Tag-Archive for » Advent «

932372_stand_alone_treeHave you ever felt a twinge of loneliness slip in at Christmas? I have, and not for lack of family or holiday spirit—both abound at my house. 

Such moments sneak up unexpectedly, unbalancing expectations and causing me to wonder if my emotional health is declining. My husband is the one who suffers depression, not me—at least that is my reasoning.

Yet, I’m learning that part of experiencing the Holy includes visitations of loneliness, whether in the quiet of my study or hosting a holiday party. How can I long for God if I do not know the feel of lonely? How can Christmas have any depth unless I first experience aloneness?

Advent calls us to wait—wait for the One who has said he will never leave us or forsake us. What twinges of loneliness have marked your days this Advent season? How well are you waiting?

In Him together, Susan Gaddis

1152283_airportChristmas is unwrapped in Holy disorder. It is God’s fault. Life escalates the excitement, stress, and extra activities during this season.

A census issued by Caesar Augustus wasn’t great timing as far as Mary and Joseph were concerned. Who wants to travel the week of your due date? Imagine Mary’s discomfort at nine months pregnant riding a donkey. For Joseph, there was the pressure of finding lodging in an over populated Bethlehem.

Who cleaned out the manger and set up the delivery corner in the stable where Christ was born? Who tidied up the birthing mess? What does one do with unexpected shepherds showing up shortly after the birth? Coffee and cookies?

Perhaps the Christmas Pageant captures the Holy best when the angels stumble over their lines, the shepherds miss their cue, or Joseph picks his nose. Children tend to embrace the Holy hidden in our humanness. Adults often miss it.

This year embrace the messy house, crowded mall, extra baking, unexpected company, and the disarray of Christmas week. Sometimes disorder is Holy.

What Holy disorder is unwrapping for you this week?

In Him together, Susan Gaddis

Music stirs the sense of the Holy in this short video of Lisbeth Scott singing Dona Nobis Pacem from her new Christmas album, Peace on Earth. Dona Nobis Pacem—Grant Us Peace—may it be so this Christmas. I hope you enjoy this amazing visual and musical performance.

  • 947913_tombstones_2House decorated—check!
  • Christmas Eve dinner reservations made at Novos—check!
  • Menu planned for Christmas day—check!
  • Gifts bought and wrapped—workin’ on it.
  • Waiting for Christ . . . say what?

Whoops! The holidays showed up and our hectic lives just became more chaotic. 

Things haven’t changed much over the centuries. The first Christmas saw folks traveling, crowding the local motels, and reuniting with family. A nationwide census stressed everyone. In the midst of the chaos, a stable served as an emergency birthing room. Most people didn’t have a clue that the Messiah had arrived; many didn’t even know he was coming.

Advent calls us aside to wait and watch for Christ—joyously, quietly, and with purpose. That means finding a few minutes here and there throughout each day to focus on the reality of God becoming a man. Prophets foretold God’s advent into humanity. In fact, Jesus referred to the Old Testament prophecies as a way of explaining his identity and his intentions (see Luke 24:13-32).

I’ve listed some of those Old Testament prophecies and their New Testament fulfillment below—just in case you need a quick reference. Pondering these ancient words informs my waiting and expectancy for the One Who is Christmas. Consider adding a little of the Holy to your daily by reading and discussing a prophecy each night this week with your family during dinner.

  1. His birthplace: Micha 5:2 (Luke 2:4,6,7)
  2. His birth: Isaiah 7:14 (Matthew 1:18,22,23)
  3. His childhood in Egypt: Hosea 11:1 (Matthew 2:14,15)
  4. His betrayal: Zechariah 11:12, 13 (Matthew 26:14:16)
  5. His death: Psalm 22 (Matthew 27)
  6. His resurrection: 16:9-10 (Acts 2:31)
  7. The purpose for His death and resurrection: Isaiah 53:4-6 (2 Corinthians 5:21 and 1 Peter 2:24)

What do you find in your reading of these prophecies that binds you to the Christ of Christmas?

In Him together, Susan Gaddis 

The Advent Conspiracy is out to change your holiday season!

506797__2Advent comes from the Latin. It means “coming” and is the time of waiting and preparation before Christmas that helps us focus on the three comings of Christ.

Past

The first coming of Christ is what the baby and the manger are all about. God became flesh and bone inside Mary’s womb and was born through the normal birthing process of pain and desperation. He walked among men as one of us. He ate our food, laughed at our jokes, and loved us in our brokenness.

Christ’s death on a cross along with his burial and resurrection secured forgiveness of wrong in our lives and ensured a future with him for those who believe that he actually did these things.

Present

The second coming of Christ that Advent calls us to embrace is Christ coming to live within us. The One who walked among us has now come to live within those who call on his name. Not only is he living within us, but he is constantly talking, teaching, and leading us.

Jesus is the Great Communicator. In the Old Testament, Christ was known as The Word (see Genesis 1:1). John tells us that The Word then became flesh in the form of a baby and dwelt among us as a man (See John 1:14). He lives within those of us who have asked him to take up residence in our lives. Someday in the future Jesus will return and again walk among us physically as The Word (see Revelation 19:13). If Christ lives in you, what is he, The Word, talking to you about? What is he teaching you and where is he leading you?

Future

The third coming that Advent points us to is the future coming of Christ again to planet earth as our King. Someday soon his feet will land on the Mount of Olives and he will reign over the world he created. Jesus told us to be alert and watchful concerning this coming and to prepare for it. 

Advent gives us time to examine our lives and prepare our hearts for the coming of the Lord. It offers us the joy of expectancy and the responsibility of spreading the word that Christ has come and will come again.  The early church was always mindful that their mission was on a timetable. This knowledge motivated them to communicate the good news, or gospel, throughout the known world in a relatively short amount of time.

Three comings of Christ—past, present, and future—all are represented in Advent. As Joan Chittister says in The Liturgical Year, “The great spiritual question the season poses for each of us is, which coming are you and I waiting for now? At this moment of our lives, at this present stage of our spiritual development, what we’re waiting for surely determines how we will wait for it.”

Personally, I’m waiting for the future coming of Christ at this point in my life. How I am waiting involves examining myself, preparing my heart for his return, and encouraging others to do the same. Time is short—before I go or before he comes—I plan to make my life count!

Which coming are you waiting for this Advent season and how are you waiting for it? I’d love to hear your thoughts on this.

In Him together, Susan Gaddis

Advent wreath

Advent wreath

There are some things everyone ought to know about Advent, but somehow I missed the memo. I’ve been in ministry for over 34 years and am finally beginning to realize that Christmas is actually a whole season called Advent.

The season is designed to be a spirit ritual for growing in the grace of God. Following are five basic things we need to know about Advent.

1. The season of Advent is all about Jesus—the One who is God, but became human and chose to be like us in all ways except sin (Hebrews 4:15). It is about the One who humbled Himself “to the point of death, even death on a cross” (Philippians 2:8). 

2. Christmas is not meant to be an isolated day, but a seasonal celebration that encompasses the Old Testament prophecies concerning the coming of the Messiah, the wonder of the incarnation (God becoming man) and the hope of His coming again. Advent is that seasonal celebration—giving us time to embrace the wonder and reality of God’s overwhelming love.

3. In the Western church, Advent begins on the Sunday nearest to November 30th. It lasts for the four weeks leading up to Christmas. Advent contains four Sundays and the first Sunday is also the first day of the new church year.

4. Many homes have an Advent wreath on which four candles are placed. One candle is lit each week during Advent. The first candle represents Hope and the second candle symbolizes Peace. The third candle signifies Joy, and the fourth candle stands for Love. An optional fifth candle signifies the birth of Christ and is lit on Christmas.

5. It is in Advent that we begin to prepare for Easter, because without Christmas there would be no death, burial, and resurrection of the One born in a manger.

I plan to explore more of Advent in the weeks ahead, but for now, what are you doing to encounter the Holy during this season of Advent?

In Him together, Susan Gaddis

Related Posts with Thumbnails