What am I experiencing in my life, as Advent begins?
Many of us are in an ideal place to begin Advent, but we
don’t know it. It can be tempting to think that, because we are struggling
these days, we can’t enter into Advent without a big change in our mood or
without distancing ourselves from our real experience. Nothing could be further
from the truth. Advent is about letting God come to us. We do the letting and
God does the coming. And, the whole mystery of our faith is that God is not
reluctant to come into an unusual relationship (like Mary and Joseph’s) or to
be born in the poverty of a makeshift stable. We are tempted to prepare for
Advent by cleaning everything up first – by, in effect, saving ourselves first.
Our opening to Advent is to realize we need saving and to accept the saving
love of our God.
So, what are we experiencing? That is the first Advent
question. If we chew that question, then the Isaiah reading will sound so good
to our ears. Are we the people “who walk in darkness” or have “thick clouds”
over us? Is the way before us full of valleys and hills? Does it seem like we
are in a desert? Are there wild beasts out there who are ready to devour us?
Have we been guilty of some things we aren’t proud of? Have we lost touch with
who we really want to be? Has our fidelity become a bit shabby? Then, Isaiah
proclaims that our God is ready to come and save us. And, none of the things
that I see as barriers even matter to God.
Then, is Advent a passive season? No, we have work to do,
but it is different from what we first think it is. It starts with
understanding what our preparation is. If we haven’t prepared our hearts to be
open to asking for salvation, we’ll never shout, beg, plead, “Come, Lord,
Jesus!” Our work is to become who we are. Advent is a humble season, a season
of self-awareness. To say it another way, before we decorate our homes for
Christmas, we have to clear away some of the false masks we might wear. These
made up identities help us be more “presentable” to others, and at times they
even fool us. When I look in the mirror, which “me” do I see? There is nothing
wrong with putting our best foot forward in public, and it is quite
understandable when we want others to see our best selves. But, before our own
consciences and before God, we want to be transparent and real. We want to have
no illusion. If there is struggle in my life – and there has to be some
struggle in all our lives – then we want to acknowledge that before our God and
to let that struggle be the door into Advent’s graces.
How can we have hope and expect God will come to us? The
readings of Advent open up a whole series of promises, full of powerful images,
that keep reminding us that our God will come to save us. They free our
imaginations to see and experience that coming with drama and joy – a banquet
with “choice wines and rich, juicy food.” They invite us to imagine when “a
time will come for singing.” They give us the opportunity to hope beyond our
wildest hopes in the past – “the lion will lie down with the lamb” and “they
will prepare for war no more.” They open our hearts to imagine the love of our
God embracing us in the coming of one like us, who knows our life and its
struggles and offers us the hope of the Spirits presence with us every day, in
every moment.
What are the key first steps to enter into Advent? We can
all slow down. We can all breathe more deeply. We can all begin to trust that
this will be a blessed time. Then, when we let ourselves be who we are, and
hear the Scriptures, we can begin to quietly pray, “Come, Lord, Jesus.” We
might expand that prayer, in quiet moments of our days ahead, “Come into my
life. I trust you don’t mind if it is still messy. I believe you love me,
because I need your love. I don’t fear you can’t find the way to my heart. Come
and fill me with peace and the love only you can give.” Some of us will want to
open our hands on our laps or hold up our arms in the privacy of our rooms and
say out loud, “Come, Lord, Jesus, come into this house, into my family, into
our struggles. Come and heal us, and give us join again. Come and unite us and
let us experience, each in our own way, a bit of the joy you are offering me
now.”
And, before a single decoration goes up, we have prepared
for Christmas’ message with the foundation of faith, with the mystery of
Advent’s gift. God wants to be with us. Advent is letting God’s will be done in
our hearts and in our everyday lives.
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