Sunday, November 28, 2010

First Sunday in Advent

Light one candle to watch for Messiah
Let the light banish darkness
He shall bring salvation to Israel
God fulfills the promise.

(reprinted under OneLicense.net license # A700392)

Well today is the first Sunday in Advent and we’ll sing the subsequent verses to this song in each approaching week as we move through Advent toward the birth of our Savior on Christmas. This Yiddish folk tune with words by Wayne Wold reminds us that even in the darkness of our lives, God has a plan and a promise for us.

The color for Advent in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America is blue. I grew up in a Missouri Synod congregation and the color was purple, the color of royalty, as we saw Advent as the preparation for the coming King. I like the use of blue in the ELCA to represent the darkness of the world and the night sky, with the increasing light of the Advent candles with each successive week bringing us to a Christmas Eve filled with candlelight, when we celebrate with JOY to the World, our Savior reigns. It reminds us of the times in our lives when there seems to be nothing but the darkness, those times when we are separate from God, those times when we need a Savior to break into our darkness and bring light into our world. In this time of Advent, we prepare for the coming of our Savior, the Light of the World, as we remember the promises of God foretold to us by his prophets…Isaiah, Jeremiah, Zechariah, Micah.

These are certainly times when we can often feel like our world is blanketed in darkness. Our economy is a mess, so many people are out of work, our healthcare system is in need of a bandaid (or maybe surgery), our governments (from local all the way up to federal) are rife with corruption and we see little hope of real change for a better crop of politicians with each election, our young men and women die on foreign soil in a war that seems to go on and on, our taxes eat up more and more of our incomes, and the things we buy cost more and more while our incomes stagnate or recess. Where is the light in this endless tunnel of gloom?

The Advent wreath begs us to look in its direction.

Because ...with each passing week, we get closer and closer to the answer to that question. The Light that ends the gloom is coming. It comes in the form of God’s own Son, manifest in flesh, to live among us and know our fears, worries, pains, anxieties, and hopes. He has been here. He knows what fear and pain and worry consume us. He yearns to ease our burden if we will but love Him, look to Him for our answers, and give up our fears, worries and anxieties to Him to handle, so that He can let the light in to our lives.

Come, oh come, Emmanuel and ransom captive Israel…

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