category: Advent Advent Reflection: Day 13 By Gardner-Webb University On November 12, 2020 Friday, December 11 Habakkuk 3:2-6; Philippians 3:12-16 Growing up, my church did not celebrate Advent. When I was young, our celebrations included rehearsals, Christmas plays, concerts, and brown bags of fruit, nuts, and hard candy. I remember the anxiety of forgetting my lines, fear of embarrassment, and thoughts of people laughing at me. During Advent ceremonies, I often feel this anxiety again. Watching my church light Advent candles each week, I am waiting for them to fall and burn the church down. The prophet Habakkuk lived in a society in which he felt the burden and affliction of his people as they experienced a myriad of trials and injustices. Despite violence and strife, Habakkuk chose to see the awesomeness of God. He chose to rediscover the wonder of who God is in the midst of his situation. The year 2020 has been quite the adventure. As a nation, we have grieved. COVID–19 brought infirmity, sickness, and death. Our lives have changed. The way we work, worship, travel, and relate to others has changed. It forced us to bring life back into balance. COVID–19 brought us to a place of silence, solitude, and prayer. With civil unrest, increased protesting and brutality, many have a greater awareness of the ugliest truths and depths of what some call “America’s Original Sin,” racism. We hear the cries of black and brown mothers for the lives of their children; we have seen sons dying in the street with their last breath calling out to their mothers; our hearts have been broken, and we weep. We weep over not only the lives lost, but also over the realization that not all lives are honored as Imago Dei. How do we bring reconciliation, healing, and redemptive love into this moment? We wait. Waiting is not something that we do passively. We wait in hope, believing that there will be a dismantling of patriarchy, white supremacy, and systemic racism as we seek justice, love, and mercy. We wait in peace knowing that God is God of the privileged and God of the oppressed. God has heard the prayers of our ancestors and surrounded us with a great cloud of witnesses to cheer us on in this journey while reminding us that God is with us, God is for us, and God will see us through. We wait in love. Who can know the depth of our capacity to love but God? God is love. Healing begins when we understand that my neighbor is the expressed love of God no matter who they are or what they have done. We wait in joy. We rejoice in anticipation of the triumphant return of our King. Of His Kingdom, there shall be no end (Isaiah 9:7; KJV). Jesus is the repairer of the breach, restorer of the broken, and the One who makes all things new. Until he comes, we must continue to press toward the mark of our individual and collective high calling of God in Christ (Philippians 3:14; NIV). Make a choice this Advent season to wait on God and behold the beauty of God. “His brilliant splendor fills the heavens and the earth is filled with His praise” (Habakkuk 3:3b; NLT). Natasha ShackelfordSchool of Divinity Student
Post 2024 Advent Devotion: Day 25 Wednesday, December 25 Psalm 98; Isaiah 52:7-10; Hebrews 1:1-4, (5-12); John 1:1-14 Thanks be to God, for the blessed day of Jesus’ birth has arrived! Merry Christmas, Gardner-Webb family. I hope that this season of Advent has been filled with wonder, joy, and hope for you and for your loved ones. I trust that in reading […] Gardner-Webb University | December 25, 2024
Post 2024 Advent Devotion: Day 24 Tuesday, December 24 Psalm 96; Isaiah 9:2-7; Titus 2:11-14; Luke 2:1-14; (15-20) The Christmas season is a time for our souls to find rhythm again. Specifically, this time of year tunes our hearts to the rhythm of grace around us. During this season we look back and we look ahead, and our hearts and minds awaken […] Gardner-Webb University | December 24, 2024
Post 2024 Advent Devotion: Day 23 Monday, December 23 Psalm 113; Genesis 25:19-28; Colossians 1:15-20 “Joy to the world, the Lord is come! Let earth receive her King!” Three Dog Night sang a similar song: “Joy to the world, All the boys and girls, Joy to the fishes in the deep blue sea, Joy to you and me.” While this song is […] Gardner-Webb University | December 23, 2024