For a lot of history, the church has treated Advent in the same manner they treated Lent; there was more longing and penitence and less shopping and decorating. We miss so much skipping over Advent: a punch line needs a joke. We don't do waiting in our culture-- we're far too important and busy.
I've been on a quest for a good Advent devotional book, a guide: Watch for the Light. In this context, "good" means intelligent not sentimental, insightful not cliche, what I need to hear not what I want to hear.
I think I may have found it... after reading November 24th's reading, Blumhardt's "Action in Waiting":
".... We live in a mass of wrongs and untruths, and they surround us as a dark, dark night. Not even in the most flagrant things do we manage to break through....
"Anyone whose attention is fixed on the coming reign of God and who wants to see a change brought about in God's house will become more and more aware that there exists a universal wrongness that is pulled over us like a choking, suffocating blanket." (5-6)
"We must speak in practical terms. Either Christ's coming has meaning for us now, or else it means nothing at all." (10)
"The all-important thing is to keep your eyes on what comes from God and to make way for it to come into being here on earth. If you always try to be heavenly and spiritually minded, you won't understand the everyday work God has for you to do...." (12)
Humble thyself. "Because a transformation of this scale can never be achieved by human means, but only by divine intervention, Advent (to quote Bonhoeffer again) might be compared to a prison cell 'in which one waits and hope and does various unessential things... but is completely dependent on the fact that the door of freedom has to be opened from the outside.' It is a fitting metaphor. But dependency does not release us from responsibility. If the essence of Advent is expectancy, it is also readiness for action: watchfulness for every opening, and willingness to risk everything for freedom and a new beginning." (xvi)
I like how the writers lean into the tension of watching and willingness. In fact, I need it.
I'll close with the poem the book opens:
Lo, in the silent night
A child to God is born
And all is brought again
That ere was lost or lorn.
Could but thy soul, O man,
Become a silent night!
God would be born in thee
And set all things aright!
15th Century
*Haha, a little Advent humor.
1 comment:
Hey Joy, Are you around over the weekend? I have to put together the women's group study and am wondering if I can pick your brain about the second week of advent.
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