Keep Silent

Neither the Advent period nor Christmas itself are renowned for their silence. Shops are heaving with customers; streets are packed with pedestrians; traffic jams abound. The stress levels of many people rise dramatically at this time of year.

But Advent means taking time out from the bustle and busyness to pause before God: “The season of Advent means there is something on the horizon the likes of which we have never seen before… .What is possible is to not see it, to miss it, to turn just as it brushes past you. And you begin to grasp what it was you missed, like Moses in the cleft of the rock, watching God’s back fade in the distance. So stay. Sit. Linger. Tarry. Ponder. Wait. Behold. Wonder. There will be time enough for running. For rushing. For worrying. For pushing. For now, stay. Wait. Something is on the horizon.” (Jan L. Richardson)

Today’s music reflects this stillness, since both are instrumentals. ‘Keep Silent’ is from Aaron Shust’s new Christmas album and this gentle piece captures the essence of peace. Phil Keaggy’s ‘Coventry Carol is an instrumental version of this famous carol, a lullaby to Jesus. Both are brief, so take five minutes out from today’s busy schedule to listen and to stay… sit…linger… tarry…ponder… wait…behold…wonder.

Like Job, there are times indeed when we should simply keep silent. (Job 40:4, see also Eccl 3:7)

 

The Mystery of the Incarnation

Today’s song is from Michael Card and looks at the mystery of the incarnation:

‘When the Father longed to show
A love He wanted us to know
He sent His only Son and so
Became a holy embryo

That is the mystery:
More than you can see.
Give up on your pondering
And fall down on your knees

A fiction that’s fantastic and wild
A mother made by her own child
A hopeless babe who cried
Was God Incarnate and man deified

Because the fall did devastate,
Creator must now recreate
So to take our sin
Was made like us so we could be like Him.’ (‘To The Mystery’, Michael Card)

Enough light

Isaiah 9:2 says ‘The people walking in darkness have seen a great light; on those living in the land of deep darkness a light has dawned.’ John connects this with the arrival of Jesus, saying The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it.’ (John 1:5) In his first letter, John goes on to tell us God is light; in him there is no darkness at all’ (1 John 1:5) and God’s word is often described as a light to guide us. (Ps 119:105) That’s why one of the key Advent symbols is the candle.

Advent light

The image of light is therefore inextricably linked with God. Today’s song is not, strictly speaking, an Advent song at all, but it does take this theme of light (starting with words from Ps 27:1) and reminds us that God will always grant us ‘enough light for the next step; enough light for the way ahead.’ Quite often, we feel like Isaiah said, as though we are walking in darkness, as though life has more mystery than clarity about it. God’s grace is sufficient for us at all times, providing enough light for us to follow His right paths.

‘You’re my light and my salvation
Through it all I won’t be shaken
Lead me on, O fire, in the night.
In the shadows, in the mystery
I’m not afraid, for You are with me, Lord.
I know that You will give

Enough light for the next step
Enough light
Enough light for the way ahead
Enough light

Ev’ry day that is to follow
I will trust You with tomorrow
In this life my hope is found in You
I set my sights on the horizon
Moving on towards Your promises
I know that You will give

You are shining brighter than the sun
You’re the light who was and is to come
Jesus, You are faithful, lead me on.’ (‘Enough Light’, Ben Cantelon & Nick Herbert)

Advent: two comings…

We celebrated the first Sunday in Advent by lighting the first candle on our Advent wreath, made up of handprints from church members:

Advent candle 1We also distributed Advent calendars which included a child’s activity booklet all about Christmas to the children in the church.

Dave reminded us that Jesus came to earth when we did not expect it – God’s perfect timing did not find people prepared! Jesus will come again at a time known only to the Father and we need to be ready. (1  Thess 5:1-8) Casting Crowns’ adaptation of a famous Christmas carol makes this point abundantly clear:

‘Oh little town of Bethlehem
Looks like another silent night
Above your deep and dreamless sleep
A giant star lights up the sky
And while you’re lying in the dark
There shines an everlasting light
For the King has left His throne
And is sleeping in a manger tonight

Oh Bethlehem, what you have missed while you were sleeping?
For God became a man
And stepped into your world today
Oh Bethlehem, you will go down in history
As a city with no room for its King
While you were sleeping
While you were sleeping

Oh little town of Jerusalem
Looks like another silent night
The Father gave His only Son
The Way, the Truth, the Life had come
But there was no room for Him in the world He came to save

Jerusalem, what you have missed while you were sleeping?
The Saviour of the world is dying on your cross today
Jerusalem, you will go down in history
As a city with no room for its King
While you were sleeping
While you were sleeping

United States of America
Looks like another silent night
As we’re sung to sleep by philosophies
That save the trees and kill the children
And while we’re lying in the dark
There’s a shout heard ‘cross the eastern sky
For the Bridegroom has returned
And has carried His bride away in the night

America, what will we miss while we are sleeping?
Will Jesus come again
And leave us slumbering where we lay?
America, will we go down in history
As a nation with no room for its King?
Will we be sleeping?
Will we be sleeping?’ (‘While You Were Sleeping,’ Casting Crowns)

Why celebrate Christmas?

If we simply look at what goes on in the world at this time of year, we gain a very skewed perspective of what Christmas is all about: glitter, lights, spending vast amounts of money, overeating, noise and toys. Christians celebrate Christmas, however, because this is the time when God broke into the world, appearing in human form.

Is 9:6-7 reminds us of the fact that hundreds of years before Christ’s birth, God told Isaiah of His great plan of salvation, that the Wonderful Counsellor would come through a virgin, not to inaugurate a political reign (to the dismay of the Jews under Roman oppression), but to bring about God’s kingdom on earth. We live ‘between the times’ of Christ’s first coming as a baby at Bethlehem and His second coming as glorious Lord of the Universe, and both perspectives need to be held by us as we contemplate the positive plans God has for us. (Jer 29:11)

God has a plan for good for our lives, even when circumstances are far from good and all around us looks miserable or hostile. Sacred truth is always lived out in the secular realm. We are called to live our lives in the real world, not just when we are in church, but in our ordinary, everyday lives. History may tell us that it was the Roman census which determined Jesus’s birthplace, but Micah 5:2 reminds us that history is His story, for God predicted Christ’s birthplace long before Roman rule! God orchestrates everything we call life so that all that seems random to us is actually part of His plan! (life is ‘intentionally haphazard’, as Eugene Peterson says.)

Luke 2 reminds us that Christ’s birth came at an inconvenient time in an inconvenient place, but Gal 4:4 reminds us that this was God’s perfect timing and part of His perfect plan. Our lives were presented with a future and a hope because of Christ’s birth, and the fact that God chose shepherds – whose everyday exposure to dead animals as part of their job rendered them unclean according to Jewish laws and who were regarded as the lowest of the low in some respects – to be the first evangelists reminds us that God’s ways are not our ways and of the need to revise our opinions of social classes. The good news needs to be told to all groups and classes and the shepherds demonstrate to us the blessings that come from simple obedience! (see John 13:17) We too are blessed when we obey God and tell others of all He has done for us.

Advent songs

Throughout Advent, I’ll be trying to help us to focus our thoughts on the arrival of Christ as a baby at Bethlehem through a variety of songs. The first one is from Aaron Shust’s new Christmas album ‘Unto Us‘ and is called ‘Advent Carol’:

No more sadness, now nor fasting,

Now we put our grief away.

God came down, the Everlasting,

Taking human flesh today.

 

God came down on earth, a stranger,

Working out His mighty plan.

God was cradled in a manger,

Very God and very Man.

 

There were shepherds once abiding

In the fields who watched by night

And they saw the clouds dividing

And the sky above was bright

 

And a glory shone around them

On the grass where they were laid

And a holy angel found them

And their hearts were sore afraid.

 

‘Fear ye not,’ he said,

‘For cheerful are the tidings that I bring.

Unto you so weak and fearful,

Christ is born, the Lord and King.’

As the angel told the story

Of the Saviour’s lowly birth,

Multitudes were singing

‘Glory be to God and peace on earth.’

 

Angel hosts sing ‘Hallelujah’

Heart’s redeeming love proclaim

Led by church in every nation

Sing the glory of Thy Name.