Second Sunday of Advent, December 7, 2025
Dear friends,
The first week of Advent has already passed; three short weeks until Christmas, and there is so much more to do. In the week that has just slipped by, I haven’t had time to do all that I thought I would for my own spiritual preparation. You might be thinking of things like: I thought I would spend some time in silence to pause and ponder the mystery of God coming to visit me and, yet, I didn’t make the time. I thought I would go to the Stations of the Crib on Tuesday, and I missed it. Most of us are in the same boat, but we can still do some solid things to make this Advent count.
This weekend, we heartily welcome Johnette Williams, founder and president of Living His Life Abundantly® International, Inc., a Catholic evangelization apostolate with outreaches in television, radio, print, and internet communications. She is also founder of Women of Grace®, a Catholic apostolate for Christian women that features a number of outreaches including conferences, curricula, study groups, and more. She has been a consistent presence on Catholic radio since 1987 and on Catholic television since 1988. Johnette has been published in major Catholic magazines and has authored several books. What a privilege it is for us to have her share her journey of faith.
Johnette will present our Advent mission on three nights beginning this Sunday through Tuesday, December 7 − 9, at 7 p.m. each evening. Please join us in preparing ourselves to reflect on the theme of our Silver Jubilee, “A Journey of Grace, Faith, and Hope.” As the mission statement points out, we pray that the Holy Spirit might help us experience a new “Advent” of the Lord with burning zeal to know, love, and serve the ONE who comes to us as a helpless little Babe in the manger.
While Johnette is here with us, she will also be the guest speaker at our women’s luncheon on Sunday, 7 December, at 12:30 p.m. As founder of Women of Grace, it is fitting that she is able to meet with our women and help us PREPARE THE WAY OF THE LORD.
We will be celebrating the Solemnity of the Immaculate Conception on Monday, 8 December, a holy day of obligation and the patronal feast day of the United States of America. We will be offering three Masses: 8 a.m., 12:05 p.m., and 6 p.m. Since the beginning of the Church, the Blessed Virgin Mary has been regarded as the holiest and most blessed of all disciples. Celebration of the Immaculate Conception began in the 7th century under the title, “Conception of Mary by Saint Anne” and was changed to “Immaculate Conception” with the definition of the doctrine in 1854.
We celebrate the Second Sunday of Advent with the appearance of some of the most significant people who were blessed with the Advent spirit. The prophet Isaiah and John the Baptist, the desert preacher, lived their lives with such joyful anticipation for the coming of the Savior of the world. They knew deep down in their hearts that the world as they knew it was not how God intended it to be; hence, they were inspired by the Holy Spirit to believe and profess that a Messiah would come from above to offer a vision totally different from the one they lived.
We, too, live in times where things are far from how God wants them to be. How our hearts long to live in a world where every human being is respected, where the sounds of gunfire and exploding bombs would be heard no more, paving the way for peace, where the riches and wealth of the nations would ensure elimination of poverty and hunger in the world, where one would not fear another because of race, nation, or ethnicity, where we would be free to walk our streets or gather in churches or market places without fear of being harassed or attacked.
The prophet Isaiah spoke of a shoot sprouting from the stump … can we be the fruits of the new shoot with dreams of a just and peaceful world characterized by deep and lasting tranquility? We know God’s vision for us because He sent His only Son to live among us. Let us, therefore, commit to living the spirit of Advent with a certain hope and longing — that if all of humanity were to come together to work toward building a world of justice and peace as anticipated by the prophet Isaiah, urged by John the Baptist, and lived by Jesus our Savior, it would be possible to transform the world.
In his letter to the Romans, Paul offers two suggestions that might help us live in harmony and unity: endurance (to willfully choose to remain faithful to Christ) and seeking encouragement of the Scriptures. May we heed the clarion call of John the Baptist to repent and transform our lives to meet the Lord who is close at hand. This Advent season, may we gently fan the glowing embers of his presence among us until they start to flame.
Have an adventurous Advent!
With love,
Fr. John













