"It's been a long time" are the opening lyrics to the song "Wait" ... which is likely what most of you have been doing since my last post. But now, after almost two years of no posting, and since it's the 3rd Sunday of Advent, I decided to OPEN up shop again.
If you’re like me, your door is CLOSED right about now. Cold weather. Keep out wind. Windows are lined with plastic. Garage door is closed. Soon schools are closed. Snow is too high, business and stores close. You also close up our bodies: sweaters, coats, and head coverings. If wind is high, we close our eyes. So, winter is a time when things CLOSE. Even our emotions and our spiritual life.
That can leave us rather dark,
depressed and hopeless. But
good news:
Advent is a time to
remain OPEN to the light that shines in our darkness.
Open your Christmas cards.
-
see who it’s
from, then think of the person
-
write down the
change of address
-
answer right back
-
don’t just you
toss it away
-
hang them on your
door
-
be sure to find
the message of hope.
-
OPEN IT. Be open to the good news inside that card.
-
Just to READ the
message, much less think about it, just to READ it!
I have a card with one word: “Rejoice” and that is the name of this Third Sunday of Advent, Gaudete Sunday … which is Latin >“Rejoice”
On the Advent wreath, one of the candles is pink, suggesting that during this time of penance and waiting, we have reason to be hopeful, open to possibility, and joyful at the coming of Jesus.
Advent is a time to remain OPEN to the light that shines in our darkness.
Tell that to John the Baptist. In today's Gospel, we see him waiting in prison, he was closed. Not because of the snow, but because he had challenged King Herod about his wife. He’s a rebel and a strange man in Judea, and so he was closed up into prison. He found himself in exile, darkness, trapped in the dark and alone. Maybe you identify with his suffering.
So in a period of doubt, and
skepticism (kinda like me in mid-December) John the Baptist opens the window of
his prison cell and sends a message to Jesus by way of his disciples. “Are you the one who is to
come, or should we look for another?”
Guess what Jesus does? He sends messages back that gives John hope. It’s like he has his disciples deliver several Christmas cards back to John in prison:
- the
blind regain their sight,
- the lame walk,
- lepers are cleansed,
- the deaf hear,
- the dead are raised,
and the poor have the good news proclaimed to them.
In these chilly days when people are closed off from God’s love, perhaps you could be someone like Jesus who brings
- healing to a
relationship|
-
cleansing to a bad
habit
- sight to an area
in your life where you are blinded
- a listening ear
where you are usually deaf
- a second chance
for life to someone hard to forgive
- and a gift from
the heart to someone who is poor
More powerful than Advent
wreath or Christmas cards, these are the real ways to remain open to Christmas
and to bring that light from the pink candle to light up your community this
season. It's been a long time.
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