TWO
ADVENTS
There are two Advents; the one we know about and is
thoroughly written up, especially in Isaiah, and the one we don’t know but we
are racing towards. This second one is where we are involved and, in a real
sense, have a say. We are not just in the stands, watching, but influence the
unfolding of this Advent by the decisions we make. The timing is up to us: the
sooner we succeed in making this world in the image of the One who designed it,
the sooner that One will be able to ‘gather’ all his people into the peace he
has planned for them.
But we keep postponing this universal community of
peace. We run away from the implications. One story in the news is of an Iraqi
family driven out of their home by the IS who sought refuge in a camp where
they had to stay for seven years. They struggled to get to Europe and a better
life only to be hounded on the Polish border, sent back to Iraq. The report
ends, ‘and there is worst to come.’
The Isaiah reading for the First Sunday in Advent says;
‘I will make a virtuous branch for David who shall practice honesty and
integrity in the land.’ It is poetic hidden language but it expresses the times
that are coming when God, working with people, will bring truth in
relationships. God cannot do it alone. Maybe the people of the first Advent who
were looking forward to a Messiah, thought the Messiah would do everything for
them. We know they had a narrow focus on Israel. Few had any thought for the
‘gentiles’.
But the first Advent did bring us a Messiah and that
is what makes our hearts rejoice this 25 December. Yet this Messiah can do
nothing without us. The whole plan is that we wake up and take steps in our
lives to bring about community in the world. Sending the Iraqis back to where
they came from, washing our hands of them, is certainly not building community.
What should we do? Well, it is easy to be an arm-chair strategist and there is
no avoiding the problem. But some kind of follow up of the lives of these
people, some kind of support for them in their own countries to help them get
settled, would be better than sending them back in despair.
We cannot wait around for this second Advent. It calls
for our full engagement in doing what we can. If this sounds starry-eyed, one
thing we know: if we decide to do something we will succeed, one way or
another, and we are not alone. Our five loaves and two fish quickly grow.
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November 2021 Advent Sunday 1C Jer 33:14-16 1 Thess 3:12-4:2 Lk 21:25-28, 34-36
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