is coming, the Nativity of our Lord Jesus Christ. And remember that He is the Promised One – the One who keeps His promises – the One foretold by the prophets, the One born of the Virgin Mary, and the One who comes to us today.












