The Season of Advent

The liturgical year, with its collection of seasons, provides a rhythm for the Christian life. Advent is one of my favorite seasons because it reminds us to slow down, to be present to the lives we are living as we do something that is taboo in our modern society, wait. We sit in the tension of what has already happened; God breaking through into our world in the humblest of ways, a human baby while we live into the present where we proclaim and trust that God is with us here and now, even as we wait with hopeful anticipation for Jesus to come again.

In this section, you will find writings from Advent 2022 and Advent writings from 2021.

Margaret Fleming Margaret Fleming

Prepare the way of the Lord

There are many ways to wait and this season I am hoping to find another way to wait. Sunday, we lit the second Advent candle, the candle of peace. Lighting the wreath is a way of being intentional in preparing ourselves for the coming of the Lord. We are gifted with a theme to focus on throughout our week and invite the Spirit to soften our hearts, to prepare them.

Luke 1:76-79:

“And you, child, will be called the prophet of the Most High; for you will go before the Lord to prepare his ways, to give knowledge of salvation to his people by the forgiveness of their sins. By the tender mercy of our God, the dawn from on high will break upon us, to give light to those who sit in darkness and in the shadow of death, to guide our feet into the way of peace."

The overarching theme for this Advent series is waiting with hopeful anticipation for the coming of the Lord. There are many different ways of waiting and many of them are not very pleasant. We can wait with anxiety and impatience, we can waste our time waiting, we can do everything and anything to distract ourselves from what we are waiting to happen, or we can do nothing. This Advent, what if we found another way to wait?

I recently listened to a podcast, the host, Jen Hatmaker, interviews one of my favorite authors, the ordained Lutheran pastor Nadia Boltz-Weber. Boltz-Weber spoke of how Advent is a season of preparation; we are preparing ourselves and our hearts for the way of the Lord.

Our text today is a brief section of Zechariah’s song of praise and prophecy after the birth of his son, John. John is proclaimed to be a prophet of the Most High, he is set apart to prepare the people for the coming of their Lord.

Sunday, we lit the second Advent candle, the candle of peace. Lighting the Advent wreath is a way of being intentional in preparing ourselves for the coming of the Lord. We are gifted with a theme to focus on throughout our week and invite the Spirit to soften our hearts, to prepare them.

As we go into this week, living in a world that seems to be anything but peaceful may we take comfort in Frederick Buechner’s beautiful definition of peace. He writes in his book of daily meditations, Listening to Your Life, “…for Jesus peace seems to have meant not the absence of struggle but the presence of love.”  

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