On Thanksgiving Weekend, at the beginning of a new liturgical season, officially, New Year in the church’s calendar, dependent on the movement of the cosmos, the Gospel of Mark asks us to stay awake! Be alert! Beginnings are always important in any endeavor. That's why waiting and staying awake marks the First Sunday of Advent. It appears he knows exactly what is happening in the current times. Advent is a time to prepare for the coming of the Lord in human flesh, the supreme gift of God who came to us to redeem and reconcile humanity with God. This is the time of the year when our schedule becomes so busy. We are feeling pressured about getting shopping done, Christmas cards dropped in the mail and make the Christmas parties planned out with the exception of 2020. The hope of advent is that the dark days brought by the pandemic will be diminished.
The prophet Isaiah’s message is of profound longing of the absence of God felt at a time of deep loss, cancelled family and community gathering which is so important for social cohesion and mental wellbeing. Coming together to celebrate the Eucharist brings joy, comfort and consolation which strengthens relationships. Isaiah, with high intensity, said, “Oh that you would rend the heavens and come down, with the mountains quaking before you, while you wrought awesome deeds we could not hope for, such as they had not heard of from of old.” Tear down the heavens! Open it up and come down to us! The prophet’s cry was a lament desperately pleading God to do something urgently. The world is in a mess. Our lives are in trouble. We can’t wait for you. Please come to the rescue and do not delay. Send us the best of humanity, the most talented, the smartest, peacemakers to get us out of this present crisis and the perils of humankind. Heal our land. Help us to practice civilly. End the pandemic. Help us to work together. Do something as soon as possible. Stakes are high. We come to you because “No ear has ever heard, no eye ever seen, any God but you doing such deeds for those who wait for him” (Is. 63: ). And yet, in spite of our yearning, we are willing to wait as challenging as it is. Remember, “There is none who calls upon your name, who rouses himself to cling to you; for you have hidden your face from us and have delivered us up to our guilt.” While waiting, we will remain active, alive and alert! We won't be lukewarm and complacent. Advent is a time of waiting for the anniversary of the coming of the Lord Jesus in the flesh and his second coming which we have been immersed in the last few weeks. Advent ushers a new liturgical cycle marked by waiting, waiting and waiting. When you wait for something, you are alert. You can’t sleep on it. You can't sit down and leave the rest to chance. Many of us have been left behind by the bus in the terminal, by the train in the train station, by the plane in the airport for whatever reason. We are no stranger to waiting. We can’t wait to end the madness 2020 has brought us. We tracked the behavior of SARS-COV-2. We checked data and analyzed the facts. We followed the trajectory of the virus. We know what it means to wait in isolation for test results. We have waited for months for the wonder drug, vaccines and therapeutics that hopefully would put us back closer to normal life. We know what it means to wait in check- out lines in grocery stores with our masks and 6 ft apart.
Advent is a time of waiting in joyful anticipation, spiritual preparation and forward-looking festive celebration. Maybe just once, priest as I am, let me do a play of words-merge these two opposing words- Christmas Holidays referring to almost the same thing in the advent season. Holidays outside, Advent inside, waiting brings them both best described in secular terms as the most wonderful time of the year. Advent is a blend and a mixture of the sacred and the secular, the contrast between darkness and light as the season draws us closer to the incarnation of the Lord. Why do we wait? What does it feel like to wait for someone? What happens when we don't wait? Why does God want us to get better at it?
Let’s end this short reflection with the Collect (Opening Prayer) Grant, you faithful, we pray, almighty God, the resolve to run forth to meet your Christ with righteous deeds a this coming, so that, gathered at his right hand, they may be worthy to possess the heavenly Kingdom. Amen.
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May God bless you abundantly!
Bishop Edward J. Weisenburger