I can’t believe that
it is already Advent. Often we have a Sunday between Thanksgiving and Advent to
catch our breath. Not this year. We are still eating turkey leftovers from the refrigerator
and talking about baby Jesus in church.
On top of that, as I mentioned in a previous blog, I am dealing
with anxiety. I won’t bore you with the details of my mental health, except to
say it does not make for a relaxing holiday season. It does not help that the heating
system in our home chose this time to go on the blink again. I may need a new
boiler. One more thing to overthink.
Writing this blog helps, and that is why I am doing it,
regardless of whether anyone reads it. Reading the Bible helps too. When I read the
Advent narratives in the Scriptures I find that there was a lot of anxiety going
around in the time leading up to the first Christmas. First we have the story
of the birth of John the Baptist. That is a tale of an unexpected geriatric
pregnancy for senior citizens Elizabeth and Zachariah.
The announcement of his wife’s pregnancy was so shocking to
Zechariah that he could not speak for nine months! I sympathize. If my wife
announced she was having another child, I would be speechless too. Besides the
fact that it would be a bona fide miracle, I can’t imagine being a parent of a
small child at this stage of my life! Occasional childcare for our
grandchildren is more than enough for me right now.
Then there is the drama surrounding the pregnancy of Mary.
Can you image the feelings Mary felt while trying to explain the impossible
story of a miraculous virginal conception to her parents and to her fiancé
Joseph? Who in their right mind would believe such a story if offered today? Sounds
like “fake news” or something out of supermarket tabloids.
Joseph sure didn’t believe Mary’s tale at first. He was planning
to break off the engagement to the woman he loved, until he had the virgin birth
divinely confirmed to him in a dream. Even then I imagine he had some doubts.
After all, it was only a dream. Was it really God speaking to him in that dream
or just his unconscious?
Then there was the anxiety surrounding the trip to Bethlehem
and giving birth in a stable. Labor and delivery is stressful enough in our
modern age of automobiles, ambulances and hospitals. Can you imagine what the
infant mortality rate – and childbirth mortality rate for the mother – were at
that time under good conditions?
So it seems that there was lots of anxiety floating around
during the original Advent season. You can feel it exuding from the text of the
Bible stories. For that reason these stories are able to speak to the normal
stress of holiday preparations that we feel during these next weeks.
Advent is not all about Joy to the World, Silent Night, and
“all is calm, all is bright.” It seems that anxiety is also a part of the
Advent season. That means I fit right in! It seems that I am in the holiday
spirit after all! Who knew? Now I just have to come up with a creative idea of
what to get my wife for Christmas. No pressure there. Any suggestions?
As always, enjoyed reading your blog...so much truth and wisdom with a bit of lightheartedness all wrapped up in an Advent package! :-)
ReplyDeleteWith so many people feeling loss or stress from holiday expectations, anxiety is not surprising, especially for someone used to having to shoulder the burdens of others. I always look forward to breathing that sigh of relief when all is done and suddrnly the world seems calm and bright.
ReplyDeleteFor your wife, I suggest a get-away mini-vacation or night out, where you can do just that, together!
Thank you as always for your blog. Merry Christmas!