Homily for the First Sunday of Advent
"Awake to Life"
by
Margaret D. McGee
Delivered at St. Andrew’s Episcopal Parish in Seattle,
Washington, on November 28, 2010
Isaiah 2:1-5
Romans 13:11-14
Matthew 24:36-44
Psalm 122
So we make full circle and return again to the beginning, to
Advent, the opening of a new year in the life of faith. The
season when, around the world, hearts break open for the coming
of the Christ child. A season when even our own rather damp,
gray world may be revealed as the best and only place to hold
the birth of love, life, and light.
Like all true births, this birth will take its own sweet time,
regardless of how many shopping days are left. It’s a birth that
must take place in the very midst of us, because the
labor of love begins only when surrounded by the grit and straw
and blood of everyday human life.
Over the next three Sundays, in the Gospel readings, we meet
again some of the most compelling characters and stories in the
canon. John the Baptist – that wild man – makes his annual
Advent appearance, his voice calling out in the wilderness,
challenging all of society to repent, and turn to a life of
radical equality and justice. John knows in his bones
that something big is coming, and it’s time to wake up and get
ready. A very public figure in his day, the Baptizer’s fiery
message resonated through all the social strata of his occupied
land.
Then later this month we meet Joseph – that good man – quietly
struggling to discern the right path, when he learns from Mary,
his betrothed, that the start of their life together is not
going quite as they planned. Faced with a very private dilemma,
Joseph shows himself to be a real mensch, a decent man
able to let go of pride and act in mercy, taking his unusual
family into his heart.
In other years in the annual cycle of Advent readings, Joseph
makes way for the women of Advent: Mary, mother of Jesus, and
her relative Elizabeth, mother of John the Baptist. The young
maid and the old wife, each surprised by an unlikely pregnancy,
each supporting the other in new lives and roles that, to
outside eyes, may have seemed completely beyond them.
John the Baptist, Joseph the carpenter, the maiden Mary,
Elizabeth, friend and wife—four very different people with the
common experience having their lives turned upside down by
something greater than themselves, something that carries its
own agenda. Entering whole-heartedly into new life and love,
each one sheds preconceptions about the course of their own
lives, their proper role in the world, even the way the world
operates—each one awake to the possibility of heaven
drawing near, of God among us, breaking in and making all things
new.
And crucially, all four of these interesting characters show
themselves to be able to wait for new life to come to
full, ripe fruit—each one awake to the glory all around
them, all the while they wait.
The season of Advent honors waiting. Waiting not as dead time,
or as wasted time, but as pregnant time. Gestating time. Waiting
with anticipation.
I sometimes think I’ll spend my whole life just learning how to
wait. Here’s a funny thing about my husband, David. When he
feels pushed to hurry up—by a car behind him on the road, for
example, or an unexpected deadline, a wife’s agenda—something in
his psychology just slows right down. When we were first
married, this was one of the most challenging things for me to
figure out. I had to realize that he was not purposely trying to
drive me mad; it’s just the way his mind works. And that if I
simply backed off, and didn’t push, have a little faith, then
whatever I wanted to happen sooner would most likely happen, in
reasonably good time. Married life has taught me lessons in how
to wait.
And professional life had its lessons, too. I’m a writer, and
have been a writer ever since I could read. After college, I
hoped someday to make my living as a novelist. So I attended
writers conferences, and heard from people who already lived in
that exalted realm that the typical road to publication was
long, difficult, and involved a lot of rejection. I remember one
popular novelist, a keynote speaker, who said that her first
published book was actually the fourth that she wrote, and that
this was typical in the world of novel-writing. A perfectly
normal pace.
“Go for it,” she said to us, “good luck, don’t give up, and
don’t quit your day job.” I believed in her description of the
typical writer’s professional path, because I heard many similar
stories from other pro’s at the conference.
And then I went home, and got down on my knees, and prayed,
“Please God, don’t make me go through all that. I understand,
dear Lord, that other writers have to fail many times before
they succeed. But, not everybody, right? And not me. Let me be
the exception; I’m not good at eating humble pie. Okay? Thanks.
Amen.”
So, three unpublished novels later, after years of various day
jobs, my first book finally came out, a work of non-fiction, as
it turned out, called Stumbling Toward God. You could
paper my house in rejections, inside and out, including
rejections for Stumbling Toward God, which was turned down more
than two hundred times before it finally found its publisher.
Now, I do not think God was getting back at me for my prayer,
because it doesn’t seem to me that God works that way. I think I
just wasn’t ready, but didn’t know it. The full term of my
gestation as a writer turned out to be longer and a little more
challenging than I’d hoped for.
I had to drop some baggage on my way. That sense of entitlement,
of being more deserving than others. A sense of invincibility,
of moving through life smoothly from one triumph to the next,
unwounded. Able to offer a helping hand to those in need, maybe,
but not really needing help myself.
Those illusions had to go. And because I was deeply attached to
some of them, they didn’t go easy.
In our reading from Matthew this morning, Jesus speaks of the
coming of the Son of Man—a phrase associated with the
Messiah—and he warns the people to stay awake, because
they don’t know when their Lord is coming.
Now, you would think that the coming of the Messiah would be a
good thing, but here Jesus compares the event with Noah’s flood,
when oblivious people are swept away, and later with a thief in
the night, who breaks in and robs the sleeping owner’s home.
Difficult images, as we head into Christmas. It helps me to
remember that Jesus spoke in images, in stories and parables,
saying, Look, it’s like this. The kingdom of heaven is
like a mustard seed, like a pearl of great price. So
how might the coming of the Lord be like Noah’s flood?
When the Creator of all Life enters into life on earth, what’s
gonna be swept away?
From my experience on the road to publication, one thing swept
away might be that very sense of entitlement that inspired me to
pray, “Not me.” Or any idea that I’m somehow separate and
exempt from the shared conditions of human life, separate from
the brokenness of this world. Or anything that lets me view my
personal world, my accomplishments, or my own goods as mine
alone, separate from the commonwealth, the common wealth
of God’s world.
And how might the birth of Love Incarnate, made in love and for
love, how might that be like a thief in the night? If I’m
asleep in my own little world when Love comes busting out of the
womb, what might be taken away from me?
Maybe, a cherished dream about how love is “supposed” to work.
Like the idea that family love is best and only expressed in a
perfect family gathering. The whole gene pool at the table,
everyone glad to be there, getting along for once, the sweet
potatoes not too sweet, and the cranberries not too tart, and
no burnt pie crusts.
We laugh, because we know. If we’re resting all our hopes for a
happy Christmas on a perfect family gathering, then Jesus is
gonna come like a thief in the night and steal those delusions
right away. And the tighter we close our eyes, the harder we
cling to our dreams, the more painful that loss will be.
“You know what time it is,” Paul writes in his letter to the
Romans, “how it is now the moment for you to wake from sleep …
the night is far gone, the day is near.”
And here’s the good news. After the flood, after the thief has
done his work—daylight sweeping through the house—we turn to
what remains, and discover the pearl that’s been hidden all
along underneath all that dross that’s swept away.
Now that we don’t have to be perfect, we can be ourselves.
Stepping down the banks of the River Jordan, feet muddy and wet,
ready for the calloused hands of John the Baptist to rest on our
heads. Here we are surrounded by friends and family, neighbors
and strangers, awake to the possibility of meeting love and joy
at any moment, in every chance encounter in the big gene pool.
We can be like Joseph, letting go of the imaginary ideal family
that looks proper or even normal to the neighbors, and instead
making a home to raise up hope, and a love that breaks through
all bounds.
We can be like Elizabeth, a friend and mentor in the autumn of
life, showing that, in the world our God makes, it is
never too late to come to flower and bear new fruit.
We can be Mary, the lowliest of all, the one who carries
deep inside the source of life and love, its parts knitting
together, growing stronger every day.
The pregnancy takes its own time. And the labor takes its own
time. In this season of waiting, it matters how we wait.
For salvation, writes Paul, is nearer to us now than
when we became believers; the night is far gone, the day is
near.
So let us awake. Awake to the glory present among us in this
room today. Awake to the mystery of our God in each moment, a
mystery that longs to take shape and form and to live among us
again.
Amen.
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