Isaiah 2:1-5
This morning I awake with the luxury of imagining how I
might spend this day. For it is not a
school day, not a work day. It could be
a shopping day, a reading day, a playing with the children day, a visiting with
relatives day.
I am aware that as I write this, many have been awake
through the night, stocking shelves or making lists, preparing for the shopping
of the day,. That right now, there are folks waiting at the doors eager to get
the bargain that will be just the right gift and that will propel retailers’
books into the black.
Many of you, I imagine have traditions for this day, even as
you have traditions for Thanksgiving and for the days and weeks leading up to
Christmas. I wonder what your tradition
is? As a child, my grandmother packed a
picnic of pimento cheese and hot chocolate for me and my sisters, my dad, my grandfather,
my uncles and my cousins and sent us off to the horse races at Churchill Downs.
While we were cheering on our horses, my grandmother, my mom and aunts went out
to lunch and shopping. How lovely it was
to have a day, just to enjoy family, with no worries about what the next day
would bring. How good it is to have a day after the big feast making and before
the travel home, before the return to routine and the beginning of the rush of
December.
I pray that whatever you are doing this day, you will find a
quiet time to think and even talk with your family about the way you will begin
the new year that is coming, a new year that for us in the Christian tradition begins
on the first Sunday of Advent, which falls this year on December 1.
Advent means “to come.”
In this season leading up to Christmas, we prepare for three comings,
three advents of Jesus. The first is the
coming of Jesus over two thousand years ago, to a faithful people, Abraham and
Sarah, Moses, Miriam and Aaron, King David and prophet Isaiah, Elizabeth,
Zachariah, Simeon, Anna, shepherds and kings, the simple and the wise, who
watched for the coming of God’s promised Messiah.
we can be awake and alert standing on tiptoe, wide eyed and watchful, ready to receive him whenever he comes
The second advent is the coming of Christ among us now. We know that every day, Emmanuel,
God-always-with-us, comes to us in the waters of baptism, in the breaking of
bread and wine, in the reading of God’s word, in the fellowship of disciples, the
delight of creation, and in the least expected places. Christ surprises us, coming to us in
unexpected places, through people we least expect, blessing us with new life.
The third advent we prepare for in this season is the advent
yet to come. Christ will come again, at the
end of time, gathering God’s people, healing all wounds, mending all that has
torn us apart. As author Susan Briehl
writes in her excellent Advent devotional, “as with the coming of Christmas
Day, we cannot make it happen sooner because we are eager, nor can we delay it because
we are not ready. However, we can be
awake and alert standing on tiptoe, wide eyed and watchful, ready to receive
him whenever he comes.” (Briehl, Come,
Lord Jesus, 8)
We affirm these three advents in the prayer we pray before
sharing communion, the Prayer of Great Thanksgiving, “Christ has died, Christ
has risen, Christ will come again.” And
in this season we pray with hopeful hearts, “Come, Lord Jesus!”
Daily devotions through Advent will make us attentive to the
way that Christ has come among us, the way that he comes among us in the midst
of our ordinary and busy lives, and the hope we have in his ultimate
coming. May the days ahead be filled
with wonder and joy at the coming of our Lord, and your table be a place of
sharing the wonders God has shown you.
On this day, no matter how you have chosen to spend it,
may you be met by the One who has come, the One who comes even now and the One
who will come again!
I look forward to this walk with you in the light of the Lord!
Please feel free to post here your thoughts, reflections and family experiences as we watch together for the coming of our Lord!
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