Official Website of the
Catholic Diocese of Little Rock
Published: December 8, 2024
Bishop Anthony B. Taylor preached the following homily during a Mass and blessing of the new columbarium at Immaculate Conception Church in North Little Rock on Sunday, Dec. 8, 2024.
Every year in early December we begin another Advent, a time of expectation, waiting for the arrival of our Savior. The word "ad-vent" comes from Latin; "ad" means "until" and "vent" means "he comes," so "until he comes." But there is a problem: There are two comings of Christ and both are being referred to.
But there is a problem: There are two comings of Christ, and both are being referred to. His humble coming on Christmas and his glorious coming at the end of the world.
Jesus is at the door and is knocking. Listen to his voice, grab that knob and open the door. Receive him into your heart now, and thus also on Christmas and for always, until his second coming on the last day.
Instead of saying the season of Advent, wouldn’t it be better to say the season of the Advents? And even more so because there aren’t just two comings — there are three.
In the last week of November, one liturgical year ended with the feast of Christ the King and another year began with a final glance forward to the day when what we celebrate on Christ the King is fully manifest on the day of his second coming.
And then we turn our gaze backward toward his first coming on Christmas. The first Sunday of Advent prepares us for his second coming, and the second Sunday prepares us for his first coming. And both prepare us for his third coming.
And when is his third coming? Right now. Have you ever seen that picture of Jesus knocking on a door that has no handle? It represents Revelations 3:20, where Jesus says, “Here I stand knocking at the door; if anyone hears my voice and opens the door, I will enter his house and dine with him and he with me.” The door has no handle on the outside because it can only be opened from within. Christ knocks at the door of your heart, but you’re the one who has to open it.
That’s his third coming. Not only in the past and in the future, but also now, today.
Advent is not just a time of waiting; it’s also a time of preparation. As we see in the Scriptures, John the Baptist prepared the first coming of Jesus, and the prophecies of the end of the world prepare us for his second coming, but only you can prepare yourself for his third coming.
There’s no one else who can open the door to your heart for him. Sure, we can offer resources and help, encouragement and prayer. Sure, we can look at the columbarium we will be blessing today and remember that one day our life on this earth will come to an end. We’ll be long gone when someone opens the time capsule we will bury today.
Sure, we have the good example of the saints to inspire us and soften our hearts, but it won’t open until we ourselves take hold of that knob with our very own hand and open that door ourselves, to receive him into our own hearts.
This time of the Advents is also for this. Indeed, it is principally for this because if you don’t open your heart to him now, it won’t do you any good to commemorate his first coming because without him inside you now, you are not yet ready for his second and definitive coming on the last day.
There are three Advents because Christ is King not only of all places but also of all times: the past — Christmas, the future — the end of the world, and the present and his coming in the present is the most important of the three.
In fact, it is to open us up to his third coming in the present time — it is precisely to make this happen — that we celebrate liturgically the Advent of this first and second comings. Jesus is at the door and is knocking. Listen to his voice, grab that knob and open the door.
Receive him into your heart now, and thus also on Christmas and for always, until his second coming on the last day.