And all of creation groans in this moment, and we, too, look about us and groan, because the waiting is sometimes more like pain than eager anticipation. And timing does not feel God-ordained and the sheep are going astray, the charts are unclear and Gabriel’s visit a confusing memory. We are easily distracted in the dark. The cold loneliness of three in the morning fills our stomachs with the lead of doubt while the rest of the world sleeps on. We are a waiting people and the wait is not an easy one.
“How long, oh Lord?” we all ask. “How long before we will be done with this bad taste in our mouths, with sorrow, with disappointment, with sin, with the bleak journey of one foot in front of the other? When, Oh Lord, will you save us from all the waiting?” But the clock ticks on and heaven, it seems, is unmoved.
But in the waiting, God sits, too. Containing and constraining himself within time and nature and natural courses of the heart. And God, it seems would wait for us in holy patience while leaders take thrones, stars move in their courses, shepherds buy sheep and an unborn baby grows a spine and fingers and eyelashes.
There was a time, just over two thousand years ago, a perfect moment when the stars aligned in reconciliation and a girl gave birth in a barn. The black night tore open and the very joy of heaven spilled over the upturned faces of sheep and shepherds alike and led them all toward the warm beating body of God in swaddling clothes. And the waiting gave birth to gift.
8 comments:
Angela. thank you for this. Can I pass it along?
you're welcome.
please do!
I love your sermons.
thanks, deanna. i wrote this for our christmas eve service at church and it was the closest thing to a sermon we had that night.
Me, having no words to describe this, yes, true....this is really...magnificent. Reading and re-reading. It feels like a nice hot bath for my soul. Stimulating and soothing all at once.
Good job! Your church is lucky to have you.
thanks, cherie! i love my church. it's nice to get to share with them.
Sigh. This is beautiful. I love your writing. (This and your troubling story of Casper (was he Casper... I haven't been back to re-peruse) which disturbed me and prickled me and made me want to be an agent of change)
Our church is lucky to have you!Thank you so much for doing this, it truly was the best Christmas gift I got. I appreciate you greatly. Thank you thank you thank you.
Karen
Post a Comment