For Christian traditions that follow the liturgical calendar, today is the first day of Advent.
It's a special time of prayer and reflection that prepares us to celebrate Christmas.
It's a time when we think a lot about why Jesus came into the world.
It's a time when we contemplate our belief that humanity's relationship
with God became so broken that God had to come to earth physically and
be with us for a time. (Think of your mom yelling, "Don't make me come
down there!")
This concept of
"broken relationship" has been on my mind a lot lately. It sure does
seem like something is broken right now. There's something broken in
our country. Something broken in families and among friends.
The presidential election demonstrated that so many of us are not on the same page when it comes to values and priorities.
The election demonstrated that some of the things that really bother me
are not the same things that bother some of the people I love. And, as
something of an OCD control freak, this bothers me!
I'm also
troubled by the extent to which I didn't know this chasm existed. I'm
troubled by how out of touch I was, not only with millions of other
Americans, but out of touch with the true thinking of many of my own
family members and friends.
On Wednesday, November 9, in my anger, I unfriended and blocked
on Facebook anyone I saw cheering the election of Donald Trump. Family
members, childhood friends, high school classmates, longtime political
allies, people who attended our wedding. If you voted for Trump, I was
done with you.
And, then came good Pope Francis and some of the
priests with whom I work, reminding me that I need to forgive and listen sincerely — that I
shouldn't oppose the great orange wall-builder by building walls of my
own. Ugh.
All of which brings us to the video below from Sojourners.
It's a bit on the dramatic side for my taste. But, it's good for
thought in this season of discontent and on this first Sunday of Advent 2016:
1 comment:
I hear you. I'm not quite there yet when it comes to forgiveness. It's still too raw, because I know people who're going to be negatively affected by this. Hell, my stepsister and her wife live in a very red part of their state, and she fears for her life in the rural town she works in.
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