Dai­ly Reflec­tion
Decem­ber 9, 2021

Thursday of the Sec­ond week in Advent
Lectionary: 184
Ronald Fussell

There has been none greater than John the Bap­tist;
yet the least in the King­dom of heav­en is greater than he. (Matthew 11:11)

As a teacher and a schol­ar of edu­ca­tion, I am very famil­iar with the idea of ser­vice require­ments for stu­dents.  School pol­i­cy often dic­tates that stu­dents must sat­is­fy expec­ta­tions about the amount of time that the spend serv­ing oth­ers.  If you ask stu­dents what they gain from their ser­vice that they give, they might respond that they gain “hours” for some arbi­trary grad­u­a­tion require­ment.  After all, the easy path is almost always to reduce these ser­vice encoun­ters to a mere trans­ac­tion­al endeavor.

Take a moment to con­sid­er how ser­vice is to you.  If your reflec­tion is sim­i­lar to mine, you might find that ser­vice can be trans­ac­tion­al here as well.  For exam­ple, I have sug­gest­ed to my adult child before that he high­light his ser­vice activ­i­ties when he applies for jobs so that he might be a more desir­able appli­cant.  And even for me, as a tenure-stream pro­fes­sor, I am expect­ed to com­ment on my ser­vice if I hope to achieve tenure.

Today’s read­ings prompt­ed me to reflect on how we engage the poor and mar­gin­al­ized – the least among us – the ones who need it most.  What do you give for your ser­vice?  What do you gain in return?  The answers to these ques­tions will prob­a­bly reveal a lot about your mind­set when in comes to serv­ing others.

Of course, some of this might be the real­i­ty of the world in which we live.  But, the psalmist writes, “the Lord is good and mer­ci­ful – slow to anger, and of great kind­ness.”  For me, the impor­tant word of this pas­sage is mer­ci­ful.  To be mer­ci­ful means to show com­pas­sion – to suf­fer with – to see the world through another’s eyes.  Jesus was and is a per­fect pic­ture of this com­pas­sion as we see in so many of his encoun­ters with oth­ers.  Jesus’s com­pas­sion calls us to the same – to encounter oth­ers with stead­fast grace and per­fect humil­i­ty, so that we too can under­stand their world through their eyes.

In qui­et and still of this Advent sea­son, we can and should take care to pre­pare our­selves for the com­ing of our Lord by exam­in­ing our approach to mer­cy and ser­vice, and espe­cial­ly to what we give and gain in these encoun­ters.   And when our approach shifts the focus to com­pas­sion, what we gain will be so much more valu­able than hours, jobs, and advance­ment.
May the days and weeks lead­ing to Christ­mas be qui­et, reflec­tive, and reveal­ing to all of us seek­ing to grow clos­er to Him.