Tim Basselin - October 22, 2017

What Lament Looks Like

Good Grief

We avoid pain and grief as much as possible. When faced with someone else's grief, we avoid or offer platitudes. But the book of Lamentations invites us to sit with grief, to enter into the prophetic process of Lament. In this series, we'll explore how to grieve and how to be a friend to the grieving. Ultimately, we'll see how the process of lament invites us to be agents of healing in the larger world.

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Today is officially the last Sunday of 2020. And I know the general vibe is that we’re all so glad to be done with 2020 we can hardly stand it. 2021 looks so promising – the COVID vaccine is on the horizon, we’re through the election and we’re all still basking in the glow of the Christmas season.

So in light of the turn of the new year, I have some bad news and some good news.

The bad news is that nothing magical happens on New Year’s Day. The difference between 2020 and 2021 is totally arbitrary. The calendar is something we made up. It’s an artificial, imperfect invention (remember leap day?).

So I know we’re all feeling relief at almost having made it out of 2020, but it doesn’t actually mean much.

I know. Major bummer, right?

But I promised good news! Today is the third day of Christmas! And the 12 Days of Christmas is our feast, our festival celebration that extends well into the new year. Christmas is a celebration of change, a celebration of rescue. A celebration of hope.

In other words, it’s a holy festival that celebrates all those things we’re feeling about the new year. But rather than being grounded in the arbitrary flip of the calendar page, it’s grounded in God’s activity in our world.

We don’t celebrate because we have to get new calendars. We celebrate because Jesus is with us.

We don’t celebrate because we’re going to be writing the wrong dates on stuff for the next three weeks. We celebrate because God is at work around us.

Join us Sunday as we look toward next year with hope for how God is at work.

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