The Sunday before the First Sunday of Advent, the Solemnity of Christ the King, is also the last Sunday of the current liturgical year. This year, December 1st marks the First Sunday of Advent and the start of a new liturgical year, in this case, 2025, for us Catholics and other Christian denominations who observe the month-long season of Advent. This year we also start “our Catholic/Christian New Year” exactly one month before the secular celebration of “New Year’s.” That doesn’t mean we as Catholics should not celebrate on December 31 and January 1 with the rest of the world, but we should always keep in mind that new beginning that we can all embark upon when we light the first of the four candles of the Advent wreath. Yet, with Christ as our Light, we can also remember that each and every day can be a day for a new start, a new beginning – not only when Advent or Lent or Easter or Christmas begins – but any and every day is a good day for us to recommit ourselves and renew our Baptism and continue to be a faithful and faith-filled follower of Jesus. Jesus knows that faithfulness and discipleship are not always easy crosses to carry, but our willingness to carry them is what Jesus wants, and He will help us each step of the way at our invitation to Him. That’s where the faithfulness and the discipleship come in – our Blessed Mother, the Twelve Apostles, the many men and women who joined Jesus’ mission and traveled with Him in His three-year mission, and all the saints who followed them - they all committed themselves, each with his or her difficulties. But letting Jesus help us through those difficulties through our faithfulness and discipleship is the key to our growth in faith, hope, and love. Starting this December 1st, let’s make 2025 a truly good year for us, the Church.