I was hoping you’d read the quote of the title in the accent
of a Californian girl. ‘Literally’…
But anyway, we’re waiting for Jesus right now (Advent etc.), and some people really aren't good at waiting for Christmas. They like, literally, just can't even...
But anyway, we’re waiting for Jesus right now (Advent etc.), and some people really aren't good at waiting for Christmas. They like, literally, just can't even...
However, before we celebrate the arrival of Jesus, I thought I’d take
this time introduce you to my Nokia. It’s a beaut.
It’s white. It has snake. It's a stone cold classic.
It’s the replacement of two
previous ‘brick phones’ as they’re affectionately known and it gets reactions (not the good
type). The question across seminar tables of, ‘is that really your phone?’ One
of my personal favourites was this, ‘O, I’ve got that phone too! It’s for when
I go inter-railing, in case I get mugged.’ That one hurt a little.
Every now and again, a friend in horror, will just outright offer to replace it when they get an upgrade, and I have to think seriously about why I choose this rubbish, muggable phone. The truth is, I've always spent way too much time on Facebook, and I hate the idea of having it on me all the time.
So being smartphoneless, means that when I get on trains for a few hours, or go on retreat, or leave the
country for a week, or find myself without wifi, I really am pretty
disconnected, I have few options to distract myself with. And I love it. It’s given my life space. Hours of it.
I came
across a Youtube video a while ago, where one of the biggest comedians in
America, Louis C.K., was explaining why he didn’t want to get his kids phones
yet. He got pretty deep.
‘The thing is, you need to build an ability to just be yourself and not
be doing anything,
that’s what phones are taking away.
Is the ability to just sit there.
That’s being a person, right?’
Now to
clarify, I’m not anti-smart phone, I’m just pro the practice of waiting. That’s
gotta be what Advent is. A time to get used to the long waits of life. A friend
of mine passed me a Dr. Seus book a few weeks ago and demanded I read it. I’d
never read him before (he’s the writer of The Grinch), and again, I was not
expecting the profound, especially from a kids book. It
spoke of ‘the waiting place’, and it
reads:
‘… for people just waiting.
Waiting for a train to go
or a bus to come, or a plane to go
or the mail to come, or the rain to go
or the phone to ring, or the snow to snow
or waiting around for a yes or a no,
or waiting for their hair to grow.
Everyone is just waiting.’
And the
book shows you that it looks like this:
And as
sad/strange as that looks, it speaks to my frequent reality. Waiting has always been
uncomfortable. It’s anticipation, it’s frustrating. It’s like messaging the
person you really like, putting it all out there and receiving ‘Seen at 17:13’. And just staring at
that for as long as it’s there. That’s horrible. Waiting never really feels
like ‘life to the full’, and yet it’s given to us a lot. What do we do with it?
The good doctor continues in the book:
The good doctor continues in the book:
‘Whether you like it or not,
Alone will be something
you’ll be quite a lot.’
I found
myself at a retreat last weekend, and I was hit by something totally new, about
the nearness of God. It’s what we’re expecting now, it’s what we celebrate at Christmas: the Emmanuel, the God-with-us. One of the speakers said simply, when Jesus left
the earth, he said leaving us with the Holy Spirit was better, than him being physically here. The Holy Spirit dwelling
within his disciples, the baptized, us,
is the reality.
‘Do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit who is
in you,
whom you have received from God? You are not your own.’
1 Corinthians 6:19
He chooses to dwell in me always.
Not only when I ask him to be with me, or when
I’m spiritually feeling ok, but always.
He is with me in the waiting place too. But I can forget that if I’m
distracted. When I’m living every journey with earphones in, and every
reception sofa moment by checking a profile. And this might sound dumb, but I’ve
never sought out prayer with as much
urgency as I have Wifi. That sounds like a fun line, but it’s actually true.
Something in me needs to change.
Taking moments to live with the
Emmanuel, to sit with him, is what we’re called to. The biggest thing that uni
life has taught me these past few years, is that friendships come down to
something very real and quantifiable: time. Spending weekly/daily time with people,
has made me a better friend to them. Setting time apart, solidifies
relationships.
So give him your waiting. Replace scrolling through the Facebook void with personal prayer. Give
him your boredom, because that’s quality time. Give him your advent anticipation. Because we really can wait, and we’ve got the best
company to share our waiting with.
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