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Second Monday of Advent - Twelve Tide

Second Monday of Advent

Reflection: Monday, Day 9 of Advent

Then Moses called all the elders of Israel and said to them, “Go and select lambs for yourselves according to your clans, and kill the Passover lamb. Take a bunch of hyssop and dip it in the blood that is in the basin, and touch the lintel and the two doorposts with the blood that is in the basin. None of you shall go out of the door of his house until the morning. For the LORD will pass through to strike the Egyptians, and when he sees the blood on the lintel and on the two doorposts, the LORD will pass over the door and will not allow the destroyer to enter your houses to strike you. You shall observe this rite as a statute for you and for your sons forever. And when you come to the land that the LORD will give you, as he has promised, you shall keep this service. And when your children say to you, ‘What do you mean by this service?’ you shall say, ‘It is the sacrifice of the LORD’s Passover, for he passed over the houses of the people of Israel in Egypt, when he struck the Egyptians but spared our houses.’” (Exodus 12:21-27) 

If there is one passage that fills me with Christmas cheer, it’s this one.  

Just kidding.  

Perhaps, though, it fills me with Advent sobriety? It is an awful passage, weighty and frightening.  

I remember hearing this Passover account as a boy. And while I understood that—in theory—the Angel of Death was a one-time thing, I probably would have felt a little more secure if we’d managed to borrow a cup of lamb’s blood from a kindly Israelite neighbor and dabbed it on our doorframe. No one else in my family shared my concern, but then, no one else was the oldest male child. 

The passage itself (much like the Abraham passage) is hard, having to do with the death of children. It is also a text that collapses time, which explains at least part of my unease, even as a twentieth-century American gentile.  

God gives detailed directions throughout this chapter, and that’s expected—after all, he’s telling the Israelites how to be passed over by the Angel of Death. Weirdly, though, his directions are equally addressed to their children’s children, reminding them of how to properly commemorate this moment once the danger has passed. He seems to care as much that they remember this event correctly as anything else.  

This is because, however much the blood over the door saves them on that particular night in Egypt, the Feast of Passover will be part of what forms them as a People of God. Once a year, in the midst of their Promised Land prosperity, the Israelites will eat a meal that symbolizes their hasty departure from Egypt, a meal that reflects their distinctness from other nations and the obedience to God that makes it possible. 

We all want to be saved from the Angel of Death—but mostly so we can go on being like everybody else, pursuing various kinds of personal empowerment and autonomy that actually keep us enslaved. But God ties his people’s salvation here to their distinctness, and their distinctness to their obedience. Take away one and you don’t get the others.  

Jesus, whom the New Testament presents as the ultimate Passover Lamb, says that Eternal Life is knowledge of God and Christ. But that can be a bitter herb to digest. Much of the time I secretly feel it would be pretty great to have Eternal Life that tastes a little less Jesus-y—where I still get to run my life my way—and by “my way,” I mostly mean the way that everyone around me runs their lives, because it sure seems like they get to be happy on their own terms. But happiness, or even survival, on one’s “own terms” is an illusion. Not even Jesus got that, even when he prayed for it all night after celebrating his last Passover. 

Do traditions—like Advent or Passover—remind us of these sorts of spiritual realities? Or do they become sites of potential idolatry, allowing us to pay attention to quaint little cultural practices, making us feel insulated against our own discomfort with a God who requires our very selves and gives us his? If we think that such practices are inherently idolatrous, we need to reckon with the fact that God prescribes them to his own chosen people (and Jesus joyfully celebrates them). Either this was a mistake on his part, or they can and should be used as instruments of our salvation.  

 

Instead, I think, these sorts of traditions create another space in which God’s grace can operate in our lives, while never being a substitute for the operation of that grace.” 

If, on the other hand, we think that observing the external tradition is enough (that as long as we put a little blood on our doorframe, we can otherwise live however we want) we need to reckon with some of Jesus’ (to say nothing of Paul’s) harsher statements toward those who believed that observance of old practices made them holy. Instead, I think, these sorts of traditions create another space in which God’s grace can operate in our lives, while never being a substitute for the operation of that grace. They may serve to liberate us from slavery, not only to our own appetites, but to our minds and feelings—requiring us to fast when we feel inclined to self-indulgence, or to celebrate in defiance of our own dreary moods, or to sit down together and pray when we’d rather zone out or get one more work project completed.  

They are the practices of a free and distinct people, positing a reality outside the self, outside even our obligations to world and family. Ideally, our observance of such practices checks our emotion and ambition—making us ready to hear God, who reminds us that in Christ he has already delivered us from death, has already marked us out as his. Rather than using these rituals to keep him out, we now use them to invite him in, even as he comes. 

Advent

Activities

Tomorrow, December 6, is the feast day of St. Nicholas (who is, admittedly, the antithesis of the Angel of Death). Tonight, in many church traditions and countries, St. Nicholas visits, putting candy or coal (or potatoes) in children’s shoes to commemorate the story of one of the saint’s acts of charity.

 

If you have children, consider putting their shoes by the fireplace or door and filling them with candy or small toys. Because tomorrow is a feast day, you will take a short break from fasting for Advent. Think now about finding some small way to celebrate the day and reflect with your kids about the story of the real St. Nicholas. There are a few good versions of his story out there, including one by Veggie Tales: Watch VeggieTales: St. Nicholas: A Story of Joyful Giving | Prime Video (amazon.com)

 

Taken from the daily office

Daily Scripture & Prayer

First Lesson: Exodus 12:21-27 (ESV)

Second Lesson:  

For Monday (December 5): 

Blessed Lord, who caused all Holy Scriptures to be written for our learning: Grant us so to hear them, read, mark, learn, and inwardly digest them, that by patience and the comfort of your holy Word we may embrace and ever hold fast the blessed hope of everlasting life, which you have given us in our Savior Jesus Christ; who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen. (BCP) 

For Tuesday (December 6): 

Nicholas, Bishop of Myra, c.326 

O God, our heavenly Father, you raised up your faithful servant Nicholas to be a Bishop and pastor in your Church and to feed your flock: Give abundantly to all pastors the gifts of your Holy Spirit, that they may minister in your household as true servants of Christ and stewards of your divine mysteries; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen. (BCP) 

Literature

Dante Gabriel Rossetti,”The Passover in the Holy Family”

 

Here meet together the prefiguring day 
And day prefigured. ” Eating, thou shalt stand, 
Feet shod, loins girt, thy road-staff in thine hand, 
With blood-stained door and lintel,” — did God say 
By Moses’ mouth in ages passed away. 
And now, where this poor household doth comprise 
At Pashcal-Feast two kindred families, — 
Lo! the slain lamb confronts the Lamb to slay. 
 
The pyre is piled. What agony’s crown attained, 
What shadow of death the Boy’s fair brow subdues 
Who holds that blood wherewith the porch is stained 
By Zachary the priest? John binds the shoes 
He deemed himself not worthy to unloose; 
And Mary culls the bitter herbs ordained. 

Song

Johnny Cash, “The Man Comes Around”

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