Today’s first reading from Isaiah presents us with a beautiful image. Isaiah says that God is our father and we are the clay. God is the potter and we are all the work of God’s hands. The image, of course, is that of a potter molding clay on a potter’s wheel, shaping and reshaping the clay to achieve what the potter desires. He first lays the base, then builds up the walls, then turns the lip. Isaiah’s image tells us that just as that potter molds the clay, God is molding us. God is forming us by the work of His hands. Now notice Isaiah does not say that God is the potter and we are the pot. The pot is the finished project. We are not the pot; we are the clay. We are the work in progress, the work that is shaped and reshaped by God’s love. None of us is finished.

When you take this image of the potter and place it with the beginning of a new year, the meaning is obvious. We are now beginning a year in which God will change us; he will reshape us. Now some of us here have been on the potter’s wheel for a long time. But none of us is finished. A new year means a new opportunity in which God will continue to form us. And who knows what changes God will make this year.

A new year is a new beginning and God is still at work shaping and reshaping us. We not only believe that God can change us; we believe that God is changing us. Because God is father, the changes that God is making are based on love. So, we do not need to fear the year ahead.

We are also on watch. Watch for what? What are the circumstances in which Jesus is likely to arrive? The gospel presents us with three possibilities. And it does so by mentioning three times of the day: evening, midnight and cockcrow, and morning. These times should be understood in terms of the events of the paschal mystery. Evening is the time that Jesus shared a meal with his disciples on the night before he died, and washed their feet. Evening then is a time for service. Midnight and cockcrow are when Peter denied Jesus and all the disciples abandoned him. Midnight and cockcrow then are times that demand forgiveness. Morning is when the women found the empty tomb. So, morning is a time of joy and thankfulness for God’s goodness. What the gospel is telling us is that we should watch for opportunities of service, forgiveness, and joy, because it is in such moments that we are most likely to meet Jesus.

Therefore, we shall be shaped by the way God wants us. Let Him be the potter and we shall always be the clay. We shall always be on the watch. We do not know the time He will come. So be ready at every moment of our lives. We shall always be at His service and be happy and forgiving to one another. Don’t worry about the TIME. BE READY ALWAYS.

Love and prayers,
Fr. Charley