. . . a voice of one calling in the desert, ‘Prepare the way for the Lord, make straight paths for him.’ (Mark 1:1-4)
Everything around us this week has been telling us that the Christmas season is well under way. Don’t believe it.
That’s not to say that you shouldn’t get a jump on your shopping or take advantage of the great deals on Amazon. I’m not trying to tell you to stop watching those Hallmark Christmas movies or delay your efforts to get your cards in the mail. I’m well aware that many of you are eager to get on with it, whether enthusiastically or just to get it done and over with. Hopefully, as you look to the month ahead, your enthusiasm exceeds your dread.
All that being said, faith communities have a different way of marking time when it comes to the so-called ‘holiday season.’ In the world that dominates my time and attention – what I often call ‘church-world’ – the season begins with the first Sunday of Advent. No one really seems to think that way about this season of the year. Pastors and the choir, but hardly anyone else.
The point of all this is that I’ve got some good news about this week, this very day.
Thanksgiving was done and in the books over a week ago. The first Sunday of Advent is still a couple of days away. This brief interlude on the calendar is a treasure. It doesn’t happen every year. It won’t happen next year. Very often it seems the dishes have barely been washed from Thursday’s thanksgiving meal, and almost immediately on Sunday we’re plunged into Advent. But not this year.
This year we get a chance to pause, to catch our breath, to think for a moment about what we can do to prepare him room in the midst of our crowded days.
That Blank Page in the Bible
What’s true of our lives this week is true on a much larger scale in the biblical story. You can see a very simple visual representation of this in the way many Bibles are printed. If you locate the very last page of the Old Testament, and then find the opening page of Matthew’s telling of the life of Jesus, you’ll very likely find a blank page. Possibly you’ll find a page that is mostly blank except for ‘The New Testament’ appearing in bold letters.
That blank page contains the lengthy unwritten story of the interval that followed the last of the Hebrew prophets and led to the birth of Jesus. Scholarly types refer to this as the ‘intertestamental period,’ the time between the close of one era and the beginning of another. Sometimes these years are spoken of as a silent period – but that isn’t quite right. These years were hardly silent.
Whereas you and I have few days before Advent begins, before we begin telling about how God entered our world in the birth of his son Jesus, the intertestamental period was roughly 400 years long. Four centuries of yearning and hoping and praying. I’m troubled sometimes by God’s sense of timing. I wish he’d show a little more urgency and act a little quicker on our behalf.
This much, however, can be said with certainty. Our waiting is not wasted. God is at work in the in-between places that appear to be void of his word and his works.
People Get Ready
The figure who signaled the end of the intertestamental period would have never thought to speak of an intertestamental period. He was a blunt and fiery preacher who dressed like Elijah and evoked the people’s collective memory of Israel’s great prophets. We call him John the Baptizer (or Baptist). Even though he was only a few months older than Jesus, he stood between the times, the time of the prophets and the announcement of the Messiah.
Here between Thanksgiving and Advent, I’d like to direct your attention to John the Baptist. At the same time, I’d like to invite you to name the in-between places in your own life.
Often, the in-between places can feel barren and boring. What was no longer is. But what will be is not yet clear. We’re waiting, but we’re not quite sure what we’re waiting on. Maybe we’ve moved beyond simply waiting. In the in-between we sometimes flounder, lacking direction and passion and vision for a future that used to seem vivid and exciting. In his book, The Land Between, pastor Jeff Manion argues that these in-between stretches of life can be fertile ground for spiritual growth and transformation. But they can also leave us beaten up and bitter.
Here on the threshold of Advent we’ll spend some time getting ready for the season by naming and facing the in-between spaces we inhabit. Where is yours? And how are you doing in that place today?
Prayer:
Ever patient God, our tendency is to rush. We rush through meals and conversations. We rush through our todays trying to secure days yet to come. We don’t like the in-between places, and we easily fail to see you at work there. Slow us down enough to get ready for what you are doing in these days. Come and find us in the in-between, we ask in Jesus’s name. Amen.
Ahhh, such a wonderful reading to start the day! Beautiful and Insightful thank you!
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Mark, it is so wonderful to receive your inspirational devotionals, thank you! Sheila Fraser
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My life includes a load of in-between times. For the most part they leave me beaten up. I think I’ll take a look at Jeff Manion’s book. Thanks as always for your thoughts. And I agree, poor John…he deserved better. Jg
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