Waiting with Expectation in Advent

Advent 2024  •  Sermon  •  Submitted   •  Presented
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Introduction:

What are some of your favorite Christmas season traditions?
Advent
Last week we looked back at the unexpected birth of Jesus
This week we are going to be talking about the future-aspect of advent
It is a season of waiting with expectation

Scripture Reading:

Psalm 130 (CSB)
Out of the depths I call to you, Lord!
Lord, listen to my voice;
let your ears be attentive
to my cry for help.
Lord, if you kept an account of iniquities,
Lord, who could stand?
But with you there is forgiveness,
so that you may be revered.
I wait for the Lord; I wait
and put my hope in his word.
I wait for the Lord
more than watchmen for the morning—
more than watchmen for the morning.
Israel, put your hope in the Lord.
For there is faithful love with the Lord,
and with him is redemption in abundance.
And he will redeem Israel
from all its iniquities.

Advent is a Season of Waiting

Like many things in the Christian life, Advent is counter-cultural
It’s not something that just comes natural to us
The whole purpose behind Advent is to slow down and actively wait on the Lord, preparing our hearts for Jesus
How many of you like waiting?
We live in a fast world—an optimized world
We value efficiency
And in one of the busiest times of the year—we are called to slow down and wait on the Lord:
(SLIDES)
“Advent: the time to listen for footsteps – you can’t hear footsteps when you’re running yourself.”
– Bill McKibben
You see God’s people throughout the Scriptures are people who wait
Abraham for the birth of his son Isaac
Moses in the Wilderness
David to become king
The Nation for a Messiah
And even on this side of the cross—We aren’t done waiting...
We still find ourselves waiting for Jesus’s return
When we forget to wait on the Lord—we actually forget our story—our destiny
When this happens we are open to all sorts of compromise because we are distracted
Advent is a time to refocus our hearts
Because the reality is we are all waiting for something
We are waiting for school to be out for break
Waiting to graduate from school
Waiting to start your career
Waiting to get married
Waiting to have a family
Waiting to buy a house
Waiting to have grandchildren
Waiting to retire
Maybe you’re sick and waiting to be healthy
Maybe you’re depressed and waiting for better days
Maybe you’re anxious and waiting for peace
Maybe you’re in conflict and want resolution
But the truth is all of us are waiting for something—and this isn’t necessarily a bad thing
You see, God actually created us with longing
We were designed with a hole in our heart—every human longs for more
And the reason God did this was because He is one that is intended to fill that hole
In each of us we have an infinite pit of longing—that can only be filled by an infinite God
(SLIDES)
“You have made us for yourself, O Lord, and our heart is restless until it rests in you.”
—Saint Augustine
Advent is a time where we reorient/re-prioritize our longings so that God is on top
If you are a serious follower of Jesus—the temptation usually isn’t that you don’t long for Jesus at all
The real threat is that it isn’t prioritized—there are other things that are coming first
But it’s in this time that we take stock of our desires and longings and refocus on the main thing
So if you’re taking notes, I want you to write this question down:
(SLIDES)
What am I waiting for? What am I longing for?
Take some time in prayer to seriously and openly consider this question
It might come to mind right away—or it might take some time to consider
If we are honest we are all longing for something
Like Augustine’s quote, the reality is that we will always be restless and without peace until we come to Jesus
So Advent is about reorienting our hearts to Jesus
Like the famous Christmas Carol tells us...
Joy to the world the Lord is come,
Let earth receive her King,,
Let every heart prepare Him room,
And heaven and nature sing,
And heaven and nature sing,
And heaven, and heaven and nature sing.
How do we prepare our hearts for Christmas?

Preparing Our Hearts

This is where its difficult… there is no quick fix
But Advent is all about the coming of Jesus
We remember the story of his birth 2,000 years ago
And we look forward to his second coming
But it’s also about the present
Jesus is here, now, and wants to arrive in your life
Is there room for him?—Do you have room for Jesus in your life?
Or like the night of His birth—is there no room available for him
In Jesus’s own words in Revelation
(SLIDES)
Revelation 3:20 (CSB)
See! I stand at the door and knock. If anyone hears my voice and opens the door, I will come in to him and eat with him, and he with me.
Imagine our heart is a house with many rooms—Is there room for Jesus?
Are we giving Jesus the closet… or a spare bedroom
Because he wants to be a part of every aspect of our lives
Including the closets full of secrets and stuff we prefer to hide
He wants to run the household—and He knows how to do it better than you!
Doing this isn’t easy
It involves prayer, repentance, surrender, and obedience
But we want to be people who are fully committed and surrendered to the will of God

Waiting on the Lord

And guys, this is what waiting on the Lord is
It is not idly standing by picking our nose waiting for God to do something
It is preparing our hearts for what God wants to do in our lives
We do our part—and God will do his
And our part is a lot easier—it’s opening up to him in surrender—and He WILL move
(SLIDES)
Isaiah 64:4 (NLT)
4 For since the world began,
no ear has heard
and no eye has seen a God like you,
who works for those who wait for him!
OR
Isaiah 64:4 (CSB)
From ancient times no one has heard,
no one has listened to,
no eye has seen any God except you
who acts on behalf of the one who waits for him.
You see, waiting actually does something to us
We become more in tune to God at work in our lives—because we are asking him to work, expectantly waiting for him to work, and watching for Him with our eyes wide open
(SLIDES)
“Biblically, waiting is not just something we have to do until we get what we want. Waiting is part of the process of becoming what God wants us to be.” —John Ortberg
As a culture, we are terrible waiters
We want stuff now—Amazon 2-day shipping
And even then—we distract ourselves for 2 days
So when God doesn’t work according to our time frame we usually do 1 of 2 things
We give up on God directly—turning away from him in unbelief
We give up on God indirectly—distracting ourselves while we ‘wait’
But what would it look like for us (for you) to wait on God?
And not just wait, but with expectation that He will show up—Pause
In Psalm 130:5-6 the Psalmist writes:
(SLIDES)
Psalm 130:5–6 (CSB)
I wait for the Lord; I wait
and put my hope in his word.
I wait for the Lord
more than watchmen for the morning—
more than watchmen for the morning.
Two things here:
1. Like a Watchman
A watchman waits expectantly—on guard
It is his job and duty
We too should be resolute in our waiting on the Lord
More than a watchman—we are people who wait on the Lord
Waiting for a glimmer of light
2. The Psalmist’s Hope is in his word
Like i said it is not just a blind and aimless waiting
But our waiting and hope is grounded in the Word of God
The better we know the word of God—the better we will be able to wait in expectation
Bible reading and memory is crucial
It is how God changes us in the waiting
He doesn’t leave us to wait blindly
He give us his own words to read and trust
Imagine a time before cell phones—where people wrote letters
I’m across the world and write a letter to Anaiah that I will soon be coming home
She isn’t waiting blindly—she has my word! and she is expecting me to return
God has given us his word to wait on
To hear from him—to find our strength
Waiting on the Lord means listening to him through His word

Conclusion

So this is my challenge for you these next few weeks before Christmas:
Wait on the Lord
Wait with diligence and expectation
Open your eyes to see our God at work in your life
Just like you can’t wait to be on break or you can’t wait to receive gifts for Christmas
Foster a longing for God to work and be present in your life
I can’t wait for God to show up
Avoid the temptation to live in constant distraction
Spend time to be intentional—especially with extra time off of school
Breaks can fly by because we live distracted through them
Set aside time to wait on the Lord—and He will show up
While we wait—we let God do work in our hearts that we might better reflect Him
(SLIDES)
“The Lord is coming, always coming. When you have ears to hear and eyes to see, you will recognize him at any moment of your life. Life is Advent; life is recognizing the coming of the Lord.”
– Henri Nouwen
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