Advent Devotion 1 – Taking Sides

This is a season of watching and waiting. Of getting ready. We are anticipating something that will happen. We don’t want to miss it. We want to be prepared.

On Sept. 20, 2001, then President George W. Bush declared in a speech that “God is not neutral.” That may be one of the only things he ever said that I can agree with! God is not neutral and that truth is at the heart of the meaning of Christmas.

Christmas is centered on the birth of Jesus. We celebrate his birth because of his life and ministry that has been remembered and handed down from generation to generation. Jesus is a bold statement that God is not neutral. Jesus is the embodiment of God’s concern and favoritism for those made poor, for those who are taken advantage of, for those who are left out, for those who are discounted, devalued, and demeaned. Jesus represents God’s advocacy on behalf of the poor, the hungry, the oppressed. Jesus shows us that God is not neutral. God has a heart for those who are suffering and don’t get a fair shake at life.

Jesus came to a people who were living under the thumb of a regime of violence and intimidation. They were being economically strangled by taxation and fees. They were being forced to support and serve the administration that was oppressing them. And in that time and to that place, there comes a person of justice and peace who does not make accommodations, who does not compromise his values, who lives out of complete and utter solidarity with those who are poor and abused and sidelined by religion and by government.

God is not neutral. That is the message of Christmas. God is on the side of those who are struggling and those who are stifled against those who impose power through violence, economic intimidation, and social control.

This leads us to think about the people are in our day and time that God is concerned about and favors. Who is struggling and not treated fairly? People who are poor. People who are not heterosexual. People involved in the criminal justice system. People who have disabilities. People who are immigrants. People who are illiterate. Older people. Millions of children. The list could go on and on. The coming of Jesus is a bold declaration of God’s preferences and favoritism. Jesus was born to poor parents in a backwater village. He was not from a prominent family. He was not economically or socially privileged. There is God’s preference. And lack of neutrality.

In light of this, how do we prepare for Christmas? How do we align ourselves with God? How do we celebrate the birth of a poor peasant? How do we get ready for what God is doing to make life better for those left out, left back, and left over?

“The lowly will again rejoice in God,
and those who are poor will exult in the Holy One of Israel.
For tyrants will be no more,
mockers will vanish,
and those disposed to do evil will be destroyed. . .”
Isaiah 29:19

Prayer: We are grateful that our devotion is to a God that is not neutral. We pray for the will and courage to reflect the preferences of God in our lives. May we delight God by our defense of the poor and the victims of violence and injustice. In this season of joy, may we find ways to be in solidarity with the God of Jesus who is the God of justice. Amen.

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