Friday, December 25, 2015
Thursday, December 24, 2015
Christmas Eve
This
Christmas will likely be a difficult one in parts of Cumbria, in the aftermath
of the floods, and we remember those communities before God. But in Iceland,
tonight is marked by a very different kind of flood, the jólabókaflóð, or ‘Christmas
Book Flood’. There, between eighty and ninety percent of books are published
for Christmas, with almost everyone being given a new book on Christmas Eve and
staying up through the night to read it. A heart-warming, cosy tradition.
Christmas
is a time for stories, including all those Christmas films that are repeated
year after year on tv. We have favourite stories we can read or watch or listen
to again and again, never tiring of them.
My
wife and I have a tradition of watching the film Love, Actually. It is a film about love; but it is really a film about
choices: good choices, poor choices, habitual choices, painful choices, risky
choices, life-changing choices.
In
one scene, a young girl is bursting to tell her mother which role she has been
given in the school nativity. She proudly announces that she will play the part
of the Lobster – indeed, First Lobster. Her mother doesn’t quite know how to
respond, and somehow manages to form the question, ‘There was more than one
lobster present at the birth of Jesus?’ – to which her daughter responds,
‘Duh!’ [lit. of course; everybody knows that!]
The
humour lies in our knowing that there were no lobsters at the nativity
alongside the shepherds and wise men, the angels and star, the cattle and sheep
and donkey, Mary and Joseph and the innkeeper.
Except
there was no innkeeper, and no over-full inn. You see, the phrase on which
every traditional nativity play hangs, there being no room in the inn, is
simply a very poor translation. In Luke’s Gospel, an inn and innkeeper appear
in the parable of the Good Samaritan, but not in the account of Jesus’ birth.
The word translated ‘inn’ in Luke
chapter 2 is in fact ‘guest room’ – the same term Luke uses to describe the
room in a house in Jerusalem where Jesus and his disciples ate the Passover
meal we know as the Last Supper. But that was a sizeable guest room in a home
in the capital city. At the time of Jesus’ birth, Joseph and Mary were guests
in a home in Bethlehem. They were welcome and honoured guests – after all,
Joseph could trace his ancestry to none other than Bethlehem’s most famous son,
King David – but nonetheless they were guests in a smaller, provincial home,
where the guest room was too small for Mary to give birth in, attended by the
village midwives and the women of the household. So Mary gave birth to her son
in the main room that served as bedroom to the family and shelter to their
animals at night, and living room by day. Afterwards, Jesus was washed and
wrapped in linen strips and laid to rest in one of the mangers, a confined and warm
space, an ideal crib. And there the shepherds will find him, and all just as it
ought to be.
I
tell you this not to take away the wonder of Christmas, not to pour cold water
on memories of childhood and children and grandchildren, not to throw out the
carols, but because it is the stories we tell over and over that shape us.
We
have told the story of Jesus’ birth as a story of rejection, of God coming
into the world and being largely ignored at best. And the
more we tell that story, the more it shapes us to expect of other people and of
ourselves that they, that we, will reject or ignore God. It becomes something
of a self-fulfilling prophecy, if you like.
But
Luke tells us a story of welcome, a story of God’s
long-awaited coming to his people, of God dwelling in the midst of his people,
at the heart of ordinary lives. And when we start to tell this story, and to
tell it again and again, the story shapes us for welcoming - welcoming one
another, welcoming God – and for wonder, shared between us, at God’s sheer
goodness.
So
tonight let us stay up telling stories, as the shepherds did, of good news for
all people. Stories of a God who has not abandoned us but who came to us, and
who comes to us today; who is here in our midst, in the bread and the wine of
this holy night, and in the gift-giving of the morning, and the gathering
around the table for Christmas dinner and then falling asleep in front of the
telly later on. God with us.
That
is a story I never tire of hearing, or telling; of sharing with family and
friends; of shouting from the rooftops. Happy Christmas! May it be filled with
welcome and wonder, more and more, year upon year. And may it shape our
rejoicing and our mourning, our treasured memories and our deepest pain; in joy
and in peace, amen.
Wednesday, December 23, 2015
Advent Twenty-Five
God-With-Us.
Advent
is a season of learning to wait, attentively, in the dark.
To
wait for the Lord’s return.
Yet
the paradoxical miracle of Advent is that while in a very real sense we wait
for God to come to us, in another very real sense God also waits not at a distance but with
us.
The
one who came into our world, not as an adult but as a baby; who grew into a boy
discovering the world around him; became apprenticed to a builder; who shared
the love of God with all who would welcome love; who experienced joy and sorrow;
who died a painful death…waits with us, in the birth of a new baby, in the
squabbles and excitement of children, in the application of learning a trade,
in eating and drinking with friends old and new, in our celebrations and
bereavement, in the hard-drawn final breaths of the dying, God is with us, now, for
always.
May
we discover that secret hidden in our midst, transform every moment.
O
Emmanuel
O
Emmanuel, our King and our lawgiver,
the
hope of the nations and their Saviour:
Come
and save us, O Lord our God.
Tuesday, December 22, 2015
Advent Twenty-Four
King.
In
the ancient world, to be king – or pharaoh, or emperor – was understood to be
raised up by one of the gods; perhaps even to be a living god or son of a god.
Christianity modified this view, to consider rulers as taking up and being
removed from office at least by divine permission. It did so under the
world-changing belief that Jesus was king of the nations, which is not only to
proclaim him king over all peoples everywhere, but to proclaim him so by
appointment of – and a sharing in identity with – the God over all gods, of
every realm. So fully did the early church identify Jesus with God that they
considered creation to have been brought into being by him.
In
this world view, everything points
beyond its current state to an awaited fulfilment – or realignment – achieved
through the person of Jesus.
For
this we still wait. And for this, we are being refashioned, as from clay, to be
those who are shaped not for what is but for what is to come.
O
Rex Gentium
O
King of the nations, and their desire,
the
cornerstone making both one:
Come
and save the human race,
which
you fashioned from clay.
Monday, December 21, 2015
Advent Twenty-Three
Star.
Living
in darkness leads to desperation, and desperation can lead people to do tragic
or beautiful things.
At
this time of year in particular, working from a building open to the public
during the day, I come across two kinds of people. There are those who come
trying to scam us (and our neighbours) out of money. We have learnt to be wise
as serpents and innocent as doves. But what kind of darkness has so borne down
on someone to drive them to attempt to steal from a church, to try to exploit
kind-heartedness?
And
there are those who come, having lost a loved one, and feeling that somehow, by
not being able to stave off death, they have let their loved one down.
Invariably, in sitting and listening to them, I can see that nothing is further
from the truth. Again and again, they recount how they were there day-in
day-out, or tell of battle after battle won, before one day they weren’t there
or a final battle inevitably lost. Sometimes darkness allows us to shine, even
if we cannot see ourselves shining.
Jesus
is described as the Morning Star, visible in that part of the night which feels
especially dark before the sun begins to rise and the sky grows light again, by
degrees. More, so bright that it remains visible even as the darkness falls
away: a promise, or testimony, that outlasts the dark and sees us into day.
O
Oriens
O
Morning Star,
splendour
of light eternal and sun of righteousness:
Come
and enlighten those who dwell in darkness
and
the shadow of death.
Sunday, December 20, 2015
Advent Twenty-Two
Key.
On
one occasion, Jesus took his disciples to visit the mouth of a large cave which
was considered by the Greeks to be one of the entrances to the underworld, the
realm of the dead ruled over by the god Hades.
It
is here that Jesus gives to Peter the (symbolic) keys to the ‘kingdom’ of
heaven. These keys unlock/lock the door to the underworld, wresting control
over Hades’ jealously-guarded ‘kingdom’. In other words, this event points to death
being transformed into life (the possibility of return to the world
from the underworld) and judgement being transformed into love
(Jesus’ authority being expressed in setting captives free) and hell
being transformed into heaven (the ‘kingdom’ of Hades being overthrown
by the ‘kingdom’ of heaven, the souls of the dead set free and the furies
bound).
Moreover,
these keys, used on earth to
unlock/lock the door of hell
simultaneously unlock/lock the door of heaven.
Heaven is now aligned to earth, or one with earth, with earth being the key (to
play on words) location. And so this event also points to heaven being transformed into
earth (earth becoming the dwelling place of God and his people).
O
Clavis David
O
Key of David and sceptre of the House of Israel;
you
open and no one can shut;
you
shut and no one can open:
Come
and lead the prisoners from the prison house,
those
who dwell in darkness and the shadow of death.
Saturday, December 19, 2015
Advent Twenty-One
Sign
Post.
Sign-posts
point us in the direction we need to go, towards our destination. But sometimes
sign-posts get knocked off line, sending us off in the wrong direction.
Jesus’
birth stands as a sign-post; but the post has been knocked askew. Coming to it,
we have seen a story of rejection. The stories we tell – and especially the
stories we tell over and over – shape us. Coming to a sign-post pointing to
rejection again and again, we are shaped to live in the expectation that you
will reject Jesus, that I will reject Jesus. The sign-post still points to a
destination in which death is not transformed into life, judgement is not
transformed into love, hell is not transformed into heaven, and heaven is not
transformed into earth.
Yet
this is not how the sign-post was erected. Luke tells us a story of welcome and
embrace, of God dwelling in the very heart of a family who opened their home,
their lives, to him; an account in which all is well, which points to a day
when All
Shall Be Well. Coming to this
sign-post again and again, we are shaped to receive death being transformed
into life, judgement being transformed into love, hell being transformed into
heaven, and heaven being transformed into earth.
We have read the story of Jesus’
birth as part of John 1:10, 11 –
He was in the world, and the world came
into being through him; yet the world did not know him. He came to what was his
own, and his own people did not accept him. – when we ought to read it as part of John 1:12-14 – But to all
who received him, who believed in his name, he gave power to become children of
God…And the Word became flesh and lived among us, and we have seen his glory, the
glory as of a father’s only son, full of grace and truth.
O
Radix Jesse
O
Root of Jesse, standing as a sign among the peoples;
before
you kings will shut their mouths,
to
you the nations will make their prayer:
Come
and deliver us, and delay no longer.
Friday, December 18, 2015
Advent Twenty
Majesty.
The
title ‘Adonai’ is an attribution of majesty, a recognition of the greatness and
the dignity of God. The beauty of this Antiphon is seeing that majesty
best-depicted in the fire of the burning bush, and in the giving of the Law.
Crucially,
when God reveals himself to Moses, a highly-combustible desert shrub burns but
is not consumed. That is to say, God’s vision – to enlist Moses in leading his
people out from slavery – is impressed upon the created world without damaging
it. This is in marked contrast to how those in positions of leadership have
often gone about impressing their vision on others.
Likewise,
the Law is given as gift. Essentially, the Ten Words (or, Commandments) state, ‘I
have delivered you from slavery: do not sell yourselves back into slavery; nor
treat yourselves as slaves; nor enslave others under you.’ This is a
Constitution of the Free.
Yet
that freedom has been too frightening a thing for us. We have chosen something safer
than God’s majesty, and found ourselves enslaved by fear. Only perfect love – that
burns without burning us – can set us free.
O
Adonai
O Adonai, and leader of
the House of Israel,
who appeared to Moses in the fire of the burning bush
and gave him the law on Sinai:
Come
and redeem us with an outstretched arm.
Thursday, December 17, 2015
Advent Nineteen
Wisdom.
It
has been said that knowledge is knowing that a tomato is a fruit; wisdom is
knowing not to put it in a fruit salad.
If
wisdom is understood at all, it is often understood as knowing what to do for
the best in given circumstances, and in particular in complex circumstances
(far more complex than making a fruit salad). But such omniscient wisdom is
beyond the constraints and responsibility of being human, for all of us face
circumstances where we simply cannot know what to do for the best.
This
year, I find myself asking the question, How do I want to live my life, in the light of our inevitable day of
dying? And as the day of our own
death is hidden from us, I am helped, in both asking and answering the
question, by the terrible privilege of observing others approach that day.
As
I reflect on the lives of those whose life has left a lasting impression on me,
I have concluded that wisdom is not so much concerned with particular words or
actions as with a way of living, and that the way of wisdom is made manifest through a
gentleness that is evident to all (Philippians
4:5).
O
Sapientia
O Wisdom, coming forth
from the mouth of the Most High
reaching
from one end to the other mightily,
and
sweetly ordering all things:
Come and teach us the way of prudence.
Wednesday, December 16, 2015
Advent Eighteen
Tomorrow
sees the start of the Advent Antiphons, a series of
centuries-old song-prayers - O Sapientia; O Adonai; O Radix Jesse; O
Clavis David; O Oriens; O Rex Gentium; O Emmanuel – that explore
different facets of Jesus’ identity, through which death is transformed into
life, judgement into love, hell into heaven, and heaven into earth…
Tuesday, December 15, 2015
A Plea To Those Who Tell The Christmas Story
A
plea to those who tell the Christmas story: when will we stop
perpetuating nativity misconceptions and start proclaiming what the Gospels
tell us concerning the birth of Jesus?
There
was no inn, no innkeeper, no weary little donkey. Jesus was not born in a
stable, but in a home. And the difference actually matters – to children and to
adults.
The
Gospel According to Luke tells us (chapter
2) that at some point in the second or third trimester of Mary’s pregnancy, she
travelled to Bethlehem with her husband Joseph (nowhere is it suggested that
they arrive on the night that she will give birth). Bethlehem is Joseph’s
ancestral home. In that culture, where
– and who – you came from mattered
far more significantly than it does in my culture (which tells us that what
matters is not your past, but your future, and you can be whatever and whoever
you decide). That is what the biblical genealogies (such as the one in Luke 3) are all about. Even if Joseph no
longer had immediate relatives in Bethlehem, simply by turning up and giving
his genealogy – showing his ID – it is almost unthinkable that they would not
find a welcome.
Moreover,
Luke tells us that this – Bethlehem – is the city of David. That
detail matters. Everyone anywhere knew that Jerusalem was the city of David –
though Jerusalem has grown in the 3,000 years since, that part which king David
established is known as such to this day. But Bethlehem was proud of its most
famous son, and the locals laid claim to the title for themselves (in the same
way that Sunderland lays claim to Alice in Wonderland, though elsewhere Alice
is universally associated with Oxford). Given that Joseph’s genealogy ties him
not only to Bethlehem but to David himself, it becomes almost inconceivable
that they would not be welcomed into a home.
Why,
then, the inn? Quite simply, this is an inconsistent and unjustified
mistranslation. Luke knows the word for a commercial inn – it appears, along
with a beast of burden and an innkeeper, in the parable of the surprising neighbour
(or, good Samaritan, Luke 10) – but
here in the birth narrative uses the word for the guest room of a home, the
same word he later uses for the (larger, urban) guest room in which the Last
Supper is held (Luke 22).
The
typical peasant house had two rooms: a larger multipurpose room in which the
family lived, and slept; and a smaller guest room. Jesus (like both of my sons,
but not my daughter) was born in the family room, because there was no room in
the guest room for Mary to give birth, supported by the women of the house and
the women who functioned as midwives within the community. In all probability,
Joseph waited in the smaller room, with any other men.
Why,
then, is Jesus laid in a manger? In that context, every home kept a few
animals, and the animals were brought into the house at night, both for
protection against theft and in order that their body heat help keep the people
warm at night (no central heating; hot days, cold nights). The animals were
untied and led out from the house in the morning – every morning (including the
Sabbath, as Jesus himself will point out when criticised for healing – untying –
a woman on the Sabbath, Luke 13). The
animals were kept at one end of the house, with the living room perhaps raised
up a few feet; and mangers were bowl-shaped depressions in that end of the stone
floor, at grazing height for the animals. As such a manger would provide a
contained space, ideal for making a new-born baby feel secure. This is also why
the shepherds, sent by the angels, praised God for all they had seen, as
opposed to concluding that they had been sent to rescue this family from woeful
abandonment.*
And
that is why it matters, how we tell the story. Because the stories we tell shape us.
We have told it as a story of obstruction and rejection. We confront people –
however politely – with the expectation that they too will reject Jesus. But
that is not good news. It is the very opposite of the good news that Luke
presents us with. The good news is that in this carefully-planned event God is to be
found dwelling in the midst of his people, having fulfilled his promise made
long ago to David.
This
is not a story of rejection, which allows us to take pride in being rejected,
or make points about the marginalised, however convenient it might be if it
were. This is a story of God being received with joy, of good news for all
people, of Jesus at the very heart of everyday life with all its struggles and
benefits and normality.
This
is a story worth rediscovering, and shouting from the rooftops.
*If
you are interested in more detail to this overview, see Kenneth E. Bailey’s Jesus Through Middle Eastern Eyes.
Advent Seventeen
Heaven
and hell exist in the present tense – which is why I find it so strange to come
across people who don’t believe in one or the other, or both.
Some
days I live in heaven: where love is shared; where those on the margins are
enfolded within community; where broken lives find healing and wholeness. But,
at least for now, living in heaven continuously is not sustainable.
Some
days I live in hell: existing in experienced separation from the source of love
and life. But hell does not go on for ever (Jesus spent time in hell, somehow
being good news and holding out hope; so at least we know God is at work even
here).
I
am not using ‘heaven’ and ‘hell’ as metaphors to describe something else, but
in an absolutely literal – albeit not final – sense. We can all relate to this,
for we have all participated in both. Some days, we live in both
simultaneously.
Death,
judgement, hell, and heaven – the so-called four
last things – are traditional Advent themes. Which might sound quite bleak,
until we understand each in the light of Jesus’ coming-again into the world,
until we see each transformed through him.
Death.
The full stop, at the end of every life; torn open, thrown into the air, become
a semi-colon; the pause before our story carries on…
Judgement.
Anyone who has ever feared accusation, but found themselves affirmed instead
will have an insight into God’s judgement on humanity – the sheer release,
relief, encouragement, gratitude…
Hell.
We have all suffered loss, in all our relationships – not only bereavement, but
misunderstandings, regrets. Here is the promise that everything that is redeemable
will be redeemed, and everything that harms will be consumed forever…
Heaven.
Fully-established. This world made new. Right relationship between every living
thing…
Four
last things, not because these four cannot be moved, but because with their transformation
– death
into life; judgement into love; hell into heaven; heaven into earth –
the work begun in Christ is brought to its completion.
Monday, December 14, 2015
Sunday, December 13, 2015
Saturday, December 12, 2015
Friday, December 11, 2015
Thursday, December 10, 2015
Advent Twelve
Four
days a week, most weeks, for the past two years, it has been my custom to say
Morning Prayer in Sunderland Minster’s Bede Chapel. In the darkest days of the
year, the windows are black when I arrive. I must simply trust that there is
something beautiful there, waiting to be revealed. As the light increases, some
idea of structure begins to be made out. Then, the boldest, brightest colours
are shown; not in their glory, but muted, ‘muddy’. As the light grows, more and
more colour and fine detail become apparent. Many people assume that windows of
coloured glass are made for radiance; but this window is designed to change
with the light.
There
are days when I shine for all to see – and hopefully for God’s glory. There are
other days when it is a major victory to get out of bed in the morning, and I
might achieve little else all day. Days when my boldest colours are muddy, when
my intricate design is hidden in darkness. Days when I don’t have the energy
running through me to offer the world what is on my heart.
But
that doesn’t mean that the beauty isn’t there.
In
the context of the tendency to compare ourselves – sometimes unfavourably,
sometimes favourably – against others, Paul wrote:
‘…do
not pronounce judgement before the time, before the Lord comes, who will bring
to light the things now hidden in darkness and will disclose the purposes of
the heart. Then each one will receive commendation from God.’ 1 Corinthians 4:5
Sometimes,
I am hidden in darkness. Sometimes, I am not able to express the good,
God-given purposes of my heart. When the Light comes, what is hidden is brought
forth, disclosed to all. Then I will be commended, for what was there all
along. And not only me, but also you.
If
I truly believed this, what difference would it make to how I wait in darkness?
Wednesday, December 09, 2015
Advent Eleven
‘…my
soul waits for the Lord…’ (Psalm 130:6a)
At
this time of year more than any other, I find myself having to wait: waiting my
turn, waiting in line, waiting to pay, waiting to be served, or seen.
However
long I have to wait, something transformational takes place when my waiting is acknowledged. The words “Thank you for
waiting” speak directly to my soul.
We
are made up of heart – our will, the choices we make; and mind – our thoughts
(which cannot be separated from our emotions) and emotions (which cannot be
separated from our thoughts); and strength – our bodies, finite energy packs;
all held together by our soul. Unless our soul is at peace, it cannot direct
and gather heart and soul and strength. But when our soul waits, then we might
notice and attend to the warning signs in our bodies, our mental health, our
decision-making.
When
I find myself having to wait in a queue to pay for an item of Christmas
shopping, in an over-full retailer in an over-full shopping centre, my body
starts to show signs of anxiety, my thoughts turn to agitation, my choices
start to lack grace. Friendly conversation with others who are also waiting
might stem the rising flood for a while, but will only hold for so long. But
if, when I reach the counter and the till, I am thanked for having waited…it is
not so much that my irritation is disarmed, but, rather, that my soul is blessed; and blessed,
encouraged; and encouraged, empowered to bring heart and mind and strength into
alignment, into harmony.
It
is my soul that needs to wait, more than anything else. And stilled, attentive,
watchful, sees the salvation of God break in.
If
I truly believed this, what difference would it make to how I wait in line?
Tuesday, December 08, 2015
Advent Ten
The
obvious thing to do when we aren’t making progress is to try harder. Or – if we
are really smart – to try another
approach for moving forward.
When
the thing we are being invited to do is to stop.
To
stand in attentive waiting.
Monday, December 07, 2015
Advent Nine
Once,
I walked on water.
Stepping
out onto a frozen lake, in Sweden, with an experienced local guide.
We
stood in the middle of the lake, and I thought that, standing still, the ice
might give way.
We
keep moving because we fear that if we stand still, if we stop for just a
moment, the ground will fall from under us.
Sometimes
that is exactly what we need to happen.
Once,
Jesus walked on water. And Peter doubted that it was truly Jesus, not a ghost.
So Peter asked to walk out on the water to him, as proof; and Jesus consented.
Peter walked on water. It was only when he stood
still that he recognised Jesus, the salvation of God.
“You
of little faith, why did you doubt?”
‘Little
faith’ is not a criticism. In Jesus’ teaching, it is precisely the poor in
spirit who experience the kingdom of heaven; the little flock who are
comforted; the seed or the grain of yeast that transform. Those ‘of little
faith’ are those on the inside of the secret – those who, of all people, are
able to recognise Jesus. The doubt Jesus wondered at is Peter’s failure to
recognise him while still (or, more to the point, not standing still) in the boat. Even so, these are words of
comfort and encouragement, not rebuke.* And they spring from the place of
stillness, of poised or attentive waiting.
In
the boat, Peter was busy, rowing against the wind, fighting circumstances,
trying to keep afloat. Jesus, initially making as if to walk past, stood still.
Stood still, at the edge of Peter. Stood still, long enough to see Peter – beneath the veneer of
competence and busyness – before Peter stood still long enough to see him. And far from drowning, their
friendship took on new depths.
*Jesus
certainly rebukes Peter on occasion. But this is not one of those times.
Sunday, December 06, 2015
Advent Eight
Sieger
Köder, Celebrate
But
most of all I wait to be found and freed, held and carried into the circle of
light I can see but cannot reach.
And
in this, I do not believe that I am alone.
Saturday, December 05, 2015
Advent Seven
Of
course, waiting does not only take us to the outside edge of ourselves. It also
brings us to the outer edge of others, holding us long enough to look again, to
look beyond the surface – should we dare so to do. True waiting is not an
introspective withdrawal from life; it is the means of a deeper discovery of this
life we get to share.
Why
does that person hold such very different views from me? (And why do I hold the
views that I hold?)
Why
are they unreliable? (And how can I bear my own capacity to let others down?)
Why
are they so frustrating? (And why do I frustrate myself?)
Such
questions cannot be answered well quickly, by second-guessing or labelling
others (or myself). They cannot be answered by generalised status (or by social
media status-updates); they cannot be answered by reading about the other. They
can only be answered – never fully answered; always partially and provisionally
answered, and yet meaningfully so – slowly and respectfully.
Friday, December 04, 2015
Advent Six
Waiting
takes us to the edge of ourselves.
Not
from the centre, outward, coming to our end, beyond which we are not; but travelling in the other
direction, arriving at the border beyond which we are.
That
is why a decision made in haste so very often turns out badly, in the long-term:
because one does not adequately know who it is that is making the decision (me)
and on what basis they (that is, I) do so.* But to have to wait, whether as a
result of our own limitations or the limitations of someone else, opens up a
space that wasn’t there before – a four-dimensional space (that is, composed of
both physical space, and time) – in which we can be found, and known.
However,
this only happens when we understand waiting not as the opposite of action, but
as a key action for living well.
If
I truly believed this, what difference would it make to how I live? Who would I
seek out as a conversation partner, in order to get to know myself better, and
in order to get to know someone else – not (in either case) as a problem to
fix, but as a person to delight in?
*Of
course, repeatedly making decisions in haste results in recurring bad outcomes;
which in turn feed the pressure to make decisions in haste.
Thursday, December 03, 2015
Advent Five
Waiting
takes us to the edge of ourselves.
Not
from the centre, outward, coming to our end, beyond which we are not; but travelling in the other
direction, arriving at the border beyond which we are.
The
virtual reality of a post- digital revolution world is that we are all objects
in our own lives. We might not be celebrities photographed by the paparazzi,
our lives exposed in the press; but we cut out most of the middle-men and present
ourselves via social media. We look at ourselves there, and – however honest we
try to be in that presentation – see someone removed. We are in danger of losing touch with us.
This
is not a rant against social media. It
is a (small) celebration of the gift of waiting in an instant world.*
If
I truly believed this, what difference would it make to how I live? What core practices
might help earth my life?
*Which
is also a flat earth, albeit tilted up from the old flat earth.
Wednesday, December 02, 2015
Advent Four
I
notice that the pedestrian crossing lights have changed. Now when the traffic
light is red, both the red and the green man are missing. The red man has moved
from a position of triumph over the green man, or indifference to his plight,
to friend who repeatedly goes looking for him.
Of
course, that isn’t literally the case. But the picture image – and, indeed, the
visual prompt – is a timely one.
Tuesday, December 01, 2015
Advent Three
Some
two-and-a-half millennia ago, Isaiah is given an insight into the process by
which God’s glory is made manifest in human lives – a coming that not only dignifies
our human nature but also enables us to share together in the experience:
‘A
voice cries out: “In the wilderness prepare the way of the LORD,
make straight in the desert a highway for our God. Every valley shall be lifted
up, and every mountain and hill be made low; the uneven ground shall become
level, and the rough places a plain. Then the glory of the LORD
shall be revealed, and all people shall see it together, for the mouth of the LORD
has spoken.”’ (Isaiah 40:3-5)
As
is so often the case with insight, the exterior world is recognised as holding
up a mirror to the interior landscape; the nature of eroded earth mirroring
that of the human, or, earthling.
Isaiah’s
insight is that it is precisely in those places where we are at our lowest
points, it is precisely in those places where life towers over us, where the
Spirit of God rests upon us, at work both to prepare us to receive the Lord who
comes and to equip us to recognise and proclaim that impending arrival.
It
is in the places where we acknowledge our weakness, our humanness, that we are
at last able to encounter ourselves – perhaps for the first time in a long time
– and our neighbour, and the God in whose likeness we are both made.
If
I truly believed this, what difference would it make to how I live?
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