Sunday, December 21, 2014

Reflection for the Fourth Sunday of Advent



In the sixth month the angel Gabriel was sent by God to a town in Galilee called Nazareth, to a virgin engaged to a man whose name was Joseph, of the house of David. The virgin’s name was Mary. And he came to her and said, “Greetings, favored one! The Lord is with you.”

In this last week of Advent, as we enter into our final days of preparation for the Christmas season and the celebration of Christ’s birth, we hear the angel’s greeting to Mary. We hear of the promise of the birth to come.

What are we listening for in these final days, then? What have we opened our ears to in these last moments of Advent, as Christmas rushes headlong towards us?

What do we have left on our “to do” lists? Do we have all of the decorations up and the gifts bought? Are the pictures taken, cards mailed, and family contacted? What more is there yet to do to be ready?

I think of all the sounds that are particular to Advent and December: the bells, the songs, the carols, of course. But I also think of the whisper that tells you the difference between rain falling, and snow. The way you can tell when the snowplow is going by, which is somehow a different sound than the usual cars or garbage trucks.

If we could open our ears to the world around us and hear God through the voice of the angel Gabriel, what greeting would we hear? What would we expect to hear? “Greetings, child of God!” or do we look down on ourselves in our image of God’s eyes, and expect something a little less cheery, “Hello, child.”

Perhaps we are indeed hearing God’s voice, coming closer and closer as Christmas approaches, through all the different sounds of the season. The voices of the angels singing out in the carols on the radio, the greetings of family and friends reminding us of the joys of the season, these voices remind us of the love of God, who delights to be in relationship with us.

And perhaps also we can hear the voice of God in the whisper of the falling snow and the rush of the working snow plows. Perhaps we can open our ears to the quiet ways that God calls out to us, calls us into the world that is always changing, forming and re-forming around us in every moment, calling us into relationship with God and God’s beautiful, holy creation.

After all, Christmas is when we celebrate God becoming a truly physical part of that creation.
And it’s coming soon!

Thanks be to God!
Amen.

Sunday, December 14, 2014

Reflection for the Third Sunday of Advent


“Rejoice always,
pray without ceasing,
give thanks in all circumstances;
this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you.”
Amen.

This Sunday the children and youth of our congregations will be working together to present their Christmas pageant. This year’s pageant tells the Christmas story through the eyes of a candymaker, telling a mythological story of how the candy cane came about: the white candy to remind us of Christ’s purity, the stripes to remind of how he suffered, the cane shape to remind us of the Good Shepherd, and the hardness to remind us that Christ is our Rock. These children have been working hard to prepare to present this pageant. They have practiced on Sunday afternoons, and are ready to share what they have learned.

As our Advent season passes the halfway point, what have we learned? What have we heard, seen, encountered? What have these two-plus weeks taught us about waiting, about looking forward, about what is to come?

In our readings for Advent we hear the call of John the Baptist, we hear Isaiah’s promises about the coming Messiah. We hear promise and hope and expectation.

From Paul, our second reading, which is quoted above, we hear more about how to prepare, and it is all simple, beautiful stuff.

Rejoice, always.

Rejoicing isn’t always easy. It isn’t always easy to take the breath, the time, in the midst of “to do” lists and shopping and cleaning and preparing. It isn’t always easy to stop and rejoice. And yet, that’s not what we’re being asked. Rejoice, always. Not, “stop and rejoice,” but “rejoice, always.” In all you do, be joyful. Again, not always easy, but not something we have to see as disconnected from everything else we do.

Pray without ceasing.

Hear again the continual nature of this call. “Pray without ceasing,” Paul urges us. In all we do, during all we do, in the midst and breath and moments of all we do, pray.

Give thanks in all circumstances.

Another one that we can easily come up with excuses for not doing, and yet isn’t so difficult after all. Thank you, thank you, thank you. Not so difficult.

This is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you.

It is the will of God that we be in relationship with God. After all, that’s what rejoicing, praying, and giving thanks all have in common. God just wants to love us, that we may love God, and love each other.

Thanks be to God.

Amen.

Sunday, December 7, 2014

Reflection for the Second Sunday of Advent



As it is written in the prophet Isaiah,
“See, I am sending my messenger ahead of you,
who will prepare your way;
the voice of one crying out in the wilderness:
‘Prepare the way of the Lord,
make his paths straight,’”


As we enter into this second week of Advent the sense of the season is truly beginning to dawn upon us. The stores are now in full bloom with their colors and sales and enticements. The streets begin to glow with holiday lights, and plan for travel, cooking, and celebrating no longer seem far off.

And yet, it is only the second week. There is still more road to travel, there are still more stories to be heard, more candles to be lit. Last week we celebrated our freedom in how we prepare for the Christmas season. This week, we hear from John the Baptist, announcing the way of the Lord, telling the people how to prepare:

“Prepare the way of the Lord, make his paths straight.”

We like it when there are messengers. Though the adage “don’t shoot the messenger” exists for a reason (John ended up beheaded, remember?), we do actually like to know what is going to happen next. We like to have a “heads up,” a little time to prepare for whatever big news or event is coming towards us.

So, John prepared the people, baptizing them in the waters of the Jordan, calling for repentance and making the way ready for the One who was to come.

What do we do, then, to prepare in this season?

Perhaps, in a spirit of baptismal waters, we wash our houses, doing extra cleaning and preparation for the holidays. Or perhaps we take up additional spiritual practices, similar to the tradition of “giving up” something in Lent. Or perhaps we are so overwhelmed by the secular world’s demands on our pre-Christmas time that the idea of doing anything to prepare ourselves personally for the coming of Christ, of which we do not know the day or hour, just seems like one more thing on the list that isn’t going to get done.

It’s okay.

Read Isaiah’s proclamation again: “See, I am sending my messenger…who will prepare your way.” It’s not actually up to us to prepare. God prepare us. We have already been washed in the font, we have already been fed at the table, we have already been loved and named and claimed.

Thanks be to God!
Amen.

Monday, December 1, 2014

Holiday Steeples Pastor's Letter



Grace and peace to you from God our Creator, and our risen Lord, Jesus Christ!

It is just now the very beginning of the holiday season. As I write this, we are preparing for Thanksgiving, the stores are beginning to fill up with red and green everything, and the air is decidedly taking at turn towards “winter.”

It is common for the message that we hear from churches in the holiday season to be one of “remember the reason for the season” or “take time for God!” I want to give you a different message.

It is, of course, important to remember why we celebrate, but we don’t by any means need to stop what we do, and somehow renounce the traditions that make us happy, in order to “really” celebrate the season. So my message to you this season is to encourage you to do the things that help you celebrate.

If you celebrate by searching for the perfect gift for everyone on your list, then do so, knowing that God celebrates with you when you find that absolute best present.

If you celebrate by gathering together with family and busily preparing massive amounts of food that leave your fridge and freezer stuffed with leftovers for weeks, then do so, knowing that God feasts with you, and celebrates with you as you feed those you love.

If you celebrate by traveling or by staying home, by lighting candles in a wreath or setting up impressive light displays, by decorating a large tree or by making cookies, by volunteering time or donating extra money, no matter what you do, do with confidence. God loves us! God loves celebrating with us!

And, if you find that the holidays are, really, just stressful, and you want time apart, do that, too.

This year we will be having a “Quiet Christmas” service on Sunday, December 21, at 5pm. This will be a full Christmas worship service with Holy Communion and familiar carols, but designed with those for whom the holidays are a time of sadness, stress, or grief, in mind.

No matter how you spend the holidays, know that the God who was made human, walk with you, sings with you, celebrates with you.

Thanks be to God.
Amen.