The Coming of the Lord

Theme: The Coming of the Lord

Sentence: `Heaven and earth will pass away,’ says the Lord, `but my words will not pass away.’ Mark 13:31

Collect: God of hope, When Christ your Son appears may he not find us asleep or idle, but active in his service and ready; through the same Jesus Christ our Redeemer. Amen.

Readings: 
Isaiah 64:1-9
Psalm 80:1-7, 17-19
I Corinthians 1:3-9
Mark 13:24-37

Today is the first Sunday in Advent. And, Advent is the season where the church waits and prepares for both the birth of Christ at Christmas and the return of Christ at his Second Coming. Advent is not just a season of the church year. It’s a reality of life. It happens in different ways and it comes at various points in life, not just the four or five weeks before Christmas.

“In those days … the sun will be darkened, and the moon will not give its light, and the stars will be falling from heaven, and the powers in the heavens will be shaken.” These are Jesus’ words to his disciples. The disciples have been admiring the temple and they are impressed. Jesus, however, is telling them that change is coming. Their world is going to fall apart.

If you have ever experienced significant change in your life, whether you wanted it or not, you know about “those days.” So you also know about Advent. You know what it’s like to enter the darkness of change. All change, whether welcome or unwanted, brings some kind of loss to us. It’s a dark place. It may be the loss of a relationship, the loss of a loved one, the loss of what is comfortable, familiar and safe. Regardless, the world as we have known it has ended. Covid 19 is a good example, we as a church must change and we are! 

You see, the Advents of our lives set before us important questions. How will we find our way forward when the usual lights that illuminate our path no longer shine? What do we do when it feels as if our world is falling apart? Where do we go when it seems as if darkness is our only companion and God is no where to be seen? 

We all go through life changes, and we all experience dark times in our lives. But the dark times of life are threshold moments. And the temptation is to quickly do something; to fix it and to get back to what used to be. But the God of Advent doesn’t allow that. We can never go back to the way it was before the lights went out. God doesn’t undo our life. God redeems our life. Advent is not about the losses in our lives it’s about the hope and coming of what will be. That hope and coming is the Son of Man, Jesus the Christ. The presence of Christ is the ultimate answer to every prayer, to every light loss we experience in life.

Every time we tell the Advent story of our life we echo the prophet Isaiah’s cry, “O that you would tear open the heavens and come down” (Is. 64:1 ). And God does. God is faithful. God strengthens us to the end. In the midst of our losses we lack nothing as we await the revealing of our Lord Jesus Christ. (1 Cor. 1:7-9).

You see, the Advent times of life are times of waiting. In Advent we live in-between what was and what will be. We are neither here nor there. We are in-between. They are times of transition and it’s hard, sometimes even impossible, to see the way forward. If we allow them too, the dark threshold places of life can draw us deeper into the divine mystery. They remind us that we don’t know everything. We don’t see all possibilities. We can neither predict nor control anything. We are not in charge. Advent challenges us to give up our usual sources of understanding, to let go of our habitual ways of knowing, and to question our typical ways of seeing. Advent invites us to receive the God who comes to us in the darkness of life.

At some point our world falls apart, life changes, or the lights go out. More often than not we see this as the end. When these things happen, Jesus says, remember the fig tree. Read the signs correctly. When its branch becomes tender and it puts forth leaves you know summer is near. So also when the darkness overtakes your life know that the Son of Man is near. Christ’s presence, our healing, and salvation, are always taking place in the dark and messy parts of life. We have not and never will be abandoned to the darkness.

“Be alert,” Jesus warns. He commands us to “Keep awake.” Darkness is not our enemy as much as is falling asleep. We fall asleep whenever fear controls our life, when hope gives way to despair, when busyness equals goodness, when entitlement replaces thanksgiving, when we choose what is comfortable rather than life-giving. Whenever we think our life is over, that darkness is our final reality, that we have been abandoned, or that loss and darkness are our only reality then we have fallen asleep.

To often we allow the darkness to deceive us into believing there is nothing worth waiting or watching for. So we close our eyes. We fall asleep and we become part of the darkness. We refuse to see the One who is always coming to us. The danger in the darkness is that we don’t give our eyes time to adjust. We don’t trust our night vision. Night vision is not about the light around us but the light that is within us, a light that can never be extinguished.

Advent asks us to trust the Coming One more than the darkness. It means we must sit, listen, wait and watch. That is the opposite to what most of the world believes and what our society rewards. We must show up every moment of our lives not just in spite of but because of the darkness. To show up and be present in the darkness of life is some of the hardest work we will ever do. Run from our darkness and we run from God.

In the darkness of Advent we move slower, we listen more than we speak, we hold questions rather than answers. We wait expectantly but without specific expectations. Waiting in darkness is an act of faithfulness and surrender to the Coming One. Waiting becomes our prayer, a prayer that is and will be answered by God’s presence.

Closing Prayer:
God of hope, When Christ your Son appears may he not find us asleep or idle, but active in his service and ready; through the same Jesus Christ our Redeemer. Amen.

The Venerable Kaio Karipa
Chaplain
Sydney Maori Anglican Fellowship Church of Te Wairua Tapu
www.tewairuatapu.com.au