I'm re-posting The Advent Writings this year, since I only got through 14-15 of them last year. So, with the dated references and all, here's day 2...
Consideratus - examine/look at/inspect; consider closely, reflect on/contemplate; investigate (Source: William Whitaker's Words)
Consideratus - examine/look at/inspect; consider closely, reflect on/contemplate; investigate (Source: William Whitaker's Words)
What
an amazing day! What was supposed to be 1-2 inches of snow turned into a
blazingly sunny, chilly but beautiful day. A day when Grand Rapids bid
farewell to Fred Meijer. A day when I left the car parked at home, and
rode the trike to my Biggby office. Light, marvelous light, brilliant
light, abundant light.
I
think introspection and deep pondering is best saved for sunny days.
Grey days, when one would think it'd be best to curl up with a book and
some cocoa in front of a fire, don't make the best pondering days for
me. The grey outside tends to call up the grey inside, and it all goes
south from there. Do your pondering when the sun is shining, and the
light within tends to rise up and join it.
Why yes, I do struggle with Seasonal Affective Disorder - why do you ask?
So what do I see?
I
see brown all around, the leaves having long left the branches, the
world shutting down for a chilly nap. And yet I see people, almost as if
they're picking up where nature left off, putting up lights and trees
and other shiny bits. Bringing out red and green and gold, wrapping and
stars, snowmen and reindeer.
And lights. Lots and lots and lots of lights.
Cozy
Christmas sweaters, some of which are so horrible that they should
never see the light of day (which is exactly why they get trotted out
every year...), make their appearance. We show our willpower and
restraint to not hit the Christmas playlist on the ol' iPod until 12:01
on Thanksgiving morning, while at the same time getting disgusted looks
on our faces when the seasonal offerings get thrown up on store shelves
at 12:01 on Halloween morning.
In
some ways, we charge into the season, and can't get there fast enough.
In some ways, we dig in our heels and try to keep the days from flying
by. And in some ways, we get ready for the letdown that we know is
coming, 12:01 on the morning of January 2nd, when the bullet train of
the holidays vanishes over the hill, out of sight until next year. The
2011 edition of the Greatest Show in December is a wrap.
What about Advent?
If
the season is indeed about preparation, looking forward to the arrival
of the King, why does it sometimes feel that when He gets here, we hit a
wall at 60 mph - all that rushing force meets the immovable object of
the new year. What good is all that preparation if we don't do anything
with it after the calendar turns over? We go from Advent to what? Do you
know? The Church year is about moving mindfully through the seasons, so
what happens next? What are we preparing for?
Not so fast, Grasshopper - we'll turn that page later.
Anticipation,
preparation, excitement - not just for the purpose of celebrating one
day, or even one week, but for a greater purpose: making the coming of
the King a reality in our lives all year long.
What
if we go through Advent mindfully aware that all this preparation is
not just for celebrating the arrival of the King, but preparing to step
into this new year having restored Him to His proper place in our lives?
What if the point of this is getting ready to see this entire year as
an opportunity to live as people of the King?
What
if this year the decorations, the shiny bits, the songs, the
celebration... what if the whole point is taking that light and joy and
making it an everyday thing, because the King has come? He is here, He
is with us, and we don't ever have to live in the darkness alone again.
To
take an idea from a song by Sara Groves ("I am the moon, with no light
of my own. Still you have made me to shine..."), what if we become the
shiny bits, to reflect the King's light all through the new year? What
if we ARE the Christmas lights, not to be taken down and stuffed away in
a box marked Christmas decorations, but left out to glow beautifully
the whole year long? The celebration never ends, never gets swallowed up
in the mundane, because He never ends, and He never gets swallowed up
in the mundane!
I
think my focus through this Advent season is going to be preparation
for the year that is coming. I want to mindfully note the joy of
Christmas, the way that we all put aside so much of the "same old same
old" and embrace the different schedule, the additional gatherings, the
busyness, the craziness (much different than madness, by the way) and
all the extra good stuff that we cram into this season. Then I want to
take that excitement and keep it to sprinkle through the year to come.
We'll
celebrate the arrival of the King, but the greatest news is that He
stays. He's here. I'd like to see what this new year could look like if I
try to live in that reality. To be shining all year with Christmas
light.
Instead
of dreading the train disappearing over the next hill, taking Advent
promise and Christmas joy with it, I want to eagerly climb on board and
ride that bad boy into the new year, shining with light that's not my
own, looking forward to the adventure that He has waiting for me.
And for each of us.
“Arise, shine, for your light has come,
and the glory of the LORD rises upon you."
Isaiah 60:1 (TNIV)
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