Sunday, 13 December 2009

Advent- unsifted (Origen)



Advent- unsifted (Origen)

It is the count down of the 3rd Sunday for Christmas

John Baptist is the Precursor of Christmas in every way but, enough for us, is his word this morning, “One Mightier will baptize you WITH THE HOLY SPIRIT AND FIRE”.

Think against that Jordan bank drama of all the ‘precursors’, like the grannies preparing the Christmas gifts for children, reminding of the responses of children of EVERY AGE – in response to what the great Origen writes of the SIFT of the Holy Spirit, the sift of chaff from wheat, The Sift for the Holy Spirit among the presents of Christmas to

- enlightening

- animating

- inspiring

- and fire.

At the Reading in the Night Office the thought of Origen gave light on St. Luke (3:10-18) “the Holy Spirit and in fire holds a winnowing fan in his hand”, . . . “I suggest that the faithful are like a heap of unsifted grain”.


From a homily on Saint Luke's gospel by Origen (Hom. 26, 3-5: se 87, 340-342)


The baptism that Jesus gives is a baptism in the Holy Spirit and in fire. Baptism is one and the same no matter who receives it, but its effect depends on the recipient's disposition. He who is portrayed as baptizing in the Holy Spirit and in fire holds a winnowing fan in his hand, which he will use to clear his threshing floor. The wheat he will gather into his barn, but the chaff he will burn with fire that can never be quenched.

I should like to discover our Lord's reason for holding a winnowing fan and to inquire into the nature of the wind that scatters the light chaff here and there, leaving the heavier grain lying in a heap-for you must have a wind if you want to separate wheat and chaff.


I suggest that the faithful are like a heap of unsifted grain, and that the wind represents the temptations which assail them and show up the wheat and the chaff among them. When your soul is overcome by some temptation, it is not the temptation that turns you into chaff. No, you were chaff already, that is to say fickle and faithless; the temptation simply discloses the stuff you are made of. On the other hand, when you endure temptations bravely it is not the temptation that makes you faithful and patient; temptation merely brings to light the hidden virtues of patience and fortitude that have been present in you all along. Do you think I had any other purpose in speaking to you, said the Lord to Job, than to reveal your virtue? In another text he declares: I humbled you and made you feel the pangs of hunger in order to find out what was in your heart.


In the same way, a storm will not allow a house to stand firm if it is built upon sand. If you wish to build a house, you must build it upon rock. Then any storms that arise will not demolish your handiwork, whereas the house built upon sand will totter, proving thereby that it is not well founded.


So while all is yet quiet, before the storm gathers, before the squalls begin to bluster or the waves to swell, let us concentrate all our efforts on the foundations of our building and construct our house with the many strong, interlocking bricks of God's commandments. Then when cruel persecution is unleashed like some fearful tornado against Christians, we shall be able to show that our house is build upon Christ Jesus our rock.


Far be it from us to deny Christ when that time comes. But if anyone should do so, let that person realize that it was not at the moment of his public denial that his apostasy took place. Its seeds and roots had been hidden within him for a long time; persecution only brought into the open and made public what was already there. Let us pray to the Lord then that we may be firm and solid buildings that no storm can overthrow, founded on The rock of our Lord Jesus Christ to whom be glory and power for ever and ever. Amen.

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