To read the texts click on the texts: Isa 63:16-17,19; 64: 2-7;1 Cor 1:3-9; Mk13:33-37
A
man was being chased by a lion and began to run as fast as his legs would carry
him, but he realized that the lion was gaining ground. He decided to change
course and veered to the right, but as he turned, there was a tiger coming
towards him. He was at his wits’ end and did not know what to do and so in his
desperation he turned left to escape the tiger and soon found himself nearing
the edge of a precipice. He was now perspiring not only from the strain of his
effort but also because of fear that had gripped him. Then he woke up.
Are
you awake or if you have been asleep have you woken up yet? “Stay awake!” is
the rallying call of the Gospel text of today and sets the theme for the whole
season of Advent. To stay awake – what does it mean for us today? What does it
mean to stay awake when churches and other places of worship are being burned
to the ground? What does it mean to wake up when women are being raped and
dehumanized? What does it mean to stay awake when human beings are being
tortured and killed mercilessly? What does it mean when our words and motives
are being misunderstood?
It
means very clearly that disciples of Jesus need not concern themselves with
apocalyptic speculation or predictions of the future. They must remember that
doing God’s will has no relationship to the timing of divine judgments. Neither
should the disciples concern themselves with the fate of those who persecute
them or who reject the message of unconditional love. The only question the
master will ask is whether the servants have been faithful to their call as
disciples, whether despite all odds they have been instruments of that love
which he showed when he hung from the cross.
Being
a disciple of Jesus does not just happen suddenly. It is a commitment that must
be made constantly and a decision that must be renewed at every moment of every
day. The root supposition of Jesus’ message is: we can aim higher. Holiness is
possible. We are not obliged to merely accept the forces of cruelty,
selfishness and oppression, within ourselves or in the world around us. We have
to keep fighting against them and show them up for what they really are and
once we have done all that is required of us; we must turn to God and open
ourselves to his transforming grace and love.
This
is also the message of the other two readings this Sunday. The prophet Isaiah
is under no illusions about the selfishness and malice human nature is capable
of. “Our sins blew u away like the wind”, he says. And yet, he goes on, “Oh
that you would rend the heavens and come down”. If only the skies would open up
and someone, something would come from outside of our troubled world and focus
our attention on something other than ourselves and our narrow parochial
interests! Something or someone from beyond ourselves to get our attention,
move our gaze from our navels, and challenge us to work together rather than
against one another.
In
the Psalm, too, we hear the anguished voice of Israel, imploring God to look
down from His heavenly throne – to save and shepherd His people. The psalmist,
like Isaiah, is confident that Israel will indeed experience the protection of
God who will come as he has always done in the past.
In
this season of Advent, we declare that Isaiah’s cry has been answered. In
response to the Psalmist’s plea, God has indeed looked down on his people and
saved them in a way that they never imagined possible. This salvation is
achieved not through violence or retaliating by throwing rock for thrown rock.
The cry is not answered by retaining anger and resentment against those who
seem to us to willfully and wantonly destroy places of worship and the homes of
the innocent. It is not answered by taking up arms and indulging in the same
vile acts that others have engaged in. It is answered as God comes in the flesh
to be among us, full of grace and truth. It is answered as the Son of God dies and
is raised for the whole of creation.
Paul
encouraged the Corinthians by reminding them about God’s answer to the cry of
the whole of creation. God’s grace has been given to them in Jesus Christ, and
in every way they have been enriched by him. God is faithful.
With
real anticipation we are called to live an ongoing life of faith, always open
to what God promised to do, always trustful because God is faithful.
Anticipation means staying awake, being alert and watchful. Thus Advent is a
symbol of the Christian lifestyle. Not just a mood we experience at a certain
time of year. We know that while we despair at many happenings today, our world
is not forsaken by God. Our Spirits are turned from despair to trust.
The
symbolism of Advent is the symbolism of preparing ourselves for the imminent
arrival of God: not only his entry into human history, commemorated at
Christmas, but also the impact he would have on our lives now, if we made ready
to welcome him or indeed, in the case of many of us, reawakened our desire for
God which we have managed to bury under a pile of other preoccupations.
As
Jesus says in the Gospel text of today, when God comes he must not find us
asleep!
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