Showing posts with label waiting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label waiting. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 18, 2018

While You Are Waiting



Advent is a season of waiting. We wait for our celebrations on Christmas day. We count down the days using Advent calendars to help our little ones curb their anticipation. We think about the gift that arrived in the manger. We mull the circumstances and consequences around the birth and the expectant waiting of the pregnant mother. Those looking for the Messiah had waited in vain for a word from God. The heavens had been silent for over 400 years, prior to that not-so-silent night when the startling announcement of a savior's arrival came to the shepherds. And we look forward to the time when Christ will return to usher us into the fulfilment of all our waiting.

But as we wait, how well are we waiting? Honking horns in parking lots, impatient remarks under our breath when someone has more that 12 items in the express lane, snapping at family members for not meeting expectations, withdrawing from events because our seasonal despondency tempts us to isolation? Or do we sit in rapt adoration? Silent worship? Quiet contemplation of the wondrous gift given as "God imparts to human hearts the blessings of his heaven"? Do we buy less items that will be in the landfill in two months and choose to give experiences or handmade items instead? Do we consider meeting the practical needs of those in addiction treatment centres or recent immigrants whose property needs our maintenance skills? Do we send a loving greeting to a friend far away? Do we include estranged family in our dinner invitations?

The real question in our waiting is this: are we actively making space so our hearts can fully receive the gifts Jesus brings, even if they are disguised as work or sacrifice? Can we be still long enough to hear the quiet whisper of the Spirit? To express love. To allow joy to bubble up? To craft a place of peace in our home. To choose patience. Speak a kind word, do good for someone who can never reciprocate. To notice beauty, to be faithful in our daily mundane duties.

When rushing, pushing, hurrying and over-indulging is the theme of the day, can we choose instead to be gentle and self-controlled?

In 2012, a movie version of Tolkien's classic book, The Hobbit, was released. In it, Saruman thinks evil must be defeated with great power. But Gandalf is not convinced. He says it is the little things, the everyday choices, which can overcome evil with good. Bilbo was weak, but he became strong in his actions. He was used for good, despite not having great power.

We can fight evil in a similar way. The daily choices we make have larger consequences. As you wait in this last week leading up to Christmas, actively consider: How will I spend my time? Will I go outside my self-protective comfort zone? Will I make that nasty remark? Will I speak a kind word? Will I take offense? Or will I forgive a longstanding grudge? There is big evil in this world, but it can be fought, by God’s grace and by Spirit-controlled actions, one after another.

Embark on the unexpected adventure... wait on the Lord... and you will find strength. Wait for the Lord... and you will find joy.






Photo 1: Created on WordSwag
Photo 2: by Ben White on Unsplash, scripture text added in WordSwag


Thursday, November 29, 2018

Pilgrim Year: Advent


Advent is the 40 days leading up to Christmas. A season of attentive waiting and active preparation. Advent simply means to come, and we are waiting for the coming of the Christ. This takes its form both in reflecting once again on the first coming of Jesus as a baby and the anticipation of his second coming to gather his children home.

My start to observing advent this year is driven partly by my attentiveness to my One Word for 2018: "depth." It is the idea of intentionally seeking out more depth in my faith, in my relationships, in my life. To go beyond the familiar, the shallow, the easy, and to dig deeper into origins, values, history and meaning.

I began an advent reading on Monday, November 26, with a Kindle version of Waiting Here For You: An Advent Journey of Hope by Louie Giglio. It contains daily readings, scripture, meditation, and prayer which take you through this season of waiting. "It teaches that waiting is the means God often uses to carry his plans in our lives. It brings us back to the truth that our waiting is never wasted when we are waiting on God." It uncovers hope, peace and encouragement for your soul as anticipation leads toward celebration.

I am finding it both comforting and convicting. I commend it to you. The Kindle version is only $1.99 -- you can click the book title to order.

Another beautiful resource is Pilgrim Year: Advent. Steve Bell has written a series of booklets which follow the seasons of the Christian (liturgical) calendar year. It includes meditations, reflections, songs and poems. I just received my boxed set in the mail today and I am already delighted with the beginning writings on Advent. The first song lyrics have stopped me in my tracks:

Ready My Heart
Music and Lyric by Lois Shuford

Ready my heart for the birth of Immanuel
Ready my soul for the Prince of Peace
Heap the straw of my life
For His body to lie on
Light the candle of hope
Let the child come in

Alleluia, alleluia
Alleluia, Christ the Saviour is born 

Mine is the home that is poor and is barren
Mine is the stable of cold and stone
Break the light to each corner
Of doubt and of darkness
Now the Word is made flesh
For the birth of me

Think of it. Jesus comes: into our poor, barren parts; our stone cold "stables," where he will heap the straw of my life as his dwelling place. He lights hope in me, he brings his light into the darkness where doubt festers. He comes so I can truly live.

You can listen to Steve Bell's rendition of the song here.
You can purchase individual books or the boxed set here.




Photo 1: depositphotos.com #26373653, standard license
Photo 2: Sourced online here
Photo 3: Sourced online here