3 December 2017

"Hope Grows in the Waiting" (Advent 1 - Sermon)


Chetwynd Shared Ministry
December 3, 2017
Scripture:  Isaiah 64:1-9
 

Who remembers what it felt like to be a kid in the days and weeks leading up to Christmas?

In our family, the tree would be brought inside the weekend before Christmas – any earlier and there would be needles tracked all over the house!  My father would anchor it with wires to the ceiling so that the cats couldn’t knock it over.  The decorations would be brought out and the tree would be decorated with ornaments we had made at school, ornaments inherited from generations gone before – those ones usually went at the top of the tree, out of reach of children and pets – and always the brightly coloured lights and a star on top.

And then over the next week, carefully wrapped presents would be brought out of hiding and placed under the tree.  And as kids, that’s where the fun began.  We would poke the boxes through the wrapping paper, and shake them, all in an effort to figure out what was underneath the wrapping paper.  My youngest sister was “that child” – you know, the one who counts all of the parcels to make sure that everyone is receiving the same number of presents.

And oh, the agony of waiting.  The regular refrain around our house was “how many more days until Christmas?” or, in the family vernacular, “how many more sleeps 'til HoHo comes?!”

And finally it would be Christmas Eve.  Our family tradition was that no presents were opened until Christmas morning, but on Christmas Eve we would hang our stockings by the fireplace in the living room, and then go upstairs to try to sleep.

And then finally it would be Christmas morning.  We were allowed to get out of bed at 6am, but we weren’t allowed in to the living room until 7am.  Sometimes that last hour of waiting felt like it took as long as the whole week leading up to Christmas.  Usually our aunt would keep us company in the kitchen and make us hot chocolate as we waited for the magic hour of 7am.

And then finally, finally after all of those hours and days and weeks of waiting, and waiting, and growing excitement, and anticipation, we were able to go in to the living room.  Christmas was here!

Never once did it cross our minds that Christmas wouldn’t come.  Never, in all of the waiting, did we think that we were going to be stuck waiting forever.  Never did we worry that Santa might forget to visit our stockings that year.  Despite our cries of “how much longer?” in all of our waiting, we never gave up hope.

The ancient Israelite people were also waiting – they were waiting for God.  At the time that the passage that Gloria read from Isaiah was written, the people had been through a lot.  Their land had been taken over by the armies of a couple of empires, one after another – first the Assyrian army had taken over the northern part of the land, and then the Babylonian army had swooped in and had taken over the whole land, destroyed the city of Jerusalem including the temple that was God’s home, and had carted off many of the people into exile in Babylon.  For more than 60 years, the people lived in exile in Babylon having lost their homes, their temple, their land, and many of them believed that God had abandoned them as well.

More than a full generation passed in exile, but then the political and military forces shifted, the Persian empire conquered the Babylonian empire, and the Persian king allowed the Israelite people to return home.

But things weren’t all rosy when they got there.  There was tension between the people and families who had gone into exile and had returned, and the people and families who had been allowed to stay in the land.  The beautiful temple that had been constructed under the reign of King Solomon, God’s dwelling place, had been destroyed.  And God who had spoken to Moses out of a burning bush, who had led the people out of slavery in Egypt, who had given them their land, who had been so visible in past times, this God seemed to be absent and silent.

And the prophet Isaiah cried out,
            “O that you would tear open the heavens
                        and come down!
            From ages past no one has heard,
                        no ear has perceived,
                        no eye has seen any God besides you!
            There is no one who calls on your name,
                        or attempts to take hold of you;
                                    for you have hidden your face from us.”

How much longer, O God?  How much longer do we need to wait for you to appear to us?

And yet the people never lost their faith.  They never gave up their hope.  In the waiting, they cried out for God, but they knew that God would hear them, and that God would eventually come from them.  Our hope grows in the waiting.

When we look around our world today, it is easy to feel the same way as the ancient Israelite people.  It is sometimes easy to think that God has abandoned the world.  You only have to turn on your TV or open a news website to see calamity and disaster at every turn.

“North Korea’s missile capabilities may be closer than once thought.”
O that you would tear open the heavens and come down!  How much longer, O God?  How much longer do we need to wait?

“Gun Violence Survivors press government for stronger laws.”
O that you would tear open the heavens and come down!  How much longer, O God?  How much longer do we need to wait?

“Is there a path to redemption for any of the high-profile men accused of sexual misconduct?”
O that you would tear open the heavens and come down!  How much longer, O God?  How much longer do we need to wait?

“New institute is bankrolled by billionaires steeped in scandal.”
O that you would tear open the heavens and come down!  How much longer, O God?  How much longer do we need to wait?

“Penalties when workers die on the job don’t go far enough, say labour groups and families.”
O that you would tear open the heavens and come down!  How much longer, O God?  How much longer do we need to wait?

“Families share more stories of loss, violence, and discrimination as Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls Hearing continues.”[1]
O that you would tear open the heavens and come down!  How much longer, O God?  How much longer do we need to wait?

There is so much grief and pain and suffering in our world today.  It would be so easy to fall into despair if you stop at the headlines.  But we cling to hope.  We cling to hope, because sometimes it seems as though hope is all that we have.  We know that the God who spoke to Moses out of the burning bush, the God who led the Israelite people out of slavery to freedom, the God who heard Isaiah’s plea and who saw that the temple in Jerusalem was rebuilt – we know that this same God hears our cries and our pleas even today.  We know that this same God hears us and comforts us and is always with us.

We can be confident that the God who has always been faithful in the past will always be faithful in the future.  We can never know or never understand God’s timing.  All we can do is wait.  And while we wait, we can cry out – “How long, O God?”  And while we wait, we can pray, “Thy kingdom come, thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.”  And while we wait, we can be the body of Christ, the hands and feet and eyes and ears and heart of Christ, spreading God’s love and justice in our world.  And while we wait, hope grows.

I spent three years living on the equator.  When I moved there, I thought that I was going to miss the changing of the seasons – I love how we have the four seasons here in Canada and how autumn gives way to winter which gives way to spring which grows into summer.  But I didn’t miss the changing of the seasons – there were still four seasons but they were defined by rainfall instead of temperature.  What I did miss though was the changing length of day.  We had 12 hours of daylight, 365 days of the year.  There were no long summer evenings to sit outside in.  There were no dark winter mornings to curl up with a cup of tea.  The sun always rose at 6:30am and set at 6:30pm.  Without the long hours of daylight, it was hard to know what month it was.  And without the long nights of December, it was hard to long for the light.

At this time, our nights are still getting longer and the darkness is increasing.  But we cling to our hope.  We cling to the confidence that in a few short weeks, the days are going to start getting longer again, and the daylight in this corner of the world is going to start to increase.  We have this hope – we have this confidence.

Like my sisters and I, when we were children, in this season of Advent, we are waiting for Christmas.  It may be already-Christmas in the stores and on the radio stations, but here in the church, Advent is a season of not-yet-Christmas.  We are waiting for the birth of the Christ-child.  We are waiting to celebrate the time of God-with-us, God’s Word-Made-Flesh.  We are waiting for the time when the God who makes mountains quake just by being present became vulnerable as a human baby.

And at the same time, we are waiting for the work that began in the person of Jesus Christ to reach its fulfillment.  We are waiting for and longing for the time when God’s kingdom will be fully present and pain and suffering will be no more, and we will be fully and forever in the presence of the God who is love.  And while we wait, this hope grows.

Let me finish with one more story of waiting…

Once upon a time, somewhere in Canada, a young couple was expecting their first baby.  They were overjoyed and amazed at the news, and filled with awe as they tracked the baby’s growth in the womb.  They didn’t want to find out if it was a boy or a girl – they wanted to be surprised.

As the months passed, they started getting ready.  They prepared the room that was going to be a nursery.  Friends threw them a baby shower and gave them some of the things that they would need for the baby – a crib, a car seat, receiving blankets, tiny baby clothes.  Family members let them borrow other things that they would need – a stroller, a change table, a high chair, toys, more tiny baby clothes.  The couple also spent several weekends together preparing meals to put in the freezer for the days when they knew that they wouldn’t have the energy to cook.  They gathered all of these things together in anticipation of their new baby.

But their preparations went further than just the physical preparations.  They spent hours talking about possible names – boys’ names, girls’ names, names that could work for either a girl or a boy.  They talked about the type of parents they wanted to be – how they wanted to raise this child.  They talked about how they wanted to arrange childcare once their parental leaves were over.

And they also made spiritual plans.  They talked about how they wanted their faith to be a part of their family life.  They talked about the values that they wanted their child to grow up with.  They talked about the kind of world that they wanted their child to live in.  They looked around their world and saw hurricanes and wildfires destroying communities and whole countries.  They saw nuclear arms races.  They saw wars and refugees.  They saw political unrest and hatred being stirred up in different parts of the world.  But even though they felt sad because of what they saw, their faith gave them hope that God’s world was coming.  They talked about what they could do to make the world a better place for their child to grow up in.

And when the months had passed, and the preparations were done, they welcomed their new baby into the world.  Their world had changed together.

(pause)

Won’t you join me, as we prepare for the birth of a baby?  Won’t you join me in this time of waiting and hoping and preparing?  Won’t you join me, as we get ready to take the promises of God into our hearts?

Let us pray:
God of waiting,
            be with us in this time of Advent.
Be with us as we wait,
            as we prepare,
            as we pray.
Give us the gift of your hope as we wait,
            so that we can remain confident in your promises
                        that a better world is not only possible,
                                    but is coming.
We pray this in the name of Jesus Christ,
            the one for whom we wait.
Amen.



[1] All headlines taken from cbc.ca on November 30, 2017.


(We lit our first Advent Candle today - the candle of hope)

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