Tuesday, December 31, 2019

WAKING UP - A Homily


As we are at the advent of a New Year, I want to share the last homily I gave in 2019.  It was written as a New Year's homily for the  new Church Year, but it applies to any new year.  This homily was delivered at Christ Episcopal Church, Yankton, South Dakota on December 1, 2019



WAKING UP



+ In the Name of our loving and life-giving God +



“Wachet auf, ruft uns die stimme…” is the clarion call of our first hymn in its original German language.



Waking up is the perennial theme associated with the first Sunday of Advent, the beginning of a new Church Year. Equally perennial is that the scripture readings at the end of a church year and the beginning of a church year focus on the continuum of end times as beginning times, as an eschatological bridge completing the old in the new.



Although the end times are the focus of these readings, they ride on a rail of the present.  When Jesus talks about the end times, it is usually in response to someone’s question about knowing when such things will happen or when he sees his disciple being distracted by the wonders of the Temple, the context in which this morning’s second lesson from the Gospel of Matthew is set.



When the Gospels were written, the early Christians were expecting the Second Coming of Christ to happen in their lifetimes.  Before today’s reading from Matthew, Jesus says, “Truly, I tell you.  This generation shall not pass, till all things are fulfilled.” [1]  Jesus goes on to say, however, “But about that day and hour no one knows, neither the angels of heaven, nor the Son, but only the Father.”[2]  When reading all the accounts of Jesus talking about the end times in the Gospels, it becomes clear that Jesus uses the end times to awaken us to what we’re doing right now, today.



Two thousand years have passed since these scriptures were written and for two thousand years the call to awaken has not diminished in the context of the times of each and every successive generation.  While some today continue to focus on getting ready to jump this planet at the first sign of Christ’s Second Coming, Paul pulls us back from that theological cliff.



In our first reading, the apostle Paul picks up this theme of paying attention to the here and now: “…it is now the moment for you to wake from sleep …the night is far gone, the day is near.”[3]  We are always living in this cusp of completion, “…the night (the time for sleep) is far gone, the day is near.  Now (the present) is the moment to wake from sleep.”



One might ask, “What is this wakeup call all about?  Do we really need one?” 



Perhaps the best way to answer those questions is to personally and sincerely ask ourselves what we find difficult to open our eyes to.  Jesus addresses such questions by causing us to take a deeper look at our daily lives in the dawning light of the nearing day.



Jesus literally goes on a two chapter tirade about the end times in the Gospel of Matthew when his disciples go dreamy eyed on him about all the glittering, man-made wonders of the Temple. Within Jesus’s non-stop discourse is included not only today’s reading, but also the parable of the “Wise and Foolish Virgins,” about staying awake because the Son of Man, the Bridegroom comes when least expected, in the dead of night.[4]   It includes the parable of the “Talents,” the coins the head of a household gives his servants while he’s away and returns to find two of the three servants used them to make a profit for the head of the household, but one buried the one coin he was given; doing nothing with it, leading him to cursed and cast out;[5] a reminder that there is never a time for apathy, as there will be work to be done until the very end.



Jesus’s discourse ends by bringing his disciples back to the present time and how we treat one another.  He does this by ending with the Day of Judgment; with the story how the Son of Man as the King of Glory will divide the sheep from the goats.  He ends by telling that those considered the sheep are the ones who fed the King when he was hungry, clothed him when he was naked, visited him when he was in prison and because of such deeds, they will inherit his kingdom.  He ends by telling that, in their sheepish state of surprise at inheriting the kingdom, the sheep ask the King, “But when did we do these things,” to which the King replies, “When you did these things to least of my brothers and sisters, you did it to me.”[6]



What really demonstrates how asleep we are, is the consistent dismissing the needs of others as their problem, not ours.  What really can bore us into a coma-like slumber are the judgmental and polarizing efforts that plague us today; where we are being led to perceive some as clear winners and others as clear losers. 



Advent, this new Church Year [this New Year 2020], begins with its perennial wake-up call; a call to becoming what God has always intended us to be, his children; to live into being just that, as Jesus did with eyes wide open to the present. 



Advent is a prophetic season.  It is a season to get us to look at today and see things for what they are and what they are not.  It is a season to let go of the past, the darkness of the night long gone. It is a season to awaken to the hope of a dawning day. It is a season to watch faithfully for the light of the nearing day.  Above all, Advent is a season to allow the ever present love of God to embrace us in the soon to be born in us.[7]



Let us pray:


Most gracious and loving Father, awaken us to the light of the nearing day, and grant us the courage to let go of the day long past, that in this time of becoming we may serve you faithfully in service towards others through Jesus Christ our Lord.  Amen


* * * * * * * * * *
Until next time, stay faithful.

Norm

[1] Matthew 24:34
[2] Matthew 24:36
[3] Romans 13:11b&12b
[4] See Matthew 25:1-13
[5] See Matthew 25:14-30
[6] See Matthew 25:31-40
[7] The concept inspired by the hymn, “O Little Town of Bethlehem” by Phillip Brooks and the line “…cast out our sin and enter in, be born in us today.”

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