The First Sunday of Advent-The Rev Melanie Lemburg
Advent 1A
November 27, 2022
Today we celebrate the beginning of a
new year in the church calendar. It is
the first Sunday of Advent, a season of the church year that is characterized
by anticipation and waiting, by expectant hope and longing, by preparation for
Jesus’s coming again through his birth at Christmas and by preparation for
Jesus’s coming again into this world as he promised. Advent is, perhaps, the most counter-cultural
of our seasons because all around us, the stores, the yards, the houses are all
decorated for Christmas in a riot of carols and colors. And yet in Advent, we light our single
candles week by week and huddle expectantly around the light of those
individual flames.
In our gospel lesson for today, we see
Jesus, who has just entered Jerusalem and is peering into the shadows of his
impending death, entreating his disciples (and us) to “keep awake!” And that’s really the theme of this season,
isn’t it: Keep awake! But how do we do that, we who are not so good
at or comfortable with waiting?
In Advent, we are invited to dwell for a
season with our longing. We sing every
week “O, come O come Emanual,” and we identify as a people in exile, longing to
return home. We remember for a season
that we are a people who are called to wait, to watch expectantly, to
hope. Most of the time, we just refuse
to wait. We rush or we ignore it or we
distract ourselves with our smartphones, but in Advent we are called to embrace
the waiting and the longing that comes with it; we are called to lean into the
uncertainty of our daily lives. We are
invited to keep watch for the presence of God, who does show up and who will continue
to show up.
A while back, one of my favorite songs
was titled “Awake My Soul” by the British band Mumford and Sons. The refrain of the song goes: “Awake my soul! For you were made to meet your maker.”
St. Augustine wrote a long time ago that
at the center of each of us is a God-shaped hole. We try to fill it so often with things that
aren’t God or of God. But in the end,
only God can fill that void.
So one way of keeping awake during this
season of Advent is to embark upon an examination of our longing. What is it for which we wait? What does our deepest longing reveal about
each of us? And what would it be like to
kneel before God (perhaps during some extra silence before the confession?) and
to name our specific longing before God and ask God for God’s fulfillment?
So this Advent, may your soul be
awakened: that you may watch with the expectancy and joy of children waiting
for their playmates to arrive. May your
soul be awakened that you may watch with the purpose of one who waits for water
to boil. May your soul be awakened that you
may watch with the patience and faithfulness of one who keeps watch with a loved
one who is near death. May you keep
awake and keep watch for the presence of God in your life and in this
world. For you were made to meet your
maker.
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