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Advent Meditation: Sunday, November 29, 2020

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Psalm 80:1-7, 17-19  •  Isaiah 64:1-9  •  1 Corinthians 1:3-9 •  Mark 13:24-37 

In our passage from Mark’s gospel today, Jesus delivers a bracing wake up call to his followers. It’s going to get worse before it gets better. The sun will darken. The stars will fall. There will be suffering. Heaven and earth will pass away. Welcome to Advent.
We begin the new church year not looking back to the child arriving in the stable but looking forward to the Son of God returning on the clouds. And this second advent is both urgent and uncertain. No one knows when it will happen, but Jesus’ message is clear – be attentive, be ready, keep awake.
To be awake is to be aware, to have open eyes and receptive hearts. To be awake is to see clearly what has, until now, been hidden in the shadows. It is no wonder that movements for social, spiritual, and political change are often referred to as “awakenings.”
We are in the midst of such an awakening now. Eyes are opening to what many have seen and lived for a long time – racial injustice, economic disparity, health care inequities, climate disruptions. Stay awake to these realities, Jesus says. Don’t go back to sleep. Don’t stop working just because
the householder isn’t looking. Don’t stop working because the news cycle has moved on.
God has come. God is coming. God is here waking us up.

Awaken us, God, to what is real and true and troubling about the world around us. May we stay awake and do your work. Amen.

Dr. Scott Bader-Saye
Academic Dean and Helen and Everett H. Jones Professor of Christian Ethics and Moral Theology
Seminary of the Southwest
Listen to Scott read his meditation and prayer:


Dr. Scott Bader-Saye joined the seminary faculty as the Helen and Everett H. Jones Chair in Christian Ethics and Moral Theology in 2009 and has served as academic dean since 2013.
His current research centers on theological readings of gender and transgender. Other research interests include economy, sexuality, political theology, virtue ethics, and interfaith dialogue. He teaches the core Theological Ethics courses for all degree programs. He is author of Following Jesus in a Culture of Fear, revised and updated (2020), Formed by Love (2017), and Church and Israel After Christendom (1999). He has contributed to The Blackwell Companion to Christian Ethics (2006) and The Cambridge Companion to the Gospels (2006) and has published widely in theological journals and magazines.
Professor Bader-Saye helped found and lead Peacemeal, a missional Episcopal community in Scranton, PA, served on the Episcopal Church Executive Council Economic Justice Loan Committee, currently serves on the Gathering of Leaders Steering Committee, and is active as a teacher and parishioner at St. Julian of Norwich Episcopal Church, a mission in northwest Austin.


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