Gaudete Sunday
December 13, 2020
Isaiah 61.1-4, 8-11;1 Thes. 5.16-24; John 1.6-8, 19-28
+ Today
is, of course, Gaudete Sunday.
Or Rose
Sunday.
It is
always a special Sunday here at St. Stephen’s and for the Church as a whole.
Traditionally,
on Gaudete Sunday, we light the pink candle on the Advent wreath.
Lighting the
pink candle is a sign to us that the shift has happened.
Now there
are more candles lit than are unlit on the wreath.
The light
has won out and the darkness, we are realizing, is not an eternal darkness.
But most
importantly, Gaudete means “rejoice.”
And that
is exactly what we should be doing on this Sunday.
We should
rejoice in the light that is winning out over the darkness.
We should
rejoice in the fact that darkness has no lasting power over us.
We should
rejoice in all that God has done for us and continues to do for us in our
lives, in our ministries and here particularly at St. Stephen’s.
This
Sunday sets a tone different than the one we’ve had so-far in Advent.
We find
this word—rejoice—ringing out throughout our scriptural readings today.
It is the
theme of the day.
Rejoice!
It is the
emotion that permeates everything we hear in the Liturgy of the Word on this
Sunday.
In our
reading from the Hebrew Bible, in Isaiah, we hear
I will greatly
rejoice in the Lord,
my whole being
shall exult in my God;
In our
Epistle, we find even Paul—who seems a bit, shall we say, dour at times—
rejoicing.
“Rejoice always,” he writes
to the church at Thessalonika.
And,
although the word “rejoice” cannot be found in our Gospel reading for today,
the sentiment is there.
John the
Baptist, we are told, was not the light, but came to testify to the light—that
light being, of course, Jesus.
Again,
that is something about which to rejoice.
Now, I
know that, with a pandemic, with things looking a bit bleak in the world right
now, it’s hard to rejoice.
I know.
The
vaccine will be on its way beginning tomorrow
There is
a light at the end of this very long tunnel.
But, for
now, we are still in the midst of it all.
But
that’s what Advent reminds us to do even in dark times.
Even when
it seems like the Light is still far off, even then we rejoice.
This
emotion of joy is something we oftentimes take for granted.
Let’s
face it, joy doesn’t happen often enough in our lives.
It
certainly doesn’t happen enough in my life.
I wish it
did.
It is a
rare occurrence for the most part.
And maybe
it should be.
It is
certainly not something we want to take for granted.
When joy
comes to us, we want to let it flow through us.
We want
it to overwhelm us.
But we
often don’t think about how essential joy is to us.
Joy is
essential to all of us as Christians.
It is one
of those marks that make us who we are as Christians.
Or it should
anyway.
We should
be joyful.
We have a
God who loves us, who knows us, who wants the very best for us.
We have a
God who reaches out to us in the Light of Jesus that we celebrate at this time
of the year.
That
alone is a reason to be joyful.
But, sadly,
as we all know, there aren’t always that many joyful Christians.
We have all
known those dour-faced Christians, those Christians who are angry or bitter or
false.
And right
now we’re seeing a lot of crazy, insane Christians acting terribly in the name
of Christ.
To me,
people who act in hate and lawlessness (which we are definitely seeing right
now) in the Name of Christ is nothing less than sacrilege!
There are
those Christians for whom a smile is a chore.
That is
not what God intends for us.
We all
should be joyful Christians.
“Should”
is the word.
Still, as
we all know, there are moments.
There are
moments when we simply cannot muster joy.
No matter
how much we try to break the hold the hard, difficult things of life have
placed on us, it is hard sometimes to feel real joy.
Cultivating
joy in the midst of overwhelming sorrow or pain or loneliness or depression or
a pandemic can seems overwhelming and impossible.
That’s
why joy really is a discipline.
When
things like sorrow or pain or loneliness or depression descend upon—and they
descend upon us all—we need, in those moments, to realize that joy might not be
with us in that moment, but—and here’s the important thing—joy always returns.
Joy always returns.
We need
to search deep within us for that joy that we have as Christians.
And when
we search for it, we will find it,
even when life seems so miserable and so overwhelming.
That joy
often comes when we put our pains into perspective.
That joy
comes when we recognize that these dark moments that happen in our lives are
not eternal.
They will
not last forever.
Darkness
never lasts forever.
That, I
think, is where we sometimes fail.
When we
are in the midst of those negative emotions in our lives, we often feel as
though they will never end.
We often
feel as though we will always be lonely, we always be sad, we will always
mourn.
As
Christians, we can’t allow ourselves to be boxed in by despair.
As
Christians, we are forced, again and again, to look at the larger picture—at
God’s larger picture.
We are
forced to see that joy is always there, just beyond our grasp, awaiting us.
Joy is
there when we realize that in the midst of our darkness, there is always light
just beyond our reach.
And when
it comes back into our lives, it truly is wonderful…
Because
that is what God wants for us.
Joy not
always something one is able to identify in a person.
Joy
doesn’t mean walking around smiling all the time.
It
doesn’t mean that we have force ourselves to be happy at all times in the face
of every bad thing.
If we do
that, joy becomes false and forced.
True joy comes
bubbling up from within us.
It is a
true grace.
Remember
last week when I talked about grace.
Last
week, I defined grace in very simple terms:
Grace is
a gift we receive from God we neither ask for nor anticipate.
In that
way, joy is a gift we are given that we simply don’t ask for.
Rather,
it comes from a deep place and it permeates our whole being, no matter what
else is going on in our lives or in the world around us.
It is a
joy that comes from deep within our very essence—from that place of our true
selves.
And, let
me tell you from my own experience, joy can still be present in times of
mourning, in times of darkness, in times of despair.
It might
not be joy at its greatest effect, but there are glimmers of joy even in those
dark times.
Advent
is, as I said on the first Sunday of Advent, essentially, a penitential season.
It is a
time for us to recognize that we are slugging through the muck of our lives—a
muck we are at least, in part, responsible for.
But
Advent is also a time for us to be able to rejoice even in the midst of that
muck.
It is a
time for us realize that we will not be in that muck forever.
The muck
doesn’t win out.
God wins
out.
Christ’s
light in this world is more powerful than any darkness.
And Christ’s
light always wins out.
Our
light—the Light of Christ within us—will outlast whatever darkness we are
experiencing right now in our own lives or in the world.
See, even
in the face of darkness, we find hope and we can find joy.
The joy
we carry deep within is too powerful to die.
This
powerful joy will win out and outlast any darkness.
So, this
morning, let us remember the joy we feel at seeing this pink candle lit.
Let us
carry the spirit of this rose-colored Sunday with us.
Yes, I
will say it: let us look at life with rose-colored glasses (we can legitimately
do that today!)
We have
made it this far.
The tide
has shifted.
The light
is winning out.
The dawn
is about to break upon our long dark night.
As we
ponder this, as we meditate on this, as we take this with us in our hearts, let
us pay special attention to the emotion this causes within us.
Let us
embrace that welling up of joy from deep within.
And let
it proclaim with our lips the words we, along the prophet Isaiah, long to say:
I will greatly
rejoice in the Lord,
my whole being
shall exult in my God!
Let us pray.
We rejoice greatly in your, Loving God; even in our darkness
you send us Light—the Light of our Savior Christ. Even when we feel alone and abandoned,
you come close to us and hold us close. We rejoice in you today, and all our
days, who comes to us again and again in the person of Jesus our Lord, in whose
name we pray. Amen.
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