Grant your faithful, we
pray, almighty God,
The resolve
to run forth to meet your Christ
With righteous
deeds at his coming,
So that,
gathered at his right hand,
They may
be worthy to possess the heavenly kingdom.
Through
our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son,
Who lives
and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
One God,
for ever and ever.
Advent is for waiting –
if people know one thing about Advent, it’s probably that. We’re waiting for Christmas, which isn’t very
long to wait (and seems even quicker given the decorations we have up in Old
College!) and we’re waiting for Christ’s second coming, without knowing how
long that will be. Regardless, we’re
waiting. So why does this collect talk
about running? No matter what the pastor
of St. Joe parish might tell you, it’s not a shout out to the St. Nick Six, but
a characterization of what Christian waiting looks like.
For those
of us who have run a distance further than we thought we could run, climbed a mountain higher than we thought we could climb, or walked coast to coast across
a country wider than we thought we could walk, we’ve probably come to a point
where it’s become very clear to us that the strength to do these things is not
our own. It’s hard not to pray in a
situation like that. And that’s why we
pray here for the resolve, for the strength to run. Our Constitutions tells us that “The mission
is the Lord’s, and so is the strength for it.”
What
might our lives look like if lived in total awareness that our strength was God’s,
that it came through the weakness of the cross, and that it has a purpose! “Grant us the resolve, the strength to run
forth to meet our Christ.” Encounter
with Christ is the heart of Christianity and the destination of our
journey. We run with hope towards life
eternal where we will live in that face to face encounter. But that encounter is not something
altogether distant, something we can’t glimpse now. We live in dawn’s first light and we long for
fullness of day.
That’s
why the collect continues, “Grant us the strength to run forth to meet our
Christ with righteous deeds.” Now, that could
be misread, as if meeting Christ and righteous deeds were two separate things,
as if we accrued enough righteous deeds to put on our cv and presented that as
evidence we were entitled to meet Christ.
We’re not saved by our cv; we’re saved by Jesus.
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