Tuesday, December 4, 2018

Lo, He Comes with Clouds Descending

"Lo, He comes with clouds descending"


   As I write this, Thanksgiving Day has passed; kids are back in school; the Hallmark Channels are running their endless smorgasbord of holiday movies; 100.5 & 102.5 FM are 24/7 with every Christmas song ever written (I’m a Johnny Mathis Christmas guy); St. James is changing its liturgical colors; and everyone is getting into the Christmas spirit of some kind.
   There’s only one problem – it’s not the Christmas season, no matter what they shout, while Santa waves at the end of the Macy’s parade. It is Advent!
   If the secular world has successfully eliminated the Nativity from the holidays (You can find lovely “Christmas” decorations in Dubai or Kolkata), it has done a better job (with our help?) in expunging the expectancy of Advent from our thoughts, conversations, celebrations, and activities.
   Advent, the beginning of the Church Calendar Year, the declaration that the Christ has come and is coming again, the continuing call to all (believers and unbelievers) to wake up, the constant prompting of the urgency of this hour, the proclamation of hope that our redemption is near – this season is a stirring reminder that this world is not our home, and we are living and longing for our Lord’s coming and eternal Kingdom.
   And why wouldn’t the world want us to minimize this? The King of all kings has come into the world, died for our sins, risen from the grave, ascended to His heavenly throne and now declares His rule and reign over all, while the prince of this world convinces everyone that they are the captains of their own souls and that there is plenty of time.
   This prince, though he is a defeated foe, knows that time, in fact, is running out and that our King is soon to return, overthrowing all principalities and powers, opening the final books for judgment, and establishing His Kingdom, power, and dominion forever. Knowing all of this, the “ruler of this world” inoculates God’s people with busyness, idleness, the cares of this world, even the benign routines of life, so that the church softens its message, loses its urgency, and replaces longing with comforts.
   The Advent season cannot allow this to be the settled condition of Christ’s Church; it is a wake up call, the alarm in the fire station, the check engine light in the car, the sudden health scare, the hurricane warnings, and more, all meant to be jolts to our complacency.
   The King is returning! We don’t know when, but it’s closer than ever! Advent, the great cloud of witnesses, and God’s word all call us to readiness and alertness. Ministry, worship, and life at St. James echo that message and that hope.
   The Spirit is moving afresh in the people called St. James; there is a growing hunger for deeper intimacy with God, a longing for real, authentic relationships (Life Groups), continued equipping with the transforming truth of God’s Word, ministry to people of all ages, outreach to the broken and needy, and a greater expectancy that the Day of the Lord and redemption are nearer to us than ever before.
   I pray that each of you would know an awakened stirring this Advent season, and that you would gather with us as we sing, “Lo, He comes with clouds descending” and declare, “We remember his death, We proclaim his resurrection, We await his coming in glory.”

I have you in my heart!
Pastor Mark (Marco)