Sermons

pastorEric aug2014Sermon for 1st Advent

Keep Awake
By The Rev. Eric Christopher Shafer -

 

If you are age 30 or older you can probably tell me where you were when you heard the news of the terrorist attacks in New York City and Washington, D.C. on September 11, 2001.  We watched in horror as nearly 3,000 died as the Twin Towers collapsed and the Pentagon was attacked.  They all had no thought as they went to work that day that that day would be their last on this earth.  But it was.

Jesus tells us in today’s Gospel lesson to “keep alert” and “keep awake.”

The wonderful SpaceX/NASA launch of four astronauts, including one from southern California, this past week reminded me that, similarly, if you are at least age 45 or older you can probably tell me where you were on January 28, 1986.  Many of us were watching television that day, including most grade school children.  That is because National Aeronautics and Space Administration, NASA, had injected new life into the US space program, with which many in the American public had become bored, by putting a teacher in space.  A young woman teacher named Christa McAuliffe from New Hampshire was one of seven US astronauts blasting off in the Challenger space shuttle that day.  We watched and waited – the rocket shot high into the air.  But, suddenly, both the rocket and many people’s dreams exploded.  As the reality of what had just happened began to sink in, all most of us could do was weep.

And Jesus tells us that “no one knows” the “day or hour” for the end.  “Keep alert” and “keep awake.”

For most of us, the end, the end of our own lives, is much less dramatic than a terrorist attack killing thousands or a space shuttle exploding before our eyes.  Much less dramatic, but no less painful.

I think about my parents a lot, especially during holiday times.  Like some of you, I watched my father die slowly from Alzheimer’s disease.  I watched this highly educated man, a teacher, high school principal and school superintendent, slowly and then rapidly forget who he was, even forgetting his wife of more than 50 years.  Like some of you, my Mother struggled far too long, trying to care of my father at home.  He roamed the house all night, not sleeping much at all and turning up the heat to 90 degrees or more.  Everyone became a stranger, a feared stranger.  He could no longer dress himself.  When he finally went to live in a safe, locked, nursing home Alzheimer’s unit, my Mother told me she slept for what seemed to be the first time in many years.  We were luckier than many since my Dad kept his good nature to the end, but, as too many of you know, that’s little compensation when a loved ones’ brain is turning to mush.

Many of you can share similar stories of both slow and rapid death of those you love - deaths for which you were prepared and those for which you had no time for preparation.  And prepared or not, most of us know how difficult these times can be for us and for those we love.

We are within a month of Christmas and we would certainly like to be thinking about other things than the end of the world or the end of our own lives, more pleasant things than terrorist attacks, space shuttle disasters or difficult losses of those we love.  And this year I wish we did not have to think about the more 250,000 people in the USA who have now died from COVID-19 with too many more to come.

But Jesus reminds us in today’s Gospel from Mark, that the end of his life and end of all of our lives is coming.  It may not be coming for the entire globe anytime soon, even if it might feel that way in the midst of this pandemic.  Jesus tells us that only God knows that timing – but it is coming for each of us at some time in the near or more distant future.  Death for each of us, the end of our world here on earth, is coming for each of us.  That’s a guarantee.

These are not very happy thoughts for the first Sunday in Advent. 

quote allofgodsloveOf course, most people have forgotten Advent or, more likely, never even knew of its existence.  A time of quiet preparation and reflection seems out of place in the normal hurriedness of our Christmas preparations.  A time to keep awake and be alert, discerning and expecting - to listen for God’s presence in our lives. 

These are not the themes of our modern culture’s pre-Christmas with its emphasis on buying and selling and its impatience with waiting for anything.  And the ads all tell us that, in the midst of this pandemic, we can so easily shop from home in our PJ’s – no lines, no waiting, little need for any preparation.

But themes of Advent – waiting, preparation, reflection – still are, or at least can be, the themes for us Christians – “keep alert” and “keep awake.”

Today’s Gospel lesson this first Advent Sunday, calls on us to be alert and awake, to be ready for Jesus to come anew into our lives on any and every day.  It was certainly chosen as the Gospel for this First Sunday in Advent to remind us to prepare anew for Jesus to come into our lives this Christmas. 

This Advent can bring a time, if we let it, a time for reflection and personal preparation.  A time to reexamine our own priorities and refocus them away from consumerism and towards love for others.  In this terribly uncertain time, we can still stop and reflect, thanking God for the many blessings that do still exist in our lives and remembering that God is with us in all times. 

The promise of Jesus Christ, whose birth we prepare for in this Advent season, is still the promise of God’s love for all people even in the midst of a terrible pandemic, a promise for any and all times.  It is the promise of God’s love for all people, for those who died on September 11th and in the Challenger disaster as well as our own loved ones, as well as you and me. 

The promise of Jesus Christ, whose birth we prepare for this Advent season, is still the promise of God’s love for all people in this or any season.

God’s love is coming anew into our lives this Advent and Christmas as it can and does come anew into our lives every day.  While our own end times are coming, as Christians our times need not be filled with disaster and judgment but with hope and salvation.  As Christians, we know who is coming and why, we know the real reason for this season and we know that our own end times, whenever they may come, are filled with the hope of eternal life with our Lord.

This Advent, let’s keep alert, let’s be discerning and expecting, let’s keep awake.  Let’s pray, study, worship, and prepare.  And, let us continually thank God for the gift of his son, Jesus Christ, whose birth brings with it the promise of eternal life with God.

Amen.

 

 

The Rev. Eric Christopher Shafer
Senior Pastor - Mt. Olive Lutheran Church
Santa Monica, California
Sermon for:
November 29, 2020


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