Matthew 24:36-44
Isaiah 2:1-5
November 27, 2022
Rev. Fa Lane
“Kindle the Light”
“O house of Jacob, come, let us walk in the light of the LORD! ”
It is good for us to enter the first season of the Christian year thankful and rejoicing in God our Savior. Advent is nestled within a season of thanks. It is wonderful to spend a day or two simply remembering all that you are grateful for then turning with glad and hopeful hearts to prepare for the coming of Christ fully into the world. Did you know that long ago, between the 4th and 6th century, “Advent” developed primarily to provide an alternative time of preparation of candidates who were to be baptized – Confirmands we call them.
In the late 300s AD, the Roman Emperor Theodosius made Christianity the legal religion of the Roman Empire. With the vast majority of citizens now seeking to be Christian, a single season could not accommodate all of those who had to prepare for baptism. So baptism, which usually followed the instruction time of Lent and was celebrated at Easter, would have instruction in what we now call Advent with baptism at Epiphany when Christians remember the coming of the Magi and celebrate the baptism of Jesus. The focus of Advent now is on the Christian life and preparing our hearts for Christ’s returning, his rebirth in our lives.
We decorate our houses, make extra food, receive guests who are visiting and exchange gifts with those we love. It is a jubilant time of rejoicing in God’s goodness and grace for us. At church we decorate too and use the four candles of the Advent wreath to remember Christ’s messages of hope, joy, peace and love. We light one each week, maybe you do this at home too. We are to consider each of those desires for the week until a new candle is lighted. One way we kindle the candle’s light is with our prayers for the world all week.
In most temples and churches you will find candles. The energy that quickens the flame inspires our passion for faith in Christ. Many houses of worship have the eternal flame, also called the Sanctuary lamp or chancel lamp that is never doused. It never goes out. We hold a light against the darkness we face. It is God saying “I am the light of the world.”
When in olden days the faithful people of Israel would take pilgrimage, they would carry candles in lanterns as they prayed and walked with God.
The Old Testament lesson in Isaiah instructed them to go up to the mountain of the Lord, so that they might be taught God’s ways. The mountain is a metaphor; it is a reference to Jerusalem in Ancient Near East literature; just as a temple was referred to as a house where a god lived. This oracle in Isaiah 2:2-4 speaks of people making pilgrimage to Zion, meaning the site of the Jerusalem Temple. This temple still stands in Jerusalem and people travel in pilgrimage to see it every week. I saw the Temple Mount, what we were allowed to see, when I visited in 2014 with my seminary class.
As we go through these next 4 weeks, starting with this Sunday and ending on Christmas Sunday, I invite you on a pilgrimage to consider Isaiah 2 verse 5 with the question: How do we walk in the light of the Lord? First, we must be willing to turn instruments of war and violence into means for feeding the nations and be at peace. When we no longer seek to conquer and weaken others but seek contentment we walk in the light of the Lord.
I’ve created a sheet of four bookmarks to help you on this pilgrimage. At the entrances where you picked up your bulletin, I’ve placed a small stack of cardstock with four bookmarks. You can use them to reflect each week on how we kindle the light of God in our lives. Each individual bookmark has a different question—one for each week. I caution you against working ahead and doing all four at once. That would thwart the joy of discovery; and you’d miss the richness of noticing things one week at a time, even praying one day at a time. This is not something to get done and check off your list. It’s a time of noticing and appreciating in the moment where you see the light of God.
So you can cut them apart, light one candle each week, think upon one of these desires for the whole week. You can color it in; you can write on the back; maybe it will spur your prayers through the week, or inspire you to some action that brings about hope, joy, peace and love.
For this week of hope, you can write the answer that you used two weeks ago when I asked you to talk with your neighbor in the pew about where you see hope. Then expand it by adding what you’ve notice since Nov. 13. Consider what things you can do to bring hope to others, like our gifts for the Cradles to Crayons children. Write those ideas on the back and pray about them over this whole week.
You could also scan the newspaper and web sources of news for instances that bring hope or need hope for God’s light. The Matthew scripture indicates that as we are going about our everyday lives, working, eating meals, getting married, raising families, making a living, that someday the Son of Man will come. We need to be watching, alert for those acts that reveal God’s light in the world, watching for Christ’s return.
In a few minutes we will participate in communion with one another which is an uplifting act of faithful people, bringing all of us to the table. When we gather at the God’s table I feel the light of Holy Love. Here we all share in God’s grace and the transformation it can bring from knowing Jesus Christ.
The prophet Isaiah spoke a message of hope more than 500 years before the birth of Jesus. He spoke of God promises that we will emerge from a land of deep darkness, and enter into a new world filled with the light of God’s encompassing love. That is what we celebrate in communion, Christ’s love for us, the way he provides light for our dark days. Let us prepare a place for the Christ-child to be born in our lives and kindle the love we find there. Let us be renewed at the table of grace and walk rejoicing in the light of the Lord.
Amen.
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