NOVEMBER 29, 2020 "How I Missed Santa" Rev. Dal McCrindle
In less than a month it will be Christmas! Where has the time gone? It seems it was just last week that it was shorts and tee-shirt time; and then Thanksgiving, Remembrance Day came and went, (although very different this year) and now we’re anticipating Christmas! Time does go by very quickly, doesn’t it? except when you’re counting the moments and the days, the little things and big things that have come or gone. When thinking of the 49 years in ministry, not counting the 3 as a student minister I wonder where all that time has gone; the place, the people, the situations. The older we get, the faster time flies by, except when we’re really waiting for something; something stupendous, extraordinary out of this world.
That was the situation that the people of Judah found themselves in. They had been sitting for such a long time remembering their history, their past – the times of plenty and the times of famine, the times of success and the times of failure; the times of war and the times of peace; and overall, they found their history to be rather disappointing. Oh, there had been the glory days of David and Solomon, at least they were remembered as being glorious even if they weren’t. They remembered that their puny little place of worship had been much grander, more beautiful and better attended. They remembered when they were masters of their own destiny and not enslaved subjects of an Empire far away and they longed for something better.
As they searched through their stories and scripture they came upon promises written eons before when the prophets told how God would intervene and if they cried out to Him enough; if they were faithful and righteous enough, God would intervene; send a deliverer, maybe even come down to earth Himself.
So, they waited and cried out to God for this chosen one, a Messiah, a divine King who unlike any of the others who had gone before would be faithful to God; faithful to Judah. This king would be so much what God wanted for creation that it would be God, and it would the end of time, the destination toward which all creation had been crawling ever since Adam and Eve were expelled from that perfect garden. But, O God, when?
This plight sets the stage for the story which Jesus told his listeners so long ago. This would be a cosmic happening, not another conquest, not another tribal or clan struggle for power. “In those days, after that suffering, the sun will be darkened and the moon will not give its light and the stars will be falling from the heavens and the powers in the heavens will be shaken. Then they will see the son of man coming in the clouds with great power and glory. And then he will send out the angels and gather his elect from the four winds, from the ends of the earth to the ends of heaven.”
Now if I were oppressed, down trodden and suffering and believed that I was somewhat faithful, part of the elect, that would be a great comfort to me. Because God was going to come and save me, lift me up out of the slime and place me with the elect: God’s chosen ones! Pretty good news if you ask me? That’s what people, hoped for; it’s probably what people today dream of, as well.
But then, Jesus went on to expand those words of hope, the dream of the end of times. Apparently, we’ve got to be on our toes, watching, not just idly waiting for the coming of this king. “Look to the fig tree.” Can’t you see the listeners scratching their head and wondering what figs have to do with the coming of the diving king. “Alright, alright, I know about figs,” they say: “stick a branch into the ground, water it and soon you’re picking figs. So what?”
“Take the fig tree,” Jesus says as an example of what you know. “When you see the leaves burst out of the apparently dead branch you know that summer is near – soon figs will abound. Well the same is true for the coming messiah. Look at the signs of growth around you.” “Okay, okay, we believe you he’s coming soon.”
It creates about as much interest for them as does the doom and gloom guy in the BC comic strip. You know, “prepare for the end!” almost as much interest as we give the religious who come knocking on our doors, with pamphlets predicting the end of time. “Sure, sure, the end will come someday but what does that have to do with figs, me, or my life?”
In response, Jesus continues to hammer this point home making his comments about the coming Messiah more and more personal. “About the day or the hour, no one knows, neither the angles in heaven, or the son but only the Father, So beware – stay alert. It’s like a man going on a journey, when he leaves home and puts his slaves in charge, each one with his work and commands the doorkeeper to be on the watch. You don’t know when the master of the house will come, in the evening, or at midnight or at cock crow or at dawn. Keep awake, lest he find you asleep when he comes suddenly.”
When I was growing up, I was convinced that Santa was a reality. I had more difficulty accepting the truth when told by the kids on the block the reality, than I did believing where babies came from! Each Fall, about now, as the decorations began to emerge from their dusty boxes and music of the Christmas kind is heard on the radio, I would do all the things a little kid does to get ready for Christmas and Santa’s arrival. There was the customary making sure my bedroom was clean and tidy, although it usually never was throughout the year, but for November and December, it was immaculate! Then followed the mandatory visit to Santa, at Eaton’s downtown. Or at least to see one of his lieutenants as I convinced myself as rationally began to be born in my head. Then there was the trip to Woolworth’s or the Five and Dime with $5.00 to buy the necessary family gifts, knowing that I would get more than reimbursed when Santa finally arrived. My sister and I would agree not to fight or quarrel for a few days before Christmas and set out cookies and milk for this Santa, cause we knew this would be a hard night’s work and no one else in the world was thoughtful enough to think of his stomach, although by the look of him at Eaton’s he really didn’t need any help in that area.
Then we would sit and wait. We would look out of the window every once in a while, and nothing … finally we were too tired. We have watched and watched, waited and waited and usually fell asleep on the living room couch only having to be carried to bed, usually without waking. By morning, Santa had come and gone; the cookies had been eaten except for one and we could see that most of the milk, gone! Once again, we had waited and missed him.
How did we miss Santa? We fell asleep at our post. The master had come calling and we, the gatekeepers were not on duty. We had failed, once again. I’ve often thought about Santa and our waiting for God to break into our lives and wondered; would God be harsher than Santa Claus? Will God come to me one day and find me asleep and leave me cause I won't be watching or waiting. I don't think so. The importance in the story for me is that Jesus says that God will come and it will be a cosmic event, and the signs of God's coming are around and we have been given our work while we wait. Some have even been made gatekeepers. Sleeping isn’t the problem, doing the work which the Master has given us, is! When my sister and I were anticipating so much the coming of Santa, we changed our behavior, we mended broken relationships (at least for the time being). We did what our parents hoped we would do and we watched, waited and anticipated and do you know what? even though we missed Santa again for another year, Santa didn’t miss us.
God is like that too. We have our jobs, work to do that God has given us, ministries to carry out, whether we are asleep or awake when God comes, God will gift us so much more than Santa could ever. Wake up, says Jesus as he approaches the cross, when his own end is near. During Advent and Christmas, we are not watching for a death but for a birth; new life made possible because of Jesus, birth, life, death and resurrection. Because of him we are called to wake up; wake up to the unexpected surprises that come our way; wake up to the love that is in the world, if we would see it; wake up to the future we are sometimes so angry about cause it’s not the future we’d planned, wake up to the fact that we are not the masters here, just servants, his servants with a job to do.
Our job is to be part of his life, to let God into our living. That’s what being awake means and whether we are physically wide awake or sound asleep, God will not leave us behind or forget to gifts us. At least that’s the way I see it.