Sunday Homilies with Fr. Mike Schmitz - 12/07/25 Waiting Well: Trust His Timing

Episode Date: December 6, 2025

Homily from the Second Sunday of Advent. We worry while we wait. Advent teaches us not just to wait, but to trust while we wait. When we surrender worry and remember who God is, waiting becom...es a place of grace instead of frustration. Mass Readings from December 7, 2025: Isaiah 11:1-10 Psalm 72:1-2, 7-8, 12-13, 17Romans 15:4-9 Matthew 3:1-12

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Starting point is 00:00:01 Welcome to Sunday homilies with me, Father Mike Schmitz. I hope today's homily inspires and motivates you, and I also hope that it leaves you hungry for the one who gave everything to feed you. If you want to get this and other Sunday Mass resources sent straight to your inbox, sign up at ascensionpress.com slash Sunday, or by texting Sunday to 33777.7. You can also follow or subscribe on your podcast app for weekly notifications. God bless.
Starting point is 00:00:30 The Lord be with you. with your spirit. A reading from the Holy Gospel according to Matthew. Chapter 3, verses 1 through 12. John the Baptist appeared preaching in the desert of Judea and saying, repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand. It was of him that the prophet Isaiah had spoken when he said, A voice of one crying out in the desert,
Starting point is 00:00:52 prepare the way of the Lord, make straight his paths. John wore clothing made of camel's hair and had a leather belt around his waist. His food was locusts and wild honey. at that time Jerusalem all Judea and the whole region around the Jordan were going out to him and were being baptized by him in the Jordan River as they acknowledged their sins. When he saw many of the Pharisees and Sadducees coming to his baptism, he said to them, you brood of vipers.
Starting point is 00:01:19 Who warned you to flee from the coming wrath? Produce good fruit as evidence of your repentance and do not presume to say to yourselves we have Abraham as our father, for I tell you, God can raise up children to Abraham from these stones. Even now the axe lies at the root of the trees. Therefore, every tree that does not bear good fruit will be cut down and thrown into the fire. I am baptizing you with water for repentance. But the one who is coming after me is mightier than I.
Starting point is 00:01:48 I am not worthy to carry his sandals. He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and fire. His winnowing fan is in his hand. He will clear his threshing floor and gather his wheat into his barn. But the chaff, he will be able to be. burn with unquenchable fire. The gospel of the Lord. Praise to you, Lord Jesus Christ.
Starting point is 00:02:10 Might you have a seat? So last week we started this due series, the series through Advent called Waiting Well. And the reality is we'd call it Waiting Well because we don't know how to wait well. Here is this season of Advent, season of preparation, obviously. But it's also a season of waiting. I mean, just think of how
Starting point is 00:02:27 how much we dislike the season of waiting. Because right now probably, you know, December 7th, we are probably already in a place of having gone to maybe already one or true Christmas parties that we, full disclosure, we had a Christmas party last night for our alumni. On Friday, we had a Christmas party for all of our students. And yeah, why? Well, we wanted to get it in before the end of the semester, all those things.
Starting point is 00:02:54 We have excuses. But do you? No, we all have excuses. And the excuses is we don't like waiting. We want it to be here. In fact, there is actually a whole science on waiting, on the study of waiting. In fact, David Maister is a man who he wrote a whole dissertation on the psychology of waiting lines. We talked last week about how much of our lives are spent waiting lines.
Starting point is 00:03:15 And he said this. He said, he found out this. He found out that there are four kinds of waiting we really, really dislike. And he says, when we have to wait in lines, particularly, that we have unoccupied time, we have uncertain wait times, we have unexplained weights, and when we have unfair weights. Right. So as he talks about this, he says that occupied time feels shorter than unoccupied time. So people hate waiting in lines without doing anything, right? So that's number one. Number two, he said uncertain weights feel longer than known weights. That we don't like the unpredictability.
Starting point is 00:03:47 Like, when is the next thing coming? We don't know. Unexplained weights feel longer than explained weights. We just, I want to know why. I want to know the reason why I have to wait here. And lastly, he said unfair weights feel longer than fair weights. That perceived injustice. makes it worse. And it comes down to this. It comes down to a lot of us when we have to wait. The hardest part of waiting is,
Starting point is 00:04:10 I want to know why or I want to know when. I don't know why this is happening. I want to know when it's going to end. And so there actually are some clever ways that people have kind of worked around this. So Disney, in fact, you know, imagine a place that everyone goes to have fun and then you show up and you wait.
Starting point is 00:04:26 Disney, when it comes to those theme parks, they have introduced in the course of waiting interactive like Easter eggs that if you're waiting a line, you can find little spots, you play little games as you're walking in line or as you're standing there in line to be able to engage the guests. Another thing that you can do is you can start services before the actual the wait ends. So I don't know if you've ever gone to a restaurant and you're in the waiting area, waiting to be seated. Sometimes the host or hostess will give you a menu and say, hey, just take a look at our menu or maybe, hey, go up to the bar and order some drinks.
Starting point is 00:04:56 Now all you're doing is waiting right there, but they've given you something to do. And so it feels like you're actually accomplishing something or actually I happen to have gone to the hospital relatively recently. And one of the things they do is you go in, your appointment isn't ready yet or the doctor is not ready yet, the PA is not ready yet. So what they do is to give you some information to fill out. So you feel like you're already making progress. So it gives you something. It's not idle waiting. It's not an unoccupied time.
Starting point is 00:05:20 One thing I think is really helpful is that people you will use transparency and updates so that waiting feels like it's happening faster. what I say it is, is that if you have like accurate wait times displayed, I mean, you've seen this on the highway, whereas, you know, it takes 15 minutes to get to 494 from here. Like, okay, that's good. I know, I know. That's how long it's going to take. If you've ever ordered Domino's Pizza, they are genius in the sense of they have their Domino's Pizza Tracker, where it's like, okay, hey, you put your order in, you made their phone call, and you can find, it's in the oven right now. It's out, oh my gosh, it's out of the oven already. It's on its way. Joe is bringing it to your house, like that pizza tracker makes waiting seem more tolerable. Why? Because what makes waiting feel
Starting point is 00:06:02 intolerable is when I don't know why it's happening and I don't know when it's going to end. What we do, when we don't know why and when we don't know when it's going to end, here's how a lot of us end up waiting. We just worry. Again, this whole advent, we're going to be talking about what it is to wait well, but one of the ways that you and I wait is we don't know how to wait well because we worry. We simply anxiously wait, even though we're called the wait well. And so, you ask the question, okay, well, what's the big deal? Why is it so important to be able to wait well? Why is it so important to not worry while we wait? Well, first of all, worry chokes the life out of life.
Starting point is 00:06:55 Worry chokes the joy out of life. I mean, when was the last time? We realized this. We know this is true. That worry steals joy. Why? Worry steals joy because it shifts our mind and heart out of the present and into an imagined future.
Starting point is 00:07:10 Usually, not only shifts our mind and heart out of the present to imagine future, but usually that imagined future is filled with our worst fears, right? It's very, very rare. That when someone says, what if? It's like, what if something amazing happens? is usually what if something devastating happens? Because we know this. The worry and joy cannot coexist
Starting point is 00:07:28 in the Christian's heart for very long. Worry and you can't be worried and joyful. No one, not just Christians, but no one can be simultaneously worried and joyful at the same time. Again, because why? Because worry dominates our thoughts with these ideas of what if.
Starting point is 00:07:45 And again, it's most often not, what if something amazing happens, but what if something awful happens? we catastrophes, and we end up filling that gap between where we are and when we want to be with fear. I came across this statistic the other day that said that, all the things we worry about, 91.4% of the things that we worry about never actually end up happening. Now, pause on that for a second.
Starting point is 00:08:12 While we're waiting, we worry. But what's going to happen? when 91.4% of the things we worry about never actually even end up happening. And so what we do is we pre-live the pain. If 91.4% of things that we worry about are probably negative things, they'll never happen, but I've experienced, my heart has experienced, my mind, my neurochemistry has experienced this as if it's happened because I pre-live pain. And that's why there's a saying that the one who worries makes themselves suffer.
Starting point is 00:08:46 twice. Maybe it happens. Maybe that, you know, 8. Whatever percent actually does happen, but I've made myself suffer twice. We know that one of the reasons we can't be, as Christians, we can't worry, is that worry chokes the joy out of life. Another reason we can't, we shouldn't worry is because worry doesn't work. It's like, let's just be honest. Worry doesn't work. Now, here's the interesting thing. Worry feels like work. Like worry makes us feel like we're doing something. Why? Because fretting is occupying time, but it's not effective. It takes our time, but accomplishes nothing. It takes all of our mental energy, takes our emotional energy, worry, takes all this stuff, but does nothing.
Starting point is 00:09:29 In fact, there's a man named Baz Luhrman. Bazelerman had this quote. He said, hey, don't worry. Or do. But realize that worrying is about as effective as solving a math equation by chewing bubble them. Like, it does nothing. We realize this. Worry chokes joy, so it's the life out of life, worry does nothing, and yet we still do it. Ultimately, though, of course, the reason while we worry, while we wait, is summed up by Presbyterian pastor Tim Keller. Tim Keller said it like this. This is kind of a paraphrase or rearranging of how he said it. He said, he said, bitterness. bitterness, bitterness is believing that God got it wrong.
Starting point is 00:10:13 And worry is not believing that God will get it right. We look back at our past, we feel of bitterness. That's because I believe at some way, in some level, I believe God got it wrong. And worry is to believe that God will not get it right. So the source of worry is that I don't trust. I mean, that's it. That's when it comes down to.
Starting point is 00:10:34 The source of worry is that I don't trust in God's goodness or I don't trust in God's timing. this is all of us here in Advent this is what we need to come face to face with because we're called to wait well and when we worry while we wait what that reveals is the depth of my heart the depth of my heart is that I don't either trust God's goodness
Starting point is 00:10:50 or I don't trust God's timing and this not trusting God's goodness I would say this I would say that not trusting God's goodness is the issue of our age that in the past not even too long ago when I first got on campus a big question big issue was the new atheists right people were asking that question
Starting point is 00:11:07 has God really exist you don't find that question ask this often anymore. Because I think that people realize, no, it's clear looking at the world and looking at the reality. It's clear that God exists. It's clear that something can't come from nothing. So someone must have made this. So the question of does God exist is less on the forefront of young adults' minds. But I'll tell you what question is on the forefront of young adults' minds.
Starting point is 00:11:33 It's not is God real, but is God good. Most young adults we work with on campus, they know this. Yeah, I know God's real. Their question is, is God good? Because they look around at this world. They look around at this world of pain and suffering and injustice and things are unfair. And they say, wait a second, I know God exists, but can I trust him? And this isn't, this is nothing new. It's not new for 2025 or 2026. It's not new for us right now. This is, in fact, the first temptation ever known to humanity is what happens. Here's Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden. and the serpent comes in and the serpent doesn't say, hey, does God really exist? That's not the question.
Starting point is 00:12:13 The challenge is, hey, did God really say you couldn't eat of this fruit? No, no, God, he says, no, God, we can eat of any of the fruit. He's so good. He just doesn't eat any of this. We just can't eat that fruit or else will die. And the serpent says, no, no, no, no, you'll certainly not die. God knows full well. The moment you eat of it, you'll be like him. And here's the secret that he has wanted you to know.
Starting point is 00:12:31 He doesn't want you to be like him. You actually can't trust him. the first temptation that's attacked the human heart is this question. Can I trust in God's goodness? You know, it's just fascinating because everything, virtually everything after that story is God trying to win our trust. God trying to prove to us that he can be trusted. In fact, skip to the end, skip to why we're here on the second Sunday of Advent,
Starting point is 00:13:00 why we're excited about Christmas is why? Because Christmas and Easter, the whole story, declares this, that there's not one aspect of our human life, not one aspect of our pain, not one aspect of our suffering, that one aspect of our poverty that God hasn't entered into. Right, I mean, think about this. We're going to hear this in three weeks, that when Jesus became one of us,
Starting point is 00:13:20 he didn't come as a conquering hero, come as a warrior, come as a king, he didn't come as Achilles who could not be defeated. He came, not just as a baby, but as a baby born into more poverty than you and I probably ever experienced in our lives. His life was spent in more desperation, more uncertainty than any of us could ever experience in our lives. His life ended with more unfairness and injustice
Starting point is 00:13:44 than any of us will probably ever experience in our lives. Why? So that you and I can see this God and say, oh, he's good. I can trust him. There's no part of my heart, no part of my life that he keeps himself away from. So I worry, why?
Starting point is 00:14:13 Because I don't know if I can trust God. I don't know if I can trust his goodness. And the answer is the manger. The answer is the cross. You can trust him. The answer is himself. So maybe I know that. Maybe I know I can trust God's goodness,
Starting point is 00:14:30 but maybe I don't know if I can trust this timing because I tell you this, I know so many followers of Jesus, so many disciples of Jesus, so many Catholics who's like, no, no, I know God is. Fuck, I know God is good. I just doesn't.
Starting point is 00:14:41 I'm just not convinced he's going to show up on time. Like, I know God wants the best for me. I just am not sure that it'll arrive. It's not the 30-minute guarantee that Domino's gives me. I need to know when this will end. And I think about this. One of one of my heroes in the Old Testament is King David.
Starting point is 00:15:02 For many reasons, not because he's perfect, but one of the reasons is because, you know, David was anointed. It's First Samuel, Chapter 16. David's anointed king by Samuel when he's a teenager. That's First Samuel, chapter 16. He's anointed to be the king. And then what?
Starting point is 00:15:18 Well, then he waits. Later on, the same chapter, David is in King Saul's court as like a musician. That's not, no, no, I don't know if you know this, but I'm a, you can smell the oil on my head, like I'm actually the next king. But no, no, you're not, you're the musician. That's chapter 16. The next chapter, David defeats Goliath. Great, okay, let's be the king now. Nope, not even close. He has to wait. Next chapter, chapter 18, David has all this military success. Like, he just wins battle after
Starting point is 00:15:43 all he does his win, win, win, no matter what. And all of a sudden, here comes King Saul, who is in this increasing jealousy. Then the next two chapters, Saul tries to kill David twice with a spear and tries a plot to have him killed in battle. It doesn't work. Next multiple chapters, David spends years on the run as a fugitive from the king and a fugitive from the kingdom. In fact, he spares Saul's life twice. He lives among the enemies of Israel, the Philistines. Saul dies and David has crowned king of Judah, but that's it. There's a long, long civil war between David and King Saul's family. And it isn't until second. Samuel chapter 5, which is 15 years after David was anointed that he actually is finally
Starting point is 00:16:28 made king. I don't know if any of us have anything to complain about when it comes to God's timing. David had received this promise. And then in the meantime, what was he called to do? Again, not endure 15 years. Like last week we talked about this. He was called to engage every step of the way during those 15 years. And in that engaging, he was saying, okay, God, trust in your goodness and I trust in your timing. Then when it happened, it happened.
Starting point is 00:16:57 Because he could trust him. In fact, this is my own story. I remember just kind of briefly, when I was a missionary in Central America, I'd been praying, asking God if he wanted me to be a priest, just let me know. I'll just do it, whatever, just tell me.
Starting point is 00:17:09 And it was in God's timing. I thought I was ready. I was like, God, just tell me right now. He didn't. He waited for a long, long time. And finally, when I was ready, and I always say this, that when God revealed,
Starting point is 00:17:19 to me that your next step is to go to the seminary. If you would have done it a week earlier, I would not have been ready. But his time, he was so good. So then, you know, all the steps happened. I went to seminary first year. I was like, well, it doesn't seem like I should leave, so I'll keep going back second year, okay, third year, fourth year, whatever. And I remember the year I was going to get ordained a deacon. It was the big year to make a promise, about a couple of important promises. I was a couple months before ordination. I remember being in adoration and sitting in front of Jesus in the tabernacle and just praying and saying, God, am I supposed to be here?
Starting point is 00:17:50 Like, I had that moment of crisis of, are you going to tell me to leave? Or should I stay? And it was this one of the top five moments of grace in my life up to that point where I just had this declaration of trust. I'm just so grateful to the Lord for this. Basically, I was like, okay, God,
Starting point is 00:18:08 I trust that you brought me here. I remember that moment where it was very clear, you want to be here? Okay, God, I trust that you brought me here. Secondly, okay, God, I trust that if you want me to leave, you'll let me know. And there was not, but what if I miss it?
Starting point is 00:18:23 And like, okay, God, I trust you brought me here. I trust you want me to leave, you'll let me know. You'll let me know in a way I can't miss. Like, he got me there in a way I couldn't miss. God, I trust you're going to let me know in a way I can't miss. And lastly, I remember because I had this image of like, what about I get ordained? And then the next day I meet the love of my life kind of situation.
Starting point is 00:18:40 And it's like, oh, no, it'd be too late. And God's like, oh, shoot. You know, I just got the wrong day in my calendar. And I had this moment of trust of a God, I trust that you want me here. God, I trust that if you want me to leave, you'll let me know. God, I trust if you want me to let me know, you'll let me know in a way I can't miss. And I trust that if you want me to leave, you'll let me know in a way I can't miss and you'll let me know in time. And just when I was able to pray that prayer, all of a sudden there's this profound peace like, oh, I don't have to worry anymore.
Starting point is 00:19:10 Why? Because I don't just trust God's goodness. I trust God's timing. waiting well always involves trust. I think about this. If you're anxious about something right now, if you're waiting for something right now, if you're worried about something right now,
Starting point is 00:19:27 what if you knew that whatever it is you're worried about, what if you knew that it would be resolved tomorrow, would you still allow it to ruin today? Like, whatever it is you're concerned about, whatever is you're worried about, whatever you're anxious over, whatever you're waiting for, if you knew it was all going to be resolved tomorrow, would you still let it spoil today?
Starting point is 00:19:49 If you knew that it was going to resolve next week, would you still let it spoil today? If you knew that this thing that you're just anxiously worried, hurriedly waiting for, if you knew that was going to be resolved next month or next year, would you let it spoil today? And if not, then why? Why let it spoil right now?
Starting point is 00:20:14 We know this. We know that resentment, bitterness, is believing God got it wrong and worry is believing God won't get it right. But to realize this, God is going to take care of it all. Like truly, it's all going to be resolved. It might not be resolved in the way I prefer, but it's all going to, God's going to figure it out.
Starting point is 00:20:35 It's all going to get done. It is all going to be resolved. It will all be completed. You can just trust in this. Because when we trust, it leads to hope. You know, the second reading today from St. Paul's letter to the Romans, he said, by endurance, you grow in hope, by the fact that you and I here are waiting well, waiting without worry, waiting in trust day after day that helps us grow in hope.
Starting point is 00:21:09 Why? Because there's something we're waiting for. There's something we're hoping for. And it's not an outcome. It's not a result. It's the character. of God. It's the character of God who ensures that we can wait in hope because we trust in his goodness and we trust in his timing. And so my invitation, this right now, is this. One of the best ways we can trust in God.
Starting point is 00:21:33 One of the best ways we can hope in God. One of the best ways we can actually lean in and not worry is when we trust God not only with our strength, we trust God with our weakness. Not just when we trust God with our wins, but we trust God with our sins. You know, tonight
Starting point is 00:21:49 on campus, we're going to have reconciliation service. And we're going to invite our students to trust God, trust His goodness, not because they're amazing, not because they're awesome, although they're great,
Starting point is 00:22:03 but to trust him with their sins. And in trusting with their sins, to entrust him with their whole lives. And when you do that, when we do that, we trust in his goodness and trust in his timing, there is no room for worry. This is the very last thing.
Starting point is 00:22:23 I had this imaginary dialogue in my head, recently and it's about really wanting the thing now. I don't want to wait anymore. I want it now. And I heard a voice say, well, why? Like, no, I want this now. Why? The voice, I said this, I said, I want it now so that I can stop worrying.
Starting point is 00:22:43 And maybe that's you. I want this now, why? So I can stop worrying. And I heard this voice in my head. I said this, it said, well, you could just stop worrying now. that actually is an option. I want this to be done so I can stop worrying. And that voice, whatever that's still a small voice in my own heart said,
Starting point is 00:23:02 is you could actually stop worrying right now. That's a legitimate option. Why? Because God is good and his timing is perfect. We don't have to worry. We simply have to trust. And that's what it is to wait well.

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