Saturday, November 29

Advent

"How proper it is that Christmas should follow Advent. For him who looks toward the future, the manger is situated on Golgotha, and the cross has already been raised in Bethlehem." --Dag Hammarskjold

Advent is a season of preparation. For centuries Christians have used the month prior to the celebration of Christ’s incarnation to ready their hearts and their homes for the great festival.

While we moderns tend to do a good bit of bustling about in the crowded hours between Thanksgiving and Christmas—shopping for presents, compiling guest lists, mailing holiday greeting cards, perusing catalogs, decorating hearth and home, baking favorite confections, and getting ready for one party after another--that hardly constitutes the kind of preparation Advent calls for. Indeed, traditionally Advent has been a time of quiet introspection, personal examination, and repentance. It is a time to slow down, to take stock of the things that matter the most, and to do a thorough inner housecleaning.

Advent is, as the ancient dogma of the Church asserts, a Little Pascha--a time of fasting, prayer, confession, and reconciliation. All the great Advent stories, hymns, customs, and rituals--from the medieval liturgical antiphons and Scrooge’s Christmas Carol to the lighting of Advent candles and the eating of Martinmas beef are attuned to this notion: that the best way to prepare for the coming of the Lord is to make straight His pathway in our hearts.

3 comments:

Colin Clout said...

Just a little comment, but I think you mean a little Lent, not a little Pascha. Pascha is Easter, and is, in a sense, the comming parousia or advent.

gileskirk said...

Matthew: No, it is indeed a "little pascha." Historically the phrase has been used as a kind of pre-Lenten preparation for the incarnational purpose of Christ in the world.

Scribbler said...

Coming from a Baptist tradition ,that care not for anything from the historical Christian past, today was a wonderful blessing. Henry asked about the candle and I was able to explain it somewhat, and his offering today was to be thankful that he , at 8 years old , was able to take part in Communion. Thank you again my brother. I was so proud.