I have written a new devotional for Lent for the Church of St. John the Divine Houston that starts today and ends with Christmas.
INTRODUCTION TO
ADVENT 2012
When
I was a child, I loved the Advent season, anticipating Christmas Day, the gifts
I would receive, and the familiar carols we would sing in church. The family
gatherings and parties never failed to entertain me and make me joyful. One of
my favorite traditions was watching A
Charlie Brown Christmas. Year after year I was moved when Charlie Brown
bought the pathetic Christmas tree that no one wanted, brought it to the
Christmas pageant, was declared a failure by his fellow cast members, and then
in exasperation asked, “Isn’t there anyone who knows what Christmas is all
about?” At that point Linus took center stage. Reading from the King James
Version of Luke’s Gospel, he told us what Christmas was all about. To this day,
I do not like any other version of the Christmas story.
When
I was a young architect, I used to walk from my office through a department store
to the food court in the adjacent mall for lunch. One September I noticed that
the Christmas display went up the week after Labor Day. This was entirely too
early. It made Christmas entirely too commercial. And it seems to me that
nothing has really changed. Christmas is as commercial as it ever has been, and
I want to ask, like Charlie Brown, “Does anyone know what Christmas is all
about?”
There
is a movement afoot, known as The Advent Conspiracy, to help people see what
Christmas really is about and that Christmas really can change the world. The
authors of The Advent Conspiracy put it this way:
There is a sense of
prophetic mystery surrounding Christ’s birth. The story reveals something
divine to us; it drives our quest to look closely at our own stories. Who are
we? Why are we? How do we? Where, in the midst of our questions, is this
Immanuel, this God-with-us?
Sadly, for all our
questioning, the mystery of the Incarnation escapes us. Jesus comes, in his
first Advent, into the midst of our great sin and suffering. This was God’s
design. But apart from the angels nudging a few scared shepherds and a cryptic
star decoded by a handful of distant astrologists, almost everyone else missed
it.
Missing out should feel
familiar; most of us habitually miss it every year at Christmas. Our story is consumption
and consumerism, and we’re obsessed with the climax. We worship less. We spend
more. We give less. We struggle more.
Less, more. More, less. Time
and nerves stretch thin, and we reduce family and friends to a card or a
present that costs the “right” amount to prove our level of love. Our quest to
celebrate mystery exhausts us. Another Christmas passes by like a blizzard, and
we are left to shovel through the trash of our failure.
Missing the prophetic
mystery of Jesus’ birth means missing God-with-us, God beside us—God becoming
one of us. Missing out on Jesus changes everything.
I
write this devotional to help us refocus on the meaning of Christmas and the
purpose of giving. May it challenge you in your thinking about Christmas as we consider
spending less, giving more, loving all, and worshiping fully. This
Advent, prepare for a Christmas season in which we exchange consumption for
compassion, consumerism for Christ-centered celebration, cultural conformity to
Christian-counterculture. Would it not be nice if we, like Linus, could tell
the world what Christmas really is all about?
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