Shifting gears into Advent may take some time...but don't lallygag too long
Advent begins
in a fog of unreadiness,
as if by dull surprise
or in a twilight zone,
we groggily hang the greens.
Hardly with awareness
much less anticipation
good people sleepwalk
through the prophecies
and Annunciation.
We may finally stir
by the time children sing
“Away in a Manger”
the Sunday before Christmas,
their raised voices spark
a light in our slumbering souls.
Is it only children and prophets
who grasp the urgency,
sense the passion;
whose hearts are rended
and readied by the
promise of Light shining
in the darkness?
Is it only to them that Advent
becomes no mere repetition
of myth-laden past events,
but days of embracing
the living Mystery,
the ground of all hope?
By God’s mercy and grace
children and prophets are
only the first to hear,
in a fog of unreadiness,
as if by dull surprise
or in a twilight zone,
we groggily hang the greens.
Hardly with awareness
much less anticipation
good people sleepwalk
through the prophecies
and Annunciation.
We may finally stir
by the time children sing
“Away in a Manger”
the Sunday before Christmas,
their raised voices spark
a light in our slumbering souls.
Is it only children and prophets
who grasp the urgency,
sense the passion;
whose hearts are rended
and readied by the
promise of Light shining
in the darkness?
Is it only to them that Advent
becomes no mere repetition
of myth-laden past events,
but days of embracing
the living Mystery,
the ground of all hope?
By God’s mercy and grace
children and prophets are
only the first to hear,
the first to recognize,
to proclaim that
it is, indeed, Mystery.
The Light ever dawns,
beaming its rays into the
eyes of the groggiest saints,
the hardest sleeper
among us.
Only those who refuse to rise
amid many urgent shakings
and light flooding their beds
sleep through the
Incarnation.
“Wake up, O sleeper,
rise from the dead,
and Christ will shine on you.”
The Light ever dawns,
beaming its rays into the
eyes of the groggiest saints,
the hardest sleeper
among us.
Only those who refuse to rise
amid many urgent shakings
and light flooding their beds
sleep through the
Incarnation.
“Wake up, O sleeper,
rise from the dead,
and Christ will shine on you.”
No comments:
Post a Comment