Reflection for Wednesday, December 15, 2004: 3rd week in Advent.
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Authors
Burke-Sullivan, Eileen
Issue Date
2004-12-15
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Essay
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en_US
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Today it is cold and gray where I live. There is little that appears to be alive. The trees are stripped bare, all flowers and foliage are thoroughly frozen. Underfoot, what was green grass just a scant few weeks ago, is now brown stubble. The daylight hours are short, and in my academic world tempers seem even shorter as students rush to finish long-assigned papers and prepare for semester exams while faculty spend painful hours grading those same assessments of student learning. ||Today, too, is the anniversary of the untimely death of my own beloved sibling; the day that a dear friend is struggling mightily with cancer; that another young person I care for is flying home to the bedside of his dying Mother. It is the day that a student is trying to overcome her depression and find courage to finish a nearly wasted semester with some fragment of success. Today young soldiers from my nation will die in Iraq and young and old Iraq men and women will die from the seemingly intractable war that drags around them. Today is the day that hundreds, perhaps thousands of young men and women will die of AIDS across the continent of Africa, and their parentless children will struggle to survive in a seemingly ruthless environment. |At this moment the fast approaching festival of Christmas feels more like a burden than a celebration of anything. Too many expectations to meet, too many obligations to address! Too much tinny, trivial music that drives frightened, frustrated adults to buy too much stuff that they neither need nor want and will all-to-soon throw away.|In the quiet of the college Church, almost dark in the bleak, December, late afternoon, I considered the biblical texts from today's celebration and was caught again, held almost breathless, by the profound hope that gently bloomed within me as I heard God calmly assert through the prophet Isaiah, "I am the Lord, there is no other." |Faith is as simple as that: Yahweh is God. Yahweh who liberates from all human forms of slavery; who calls us, each one, by a unique, endearing name. From within the Trinity of Yahweh's being comes forth the Son, Jesus who heals from blindness, deafness, dullness of heart; lifting all forms of crippling burden, and leaving the Spirit among us to assure that same compassion and justice for all who come to claim the One God as Lord. |"Turn to me. . . Turn to me in your study, your work, your writing, your exams, your friendships. Turn to me in your fear, from the bleakest, weakest corners of your life; in your war making and efforts at peace; in your buying and selling, your rushing and failing; Turn to me in your living and in your dying . . . Turn to me and be safe. . . for I am God; there is no other."
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University Ministry, Creighton University.
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These reflections may not be sold or used commercially without permission. Personal or parish use is permitted.
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Lectionary number: 189*
