Sunday, December 21, 2014

Advent Perspective: The Darkness Before the Dawn

I share these thoughts hoping they are of help to someone else.
Comments are always welcomed.


The Darkness Before the Dawn

The people who walked in darkness
have seen a great light;
those who lived in a land of deep darkness -
on them light has shined.

Isaiah 9:2 (NRSV)


Glory to God in the highest
Peace on Earth, good will to all men
Let all of the world sing the chorus of joy
Because hope was born this night

From "Hope Was Born This Night" by Sidewalk Prophets


It has been said that Christmas starts earlier and earlier each year.  This year, as I was walked around the local shopping mall on the day before Halloween, I noticed that Santa's workshop had already been set up.  In mid-November, soft rock radio stations started playing Christmas songs all day every day.  Perhaps I am letting my cynicism speak for me, but I cannot help but think that all the early Christmas ambiance is intended to get people in the mood to spend money by subconsciously appealing to their previous experiences of shopping for Christmas presents.

Along with "Christmas Creep," as some have named it, there is another phenomenon that has been observed in recent years: many people, particularly those who work for retailers, have been greeting people with "Happy Holidays" instead of "Merry Christmas."  Outraged by a supposed "War on Christmas," many Christians have been fighting to "keep Christ in Christmas."  Though I fully understand that Jesus is "the reason for the season," hearing people say "Happy Holidays" doesn't really bother me, because I feel that what the prevailing culture has been calling Christmas and what the Church observes as Christmas are actually two very different things.  I believe that what many call Christmas is actually a hijacking of a sacred celebration for economic purposes, so I don't really mind if people don't call it "Christmas."

On the Church calendar, there are two high holidays, Christmas and Easter, both of which are preceded by more somber seasons of preparation.  The Church and the prevailing culture celebrates this time of year in very different ways.  For many, the holiday season is the end of the year, but, for the Church, it is the beginning of the year.  For many, December 25 marks the end of the Christmas season, but, for the Church, December 25 is only the first of the twelve days of Christmas.  In the midst of the the Christmas shopping season, the Church is observing the season of Advent.

Advent is a time of preparation for Christmas.  While many of us prepare for Christmas by shopping for presents for our loved ones and by attending potlucks with our friends and coworkers, many also prepare for Christmas by looking inward.  Many think of Advent as a season of repentance, not unlike the season of Lent which precedes Easter.  The Scripture passages typically read in Churches during this season tell of the ministry of John the Baptist who called people to repentance in preparation for the coming of their long-awaited Savior.

Ever since I was a child, what has stood out to me the most about the season of Advent is the lighting of the candles on the Advent wreath.  On each of the four Sundays preceding Christmas, churches that observe Advent light a candle, the first for hope, the second for peace, the third for joy, and the fourth for love.  On Christmas Eve, a fifth candle is lighted for Christ Himself.


Two years ago, at my home church's Christmas Eve service, my pastor did something I had never seen before: she extinguished the candles for hope, peace, joy, and love before lighting the candle for Christ.  At that time, Advent took on a whole new meaning for me.

We light a candle for hope, yet the lives of many are marked by despair.  Many people in the world are stuck in situations from which they cannot find any means of escape.  To borrow a phrase from Henry David Thoreau, many "lead lives of quiet desperation."

We light a candle for peace, yet many live in the midst of conflict.  Many people in the world live in war zones.  Such an area of conflict might be an embattled region on the other side of the globe, a violent household down the street, or a person's own troubled mind.

We light a candle for joy, yet the experience of many is one of sorrow.  Ten percent of the population of my country need antidepressants just to get through the day,1 and for many people, the holiday season is a time that evokes deep sadness.

We light a candle for love, yet many are afflicted by hatred.  Many people in the world suffer because they are hated by other people, and many people in the world are poisoned by the hatred they harbor for others.

Nowadays, I like to think of Advent as a season of longing.  We light candles for hope, peace, joy, and love, not because we possess such things, but because, in the depths of our souls, we yearn for them.  After all, a person has no need to light candles unless it's dark.  In our longing for hope, peace, joy, and love, we are forced to confront the despair, conflict, sorrow, and hatred in the world and in our own hearts.  We seek hope, peace, joy, and love in the world, but what the world has to offer is often empty and shallow.  Time and time again, the world lets us down.

On one occasion, Jesus warns His audience about a time of great suffering, a time so dire that the sun, moon, and stars will cease to shine.  He says that, in this dark time, people "will see the Son of Man coming in the clouds with great power and glory" to gather up His people.2  One writer records Jesus as saying, "Now when these things begin to take place, stand up and raise your heads, because your redemption is drawing near."3  Many think that Jesus is speaking about His return to the earth, a "Second Coming" as some people call it, but I think these words have something to say about the way Christ meets the world.  The world can be a very dark place, but it is in the midst of such circumstances that Christ breaks into the world, a single light in the darkness.

Jesus once said, "I am the light of the world."4  On another occasion, Jesus announced to His audience, "You are the light of the world."5  So is Christ the "light of the world," or are we?  The answer is, of course, "Yes."  Christ is like the sun, the source of light, and we are like the moon which catches the light of the sun and reflects it into places of darkness.  When we draw near to the light of Christ, our own hearts ignite, and we carry that light with us.  Hope, peace, joy, and love are results of the presence of God in a person's life.6

Advent is like the darkness before the dawn.  Amid the frenzy of the season, we remember that the world is desperate for hope, peace, joy, and love.  On Christmas, we remember the Good News that Jesus Christ, the Son of God, came to bring light into a dark world.  We are all called to carry that light with us throughout the world, sharing with others the hope, peace, joy, and love we've found.

May we not forget those who yearn to see the light.

Come, Lord Jesus.


Notes:
  1. http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/08/12/a-glut-of-antidepressants/
  2. Mark 13:1-27 (NSRV)
  3. Luke 21:28 (NRSV)
  4. John 9:5
  5. Matt 5:14
  6. Love, joy, and peace are among what St. Paul calls the "Fruit of the Spirit."  See Galatians 5:22-23.  I believe that hope could be considered a fruit of the Spirit as well.
The photograph featured in this perspective was taken by me at Bethel United Methodist Church in West Greenville, South Carolina.

Tuesday, December 16, 2014

Perspective: Do You Want to Believe?

I share these thoughts hoping they are of help to someone else.
Comments are always welcomed.


Do You Want to Believe?

When John heard in prison what the Messiah was doing, he sent word by his disciples and said to Him, "Are You the one who is to come, or are we to wait for another?"  Jesus answered them, "Go and tell John what you hear and see: the blind receive their sight, the lame walk, the lepers are cleansed, the deaf hear, the dead are raised, and the poor have good news brought to them."

Matthew 11:2-5 (NRSV)


Give me Your eyes for just one second
Give me Your eyes so I can see
Everything that I keep missing
Give me Your love for humanity

From "Give Me Your Eyes" by Brandon Heath


I am starting to believe, more and more, that an encounter with God requires an open mind.  Sadly, open-mindedness is not always regarded as a virtue within religious circles.  In fact, Christians are generally encouraged to defend the faith and to fortify themselves against anything and everything that might challenge or stretch their beliefs.  Some even criticize open-minded people, saying things like, "Some people are so open minded, their brains are going to fall out!"

As I noted in my previous blog post, Jesus didn't always get along with the religious leaders of His day.  One day, a group of religious leaders approached Him and demanded a sign from Him, some proof that He was who He said He was.  Jesus rather harshly replied, "An evil and unfaithful generation searches for a sign."1  Later on, another group of religious leaders asked Jesus for a sign from Heaven, and He remarked that, even though they could look at he sky and predict what the weather would be like in the next few hours, they couldn't see the signs that were all around them.  Again He said, "An evil and unfaithful generation searches for a sign."2

Did the religious leaders' requests for a sign really come from a search for the truth, or were they actually challenging Jesus?

Not long before Jesus began His public ministry, there was another traveling teacher and prophet, a rather eccentric man named John.  John traveled throughout the region, calling people to repentance, and he invited people to engage in a ritual cleansing - a baptism - as an outward sign of their repentance.3  As I have written elsewhere, the Greek word translated into English as repentance is metanoia, which describes a change of mind, particularly one that results in a change of behavior.4  John was asking people to change the way they think about things.

John always spoke of One greater than he who would succeed him.  When John was born, his father prophesied that he would be the one to prepare the way for the Messiah, the long-awaited leader sent by God to bring freedom to Israel.5  John was described, in the words of the ancient prophet Isaiah, as "A voice crying out in the wilderness: 'Prepare the way for the Lord; make His paths straight.'"  Perhaps John fulfilled this prophecy and prepared the way for the Messiah by calling people to open their minds and to change the way they think.

John believed that Jesus was the Messiah.  When Jesus entered the scene, He had no interest in maintaining the status quo or in telling people what they already believed.  Shortly after Jesus was born, an elderly man named Simeon prophesied that Jesus would be the cause of the rising and falling of many people.6  More than once, Jesus stated that in the Kingdom of God - the Kingdom He came to usher in - the last would be first and the first would be last.7  Needless to say, following a leader so committed to such radical change would require an open mind.

Like John, many people came to believe that Jesus was their long-awaited messiah.  The religious leaders, on the other hand, would have nothing to do with such a notion.  Their demand for proof came not from a desire to believe but from a resistance to believe.  The religious leaders were so hard-hearted and stubborn that one day, when Jesus performed a miracle, they attributed His miracle to the devil.8

I think that, for the most part, people believe what they want to believe.  Peter Rollins makes the observation that people don't usually form their beliefs based on the evidence and arguments presented to them.  Instead, people typically seek out evidence and arguments to justify and reinforce the beliefs they already have.  This process is called rationalization.9  People who want to believe in something don't need a reason to believe, they just believe.  As Jesus points out, anyone who actually wanted a sign that He was the Messiah could have easily found one.  The religious leaders, on the other hand, continued to demand a sign because they simply didn't want to believe in Him.  People who want to think they have it all figured it out generally aren't inclined to be open-minded.

The religious leaders didn't believe that God's work of Salvation had come through Jesus because He didn't meet their expectations for the Messiah, nor did He even meet their expectations for a good Jew.  They were expecting a mighty warrior King who would drive the Roman Empire out of Israel.  Jesus, by contrast, was a wandering teacher who had some crazy ideas, associated with the riff-raff of society, and didn't follow the religious rules quite as carefully as some people would have preferred.

I don't believe that Jesus' harsh criticisms for people who wanted a sign were directed toward people who were struggling to believe but rather toward people who flat-out refused to believe.  As prophets are wont to do, John drew the ire of the powers that be, and, as a consequence, he was incarcerated.  As he sat in jail, his own faith in Jesus began to falter, and he sent some of his associates to ask Jesus whether or not He actually was the Messiah.  Jesus said to them, "Go and tell John what you hear and see: the blind receive their sight, the lame walk, the lepers are cleansed, the deaf hear, the dead are raised, and the poor have good news brought to them."  Jesus basically said to John what He would later say to the religious leaders: the signs were there if he wanted to believe.

In the same way that people who lived in Israel two thousand years ago needed to have an open mind to see God at work in Jesus Christ, we need to have an open mind if we want to see God at work in our day and time, for so often God does not conform to our expectations.  Rachel Held Evans, in her memoir Evolving in Monkey Town, writes,
The longer our lists of rules and regulations, the more likely it is that God Himself will break one.  The more committed we are to certain theological absolutes, the more likely we are to discount the work of the Spirit when it doesn't conform to our presuppositions.  When we cling to our beliefs as children cling to their favorite toys, it is hard for Jesus to take us by the hand and lead us somewhere new.10

I have come to believe that, wherever we look, God is hidden in plain sight.  Seeing is believing, and if you want to see God, simply open your eyes and look around.  St. Paul writes, "Whatever is true, whatever is honorable, whatever is just, whatever is pure, whatever is pleasing, whatever is commendable, if there is any excellence and if there is anything worthy of praise, think about these things."11  Perhaps Paul offers this exhortation because it is in such things that we can see God in the world.  If we're closed-minded, we run the risk of missing God, but, if we open our hearts and minds, perhaps we'll experience God in ways we wouldn't expect.


Notes:
  1. Matthew 12:38-39 (CEB)
  2. Matthew 16:1-4 I(CEB)
  3. See Matthew 1:12 and Luke 3:1-17.
  4. Wikipedia: Metanoia (Theology)
  5. Luke 1:61-80
  6. Luke 2:34
  7. See Matthew 19:16-30 and Matthew 20:1-16.
  8. See Matthew 12:22-32.
  9. Peter Rollins.  Insurrection: To Believe is Human, To Doubt, Divine.  2011, Howard Books.  p. 10-11
  10. Rachel Held Evans.  Evolving in Monkey Town: How a Girl Who Knew All the Answers Learned to Ask the Questions.  2010, Zondervan.  p. 154
  11. Philippians 4:8 (NRSV)
The photograph featured in this perspective was taken by Wikimedia user Saperaud and is used under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported license.  The photographer is in no way affiliated with this blog.