HAVE YOUR WAY WITH ME, O GOD!
A pupil asked his teacher: “Ma’am, would you punish me for something I didn’t do?” The teacher replied, “Well, of course not.”
        
 The pupil continued, “That’s great, because I didn’t do my homework.” 
Students don’t usually want to do their homework. They usually resent it
 when their teachers give assignments.
        
 In today’s Gospel, the chief priests and the elders approached Jesus 
like unhappy students resenting their teacher. “On what authority do you
 do these things?” Jesus refused to answer their questions directly 
because they were not asking the right questions. Jesus was teaching in 
the Temple not on the strength of authority or power (though He 
obviously has both).
        
 The season of Advent invites us to ponder on this mystery of a God who 
could have directed the world on the sheer strength of power and 
authority but did not. Couldn’t God just have dropped a manual from 
heaven and directed humanity to study it and prepare for an examination 
under pain of damnation in case of failure? He could have, but He 
didn’t.
        
 The deep mystery of Christmas is the mystery of a God who became man in
 order to show humanity how to live his own humanity. Isn’t that the 
mystery behind the name of the child Mary was to bear? Emmanuel — the 
God who is with us. The deep mystery of Christmas is the mystery of a 
God whose way is not to impose but to propose.
        
 And there lies the paradox. Before Someone who does not wish to impose 
through sheer power and authority, I do not mind to be imposed upon. 
Before Someone who does not wish to impose through sheer power and 
authority, I can willingly surrender.
        
 Now we understand the docility expressed in today’s Responsorial Psalm:
 “Teach me your ways, O Lord.” God’s ways are not cold, whimsical 
instructions from a distant God residing in His ivory palace. Jesus 
taught nothing in the Scriptures that He Himself did not experience or 
practice. That is why He became Emmanuel — the God who is with us! Fr. Joel Jason
REFLECTION
 QUESTION: There is no commandment in the Scriptures that Jesus Himself 
did not practice or experience. Do you see God as a dictator or a 
companion?
“Your ways, O Lord, make known to me; teach me Your paths. Guide me in Your truth and teach me, for You are God my Savior.”

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