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Many years
ago, Hal Luccock wrote about an Advent carol-sing.
A group of
folks gathered around the piano and sang Advent and Christmas
hymns and other songs too.
They took
turns suggesting which one to sing next, just for the fun of
renewing old acquaintances and making new favorites as well.
One person
suggested “She'll be coming around the mountain”
The leader
was distressed: “We can't do that one. It doesn't belong to this
season!”
The singing
stopped abruptly.
After a
moment of silence, one of the others said, “No, you're wrong!.
This is
a song for the season...
at least it
has the right mood and inspiration, even if its subject isn't
exactly Jesus.
She'll be
coming... is a song of confident hope and joyous
expectation.
It is a song
of preparation;
of not yet, but coming...
...speeding
on the way....six white horses....
Everyone
standing on tiptoe,
---looking
for the dust cloud,
---listening
for the clip-clop, and the rattles.
---Come,
let's clean the house,
get ready, prepare the feast.
---Our
accommodations may not be fancy, but no matter, we'll be
together with the expected one,and that is what counts.
Throughout all the
days and hours of our preparation for Christmas, there is an
air of excitement, anticipation, and confidence.
And that is just
right as a theme to introduce the season this year.
Behold, the
days are coming says the prophet.
Stand up, be on
watch, for your redemption is near, says our Lord.
And we are invited
to hear these words with confident hope!
Too often we are
tempted to turn them into words of dread and fear, like we have
with that dratted Christmas song that has annoyed me for years:
“...you'd better watch out, you'd better not cry....”
I don't think that
we will ever scare anyone into being joyful at Christmas-time,
nor will we be
able to scare anyone into heaven.
After all, lots of
people heard Jesus in person 2,000 years ago, and only a few
took it to heart.
Some heard the one
who is Lord and master when God spoke, and others just heard
thunder, the scriptures report.
Or, referring back
to the song with which we began, some will see the dust cloud
“coming 'round the mountain” and get ready for a visitor, and
others will dismiss it as just the wind blowing.
Over the years I
have collected an impressive array of unsolicited promises from
persons in hospital beds,
promises
volunteered to me in fear about the outcome of a particular
illness or malady.
“Things are going
to be different, pastor, when I get out.
You'll be seeing
me on Sunday real soon.
I'm going to take
some time to work on one of the projects like quilting or Family
Promise, ...”or whatever we had been discussing.
Very few of those
things ever come about.
They were promises
made to try to buy-off God, or at least head off a lecture that
they thought I was going to give them.
They were promises
made without meaning, made in fear.
And they are empty
words, useless words.
How different it
is when I hear things that are said in confident hope and joy.
---Bette
McCrandall has seen as much suffering and difficult
circumstances as anyone would want to face, and yet she comes to
us and with a wide smile tells us about her plans to go back to
work in Liberia.
--A volunteer tour
leader at New Windsor Service Center told me, This is truly a
joy for me. They keep asking me to come back. This is the
fourth year that I have volunteered 3 months of my time to live
and work here.
--A person
announced that the schedule of medical tests were not ultimately
worrisome, because of confidence in the doctors' and
technicians' skills, and even more, trust that God's promise of
home-coming is what is needed in the end.
--Fr. Jerzy
Popieluszko (Pop-yeh-LOOSH-koh) of Poland.
Beginning in 1980,
he regularly led worship for the striking steel workers in
Gdansk,
and shared the
message that that they could be spiritually free in in the midst
of physical enslavement.
He helped to
support families suffering because of the struggle;
he sat in court
with the families of those on trial;
he celebrated a monthly Mass for
the Country, on behalf all the imprisoned and their families.
Fr. Popieluszko insisted that
change should be brought about peacefully; the sign of peace was
one of the most poignant moments of each monthly Mass for the
Country.
After torture and
intimidation,
in
weak health, overworked,
enduring threats of death,
could still say
I am not afraid.
and so the
communist government marked him to be brutally murdered 25 years
ago last month.
They estimated
that 500,000 people attended his funeral.
His death perhaps
hastened the end of the communist regime.
How strong is a
person who is armed with the love of God; so strong that
governments cannot stand it.
We remember, too,
that a frightened government sent a band of soldiers to capture
the Lord Jesus who was armed only with the Word of God.
How different are
the words spoken or heard in hope from the words that
are spoken or heard in fear!
How is it that we
shall hear the lessons today?
Are they fearful,
or hope-filled?
If they are
fearful words,
they
may lead to strife and violence among us as we try to prove
ourselves worthy of avoiding the terrors the lessons pronounce.
If our lessons are
hopeful words,
words
of anticipation,
then we have a
chance to live and to love,
to
reach out where we could not do so before because of fear.
Let it be good
news—the Lord is coming!
How then shall we
regard the gift of time which is given to us.?
If we hear this
announcement fearfully
Behold the days are coming
then perhaps we
would draw a clock-face that has no numbers and no hands,
in a futile
attempt to deny the message.
If there is no
time then he cannot come!
But if we hear
that message hopefully,
then perhaps we
could draw at least three different clock-faces depending on
which part of the message one wants to emphasize.
If we draw a face
with numbers but no hands, perhaps it would represent the
message You shall not know the day nor the hour of his
coming.
If we draw a face
with the hands pointing at 11:55, it can remind us that
Behold, I stand at the door and knock, that there is still
time for us.
If we draw a face
with the numbers all clustered together with the hands, perhaps
that would be a way of saying I do not desire the death of
any of my saints.
--that Jesus wants
to be present to us all right now.
Each of these
three stands as a corrector of any of the excesses of any one of
them.
They are all
valuable insights,
they are all
spoken in hope and faith.
They are all quite
different from the one who fears time.
The days are coming 'round the mountain.
Hurray, make
ready!
We understand the point that the
eyes of faith allow us to look at life around us quite
differently than would otherwise be the case.
The prelude today is Bach's
introduction to the great Lutheran chorale Wake, Awake!
Is the hymn one of fear, or joy?
40 years ago when I first started
hearing that piece, it was played ponderously slowly, with the
melody played by the loud trumpet of approaching doom.
Over the years, I began to
realize that Bach is a much better theologian than that.
It is not the trump of doom, but
the announcement of the dance at the great feast....like the
kids jumping up and down when you arrive home in the nick of
time for the birthday party.
and so the piece is played in a
much more sprightly tempo than years ago.
Are we gathered around words of
doom or of hope?
I choose hope!
He'll be coming 'round the
mountain;
make ready the feast! Amen.
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