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THE ADVENT SERIES

INTRODUCTION

Day 1

DAY 2

Day 3

Day 4

Day 5

Day 6

Day 7

Day 8

Day 9

Day 10

Day 11

Day 12

Day 13

Day 14

Day 15

Day 16

Day 17

Day 18

Day 19

Day 20

Day 21

Day 22

Day 23

Day 24

CHRISTMAS DAY

THE LENTEN SERIES

Ash Wed - God Is Alive

Parable of the Sower

The Kheresa Lunatic

Feeding the 5,000

Crisis at Capernaum

The Epochal Sermon

Last Words In The...

Jesus' Family Arrives

At Sidon and Tyre

At Caesarea-Philippi

The Talk With Nathaniel

His Human & Divine Minds

Dangers in Jerusalem

The Water of Life

The Rich Young Man

The Good Samaritan

Healing the Blind Beggar

The Good Shepherd

The Pharisees At Ragaba

The Ten Lepers

Blessing the Children

The Talk About Angels

Resurrection of Lazarus

Meeting of the Sanhedrin

The Lost Son

Rich Man & The Beggar

The Father & His Kingdom

About the Kingdom

Teaching At Livias

The Visit to Zaccheus

Sabbath at Bethany

Starting for Jerusalem

Visiting About the Temple

Cleansing the Temple

Divine Forgiveness

Wednesday With John Mark

The Last Social Hour

Last Day at the Camp

On the Way to the Supper

Washing the Feet

The Remembrance Supper

The Hour of Humiliation

Jesus and Pilate

The Crucifixion

Jesus Died Royally

Meaning of the Death

The Empty Tomb

THE SANTA FE SERIES

FOREWARD

ARRIVAL IN ALBUQUERQUE

MEANWHILE IN CHICAGO

SANTA FE INDIAN VILLAGE

APACHELAND

THE TRADING POST

THE ARTS AND CRAFTS

THE VISIONARIES

DESTINATIONS & DETOURS

DESTINATIONS & DETOURS 2

DESTINATIONS & DETOURS 3

DESTINATIONS & DETOURS 4

GUYS WITH CAMERAS

GUYS WITH CAMERAS 2

GUYS WITH CAMERAS 3

GUYS WITH CAMERAS 4

PASO DEL NORTE

PASO DEL NORTE 2

PASO DEL NORTE 3

PASO DEL NORTE 4

PASO DEL NORTE 5

PASO DEL NORTE 6

     
     
DAY 16 - THE TIME OF NO ROOM
     
     
     
     
     
     
Media
"Lost In A Lost World"
Media
"No Room"
Media
"Here Comes The Flood"

The title is self-explanatory.
There's no reason to say
anymore than this:
it's from a '72 album
by The Moody Blues called
SEVENTH SOJOURN,
on the THRESHOLD label.



Here's Todd Agnew
with a cut from his
2006 CD -
 Do You See What I See?
released on the
Ino/Columbia label.


This is off Peter Gabriel's
legendary
shaking the tree
 album, released in '90.
There's another song from
the same album further
down the page,  titled
"Red Rain," a companion
piece to this one.


     
 
 
     
An Essay for the Advent Season
by Thomas Merton

     

So there was no room at the inn?
 True! But that is simply mentioned in passing,
 in a matter-of-fact sort of way, as the Evangelist points to
 what he really means us to see - the picture of pure peace, pure joy:
"She wrapped her firstborn Son in swaddling clothes and laid him in a manger" (Luke 2:7).
By now we know it well, and yet we might still be questioning
it -
except that a reason was given for an act that might otherwise have seemed strange:
"There was no room for them at the inn." Well, then, they obviously found some other place!


But when we read the Gospels and come to know them thoroughly,
we realize there are other reasons why it was necessary that there be no room at the inn,
and why there had to be some other place. In fact, the inn was the last place in the world
for the birth of the Lord.


The Evangelists, preparing us for the announcement of the birth of the Lord,
 remind us that the fullness of time has come. Now is the time of final decision,
the time of mercy, "the acceptable time," the time of settlement, the time of the end.
It is the time of repentance, the time for the fulfillment of all promises,
 for the Promised One has come. But with the coming of the end,
a great bustle and business begins to shake the nations of the world.
The time of the end is the time of massed armies, "wars and rumors of wars,"
 of huge crowds moving this way and that, of men "withering away for fear,"
 of flaming cities and sinking fleets, of smoking lands laid waste,
 of technicians planning grandiose acts of destruction.

The time of the end is the time of the Crowd: and the eschatological message
 is spoken in a world where, precisely because of the vast indefinite roar
of armies on the move and the restlessness of turbulent mobs,
 the message can be heard only with difficulty.
 Yet it is heard by those who are aware that the display of power, hubris (power)
 and destruction is part of the kerygma (message).
That which is to be judged announces itself, introduces itself
 by its sinister and arrogant claim to absolute power.
Thus it is identified, and those who decide in favor of this claim
are numbered, marked with the sign of power,
aligned with power, and destroyed with it.


     
     
     
     
     

Why then was the inn crowded?
 Because of the census, the eschatological massing of the "whole world"
 in centers of registration, to be numbered, to be identified with
the structure of imperial power. The purpose of the census:
 to discover those who were to be taxed. To find out those who were eligible
 for service in the armies of the empire.


The Bible had not been friendly to a census in the days when
 God was ruler of Israel (2 Samuel 24). The numbering of the people
of God by an alien emperor and their full consent to it was itself an
 eschatological sign, preparing those who could understand it to
 meet judgment with repentance. After all, in the Apocalyptic literature
of the Bible, this "summoning together" or convocation of the powers
 of the earth to do battle is the great sign of "the end."


It was therefore impossible that the Word should lose himself by being born
into shapeless and passive mass. He had indeed emptied himself,
taken the form of God's servant, man.
But he did not empty himself to the point of becoming mass man,
faceless man. It was therefore right that there should be no room for him
 in a crowd that had been called together as an eschatological sign.
 His being born outside that crowd is even more of a sign.
That there is no room for him is a sign of the end.


Nor are the tidings of great joy announced in the crowded inn.
 In the massed crowd there are always new tidings of joy and disaster.
Where each new announcement is the greatest of announcements,
where every day's disaster is beyond compare, every day's danger
demands the ultimate sacrifice, all news and all judgment is reduced to zero.
News becomes merely a new noise in the mind, briefly replacing
the noise that went before it and yielding to the noise that comes after it,
so that eventually everything blends into the same monotonous
 and meaningless rumor. News? There is so much news
that there is no room left for the true tidings,
the "Good News," the Great Joy.


Hence the Great Joy is announced, after all, in silence,
 loneliness and darkness, to shepherds "living in the fields"
 or "living in the countryside" and apparently unmoved
by the rumors or massed crowds.
These are the remnant of the desert-dwellers,
the nomads, the true Israel.


     
     


Even though "the whole world" is ordered to be inscribed,
 they do not seem to be affected. Doubtless they have registered,
as Joseph and Mary will register, but they remain outside the agitation,
and untouched by the vast movement, the massing of hundreds and thousands
of people everywhere in the towns and cities.

They are therefore quite otherwise signed.
 They are designated, surrounded by a great light,
they receive the message of the Great Joy, and they believe it with joy.
They see the Shekinah over them, recognize themselves for what they are.
They are the remnant, the people of no account,
who are therefore chosen - the anawim. And they obey the light.
 Nor was anything else asked of them.


They go and see not a prophet, not a spirit, but the Flesh in which
the glory of the Lord will be revealed and by which all men
 will be delivered from the power that is in the world,
 the power that seeks to destroy the world because
 the world is God's creation, the power that mimics creation,
 and in doing so, pillages and exhausts the resources
of a bounteous God-given earth.
t


     
     
     
     
     
     


We live in the time of no room, which is the time of the end.
The time when everyone is obsessed with lack of time,
lack of space, with saving time, conquering space,
projecting into time and space the anguish produced within them
 by the technological furies of size, volume, quantity, speed,
 number, price, power and acceleration.


The primordial blessing
, "increase and multiply,"
 has suddenly become a hemorrhage of terror.
We are numbered in billions, and massed together,
marshalled, numbered, marched here and there, taxed, drilled,
 armed, worked to the point of insensibility, dazed by information,
drugged by entertainment, surfeited with everything,
nauseated with the human race and with ourselves,
nauseated with life.


As the end approaches, there is no room for nature.
 The cities crowd it off the face of the earth. 
As the end approaches,
there is no room for quiet. There is no room for solitude.
There is no room for thought. There is no room for attention,
 for the awareness of our state.

 


     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     


The time of the end is the time of demons
 who occupy the heart (pretending to be gods) so that man himself
finds no room for himself in himself. He finds no space to rest in his own heart,
not because it is full, but because it is void.
If only he knew that the void itself, when hovered over by the Spirit,
 is an abyss of creativity...yet he cannot believe it. There is no room for belief.

In the time of the end there is no longer room for the desire to go on living.
 The time of the end is the time when men call upon the mountains
 to fall upon them, because they wish they did not exist.

Why? Because they are part of a proliferation of life that is not fully alive,
it is programmed for death. A life that has not been chosen,
 and can hardly be accepted, has no more room for hope.
Yet it must pretend to go on hoping. It is haunted by the demon of emptiness.
And out of this unutterable void come the armies, the missiles,
the weapons, the bombs, the concentration camps, the race riots,
 the racist murders, and all the other crimes of mass society.

Is this pessimism? Is this the unforgivable sin of admitting
 what everybody really feels? Is it pessimism to diagnose cancer as cancer?
Or should one simply go on pretending that everything is getting better
 every day, because the time of the end is also - for some at any rate -
the time of great prosperity?
"The kings of the earth have joined in her idolatry,
and the traders of the earth have grown rich
 from her excessive luxury" (Revelation 18:3).
r


     
     
     
     
     
     
Media
"Red Rain"
Headline
     

Into this world, this demented inn,
 in which there is absolutely no room for him at all,
Christ has come uninvited.
But because he cannot be at home in it - because he is out of place in it,
and yet must be in it - his place is with those others who do not belong,
who are rejected because they are regarded as weak;
and with those who are discredited, who are denied the status of persons,
 and are tortured, exterminated. With those for whom there is no room,
Christ is present in this world.
 He is mysteriously present in those for whom there seems to be
 nothing but the world at its worst. For them,
there is no escape even in imagination.
They cannot identify with the power structure of a crowded humanity
 which seeks to project itself outward, anywhere, in a centrifugal flight
 into the void, to get out there where there is no God, no man, no name, no identity,
 no weight, no self, nothing but the bright, self-directed, perfectly obedient
and infinitely expensive machine.

For those who are stubborn enough, devoted enough to power,
there remains this last apocalyptic myth of machinery propagating
its own kind in the eschatological wilderness of space -
while on earth the bombs make room!

But the others: they remain imprisoned in other hopes,
and in more pedestrian despairs, despairs and hopes which are held down to earth,
down to street level, and to the pavement only: desire to be at least half-human,
 to taste a little human joy, to do a fairly decent job of productive work,
to come home to the family...desires for which there is no room.
It is in these that He hides himself, for whom there is no room.

The time of the end? All right: when?

That is not the question.


To say that it is the time of the end is to answer all the questions,
 for if it is the time of the end, and of great tribulation,
then it is certainly and above all the time of the Great Joy.
It is the time to "lift up your heads for your redemption is at hand."
 It is the time when the promise will be manifestly fulfilled,
and no longer kept secret from anyone.
It is the time for the joy that is given not as the world gives,
 and that no man can take away.

Thomas Merton, 1915-1968
Trappist monk and author


     
     
     
     
Media
"Until The End Of The World"

The Irish seem to have a special "something"
when it comes to "end times" stuff.  Here's U2, from
their Achtung Baby CD, released back in '91 on the Island Label.
.

     
     
For Day 17 - CHRISTMAS THROUGH INDIAN EYES, click here:

http://www.maninthemaze.com/theadventseries/day17.html