Voice Crying in the Desert
Advent is the first season of the liturgical year and encourages us to start over. Like every beginning in our lives Advent is an occasion to make a resolution to leave the old and evil, and begin the new and good. Today’s gospel, taken from the beginning of the gospel according to Mark, reminds us once again about new beginning.
John the Baptist is the prophet of Advent. His entire life was dedicated to waiting and preparing for the coming of the Messiah. The first condition to welcome the Messiah according to John is repentance and conversation. John lived in the desert where he taught and baptized those who chose to change their lives, renounced evil, and followed good. The author of the gospel calls John “a voice of one crying in the desert” (Mk 1:3). There were many messengers of God throughout the history of salvation who were like a voice crying in the desert because no people listened to them.
On the other hand, there are many people who chose repentance, left evil, and followed good and God, but still fall into the same sin over and over again. St. Paul went through the same struggle when he wrote, “I do not understand what I do. For what I want to do I do not do, but what I hate I do (…) As it is, it is no longer I myself who do it, but it is sin living in me” (Rom 7:15-17). That struggle of leaving evil and choosing good is common to many people. They know they must never give up, but perseverance on starting over again and again is very hard on them. And certainly, they feel like a voice crying in the desert in their struggle of conversion. Does God listen to them?
The expression “a voice of one crying in the desert” does not originate from Mark. It is quoted by Isiah and found in the story of Hagar and Ishmael in the Book of Genesis.
Hagar was a slave of Sarah, who was the wife of Abraham. Sarah was childless and asked Abraham to have his offspring with Hagar. Hagar gave Abraham a son, Ishmael. But when Sarah miraculously got pregnant and bore Abraham her son Isaac, there was a conflict between Sarah and Hagar. As a consequence, Abraham decided to send Hagar and her child away to the desert. They received only bread and a skin of water for their journey. The bread and water were gone after a few days in the desert. Now, they were about to die. Hagar did not want to see her son Ishmael die and decided to die far away from him. She left him in a place far away from her so she could not listen to her son crying to death. Scripture says God heard a voice crying in the desert in that moment of terrible drama and struggle. The cry of the little boy saved them. God sent his angel to Hagar and showed her a spring of water that saved them both. Additionally, God promised to make a great nation of Ishmael (Genesis 21).
This wonderful story reminds us God always listens to our prayer, even if it feels like a voice crying in the desert. God appreciates our struggle for good and gives us a helpful hand. John the Baptist reminds us repentance and conversion is an essential part of preparation to welcome the Messiah during Advent. And our struggle to turn away from evil to choose good is heard by God, and will be rewarded when we meet the Lord during Christmas time.
Fr. Andrzej





