The countdown began sometime around Halloween. Deadlines heighten urgency. Retailers remind us how many shopping days we have left. The frenzy escalates as time grows short. Concerts, parties, decorations and expectations unique to this season transform our daily lives. In all its forms, it is the anticipation of Christmas.
Then it hits. The anticipation of Christmas climaxes as a whirlwind. Expectations, celebrations, traditions, and surprises all meet. At the end of the day, the carefully decorated packages, plates of food and living rooms meet their purpose. Torn wrapping paper, empty boxes, dirty dishes and a variety of emotions are strewn around the house as evidence. Old memories are relived; new memories are made. Another Christmas has come … and gone.
Then it hits. The anticipation of Christmas climaxes as a whirlwind. Expectations, celebrations, traditions, and surprises all meet. At the end of the day, the carefully decorated packages, plates of food and living rooms meet their purpose. Torn wrapping paper, empty boxes, dirty dishes and a variety of emotions are strewn around the house as evidence. Old memories are relived; new memories are made. Another Christmas has come … and gone.
Or has it? How does the anticipation and reality of Christmas affect the day after? Does Christmas day mark the end of something long anticipated, or the beginning of a new way of anticipating life? This season I have reflected on and been deeply moved by a quote from Frederick Buechner:
Christmas is God’s radical action and declaration that things are not over. Because He loves you and this world, there is no telling when and where He might show up. There is no place He won’t. Anticipation is no longer for a season; it is a transforming way of life that moves us to the edge of our seat. That’s why some of Jesus’ last words in the Bible intentionally assure us that:
Those who believe in God can never in a way be sure of him again. Once they have seen him in a stable, they can never be sure where he will appear or to what lengths he will go or to what ludicrous depths of self-humiliation he will descend in his wild pursuit of man. If the holiness and the awful power and majesty of God were present in this least auspicious of all events, this birth of a peasant's child, then there is no place or time so lowly and earthbound but that holiness can be present there too. And this means that we are never safe, that there is no place where we can hide from God, no place where we are safe from his power to break in two and recreate the human heart because it is just where he seems most helpless that he is most strong, and just where we least expect him that he comes most fully.
Frederick Buechner, The Hungering Dark
Christmas is God’s radical action and declaration that things are not over. Because He loves you and this world, there is no telling when and where He might show up. There is no place He won’t. Anticipation is no longer for a season; it is a transforming way of life that moves us to the edge of our seat. That’s why some of Jesus’ last words in the Bible intentionally assure us that:
He who was seated on the throne said, “I am making everything new!” Then he said, “Write this down, for these words are trustworthy and true."
Revelation 21:5
For centuries, followers of Jesus have celebrated the anticipation of his arrival – His first coming and His second coming. They have called it Advent, a word which means “to come.” He is Emmanuel. He has arrived on the scene. He is with you. He is with us. The good news isn’t just that He was here, but he is here. He is actively present in the world – and nothing is out of His reach. He is making everything new.
It beckons me to live in a way that joins Him in His edge-of-the seat anticipation as a way of life. It challenges me to ask not only what I can anticipate from Him, but what is He anticipating from me? That changes everything.
What does that look like for you? How might His radical presence affect our relationships and how we relate to people? How does it change how we view the world and what is going on in it? How does it impact the challenges we face? How does it affect our lives as followers of Jesus and the church as His anticipation-filled people? How might the world be different because of our edge-of-the-seat anticipation?
What do you think? Click comments (below 6) to leave yours.
It beckons me to live in a way that joins Him in His edge-of-the seat anticipation as a way of life. It challenges me to ask not only what I can anticipate from Him, but what is He anticipating from me? That changes everything.
What does that look like for you? How might His radical presence affect our relationships and how we relate to people? How does it change how we view the world and what is going on in it? How does it impact the challenges we face? How does it affect our lives as followers of Jesus and the church as His anticipation-filled people? How might the world be different because of our edge-of-the-seat anticipation?
What do you think? Click comments (below 6) to leave yours.