Last week I began the Advent Journey - Advent is a time of
preparation for the advent of the birth of the Christ Child. It is a season of the church year which,
regrettably is trampled in the rush to begin the celebration of Christmas and
the material expression of what is actually a celebration of Bacchanalia in our
culture with the extravagance of gift buying and giving and receiving.
The idea of giving at Christmas is, in and of itself, a
positive thing. I am sure that
charitable giving increases at this time of year as people open their hearts
and wallets to give to good causes.
However, if we ignore a time of preparation, we are missing what is
actually central to the celebration of Christmas. We desire the instant gratification of all
the good stuff about Christmas such as beginning as soon as possible to play the
beautiful Christmas music which should not actually be sung until Christmas Eve
and the beginning or the real Christmas season.
This, of course, would be impossible and even Churches surrender to the
inevitability of beginning the bedecking of the halls early in the Advent
Season. However, many churches still
celebrate Advent with the hope that we Christians will observe a Holy Advent in
preparation for the birth of the Christ Child.
The observance of the four themes of Advent is a wonderful
way to actually prepare for Christmas. The
four themes of Hope, Peace, Joy and Love are marked with the lighting of a
candle in the Advent Wreath. They are
cumulative so that we do not forget the theme me marked in the previous week(s)
and are able to build on what has gone before.
Last week we lit the candle for Hope and this week we lit
that candle again and also lit the candle for Peace. The theme of peace is, of course, an easily
recognized theme for Christmas. With the
Christ Child being considered the Prince of Peace, as proclaimed in the chorus
from Handel’s Messiah, which I will be part of a performance later this week
(yes, I know, before Christmas):
For unto us a Child is
born, unto us a Son is given, and the government shall be upon His shoulder;
and his name shall be called Wonderful Counsellor, the Mighty God, the
Everlasting Father, the Prince of Peace.
Well, if Jesus is the Prince of Peace, peace certainly
hasn’t arrived yet. But what would it
look like if there was peace of earth as was announced by the angels to the
shepherds? Peace is not just a cessation
of violence. If all wars ceased would
that mean that there was peace of earth and goodwill to all people? Actually, no. True peace is much more than that. It involves justice where the proverbial
lions would lie down with the lambs and all people would be treated as they
truly are – children of God. Poverty
would be overcome and racism, hate and violence would end. That is truly something to hope for.
During this Advent let us especially peace and work for a
world where true peace will overcome hatred and fear. Blessings on your Advent journey.
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