[faithandlife] WHAT TIME IS IT

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From: charles scott <crscottblu@...>
Date: Fri, 25 Nov 2005 10:42:25 -0800 (PST)
Brothers+

What time is it? The following reminder is from
the Bruderhof Community.

Ring the bell! It is time to wake up.

Charles
Church of the Good Shepherd, Indianapolis
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The Meaning of Advent

Charles Moore

Though Advent (literally "arrival") has been observed
for centuries as a time to contemplate Christ's birth,
most people today acknowledge it only with a blank
look. For the vast majority of us, December flies by
in a flurry of activities, and what is called "the
holiday season" turns out to be the most stressful
time of the year.

It is also a time of contrasting emotions. We are
eager, yet frazzled; sentimental, yet indifferent. One
minute we glow at the thought of getting together with
our family and friends; the next we feel utterly
lonely. Our hope is mingled with dread, our
anticipation with despair. We sense the deeper
meanings of the season but grasp at them in vain; and
in the end, all the bustle leaves us frustrated and
drained.
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"Light your candles quietly, such candles as you
possess, wherever you are."

Alfred Delp
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Even we who do not experience such tensions - who
genuinely love Christmas - often miss its point.
Content with candles and carols and good food, we bask
in the warmth of familiar traditions, in reciprocated
acts of kindness, and in feelings of general goodwill.
How many of us remember the harsh realities of
Christ's first coming: the dank stable, the cold
night, the closed door of the inn? How many of us
share the longing of the ancient prophets, who awaited
the Messiah with such aching intensity that they
foresaw his arrival thousands of years before he was
born?

Mother Teresa once noted that the first person to
welcome Christ was John the Baptist, who leaped for
joy on recognizing him, though both of them were still
within their mothers' wombs. We, in stark contrast,
are often so dulled by superficial distractions that
we are incapable of hearing any voice within, let
alone listening to it. Consequently, the feeling we
know as Christmas cheer lacks any real connection to
the vital spirit that radiated from the manger.

We miss the essence of Christmas unless we become, in
the words of Eberhard Arnold, "mindful of how Christ's
birth took place." Once we do, we will sense
immediately that Advent marks something momentous:
God's coming into our midst. That coming is not just
something that happened in the past. It is a recurring
possibility here and now. And thus Advent is not
merely a commemorative event or an anniversary, but a
yearly opportunity for us to consider the future,
second Advent - the promised coming of God's kingdom
on earth.

Such an understanding of Christmas is possible only
insofar as we let go of the false props of convention
and seek to unlock its central paradox. That paradox,
to paraphrase the modern martyr Dietrich Bonhoeffer,
is the fact that God's coming is not only a matter of
glad tidings but, first of all, "frightening news for
everyone who has a conscience."

The love that descended to Bethlehem is not the easy
sympathy of an avuncular God, but a burning fire whose
light chases away every shadow, floods every corner,
and turns midnight into noon. This love reveals sin
and overcomes it. It conquers darkness with such
forcefulness and intensity that it scatters the proud,
humbles the mighty, feeds the hungry, and sends the
rich away empty-handed (Luke 1:51-53).

Because a transformation of this scale can never be
achieved by human means, but only by divine
intervention, Advent (to quote Bonhoeffer again) might
be compared to a prison cell "in which one waits and
hopes and does various unessential things... but is
completely dependent on the fact that the door of
freedom has to be opened from the outside." It is a
fitting metaphor. But dependency does not release us
from responsibility. If the essence of Advent is
expectancy, it is also readiness for action:
watchfulness for every opening, and willingness to
risk everything for freedom and a new beginning.

That is why the imagery of nativity scenes is not
sufficient to explain the Christmas message. Yes, God
came into the feeding trough of an animal. But it was
not only as a baby that he lay there. This child was
the same man who was crucified on Golgotha, and who
rose again. Within the manger lies the cross - and the
hope of redemption and resurrection.

To recognize this requires reverence and humility. It
requires faith. We might ask, "What grounds are there
for such hope?" Or we might seek to become like
children, and believe. Mary did. So did the shepherds
and the wise men of the East. So can each of us,
wherever we are.

© 2005 The Bruderhof Foundation.