A few thoughts as our Advent journey begins.
I don’t know about you but I sometimes drive the car and end up at my destination without any detailed memory of the journey I’ve just done, especially if it’s one I do very often, like driving to church. It’s as if I’m on automatic pilot. Maybe I’m listening to the radio as I go along, or perhaps I’m planning next Sunday’s sermon in my mind. So, I get to my destination, the church car park say, and I’ve barely noticed my journey. I can almost hear Rachel, my wife’s reaction to that confession: Well, that just explains your driving!
When I walk to church it feels so different.
I start off at the Manse and notice the neighbours, I cross the road and
go over the railway bridge looking at the tube trains making their way to Baker
Street, I’m now outside Tesco Express and if it’s lunchtime 150 students from
our local Grammar School will also be there buying lunch, it’s then a walk up the
high street, a nod to our neighbouring church of St Michael’s, make my way over
the Zebra crossing, trying to always remember to be polite to the car drivers
who have stopped, especially if I’m wearing my clerical collar, and then in,
via the back door of Amersham Free Church. A ten minute journey in which I’ve
probably met, noted and encountered 10 different people or events taking place
that have made an impression on me.
Such a different journey walking to driving, because I’ve noticed so much more.
Advent, these next four weeks is often thought of as a waiting time, and in many ways that’s a good understanding, especially in our impatient society. Yet, the idea that Advent is primarily about waiting can imply that nothing of too much importance will happen between Advent Sunday and Christmas Day. Maybe viewed like one of my car drive experiences, just a journey of convenience, no more than just getting me, perhaps rather mindlessly, from A to B.
I’d rather look forward to the gift of these next four weeks and Sundays as a walk, instead of a drive. A journey when much might, and probably will happen. And in that sense, I tell myself this morning that Advent is just as much about watching as it is about waiting. Watching is active. Watching is being open to the whispers of God. Watching is about becoming engaged and available.
So, as we start our Advent journey, rather than ask Sunday by Sunday ‘Are we nearly there yet’, let’s take time to notice the journey and enjoy the discoveries found round every corner along the way.
No comments:
Post a Comment