What are you waiting for?

We are always waiting - for a letter or a phone call from a distant loved one, or the next bank statement to see if we have overspent, for an up-coming event we want to attend, and there are deadlines we have to meet which wait for us. We wait ages for buses, and then two, or three, come along together, which adds to our frustration.
Advent, which begins on the fourth Sunday before Christmas, is a time of waiting. It is often described as a time of ‘expectant waiting’ for we know what is coming and when the waiting will end. That heightens the excitement for children as they open Advent calendars and count down the days to Christmas. For adults, this may add to the pressure of getting all the preparations for Christmas done in time, with the right presents chosen and everything done within budget.
In Advent, we know what we are waiting for - even people with no particular faith recognise that it ends with a special day, ‘special’ in their own terms perhaps. For Christians, the waiting and the anticipation is not really for parties, gifts, food, or colourful decorations. Our preparations are for the celebration of the advent, the coming, the nativity of Jesus Christ, 2,000 years ago in Bethlehem. The birth of the Son of God was the incarnation of Almighty God in human flesh (1 Tim.3.16 [AV]; John 1.14). Jesus came to live our life and die our death to show God’s love for each and every one of us and, through His death on the cross, to offer us salvation. That’s really something to celebrate.
But beyond the celebration of Christ’s physical nativity, Advent is also a time to celebrate another coming, the coming of Christ in the heart of every believer, as He promised (Matt.28.20b). That is not something we have to wait for because it happens when we declare our faith in Jesus as our Saviour and begin to serve Him as our Lord. St Paul reminds us that every believer is ‘God’s temple’ and that, consequently, ‘the Spirit of God dwells in you’ (1 Cor.3.16[AV]).
There is another ‘coming’ that we wait for and is part of our Advent preparation, for we still await, with anticipation and expectation, the Second Coming of the Lord. It is a promise He made (John 14.3), and He always keeps His promises, and an occasion of which He spoke (Mark 13.24-27).
In this Advent season, what are you waiting for? I hope it is to celebrate joyously the birth of the King of kings in a lowly stable to bring you salvation, to celebrate His daily presence in your heart and to look forward to His glorious return, when ‘every knee shall bow … and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of
God the Father (Phil.2.10-11).
This Advent, may your preparations for Christmas go well and may you celebrate with joy on the 25th. Don’t miss it as, unlike buses, only one comes along and that is only once a year, though we can celebrate His love and salvation at any time. No waiting for that.








