Rev. Dr. Galen E. Russell III
December 3, 2023
Mark 13:24-37
Psalm 80:1-7, 17-19
“Stir up your might and come to save us!”
Prayer: As we anticipate a new birth in our lives, may we come to know how much we need you first. May we watch, wait, listen, and step forward in faith. Amen.
Well, the first Sunday of Advent finally is here. Our church is decorated. Looks good. We lit the first Advent candle. Our Advent/Christmas season officially has begun. But truthfully, I feel like the holiday season got started a long time ago. I mean Home Depot, Lowes, Hostetter’s and a bunch of other stores were all decked out for Christmas before Halloween! Radio stations were playing wall to wall Christmas music before Thanksgiving. And a lot of people took advantage of warm November temps to get decorated outside. I know this is the first time ever that Barb and I got our decorations up BEFORE the first Sunday of Advent! Unheard of!
I don’t know… it’s like people needed to get to Christmas as soon as possible. Get to the joy of the season. The anticipation of a new birth. Baby Jesus. Santa Claus. The decorations. The parties, food, and fun. Get it all together. All that can be a pleasant distraction from the struggles we’ve gone through this year, right?
You know. The stress of war that weighs on us. Leads to the persistence of racism and hatred and violence—all of which break my heart. Anxiety about inflation—rising food and gas prices impact the poor struggling to make ends meet while the rich get richer. The political corruption and dysfunction makes my head spin. Legislators can’t legislate on major issues like gun violence, immigration, climate change and others. Covid has never really left us. Each year a new variant becomes dominant and people die.
Not to mention any of the personal struggles each of us sometimes goes through. The struggles in our relationships. Our jobs. Our families. Getting the kids off to school in the morning. Getting them to their activities after school. Getting them to choir on Wednesday evening. Getting their homework done. Getting them to bed. Having time for yourself. Do it all over again the next day. It is stressful.
Others face difficult decisions related to health concerns. Or, future endeavors. Or spending money. Or developing discipline to hold off addictive habits. It’s a lot.
Sometimes even faithful people find themselves asking, “Where are you, God? Don’t you know what we’re going through?” We might pray the words of David, the psalmist, “Stir up your might and come to save us!” Fix our problems, God! Rescue us! Restore us! Send the one whom you have made strong for yourself! Give us life! We may not say all those things, but we feel it sometimes.
And as soon as we crave God’s involvement, as soon as we ask, “Where are you God?” as soon as we cry out for help, we discern our need for God. And God uses those kinds of moments of spiritual need or spiritual destitution as fodder for the Holy Spirit to work. God works much better when we know we need God. Spiritual impoverishment can be a good thing.
So, while it might be tempting to get to Christmas right away, Advent I think helps us recognize that the places we struggle… the stress and anxieties we feel, our difficulties, our challenges, our upheavals, our disruptions, the signs of the times, the troubling events we witness—these are the moments when the Holy Spirit can create a new birth in us. Jesus asks us to keep alert to see how God might do that.
Last week Barb and I rented the movie “I Heard the Bells.” It tells the story of how Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s poem “Christmas Bells” was written over a long period of time. It was inspired by Longfellow’s struggle and pain in his life when he lost his wife and when the Civil War was raging. He questioned his faith. He wondered if God was dead, and if not dead, then asleep. Where is the peace? The good will?
And in despair I bowed my head;
“There is no peace on earth,” I said;
“For hate is strong
And mocks the song
Of peace on earth, good-will to men!”
But still, he knew that when the Christmas bells rang, as they had for centuries, they sounded out a message of peace on earth and good will toward everyone. And finally, when his son came home from the Civil War, injured, but alive, Longfellow knew that God had not forgotten, God was not dead nor asleep. He wrote:
Then pealed the bells more loud and deep,
“God is not dead, nor does God sleep.
The Wrong shall fail
The right prevail
With peace on earth, good-will to men!”
So, as my friend and colleague Bob Sorozan reminded me a few years ago to “never to let a good crisis go to waste,” I encourage us—let’s be watchful as we begin Advent. In our crises and stress, look for God to grow the kindom around and within us. Anticipate a new birth. God, who promises faithfulness and steadfast love through the crisis, through the breaking and healing of our lives, through the beginnings and endings—God is at work. These are excellent places to anticipate new birth. If you’re attentive and awake, you’ll see it. If you’re distracted or asleep, you’ll miss it. So, let’s keep spiritually awake. Amen.
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