(Isaiah 61:1-4, 8-11 and) 1 Thessalonians 5:16-24 (and John 1:6-8, 19-28)
This
morning we will be taking part in our Nativity—but you will have to wait a
little longer first. Waiting. That is the theme of Advent. We are waiting for
Jesus to return. We are always waiting, but it is easy to forget that, caught
up as we are in the cares and concerns of everyday life. And so, each year, we
return once again to a season of attending to our waiting. An annual
health-check.
When
I was a child, when the bell went to indicate that playtime was over we had to
line up in our classes and wait for a teacher to come and send us back inside,
one class at a time. On cold days, the teachers did not necessarily want to
move from their warm staff room. We would be left in the cold, no longer running
around to keep warm; and inevitably the chorus would go up, ‘Why are we wait-ing? Teacher’s
hi-ber-nat-ing!’ Perhaps that is how you feel about waiting for the Lord’s
return?
Paul’s
first letter to the church in Thessalonica is all about waiting.
Thessalonica,
in northern Greece, was the second place in Europe where Paul and his
companions planted a church. They arrived from Philippi, where they had been
beaten and imprisoned without trial; and after only a few weeks in Thessalonica
they had to move on again, after a mob of ruffians set the city in an uproar
against them. You can read about it in Acts
chapters 16 and 17.
(The
cause of the uproar was that they had arrived proclaiming ‘that there is
another king named Jesus’. Like Herod and the people of Jerusalem when visited
by the magi ‘the people and the city officials were disturbed when they heard
this’.)
Like
Paul, the Thessalonians were waiting for Jesus’ return. Moreover, Paul was
waiting for news from Thessalonica of the church: having received the gospel in
the face of persecution, having grown in faith and love and hope under
continuing persecution, how were they doing now? When he could bear it no
longer, Paul sent his companion Timothy to Thessalonica to bring back a report.
Now Timothy had just returned, bringing good news of their faith and love.
Nonetheless, their hope had taken a knock, as while they were waiting for Jesus
to return some of their number had died. What would happen to them? Jesus
delayed in coming back: would they, having received him as king, miss out on
his glorious kingdom?
Paul
writes to reassure them, to enable them to grieve with hope, and not as others
do who have no hope. He uses picture-language to convey those who have died and
those who are living being caught up together in Jesus, who has died, is risen,
and will come again. That is a hope we
hold on to today, as we mourn Peter’s death and surround Minda with love.
Paul’s
first letter to the church in Thessalonica is all about waiting.
How
ought we to wait, as those who wait for Jesus?
Paul
begins his letter in this way:
‘We
always give thanks to God for all of you and mention you in our prayers,
constantly remembering before our God and Father your work of faith and labour
of love and steadfastness of hope in our Lord Jesus Christ … And you became
imitators of us and of the Lord, for in spite of persecution you received the
word with joy inspired by the Holy Spirit, so that you became an example to all
the believers in Macedonia and in Achaia.’ (1
Thessalonians 1:2, 3, 6, 7)
And
Paul returns to the beginning at the end of the letter, with the closing
exhortations including:
‘Rejoice
always, pray without ceasing, give thanks in all circumstances; for this is the
will of God in Christ Jesus for you.’ (1
Thessalonians 5:16-18)
How
do we wait? We wait, rejoicing always. Or, always celebrating. That is,
celebrating the good news that Jesus is our king, who saves us. We are to
celebrate that news when life is good, and we experience in the present a
foretaste of God’s coming kingdom; and we are to celebrate it when life is
painful, and we long for the breaking-in of God’s kingdom for which we wait.
That is why we celebrate Jesus in taking part in the Eucharist Sunday by
Sunday, whatever is going on in the world, whatever is going on in our lives.
Come again today, rejoicing, and be renewed in our waiting.
How
else do we wait? We wait, praying without ceasing. That is, in the power of the
Holy Spirit and through the Son we bring before the Father all our joys and
sorrows, all our work and struggles, all our longing—and we don’t give up. We
encourage one another to keep going. Paul made a regular practice of praying
with his companions, because that way you get to share the burden of prayer,
making the burden lighter, and the joy of answered prayer, making the joy
weightier. What are you praying about at present? Where do you long to see
Jesus come as king, turning the world up-side-down? And who else knows the
prayer of your heart? Who prays it with you?
Finally,
how do we wait? We wait, giving thanks in all circumstances. Not for all circumstances—some circumstances
are hell—but, nonetheless, in all
circumstances. Again, we focus not on the circumstances themselves, but on king
Jesus. Like Paul and Silas singing hymns in the innermost cell of the prison in
Philippi, there are times when we need to keep our spirits up, not by wishful
thinking but by wilful thanking. It is like going running. On cold, dark winter
nights, it takes some effort to go out for a run; but the mental health benefit
is enormous. It is easier to run in company, and it is easier to run when it is
a regular habit. The same is true of the discipline of thanksgiving. We need to
encourage one another to be thankful, perhaps taking small steps to begin with,
little and often, building up our capacity for thankfulness. Waiting for Jesus
is a team game, a communal activity; and Advent is our boot camp, our C25K
(couch to 5-kilometre-run) for beginners or the lapsed.
As
we learn to wait, may the people of Sunderland come to know that our hope is in
king Jesus, who came to us long ago and who will come again to judge the living
and the dead, and whose kingdom shall have no end.
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