
‘He went to be registered with Mary, to whom he was engaged and who was
expecting a child’.
(Luke 2: 5)
The
waiting is almost over! It is Christmas Eve. What are you expecting tomorrow?
Children
will be expecting the visit of Santa during the night, and presents around the
tree in the morning. This expectation will lead to mounting excitement!
Some
folks, on the other hand will be expecting nothing more than just another day.
No family, no gifts, no celebrations and no difference. Remember them and pray
for them and consider if there is anything you can do to change their
expectations.
Rather
unusually, I am expecting a very quiet Christmas Day. Most of the family will not
be with us this year. And so, with one of our sons, a friend (and our dogs!) a
simple, relaxed Christmas Day is what I am expecting.
Of
course, Mary was expecting her first child; the one who had been promised and
who would be named Jesus. The word ‘expecting’ is now so associated with pregnancy
that we simply say that ‘so-and-so’ is ‘expecting’, and we know what that means
- a baby is coming!
Usually,
that news of someone expecting brings with it excitement as well as a bit of
anxiety and apprehension. All the more so in the case of Mary. Young and vulnerable,
she is a far away from home, in a strange place, after a long journey, and with
her pregnancy surrounded by suspicion if not scandal.
I
wonder if these circumstances and her inevitable anxiety in the face of them
(and in the anticipating childbirth itself) would completely overwhelm her
excitement. Expecting (in the specific as well as in the wider sense) can lead
to negative as well as positive emotions. There will be many people who (sadly)
will be expecting Christmas Day to bring nothing but disappointment, tension or
misery.
But
it is sad that ‘expecting’ has so many negative connotations for so many
people. Just Google ‘expectation quotes’.
I
did and the first quotes were;
‘The
best way to avoid disappointment is don’t expect anything from anyone’
‘Don’t blame people for disappointing you,
blame yourself for expecting too much’
‘From
now on I will expect nothing and just accept what I get’
...and
so they go on.
What
a pity.
For
whatever reasons, expecting is not primarily regarded in a positive light, but
a negative one.
Those
of us who speak of Christian hope and who seek to live out that hope in how we
view the world, surely bring a different perspective to the idea of ‘expecting’.
While we know (and must never deny) how dark and bleak this world can be, and
while we too will have known, and will yet know, the depths of disappointment,
we must keep on expecting the fulfilment of God’s promise.
And
as we expect that tomorrow we will celebrate the birth of that hope so we can
live in the expectation of the final fulfilment of the promises that were
heralded at his birth.
I
will not give up expecting, and will not allow my expecting to be overcome by
negatives.
And
as well as looking forward to (and expecting!) a simple but relaxing and enjoyable
Christmas Day, I am expecting to be able to share some good news in tomorrow’s
final post in this series.
Much
to expect then!
Watch
this space!!
Perhaps I can guess you good news. X
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