"The people
that walked in darkness have seen a great light; on those who live in
a land of deep shadow a light has shone.
You have made their gladness greater, you have made their joy increase;"
(ISAIAH 9:1)
I understand
the significance of the pre-Easter lent, but why do we keep a Lenten
season for Christmas, since it's such a joyous occasion?" The woman
who made the comment spoke sincerely and her reasoning was correct.
What she misunderstood was the purpose of Lenten fasting and spiritual
preparation.
To so many of our people, fasting and prayers are expressions of sorrow
for a rupture in Divine-human relationships, such as was the murder
of Jesus Christ.
Primarily, lent is a time for our concentrated preparing for the Kingdom
of God's manifestation within us. By freeing ourselves from the things
of this world we can better live and experience the Spirit of God dwelling
in our souls. It is a time of pilgrimage-a spiritual journey to our
true native land which the Lord has prepared for us.
Now it is advent, the time of His coming. Christ is on the way to my
world, my city, my house and to me. How will He find it: what will He
think of us; will He be pleased?
Ostensibly we are preparing for Christmas. External trappings, translucent,
illuminated neon and plastic bubbles pronounce greetings to anybody,
and receive about as much notice as the recently discarded cardboard
announcements of political candidates. Reluctant consumers dutifully
divest the glutted department stores of what everybody knows nobody
needs or wants, because it's XMAS. Liquor store registers and
corner Santas' hand bells jingle in cacophony. Does this please Him?
Is all this a worthy greeting for Him? Nobody thinks so, and nobody
planned it this way; yet it appears we're locked in a social mechanism
we hadn't chosen to enter.
We ought to become serious about freeing ourselves of all the material
objects that are idols for so many, promising a happiness they are incapable
of fulfilling; if we know that advent is just a time for learning to
do without, then capitalist Xmas is a travesty of Christ's coming. It
is in fact the very opposite of self-denial and spiritual preparation
for communion with God in Christ. We sense His displeasure. Underneath
the tinsel peeks out a sad, selfish and troubled world.
Can it be He'll find even a few who await His coming with hope and longing?
Are there those who, while knowing themselves responsible for the world
as it is, yet trust in His promise of another life and prepare themselves
for it, while at the same time doing all in their capability to give
content and a dimension of true values to this present world?
There were such in every age of the past, and God sought them out from
their society: Abraham in Chaldea, Lot in Sodom, Moses in Midian, Elijah
at the Cherith wadi and young Mary in Nazareth. While there are such
remaining in the world, God's covenant with mankind is not abrogated.
To fulfill advent, then, would be to make ourselves like them; a difficult
task, but not impossible, for "With God, all things are possible."