It’s
Advent! For too many years, my first
response this realization was to make a list of what needed to be done in the
weeks ahead to prepare for Christmas. It’s
easy to feel anxiety about “getting it all done.” Or we can pause and reflect on entering into
Advent this year as a season with meaning.
I know it will be a better season if I can re-adjust my expectations in
a way that will bring me to Christmas Day with a closer relationship with God
and a deeper connection to the nativity.
I begin my
Scripture reflections on this First Sunday of Advent with a hope and a
reassurance: “The days are coming when I will fulfill
the promise I made….” (Jeremiah 33:14-16)
This passage
from Jeremiah was originally meant to encourage a people who were devastated by
war, whose country was overrun and whose leaders had been taken away by the
enemy. The Israelites were unsure of who
they were and what they would become as a people. Jeremiah compares them to a forest that has
been cut down, leaving no safety, no resources.
And to those
people, God promises that out of that barren land, a tiny shoot, a small sign
of life will appear on a lifeless stump: “I will raise up for
David a just shoot; he shall do what is right and just in the land.”
God goes on to promise them not only that Judah would one day be safe,
but that Jerusalem would be secure. To
those living back then, the promise would have seemed outsized and almost
impossible, yet offering hope.
God’s
promise of safety, security and love is for us, too. Advent is the perfect time to ponder the life
we have today. How can I live that
life? Am I wandering in my own desert
aimless and confused? Or do I really
believe in my heart that God is here in my everyday life with me, helping me to
be safe and secure?
In Luke’s
Gospel, Jesus, in His deep familiarity with the “end time” readings of the Old
Testament, offers a vision of a world out of order. The sun and moon are no longer in alignment
and the roar of the sea and waves terrify people (Luke 21:25-36). These readings don’t frighten me, but they do
grab my attention, as if God is begging me not to be overwhelmed with what is
out of order, but to pay attention to the promise, here and now.
Jesus talks
about the anxieties of daily life and cautions us to “not
become drowsy” from
them. I know I’ve experienced anxiety in
life over family, health and work. We
can fret about everything from a world-wide pandemic to systemic racism to our
“To Do” list. But Jesus offers us hope,
consolation and His endless love. He
tells us to pay attention at all times and to pray for strength. What He really wants is for us to know how
very deeply each one of us is loved and cherished by Him. I find this very consoling.
Relying on
that love releases my fierce grip on control of my life. We can stop each morning, set aside our “To
Do” list and pray. We can ask God to
help us feel how deeply we are loved and to help us let go of things that
really don’t matter.
I am moved
to turn to the words from Saint Paul’s First Letter to the Thessalonians, “May
the Lord make you increase and abound in love for one another … so as to
strengthen your hearts…” (1 Thessalonians 3:12-4:2). It’s Advent!
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