Many the gifts, many the people,
many the hearts that yearn to belong.
Let us be servants to one another,
making your kingdom come.
Christ, be our light!
Shine in our hearts. Shine through the darkness.
Christ, be our light!
Shine in your church gathered today!
---Bernadette Farrell, 1993
The title of the 1979 memoir I'm Dancing as Fast as I Can always makes me think of that moment when someone has given 100 percent. "You take it from here, pardner," I hear them say, "I'm out." Or, <mic drop>...done. Elvis has left the building.
And I sometimes wonder if Jesus ever felt a bit of the pull of that tension---his time ticking away, knowing he'd need to count on his rag-tag band of followers to spread the word (that love was the way), knowing he was the Sun, but he'd be having to count on the Moon to reflect the shine in the world before too long. I wonder if Jesus felt like he was dancing as fast as he could.
The church lives in that tension too---never more so than here in the Advent season, when we await the great Already/NotYet: the shining of Light into our shadowy corners, the coming of Christ into our longing world. This verse of the modern folk hymn Christ, Be Our Light by Bernadette Farrell speaks to the divergence, and richness, of what we know, and acknowledge, and embrace. While we yearn for Christ to be our light in this world, to dawn on us, we yoke ourselves with Christ the Sun. As the church, we are the body of Christ in the world, reflecting light like the moon reflects the sun's.
If Christ is to shine in the shadowed corners, it will be through the light reflected by Christ's body, the church. It will be because we served one another. It will be because we welcomed each other. It will be because we nurtured and developed the gifts each brought to share.
If Christ is to shine in our world today, it will be because the church is devoted to the work of building the reign of Love, and nothing else.
a pilgrim's journey, looking for light in a shades-of-grey world; not haunted by the big questions in life, instead inspired by them; looking for glimpses of grace in every encounter.
Showing posts with label tension. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tension. Show all posts
Friday, December 11, 2015
...and nothing else
Wednesday, November 26, 2014
Called to Stand Up
The love of Jesus calls us in swiftly changing days,
To be God’s co-creators in new and wondrous ways;
That God with men and women may so transform the earth,
That love and peace and justice may give God’s kingdom
birth.
---Herbert O'Driscoll
“What are you waiting for?” “Don’t just stand there --- DO
something!” “Get a move on!” We are all familiar with these statements, or with
sentiments like them, but maybe not related to the coming of the kingdom of
God. When it comes to the kingdom, if you are like me, the verb that most
readily comes to mind is ‘wait’. Now, on a scale of 1 to Make it Happen, ‘wait’
would seem to rate pretty low when it comes to action. Is there a way to wait
and take action simultaneously?
Our lectionary Gospel readings this month have been from
Matthew 25 (the prepared and unprepared bridesmaids, the managers of the
talents, the sheep and the goats), and have highlighted the dynamic tension
between waiting and working for the kingdom come. These stories illustrate how
active our participation is to be in the ushering in of the new kingdom --- we
are invited to be partners with God in unleashing love, peace, and justice on
society to pave the way for the coming kingdom!
Now, action should come with a caution sign --- those who choose to partner with God often find themselves at odds with 'go along to get along' society, and Godself in Jesus ended up crucified for rocking the status quo boat. In the end, though, we are not called to count the risk; we are called to stand up.
We might just have a hand in midwifing something new---all about love, and justice, and peace.
---Leigh Anne
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