Reflecting on revolution, liberation theologian Ruben Alves offers the following. Alves' understanding, his grasp of our place in history, provides a fruitful seasonal meditation on hope for those who wait for the Advent of Christ...
What is hope?
It is the presentiment
that imagination is more real
and reality is less real
than it looks.
It is the hunch
that the overwhelming brutality of facts
that oppress and repress us
is not the last word.
It is the suspicion that reality is more complex
than the realists want us to believe -
that the frontiers of the possible
are not determined by the limits of the actual -
and in a miraculous and unexplained way,
life is opening up creative events
which will open the way
to freedom and resurrection.
But the two – suffering and hope –
must live from each other.
Suffering without hope
produces resentment and despair.
But, hope without suffering
creates illusions, naivete and drunkenness.
So let us plant dates -
even though we who plant them will never eat them.
We must live by the love of what we will never see.
That is the secret discipline.
It is the refusal to let our creative act
be dissolved by our need for immediate sense experience
and it is a struggled commitment
to the future of our grandchildren.
Such disciplined hope
is what has given prophets, revolutionaries and saints,
the courage to die for the future they envisage.
They make their own bodies
the seed of their highest hopes.
- Ruben Alves, in response to the Mexican Revolution.
Lord,
I am so easily weighed down
by my struggles, my burdens,
by the harshness of the facts
of my daily life...
Sometimes, I think I'll lose hope
in you, in tomorrow, in myself
and I need you to help me see
that the peace I imagine,
the peace I pray for,
the peace you promise
is greater than any of my problems...
Help me trust that my future
is not limited by my present trials,
that the troubles of the moment
will not have the last word,
that my burdens are prelude to joy...
Give me hope in my suffering,
for that is the path of your love
and let my hope never forget
the suffering of which it was born...
Show me how the troubles of today
prepare me for the advent of your peace
and the gift of your grace...
Come, Emmanuel:
be with me and be my hope!
(This video begins with a plaintive arrangement of O Come, Emmanuel and bursts forth into a rejoicing chorus - then a segue to The Singer - Let There Be Light. Although the visual can be distracting (just close your eyes and listen), the whole piece sings the range of Ruben Alves' words above.)
Our Father...
-ConcordPastor
12/12/08
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I had some misgivings about posting this prayer today, thinking that it might be perceived as obscure or out of reach.
ReplyDeleteWell, no comments here but I did receive one comment off line which tells me that for at least two people (yours truly and the person who wrote to me)this post hit the nail on the head!