22 December 2017

Advent IV – Waiting – 24 December 2017


If you ever watched Fawlty Towers, you may remember Manuel the much oppressed waiter.  Manuel was from Barcelona, and he was keen to improve his English.  One day he had just learned the word eventually -- which he liked a lot and started to use frequently.  In the dining room, when an impatient couple told Manuel they wanted some water, he replied, Eventually

If only everything was eventually.  Eventually Christmas Day will come… eventually it will be 2018.  But eventually doesn’t cover it in much of the reality of people’s experience.  Waiting for a hospital appointment when you’re ill and anxious… eventually isn’t much comfort.  Waiting for son or daughter or grand children to call and to spare you a bit of their time…eventually.  What does waiting mean if you are a Rohingya refugee, waiting homeless in Bangladesh, in rain and mud and cholera… if you are effectively stateless, and governments are simply arguing about whose responsibility you are…?  Eventually…

Waiting, and knowing how to wait, is an important part of spiritual health.  I haven’t learned it yet.   I can’t wait…!  Of course, waiting can also be benign and joyous – as when you are awaiting a child to be born and all is well and as it should be.  Sometimes waiting is totally ludicrous and exasperating, as when you are waiting in a phone queue to speak to someone with intelligence and initiative, and all you are getting is hideous music and recorded assurances that your call is important.  Tedious waiting can on occasion be turned to some interesting subsidiary purpose, such as mentally writing stories about each person in the dentist’s waiting room.  Hospices, as we know, are by their nature waiting places.  Wise people have found how to fill them with peace and goodness. 

Life frequently takes the form of waiting – and so our prayer, in stillness and silence, is itself a mode of waiting in faith, not knowing the end from the beginning, not seeking to manage, control or possess.

Mary and Joseph waited for their child.  The gospel narratives depict a whole world waiting for deliverance.  At the close of 2017 we wait for deliverance from arrogance and violence, from hatred, fear and discrimination, from poverty and disease, from the egoism that turns everything ugly, and from excrescences of religion that distort and disfigure the plain teaching of Jesus.

My experience when waiting, usually, is that everything else around is busy, even frantic, and trauma is abroad.  Have you no consideration for my poor nerves, cries Mrs Bennet to Mr Bennet.  Mr Bennet always greatly preferred to wait in silence and solitude.[1]  I have utmost consideration for your nerves, my love, he replies, they have been my constant companion these twenty years.  Christian Meditation could have enhanced the Bennet family. 

If you are still, something is happening in the distance.  If you are not still, you miss it.  Oh, hush the noise, ye men of strife, and hear the angels sing…



[1] Jane Austen: Pride and Prejudice

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