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Light by David Ruis

Many people enjoy chocolate from advent calendars as part of their Christmas celebrations, but not everyone knows what the season of Advent is really about. Advent comes from the Latin word meaning “coming” and has been celebrated by the Church for at least 1500 years! The four Sundays leading up to Christmas help us celebrate that Jesus came as the Saviour of the world 2000 years ago, and to long for his second Advent – when Jesus will come again and put everything to rights in the world. Advent Sundays follow the themes of hope, peace, joy, and love. We cultivate our longing to experience Jesus in these particular ways in our lives now. Advent is meant to deepen our discipleship - remembering Jesus came, encountering Jesus in deeper ways now, and longing for his coming again. Advent is a great gift to the Church! Over the next four weeks we will be featuring reflections on Advent from across the Vineyard in Canada. We hope you find it meaningful and encouraging!


This weeks reflection is by David Ruis.


I have been musing a lot lately on this quote from Walter Brueggemann, “The prophetic tasks of the church are to tell the truth in a society that lives in illusion, grieve in a society that practices denial, and express hope in a society that lives in despair.”


As we head into Advent 2020, I can’t help but think of how critical it is that we as Christ’s followers allow the apocalypse of this past year to stir in us this prophetic call.


Not trying to predict elections or read the trends of the marketplace; not tweet-worthy slogans and pithy quotes filling the attention deprived space of social media; but to the essence of who we are to be as God's people. A prophetic people. People of truth. People of vulnerability. People of hope.

 

Light in the darkness.

 

For centuries the Church Calendar, through the practice of Advent, has annually reminded us to recognize how full of expectation we are to be and to turn from the distracting idols that steal our gaze. The darkness that presses in. We are to live with the anticipation of the inbreaking luminance of Jesus no matter how grim things seem.

 

Light in the darkness.

 

Through the ebbs and flows of the seasons of humanity, coming full circle each year, we realize the power of Advent. He has come. He has never forsaken. He is with us. He will come again. He not only entered our story, He transforms it. Transforms us. Inside out and upside-down.

 

Light in the darkness.

 

In the rhythms of spiritual discipline and formation, we are to lean into the truth of Advent, that though there be weeping in the night, there will come joy in the morning. There will be beauty for ashes, and we will receive the oil of gladness that adorns. Blessed are those who mourn. The story is never over, the eternal is within reach. His kingdom come and coming.

 

Light in the darkness.

 

We, now perhaps more than ever, are called to not only celebrate Advent, but to become Advent. We are to be hope, peace, love and joy come in this world.

 

Light in the darkness.

 

Let us shine this Advent. Freed of the shackles of our buildings and rote programs, let us renegotiate the obligatory nature of what our faith may have become over the years and rediscover the light that we are. The Light we are to reflect. To be like the One who shines into the darkness within us and the darkness around us. His advent is upon us, shining with such exuberance that it ignites us to shine like a light on a hill. If the world ever needed such illumination, it needs it now. Let it come.



Advent: Hope
 
A Jewish boy – a divine Son. He comes.
Immanuel, God with us.
 
Waiting in Mary’s womb.
Immanuel.
 
He would breathe earth's air. He would walk this soil. He would live – here.
Immanuel.
 
He would speak as a prophet. He would instruct and learn out of His experience as human. Obedience through suffering. Engraving a new covenant. A new way. His way. The way of love.
Immanuel.
 
Priestly empathy. Listening. Healing. Embracing all.
Immanuel.
 
Kingly humility. Righteous. Advocating for the oppressed, liberating the captives, speaking truth to the powers and principalities of the age, proclaiming his kingdom come and coming.
Immanuel.
 
Prophet. Priest. King. Ever living as our divine intercessor at the Father’s right hand until we all see him face to face.
Immanuel.
 
“We have this hope as an anchor for the soul, firm and secure. It enters the sanctuary beyond the veil, where our forerunner, Jesus, has entered on our behalf. He has become a high priest forever.” (Hebrews 6:19-20)
 
Hope, this hope, anchored to something beyond. Bigger than ourselves. Beyond the temporal. Anchored deep into the very eternal presence of God himself.  A thin place. A liminal space. Sanctuary. Beyond the veil. And yet, here.
Immanuel.
 
Every step from logos to flesh. From womb to air. From outside time and space to blood, sweat and tears.
 
Laughter. Weeping. Praying. Bleeding.
Dying. Rising. Waiting. Returning.
Hope.
 
Advent not only behind us, but before us. Come and coming.
Immanuel.


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