If you have a dinner party, clean the house

The reverend extraordinaire Nicholas Lubelfeld is our resident sage on all things theology, especially when it comes to the Anglican tradition. As is his common way, Nicholas helps us lean into the season with tender hearts and endearing humility.

Transcript

There was an emphasis on the second coming of Christ and the need to repent in preparation for his coming, but my dad used to tell me when I was a little boy, he said, "Son, keep short accounts with the Lord and live in a state of grace." I said, "What is that?" He says, "That means you need to be sorry for your sins and if you commit one, be quick to repent and be ready because you never know when your soul will be required of you. You could walk out of this building now and a brick could fall on you." That was one of the things.

So, I was a little boy. I said, "Oh, got to live in a state of grace, got to be repenting, got to keep short accounts with the Lord," but that has a sort of a sense of well, he's coming again. Prepare for it and that's a very deeply Scriptural notion that God is coming to visit. Are you ready? Well, just on a human analogy, simple homey, domestic sense, I mean if you have a dinner party at your house, you're going to clean the house, right? Who didn't clean out the cat litter box? We don't want to have our guests looking at all that stuff. So, you have to clean up.

Same thing morally. If the Lord's coming back, be ready to receive him because he's coming at an hour you don't expect and that's one of the themes of advent.