Tuesday, January 9, 2018

Journeying into Advent ... preparing the welcome ... Advent 1



The whole people of god title our readings this morning: longing for the coming of God, the people cry out for God to act, Christ with us and yet still to come, and working while we wait …
          The subtitle for this week in the lectionary is ‘longing’ – it notes that Advent marks the beginning of a new church year. There is a sense of starting over, though for most of us the new year began in September and we feel near the half way point. (They then end with a query) Are we ready to open to God’s coming into our lives and into our world?

          Advent is the beginning of the new year in the church, and it is also the time of year when we begin anticipating – even longing – for Christmas. One of the readings I have returned to over and over since it appeared in the Whole People of God curriculum in the early 90’s is a piece called “A Time for Active Waiting” that reflects on Advent through the experience of Mary waiting for the arrival of her child.
          (A Time of Active Waiting – excerpts(I will add this later))



          SO, as we embrace our ambiguity in this season, while trusting in God’s care – what is it that we are waiting and longing for as Advent begins?
          Are we waiting for a traditional nostalgia filled season – a season full of comforting foods, familiar traditions and the things that make the season special?
          Are we waiting for more? Given the political mess in the US, we could be waiting for something … anything, that is better than this … Or we could be waiting for a revival of our community, our church, our flagging spirits.              Or are we just waiting – uncertain of what lies ahead?

          Last week, I tossed out the ideas from John Pavlovitz’s book A Bigger Table that we are called to embrace four concepts of revisioning and reorienting the Church beyond the comfort and tradition of what we have … he suggests we need to embark on 1) Radical Hospitality 2) Total Authenticity 3) True Diversity and 4) Agenda Free Community …
          What if we are longing for the Incarnation present and real in our community embodied in the bigger table of a transformed community?
          If we take the longing and anticipation of Advent seriously, the door is open to allowing this journey to Bethlehem – to the coming of the Christ Child, to be more than just revisiting familiar stories, hymns, themes and traditions. If we embrace the active longing – the active waiting, as we move through the coming days, we can embrace and embody and exemplify much of what Pavlovitz is urging the Church to be about …
          Radical Hospitality – it sounds ominous and almost frightening, but it is startlingly simple.
          Pavlovitz notes that “the church begins to expand the table by providing the kind of hospitality that equally embraces everyone, not pulling some close and keeping others at a distance.” It is “ministry as sitting with people and listening to their stories, rather than standing at a distance and trying to dazzle them with brilliant words …”
          For Pavlovitz, the transformation of the Church will begin when we start to sincerely, honestly, openly, and lovingly share space with others. When we sit and share a meal, a cup of coffee, and we TALK … not preach, or bring a dogmatic intent to convert, but talk – listening, sharing, speaking as friend to friend …
          He suggests – (page 70-71- Pavlovitz – "what if")
 

          This advent season, as we journey towards Bethlehem – let us envision the challenge offered by Pavlovitz through the peopling of the Nativity scene … the gathering of characters in Bethlehem can help us see in our earliest stirrings as Church, the call to faithful response and action that has never faded nor gone away …
          We are called to be Church – with the slipping away of our relevance and our impact on society, we NEED to do things differently, and the most radical step is to go back to basics: sitting at table and welcoming in each other … it started here: with the gift of hospitality to the holy family … and it continues as we live out the words we heard last week: just as you do it for one of the least of these my sisters or brothers, you do it for me …
          Setting a bigger table, and living a radical welcome means using what we have, who we are, and what assets are around us to reach out into the community and offer our ministry in tangible ways. It is a case of using community capital in all its diverse forms to BE CHURCH:
Community capital is any resource that a community has that can be invested to create new resources. … natural, cultural, human, social, political, financial, and built capitals. In farming communities the land, natural capital, is transformed into financial capital. In scenic places, the consumption of natural capital is transformed into social capital and built capital as the wealthy seek out these places for recreation and construction. Some towns may not have much financial capital to invest, but they may have the human capital of labour force ready and willing to work in even low-paying jobs. They may have the cultural capital of a commitment to hard work and civic involvement. Church leaders can use this approach to name the strengths of a community and congregation that can then be strategically capitalized upon.

          What if, the future of the church lies in setting a table, and offering hospitality and daring to meet our community where they are, rather than staying safe and comfortable in our buildings and waiting for them to come to us??
          We are in the season of active waiting … we are waiting to welcome in the holy family … and they may not be what we expect …
          Thanks be to God … let us pray …

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