Here is my article published in
the December 14, 2017 Camrose Canadian
Clergy Comment column.
Advent
and the “R” word
We are now in the season of
Advent, the season traditionally observed as a time of preparation for
celebrating the coming of Jesus the Messiah.
One way of preparing is by focusing on the
“R” word—repentance. Last Sunday, Christians who follow the Revised Common
Lectionary, heard the Gospel of Mark, chapter one, verses one to eight—John the
baptizer’s preaching of repentance for the forgiveness of sins. John comes
across as a rather eccentric wilderness prophet, dressing like I did back in my
hippie days of the 1960s and early 70s, and following a rather strange diet of
locusts and wild honey. However, he takes his call seriously as a second
Elijah, preparing folks for the Messiah’s coming, like a broken record, wearing
out the “R” word.
What is repentance anyway, and why is it so
necessary? The Bible describes repentance in several ways, including: to regret
one’s mistakes and harmful thoughts, words and actions, to change one’s mind
and behaviour, to turn around, to return. Repentance is necessary since whether
we want to admit it or not, we are all sinners—we think and say and do things
that are harmful to others, ourselves, God’s creation, and all of this can and
often does cause us to drift further away from God.
The following story is one example of what
it means to repent. Some years ago, CBC’s “Fifth Estate” program aired a
documentary on “the Squamish Five.” You may remember that they were a group who
bombed the Litton plant, which was involved in the production of nuclear weapons.
They also bombed other political targets.
Eventually the police caught them and they
were then convicted and sent to prison.
In the interview with Juliet Caroline
Belmas, she admitted that the group’s actions were wrong. She also discouraged
others from following their example. Juliet Caroline Belmas’s change of heart
was a public expression of repentance—realizing her sins and genuinely wishing
to clean up her act. Those who sincerely repent are like Juliet; showing
remorse for the sins committed, and sorry enough to quit the destructive
behaviours; and helping to prevent others from making the same mistakes.
This Advent, as we prepare to celebrate
Jesus our Messiah’s coming at Christmas do you and I need to reorient, return,
change our thinking and behaviours?
May the grace of God help us so to do as we
share the love and joy that Jesus gives us with the world this Christmas!
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