Dai­ly Reflec­tion
Decem­ber 23, 2005

Friday of the Fourth week in Advent
Lectionary: 199
Mem­ber of Creighton Uni­ver­si­ty Community

Despite the hur­ried pace and instant grat­i­fi­ca­tion of mod­ern life, we spend much of our time wait­ing. The day before writ­ing this, I wait­ed for board­ing to begin, the plane to take off, the cap­tain to turn off the seat belt sign, the plane to land, to deboard, for my bag to appear out of the bow­els of the air­port, for the shut­tle to take me to my wait­ing car. Although we often say, “I can’t wait,” in fact much of the time that’s all we can do, wait.

Jews and Chris­tians are world-class wait­ers. Jews await the Mes­si­ah. Chris­tians await his com­ing again. As Pope Pius XII is report­ed to have said, Chris­tians are “spir­i­tu­al Semi­tes,” because we share a wait­ing for the ful­fill­ment of the promise. The Jews pray, “Next year in Jerusalem!” while Chris­tians pray, “Your king­dom come,” and in the mean­time we wait.

But wait­ing need not be pas­sive. Wait­ing to take off, wait­ing to land, I read an entire book (Antho­ny Swofford’s Jar­head, a young Marine’s mem­oir of a lot of anx­ious wait­ing for war to begin). Often­times, we not only can make pro­duc­tive use of the time, if we’re so inclined, but we must make atten­tive use of the time, if we’re not to lose any hope of receiv­ing what we’re wait­ing for.

An ath­lete can­not just sit around and wait for the next game or match. She must under­go some­thing like an agony of wait­ing, in the form of intense men­tal and phys­i­cal prepa­ra­tion. Jesus famous­ly under­went such an “agony” in the Gar­den of Geth­se­mane. He was wait­ing, but not just waiting.

In Advent, more than at any oth­er time of the litur­gi­cal year, we are called on to per­fect our wait­ing, our atten­tive­ness, our recep­tiv­i­ty, our long­ing. It’s as if we were stand­ing on the watch­tow­er, wait­ing for a glimpse of Eli­jah or John slip­ping over the hori­zon toward us. But even once he appears (per­haps only as a prophet-in-dia­pers!), it’s only to remind us of the more intense wait­ing for the more sig­nif­i­cant fig­ure still to appear.

Will the day of the Lord nev­er come? The king­dom nev­er come in full­ness? The suf­fer­ing of the inno­cent nev­er cease? Our long­ing nev­er meet its match in the promise kept? Per­haps we are not wait­ing hard enough. Per­haps we have secret­ly quit hop­ing there’s any­thing to wait for. But to quit hop­ing, to quit wait­ing, would be to quit believ­ing, quit “giv­ing our heart to.” That would be a kind of spir­i­tu­al suicide.

Advent, with its sto­ries of mes­sen­gers, har­bin­gers, refin­ing fires, good things near at hand, and prophets of yet greater prophets still to come, seems to say that life is all about expectan­cy. (But no one stays preg­nant for­ev­er.) We can only hope, and wait, with full and yet emp­ty, wel­com­ing hearts. It’s as if we had a hole in our hearts the size of a Mes­si­ah. But only if we’ve been wait­ing, and wait­ing well. The gift is in the wait­ing, the gift awaits.

Mem­ber of Creighton Uni­ver­si­ty Community

Since its incep­tion in 1997, Online Min­istries has been blessed to have myr­i­ad mem­bers of the Creighton Uni­ver­si­ty com­mu­ni­ty offer their per­son­al reflec­tions on the dai­ly scrip­ture readings.