Being in Southern California on Christmas day is quite an experience weather-wise for this Chicagoan! Wearing shorts and a tee-shirt in the middle of winter is just not what I am used to. Maybe I think clearer in such great weather, you can determine, but the word Advent is on my mind today in a whole new way.
Rarely do we even hear, much less use, the word Advent; instead, it is replaced with “The Christmas Season” or “Christmas Day.” How surprised I was, and disappointed, to read this definition in a dictionary of the word advent: “arrival of something – e.g., advent of spring” with absolutely NO reference to the use of Advent referring to the coming of Christ as a baby in the manger at Bethlehem!
It seems that these days the only place we hear the word Advent used is in a church, and that’s not bad at all, since in church we hopefully can trust that we hear truth! Advent – To Come To refers to the Creator of the universe coming into the universe in human flesh and blood, a crying baby lying on straw in a Bethlehem animal shelter.
Advent leads to interesting questions, does it not? Advent – To Come To only to the planet earth? Other planets out there where God saw fit to incarnate as a baby? How does incarnation work anyway? Assuming that the Creator God does not have flesh on bones like we do, just how does God change into flesh and blood? An interstellar magic show of sorts?
And this one just knocks my intellectual socks off every time I put energy into trying to answer it: why would a non-human Creator God even want to become flesh and blood like humans? To “save us from our sins” is the theological answer to my question but that leads to “why did we need to be saved from our sins?”
And finally, this question may strike some as sacrilegious at best, heretical at worst: Is it possible that God already does have flesh and blood? Genesis does say, “God created human beings in his own image, in the image of God he created them; male and female he created them“ [Genesis 1:27 NLT]. So, if we humans were created “in his own image” and we have flesh and blood, then maybe, just maybe, God has flesh and blood too? Sort of like the famous math formula: if A=B, and B=C, then A=C too!
And then Advent – To Come To raises a whole other set of questions for me. Since I have been taught, and believed my entire life, that God is omnipresent – which simply means everywhere – is it not logical to wonder “why did God even need to come to earth as a baby if God was already here?” Maybe this question is easy to answer: God was always here on earth, we just couldn’t see God. But wait, there’s more! If God was already like humans (i.e., with flesh and blood) then why could we not see God here on earth before Jesus was born in Bethlehem?
Advent – To Come To is not as easy and simple as “away in a manger” and “oh holy night” seem to make it. I will leave this to the professional theologians, but invite my blog readers to hit the comment button and leave your thoughts on these questions. Worth pondering, right? Especially when it’s 76 degrees out and sunny!
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