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Seeing Daylight

December 2, 2007     Advent 1 A

Isaiah 2:1-5             Psalm 122

Romans 13:11-14         St. Matthew 24:36-44

 

Symbols are rarely unambiguous. Even the image of the dove or the lion has its shadow. Water is life-giving, but it can take away your life just as surely. It may cleanse, but it is also treacherous. Fire is furious; fire is comforting. Clouds have silver linings. Countless images have their positive and negative faces.

So it is with night. Nights have starry skies that inspire philosophers like Kant and artists like van Gogh. The night brings rest and quiet. It signals not only endings, but expectancy.

But night, at least in Advent-time, has less ambiguity than most imagery. It is something to escape. Utter night, without the promise of morning, is deepest gloom. Endless night, without the glow of candle or star, is a void. Even ordinary and partial night is more scary than starry.

It is best we sleep in the dark. At night violent armies clash. Streets clatter with shouts and gunfire, sometimes even until the break of dawn. Debaucheries, betrayals, carousing are heard faintly in the distance. Nearby, once "the night is far spent," as Paul phrases it, the stumbling home from wild desires sounds a city night's death-knell.

Sudden shadows that leap and loom trouble us at night far more than the tame shadows of daytime. If we are startled from a midnight sleep, we may feel a terror greater than at any other time: some gaping darkness, some unexpected anxiety, some uncovered dread. If we sleep again, our unconscious has its say, unkempt, untrammeled, unmanageable in its better dreams, horrific in its nightmares.

Sadly, even in the day we often sleep-walk as we eat, drink, and parent, too often unknowing and unconcerned. When we do manage to stir ourselves to action, we routinely play out a strident score written by our conductor of night: the dark unconscious. Freud's find, the libido, stalks the world day and night for prey or power or pleasure. Our quarrels, jealousies, and wars are works of darkness, even though they haunt our days.

Darkness was the lifeless void of Genesis, the ninth ominous plague ofEgypt foreshadowing its terrible tenth: the death of all firstborn.

Isaiah promised that the works of dark and sleep would all be changed in God's bright presence. "They shall beat their swords into plowshares and their spears into pruning hooks; one nation shall not raise the sword against another, nor shall they train for war again.... Come, let us walk in the light of the Lord." To see in the light of eternity is to change. If we knew as God knows, if we were  "instructed in God's ways," if we walked in God's paths, not only would our nations disarm, we would tear down our more private defenses. We would never again make war against each other, against our very hearts.

The Fourth Gospel announced God as light in whom there is no darkness, the light that shines in human night, irradiating our world. It was light, the First Letter of John would teach, that opened the way to life and love.

Paul advises the Romans (they themselves knew their dreadful nights) to be conscious of the day. They are to live now what they want forever. Salvation is nigh, Paul says. Be awake. Walk with the armor of light.

The Ephesians were to be children of the day, awake and vigilant.  "Wake from your sleep, rise from the dead, and Christ will shine on you."

Since we do not know the time when our lives stop or the earth melts, every day must be one of presence. Vigilance is for now. The watchful eye, the expectant heart, is for this moment. If we are sleep-walking our way through life, now is the time to "come to."

Advent. Enter. To "come to." To wake up. To enter life, here and today. Let God enter it all and now. And let us enter it all, even the darkness, now with God.

If we go into our lives and permit God to enter with us, then we shall see, even though it be night. Revelation, enlightenment, will come to us, not in shrouded nightmare, but upon a midnight clear. Then we shall no longer be the walking dead. And even though we walk through the valley of darkness, no evil shall we fear.

The clamor of the streets will be stilled, for it will be a silent night. The deceptions of the dark will be uncovered, for it will be a holy night. Night itself will be transformed, transfigured, when all is calm, when all is bright.

We have the practical wisdom to prepare for our immediate future; for example, people routinely prepare for retirement and secure assets to live comfortably.

Advent calls us to the spiritual wisdom to prepare for our ultimate future. Both kinds of wisdom call for disciplining our choices. Stay awake, you must be ready.

Watch, for you do not know the day or the hour. Like many other scriptural texts, this admonition is addressed to all of us, though it is formulated in such a way that it would seem to concern only Christ's immediate audience.

We can all apply it to ourselves because the Last Day and the end of the world will come for each of us on the day we depart this present life. This means we must make sure we die in the state in which we wish to appear on the Day of Judgment.

Bearing this in mind each of us should guard against being led astray and failing to keep watch, otherwise the day of the Lord's return may take us unawares. If the last day of our life finds us unprepared, then we shall be unprepared on that day also.

Open your eyes. Daylight is approaching.





7/29/07 - God In Daily Life

8/5/07 - What Shall I Do

8/12/07 - Trust

8/19/07 - An Upgrade To Faith

8/26/07 - A Revolution In Six Parts

9/2/07 - Musical Chairs

9/9/07 - Barriers To The Cross

9/16/07 - Lost And Found

9/23/07 - Investment Counseling

9/30/07 - Little People

10/7/07 - Due - Nothing

10/14/07 - Where Are The ...

10/21/07 - Persistent Prayer

10/28/07 - Words And Faith

11/4/08 - For All The Saints

11/11/07 - Life And ... Life

11/18/07 - The End Of The Age

11/25/07 - The King On The Cross

12/9/07 - Affect & Effect

12/16/07 - The O Antiphons

1/6/08 - Shepherds, Magi And Us

1/13/08 - Fitting To Fulfill

1/20/08 - Changing Gears

1/27/08 - I Belong

2/3/08 - Preview Of Coming Attractions

2/10/08 - A Bite To Eat

2/17/08 - Dynamic Faith

2/24/08 - Step By Step

3/2/08 - Believing Is Seeing

3/9/08 - A Matter Of Life And Death

3/23/08 - The Real Super Sunday

3/30/08 - Conquering Death And Fear

4/6/08 - Total Experience

4/13/08 - Over My Dead Body

4/20/08 - The

4/27/08 - Christian Commandments

5/4/08 - It Ain't Over Til It's Over

5/11/08 - Comfortless

5/18/08 - Because I said So

5/25/08 - Don't Worry

6/1/08 - Life Service

6/8/08 - Guilty By Association

6/15/08 - A Focused Faction

6/22/08 - Revealing Secrets

6/29/08 - Wandering Into Myths

7/6/08 - Dynamic Duos

7/13/08 - Sower, Seed, And Soil

7/20/08 - Lessons From The Land