SUNDAY 7 DECEMBER 2025: THE SECOND SUNDAY OF ADVENT.

Spur Pruning Pinot Noir Vineyards Without Losing Crop Yield, American Vineyard, October 2019.

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“John the Baptist appeared, preaching in the desert of Judea and saying, ‘Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand!’        Matthew 3:1-2.

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In 2023 I was in the Sonoma Valley visiting a friend. It was in April, and as I looked out at the many vineyards in that part of the world, I saw a very similar sight to the one above. Those poor vines looked like they had been trimmed down – pruned – to almost nothing! I thought it would be miraculous for any of them to produce anything! That shows how much I know about vines: nothing! Had I returned to Sonoma later that year, before the grapes are harvested, this is what I would have found:

St. Francis Vineyards 2025, Sonoma Valley, California, USA.

Why this sudden interest in vineyard husbandry, or viticulture? Advent! What if we did all that pruning to our own life during this holy season, cutting our lives down to bare essentials to look like the pictures above? That would give us the chance to grow once more into the children that God wants all of us to be. The pictures above show the difference over perhaps three seasons of one year. We have four weeks. 

Alright – where to begin? Today’s first reading could be the start: “…a shoot shall sprout from the stump of Jesse, and from his roots a bud shall blossom. The spirit of the LORD shall rest upon him: a spirit of wisdom and of understanding, a spirit of counsel and of strength, a spirit of knowledge and of fear of the LORD, and his delight shall be the fear of the LORD.” It could almost have been written with viticulture in mind! The “stump of Jesse” ties in well with the pruned vines above: it suggests an absolute start. We could begin with a simple goal, to clear one’s mind, to concentrate for a moment on what is essential to our lives, and what isn’t. People are essential! How have I treated those nearest and dearest? Could it be better? And we are off and running. Let us all hope we can trim our lives down the absolute essentials, and grow from there.

It might help to remember that tomorrow, December 8, is the Solemnity of the Immaculate Conception and is a holyday of obligation, despite being a Monday. This feast is in recognition that Our Lady was conceived without stain of original sin, the only person so blest. Pope Pius IX declared this to be dogmatically true in 1854, meaning that all Catholics must accept this teaching as true. Hence Mary was prepared perfectly to receive God’s Holy Spirit and bear the Son of God. It is a teaching that goes back even to the 2nd century. Early writers compared Mary to Eve, one obedient to the will of God, the other disobedient. Remember that the angel greeted her as one “full of grace” which we say with every Hail Mary, meaning that Mary was full of the presence of God. The Eastern Church was the first to acknowledge this as a feast in the 7th century. Many years later Pope Pius formally declared this to be a true teaching of the church in 1854. Something intriguing happened just a few years later in 1858. In that year Our Lady appeared to Bernadette Soubirous in Lourdes in the French Pyrenees. This young girl had difficulties learning, was often sickly, and yet claimed a beautiful lady had appeared to her several times. Bernadette was asked time and again to find out the Lady’s name. Eventually the Lady said “I am the Immaculate Conception”, which Bernadette did not understand, but insisted that was the Lady’s answer. It went a very long way in convincing the church authorities that Bernadette was telling the  truth. There was no way this peasant girl would have been aware of the Pope’s declaration four years earlier or even understood it if she had! The resulting miracles which the church has recognized in Lourdes could be considered confirmation of all that. Although we all have not been perfect in the eyes of God, we can ask for guidance and strength in this Advent season to return to the beginning and like those pruned vines, start again. So – can we conceive of a life better, purer, more attuned to God’s will than our own, and in so doing become a stronger, better Child of God?

The Coronation of the Virgin, Velazquez 1635, Museo del Prado, Madrid, Spain.

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