Advent means "coming" & typically emphasizes themes of Jesus' birth (the first coming) & anticipation of Jesus' return (the second coming) & renewal of all things.
And they are full of little phrases about time:
"In the days to come"
"You know what time it is"
"But about that day & hour no one knows"
And I'm not sure I can manage the sad longing of "in the days to come" or the ambiguity of "no one knows" when the day of justice will dawn.
I've heard lots of sermons saying this.
But I've always wondered:
It seems a slightly more sophisticated version of the things I learned years ago in an evangelical Bible church.
Wait. Wait. Wait.
The past is, well, past.
The future is not yet here.
What about now?
We can celebrate it, re-enact it, live into its memory.
But we don't "wait" for something that has already occurred.
"For tho we sang, 'All glory to God on High and on the earth be peace,' there seems to be today night glory to God nor peace on earth."
He called it a "hunger still unsatisfied."
Only "when real peace is established" then "we shall say Christ is born."
Not just to remember the promise of peace at the birth; not just to await the fullness of peace at some day no one knows.
But Advent NOW.
Not past, not future. Now.
In every life.
Not just Jesus' life, not the life of the Christ to come. Every life. Mine, yours, every neighbor, every friend, everyone we consider an enemy.
Now. Every life.
For what are we preparing?
For someone else to do this for us? For a miracle to drop from heaven? For rapture or death or apocalypse to destroy us?
The Epistle of Romans says, "You know what time it is, how it is now the moment for you to awake."
I do know that. I know now. It is really all we have as human beings.
We hold memory; we long for the future. But what we really have is Advent now.
When you sing peace, live it. When you sit in silence to experience peace, share it. When you hear tidings of peace, shout that good news. When candles light the way to peace, hold your candle high.
Pray for the peace of Jerusalem:
May they prosper who love you.
Peace be within your walls
and quietness within your towers.
He shall judge between the nations,
and shall arbitrate for many peoples;
they shall beat their swords into ploughshares,
and their spears into pruning-hooks;
nation shall not lift up sword against nation,
neither shall they learn war any more.
Blessings for an urgent Advent. Live peaceably now.
(and pls forgive any typos, etc. My little sermon threads are extemporaneous - and mistakes do happen!)