Third Sunday of
            Advent
            15 December 2024 
            Church Year C 
            
          Meno male
          Luke 3:10-18
            Fr. Richard Miserendino
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In
        general, there are two strategies to make something better.  Decrease to bad or
        increase the good.
The
        two are not identical.  For
        instance, making something taste less bad is not the same as
        making it taste good, clothing that don’t stink isn’t
        necessarily clean, etc.  One
        of my favorite phrases in Italian captures this: “Meno male.” It
        literally translates to “less bad,” but often means “thank
        goodness” and is said when you catch a lucky break.  Yet still, “less bad”
        is underwhelming.  It’s
        starkly different than making something good.  Often, it’s tempting
        to see improvement only in terms of the “meno male,” making
        things less bad, even in the spiritual life.
That
tracks
        with our Gospel for this Sunday, wherein St. John the Baptist
        seems to be providing courageous calls to repentance, but which
        always seem to land on “less bad” instead of “more good.”  His advice to his
        hearers is very reasonable, but kind of sad that it needs to be
        give in the first place.  Stop
        hogging your food and clothing. 
        Stop stealing, lying and cheating.  Repent, avoid sin, and
        be less bad.
For
this,
        the crowds are ready to name him the Messiah, which shows just
        how beautiful, humble and powerful his witness was.  After all, at least
        “less bad” was an improvement. 
        John was a ray of hope piercing the darkness of the
        world.  Preaching to
        a world that has agonized through the midnight hours of sin
        without relief, John provides the first cracks of dawn by which
        people can just start to see truth, goodness and beauty anew.  By the dawning light
        of the forerunner, hope again becomes visible.
It
        reminds us to be patient, not to make the perfect the enemy of
        the good, and that even flawed and stumbling attempts at the
        good, the “less bad,” can still be beautiful.  All this is fitting
        for Gaudete Sunday, where the Advent purple gives way to rose, a
        sign of dawning light that points to a fuller golden-white
        Christmas splenor to come.  
But
still
        to those claiming John as the Messiah, one might ask: Is that
        (less bad) all there is?  Is
        that all the Messiah came to bring?  Tips for making your
        day less bad or the darkness a little less dim? 
Thankfully,
John
        points to the truth: “I am baptizing you with water, but one
        mightier than I is coming. 
        I am not worthy to loosen the thongs of his sandals.  He will baptize you
        with the Holy Spirit and fire.” 
        Repentance is necessary, but it paves the way for
        something better.
One
mightier
        than John is coming.  A
        lot mightier in fact, such that John, great as he is, feels
        unworthy to touch even his sandals.  And here is the reason
        for our Advent joy, which exceeds even the best hopes the world
        has to offer: There is in Christ and his grace, something so
        much better than “less bad.” 
        We could even call it “very good.”  In fact, it’s the well
        spring of all goodness that completely banishes the darkness of
        sin altogether just like the noonday sun banishes shadows.  We can see by the
        light of dawn, but full sunlight is more dazzling, revealing the
        true color and beauty of things in a way that has no rival.
As
        Christians, we rejoice in Christ’s light come into the world in
        fullness.  It means
        that, by life in the Holy Spirit, we cannot just avoid sin, but
        live in virtue.  Beyond
        “not stealing or selfish hoarding,” we can make a gift out of
        ourselves in Christlike generosity. We can proceed beyond
        foolishness, through worldly craftiness, even to arrive at
        prudence and wisdom itself. 
        We can even live not by lies, but courageously and boldly
        for the truth.  All
        that, we do in Christ.  We
        don’t just dodge the bullet of sin and death by a lucky break,
        to which we merely say “memo male.”  Rather, by God’s mercy
        we even inherit eternal life, and in rapture we proclaim “Deo
        Gratias.”  For what
        did the Messiah bring beyond “less bad,” if not the goodness of
        God himself?