Hope Begins in the Dark - Bravester

(Photo: Unsplash)

An Advent thought.

Advent is a rhythm of the church calendar that matches the seasons of the earth, for the northern hemisphere at least. Late autumn is the end of the growing season. The harvest is brought in; the anxiety of whether there will be a harvest or not is over; and it becomes feast time. The long days of field work are over too. Double feast time!

While it is feast time, the night sky is getting darker and darker, earlier and earlier and colder and colder. There is feasting but there is also anxiousness because the world is turning dark. Will the cold devour them? Will the food last? Will the darkness take something?

Feasting and fear. Joy and pain. Light and dark. We get both.

In the growing darkness we subconsciously ask, “Will the sun return again to grow life?” Thankfully we now know that December 21 is the winter solstice. We know that the sun will return again, a little bit more and more each day.

Here is where the Christmas season falls—with lots of Christmas lights. And lots of distractions and noise and too much money spent. This is the opposite of the rhythm. Is this all a coping mechanism to get through the dark?

Between the feasting and the winter solstice we have Advent. The church calendar part that recognizes the waiting in the darkness because the Light is coming. A new beginning is coming. Advent is adventus or coming.

Advent on the church calendar is when light and life is fading so we set aside four weeks to focus on the waiting and the darkness to remember that in the waiting and in the darkness God is still at work.

Advent is a Christmas tradition moving in step with creation. Like nature, we hibernate inward to find this Larger Story God. (While still attending Christmas parties.)

Is this a rhythm that your soul is seeking? In the beautiful and memory-filled chaos of Christmas, can you make time for Advent? For some sort of Advent practice?

You are invited to an Advent study with me, Brenda. We will be meeting through Zoom so you are truly invited.

We are using Zoom because for this study we will be having conversations about darkness and where God is. Because this is the movement of God.

We will take a good look and have a conversation about one of the images from the James Webb Telescope. Because amazing things are happening in the dark.

We will also learn about an animal in winter and how they respond to the dark. While we may fear the dark, animals adapt in amazing ways and shape themselves to life as it is given. The Advent book, All Creation Waits:  The Advent Mystery of New Beginnings, is our source. We will learn about the black bear, the woodchuck, the porcupine, and the painted turtle–none of which are in your Advent calendar but maybe will in the future.

Darkness, hope, animals, and a lit candle are a part of our Advent practice as we celebrate our coming Savior. We will be meeting Sunday evenings beginning at 6:30 pm EST/5:30 pm CST during Advent. Join this conversation by signing up at Eventbrite.

 

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Brenda Seefeldt

Brenda Seefeldt Amodea is a pastor, and speaker. She has worked with teens since 1981 to present. She has lived through the teen years in the 1980s, 1990s, 2000s, 2010s and now into the 2020s. Imagine that collected wisdom! Imagine just the teen language trends she has lived through. She writes about that wisdom at www.Bravester.com. Read this clever article about those decades at https://largerstory.church/four-decades-of-youth-ministry/ She has also published I Wish I Could Take Away Your Pain, the Bible study workbook with video, Trust Issues with God, and the upcoming book, The Story of Two Lost Sons. With her husband, Brenda also publishes a paintball magazine, www.Paintball.Media. You didn’t see that one coming, right?

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