Growing up as a child, my family had an advent calendar. It had an undecorated felt Christmas tree at the top and 24 numbered pockets on the bottom, each with a small felt ornament inside for the tree. It looked pretty much like a calendar you might have hanging on your wall right now. Each day, either my sister or I would remove an ornament from the appropriate numbered pocket and attach it to the Christmas tree. When the pockets were empty and the tree was fully decorated, it was Christmas Eve Day.
There were two ways to use the calendar. If you started with number 1 on December 1st, the number on the pocket would always match the day’s date. The final ornament - always the star - would go on the tree on December 24th. When that little star was set in place on the top of that little tree, you knew that tomorrow would be Christmas morning.
But the other way you could use the calendar was to start at the “24” and work backward. As a kid, that was always the way I wanted to do it. Because when you’re little who cares what the date is? The only thing that mattered was how many more days were left until Christmas. On December first that first ornament went on the tree, pocket 24 was empty and at a glance, you knew that only 23 more days remained until Christmas. No counting was required.
It seems that things actually haven’t changed much since then. Everywhere I find constant reminders that Santa Claus is coming to town, and I know exactly how many shopping days there are until Christmas. December, with its parties, shopping, concerts, decorating, baking, and everything else that goes along with it, seems to pass by in a blur. December is a sprint, and Christmas is the finish line.
During such a frenetic time of year, we would be wise to reclaim the tradition of Advent from our liturgical brothers and sisters. The Advent season is a time to reflect and consider the miracle that God deeply loves us. So much so that he stepped out of infinity and into time and space to take on flesh and bone to call us back to himself. In our lostness and brokenness, God our savior came to us in the infant Jesus. The God who created the universe is the same God who knows and forgives our sins, heals our brokenness, and loves us perfectly.
But Advent isn’t just about waiting for the baby Jesus to be born. Advent is a time of waiting, hopefully and prayerfully, for the fullness of Jesus Christ and his kingdom to be realized in our world. Evil, pain, brokenness, and suffering still rule in this world, but we can practice Advent by seeking the heart of God and petitioning him for - and being agents of - the kind of peace that only he can bring. Calling Jesus the “Desire of Nations,” the Advent hymn “O Come O Come Emmanuel” invites this heavenly kingdom:
O come desire of nations, bind
All peoples in one heart and mind;
Bid envy, strife, and quarrels cease;
Fill the whole world with heaven's peace.
May his love, grace, and peace be ever-present with you during this Advent season and beyond.
Michael Cook
Ministry Support Specialist
The Brethren Church