ADVENT

Advent – a time of waiting. We often think it is us who do all the waiting, but perhaps it is God who is waiting for us to come to our proper sense of soul and it is God waiting for our prodigal return. I wonder! On the subject of Advent and Waiting, James K. A. Smith who edits the journal Image Art +Faith +Mystery writes “The problem isn’t God’s absence; it’s our lack of awareness of God’s presence. ” This is both comforting and challenging in the midst of the chaos and evil of war. Smith also writes the following – “We look for God in the extraordinary and God arrives incarnate in the mundane, even abject, hidden right before our eyes. We’re waiting and waiting and miss the fact that “God has taken place” perhaps because we keep scanning the horizons for meteoric arrivals. Or maybe because we’re too distracted. What if the arrival happened and we’re only still waiting because we couldn’t recognize it? Maybe what we’re waiting for is not the arrival but the healing of our attention so we might see where God has already taken place.” A lot to ponder today and I trust the short poem by Kenneth Steven will open the door through which you courageously walk.

Nativity
When the miracle happened it was not
with bright light or fire—
but a farm door with the thick smell of sheep
and a wind tugging at the shutters.

There was no sign the world had changed for ever
or that God had taken place;
just a child crying softly in a corner,
and the door open, for those who came to find. Kenneth Steven 

Prayer:
Loving God,
in the midst of this season of
waiting,
help me not so much to look out, up, or down,
instead help me
to look within.
In the silence of stillness, help me to be
aware.
In this moment of awareness might
I walk through the open door of myself
and in
my walking,
my journeying,
my pilgrimming,
may I discover that you, O Lord,
have been waiting, ever so
patiently,
for my arrival. Amen.

One thought on “ADVENT

  1. There is an elegant simplicity to this lovely poem that is most welcomed during these busy days. But what also strikes me is the phrase “the healing of our attention”. We seem to be living in the “It’s All About Me” era, fraught with perceived self-importance and the belief that the whole world wants to know where “I” am, what “I” have to say, what “I” am doing, and “I” can do and say whatever I please no matter what. And all of this during the immeasurable suffering and fear from both public and private wars on one another, not only far way but in our own cities. Our attention definitely needs healing.

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