Saturday 7 December

Reveal among us the light of your presence, that we may behold your power and glory.

Readings

Isaiah 30.19-26 | Psalm 147.1-6 | Matthew 9.35-10.1(2-4)5-8 |

An anxious note to baby Jesus

Dear Lord,
I feel tired before it's even started.
The cards (should I bother?)
The presents (who to buy for?)
The decorations (real or artificial?)
The family … (enough said)
The crowds, the hassle, the weather—
Wake me up when it's all over.

I know I shouldn't feel this way
but if I'm honest,
Advent—
it makes me weary just thinking about it.

Which makes me wonder,
how was it for you?
Were you weary too?
Just thinking about it?
The call, the life-long challenge, to hear God,
listen to God,
follow God?
For those with ears to hear
and eyes to see,
to be God?

All begun in makeshift circumstances.
(Sorry, Lord, we were not better prepared—
some things don't change.)
A sign of things to come,
of an uphill struggle
to make your voice heard.
Uphill towards Jerusalem.
Uphill to the Mount of Olives.
Uphill to the hill of execution.

Hoping we would follow.
Hoping we would understand you,
respond to you,
welcome you then,
welcome you now.

Lord, were you tired before it even started?
Or was your love your inner energy,
the love you received your support,
the love you gave a light in the darkness,
the love you give the strength I need?

Will you help me through Advent, dear Lord, little one?

Give me the grace to greet you
without suppressed sighs of weariness.

Give me the generosity to invite you home
without thought to the inconvenience.
Give me the will to rise to your demands,
to share your love and to receive it.

It's not so much to ask, I know,
when you have faced it all—
the Advent task, the Christmas hope—
two thousand times before.
—Peter Thurston

Justice, mercy and peace

Prisoners

The number of people in prison in Australia is increasing faster than population growth. The great majority of prisoners come from impoverished circumstances, often experiencing multiple disadvantage.


Jerry Points. Walk in, walk out (2011) , Carmel, Indiana.
"This is the way, walk in it." (Isaiah 30.21)

Entre le beouf et l'âne gris [Between the Ox and the Grey Ass]. French traditional.


May the Lord, when he comes, find us watching and waiting. Amen.