Sunday, December 17, 2006

Advent Meditations for Week 4

The final week of Advent includes meditations that go through Christmas...so it's actually 9 days long. I've always enjoyed Advent, and feel saddened by the lack of the celebration in the evangelical and charismatic churches that I've mainly identified with. It's that one time of the year when I almost wished I was in the main line churches.
What Advent means to me is the ability to focus my attention on the reason why Jesus came into the world as the God-man. I know that he came to die for my sins...but there's more to his coming than the cross. He also came to make the Kingdom of God a reality. Most of the time the church has celebrated the death of Christ, without recognizing the significance of the Kingdom. Yet, here is the major theme of the scripture. So, I hope those who read these enjoy the season of celebration the church calls Advent.

*************************************************************************************

Advent Meditations – Week 4, December 17 – 25

The final week of Advent has as its theme: LOVE.

The previous three weeks had as their themes: PROMISE, FAITH, AND HOPE. God had promised to Israel a coming Messiah – the law and the prophets had testified of this. Those who longed for his coming cried out to God for the Advent of the Messiah.

Those who trusted in God had faith to believe the unbelievable; and their hope was that God would do what he had promised.

What they longed for, and looked for, was one who would come to deliver them from their Roman oppression. What they didn’t understand, perceive, or believe, was that God was going to send his Son through a virgin as a baby – hidden from everyone save a few shepherds and a young poor Jewish couple.

All of this was an act of God’s love. He came to bring His Kingdom upon the earth, and to make a way through the obedience of His Son to sow the seed of His Kingdom – a seed, like yeast in the dough that would grow and grow until the whole world confesses Jesus Christ is Lord.

This is the final week in our Advent journey. There are two extra days added to this week and it will take us to Christmas Day.

Sunday – December 17th

Readings: Galatians 4:4; John 13:31 – 14: 6, 15-21

Reflect on this: The heart of Jesus’ coming is that it comes “at just the right time” and demonstrates the simplest and most profoundest thing: God has sent his son as a display of his glorious Love. The old Negro spiritual exclaims: “Love Came Down…let’s dance!” Not a bad idea, even if you’re like me and dancing is not one of your most enjoyable thoughts.

When you go to Worship today you might not dance, but open wide your heart and allow this thought to invade your heart and mind – “God came down…for me…” and go ahead, tap your feet!

Lord, you have said “I am the Way” —
not that we shall never be confused.

You have said, “I am the Truth” —
not that we shall have all the answers.

And, “I am the Life” —
not that we shall never die.

Teach me to know you here on earth,
in its tangled maze of pathways.

To know you as the Way in its unanswerable mysteries.
To know you as the Truth in the face of suffering and death,
To know you as the Life.

Thank you, Lord, for not offering us a method,
saying “This is the Way.”

Thank you for not granting us a set of propositions,
saying, “This is the Truth.”

Thank you for not delivering us from being human,
saying, “This is the Life.”

Thank you, Lord, for saying instead, “I AM,”
and for giving us yourself.

— Elisabeth Elliott

Monday – December 18th

Readings: Matthew 1:1 – 25

Joseph is at the end of a long line of people! Think about it, we live in a day that many people get excited by the discovery of their genealogical history. Who is it that is in your line? Mine were all Germans from Northern Germany who came over in the mid-1800’s. Some people can trace their genealogy back through several generations. It’s an interesting thing to discover your Great-great-great-great-great… Grandparent was _________ (fill in the blanks) in __________ (fill in the country).

Matthew spends a great amount of energy telling us the human line of Jesus’ birth…all the way back to Abraham. That reminds me, us, that God knows us. He knows where we come from, and He knows who we are – through and through.

Look at the list – not everyone in this list is known for doing great things: Jacob, who deceives; Judah, who sleeps with Tamar; David, who bore Solomon, but very clearly took Uriah’s wife to do that (notice Matthew doesn’t say Bathsheba). There’s Uzziah, who makes a huge mistake and suffers the consequences of his sin, and Manasseh (no one was called more wicked as a ruler in Judah). Altogether Matthew lists 42 names that precede the final name – Joseph.

It’s Joseph that the final chapter of God’s knowing the geneaology that will become Jesus’ earthly dad.

It’s Joseph that doesn’t understand what in the world is going on until the Angel of God visits him in the night.

It’s Joseph who hears God in another dream and takes him to Egypt to avoid the insane King Herod’s violence.

It’s Joseph who fades into oblivion from the life of Jesus in the story of the Gospel.

What happened to Joseph? How long did he live? Did he get to see Jesus the Man, or did he fulfill his purpose in Jesus the Boy?

We don’t know…but this we do know, God Knows. He knew the right time, He knew the right people to entrust his gift to the world, and He knows you and me too!

An Advent Meditation,

This was to fulfill what had been spoken by the Lord through the prophet,

“Out of Egypt I have called my son.” - Matthew 2:15

by Joan Vinall-Cox

It was a dark time -

Mary had wanted to be glad
Joseph had chosen her
but that strange dream ...

and old Elizabeth, swollen with child,
calling her blessed, saying a
Child was growing in her
too, yet she’d never...
except in that strange dream;

and she had swollen
and Joseph,
angry and sad and puzzled,
had planned to hide
her disgrace, but he dreamed too,
and married her but slept apart and would not look at her.

It was a dark time.

It was a dark time -
the rulers had decided
to count them all where
their ancestors had lived
so Joseph and Mary must walk

for days, weeks, and her so
large and tired, and both so
puzzled and hopeful and fearful.
Could the Holy One really have chosen them?

Still they must walk,
as the rulers
demanded, in the cold,
in the darkening time, they must
walk into Bethlehem, this ancient
town, filled with others obeying
the rulers who wanted to count them and did not care
about walking, or a room for a
young woman with her time
pressing on her,
with the Holy One’s Gift demanding
His time on earth,
and no room for this family

It was a dark time.

There was light at His birth -
light in Mary’s eyes and
light in Joseph’s smile and
light flowing out, pulsing out
around the wondrous Child

light that brought the amazed shepherds,
and star light that
brought the Wise Ones from
afar to worship Him

and light that the eyes in
the dark could see, whispering to
a man with too much power
that he was nothing
beside such Light,

and the Holy One sent another
dream to guard the Light, to
hide it in a foreign land

and Mary and Joseph fled
into Egypt, carrying the Light
away from the darkness of
Herod’s massacre of babies.

It was a dark time.

It was a dark time -
waiting in a foreign land,
watching Him grow, and learning
patience and trust, waiting
for a new dream, yearning for
home
and then


out of the dark time,

the dream came.

Tuesday – December 19th

Readings: Galatians 4:4; Matthew 1: 1 – 25

I think most people are inclined to skip over genealogical records – unless of course it’s there own family. The story of Jesus is the story of God’s promise coming “at just the right time”.

As you meditate on this passage today, think about God’s work “at just the right time” in your own life.

Here’s the words of a Michael Card song:

The Lord God said when time was full
He would shine His light in the darkness.
He said a virgin would conceive
And give birth to the Promise.
For a thousand years the dreamers dreamt
And hoped to see His love.
But the Promise showed their wildest dreams
Had simply not been wild enough.

The Promise was love
And the Promise was life.
The Promise meant light to the world.
Living proof “Jehovah saves,”
For the name of the Promise was Jesus.

Michael Card
“The Promise”

I love the words, “For a thousand years the dreamers dreamt and hoped to see His love, but the Promise showed their wildest dreams had simply not been wild enough.”

What is it in your life that you’ve dreamt of concerning God’s promises?

Have you ever thought that your dreams have not been wild enough?

Let’s go back to Mary’s response to the Angel’s message – “Nothing you say is impossible”

Wednesday – December 20th

The adoration of Jesus, Master of the Trebon Altarpiece, Before 1380, Tempera on spruce, Alsová Jihoceská Galeria, HlubokáReadings: 2 Cor 4:6, John 1: 1-18

Did you see the verse in John’s Gospel that says Jesus “tabernacled” amongst us… He “took up residence” is what the NIV translates the Greek words as.

The Word became flesh and took up residence among us. We observed His glory, the glory as the unique Son from the Father, full of grace and truth. JOHN 1:14

It is a great thing to meditate on the glory of God coming to live among his creation. Calvin Miller wrote a meditation on this – God’s glory coming into our midst.

THE GLORY WE BEHELD

The glory we behold in Christ is the light of grace and truth. Consider this great trinity of words: glory; grace, and truth.

Glory! It is the state of being that transcends our poor, dull, ordinary lives. It implies a dazzling illumination, a splendor in seeing, a heightened euphoria, a state of elevated reality. Glory is that moment of elation when truth and reward come together to kneel before the grand approval of God. Have you never felt His exhilarating glory? Then you have never confessed your sin and turned your face toward the wonderful face of your Redeemer. Glory is the glistening garment of God—a garment that He is all too eager to throw around us, to welcome us into His everlasting light. Glory is the food of the believer. Eat it once, and a kind of joyous addiction is born in your life. One taste and you must eat it forever.

Grace! It is the unmerited smile of God. If glory is our dance with God, grace is the ballroom—wide and free. But grace is not a tiny little dance with thin music and stingy steps. This dance never constricts. It is set to the open steps of elation. Grace saves with celestial music and redeems us, with Christ as our life partner.

Truth!.This is the mortar that binds grace and glory together. Truth is Jesus; He never told a lie. He never sinned. He is never out of love with those for whom He died. Truth says that when you take any action, needing God to be there, He will be there. Truth says that if Jesus has said it, it is settled; you may count on it.

Jesus was revealed to us in glory. That glory is full of grace and truth. The moment you received Christ, all three—glory, grace, and truth—were united as a trinity of lovers to rule from the throne of all your dreams.

AN ADDITIONAL READING – 1st Thessalonians 4:13-18

We have grown so accustomed to this particular coming of Christ—this baby-in-a-manger coming, this wise-men-and-shepherds coming—that we sometimes forget to be watching for His next coming. What keeps His next coming from being a more real part of your life? ‘What is here now that won’t be so much better then?

PRAYER:

Lord, I have beheld Your glory; full of grace and truth. What a life is now mine—glory, grace, and truth bulging in the same small space I once gave to dullness, stinginess, and deceit. And what a life now awaits me—glory, grace, and truth in greater measure than I have ever imagined. I love You for filling my heart with Your presence, for being just what my dull heart needed.

Excerpted from: The Christ of Christmas By Calvin Miller

Thursday – December 21st

Readings: Luke 1: 67 – 69; John 14: 1 -6 & 28 – 29

Two Advent articles that I ran across have wonderful reflections on the idea of waiting for the Son. Advent is a season of prayerful waiting for Christmas to arrive; but it is anchored in the hope of Jesus’ second coming also. I’m going to use these over the next two days.

This first reflection is called “Waiting for His Son”.

Waiting for His Son from heaven. This is what the Christian life is about—waiting for His coming, remembering the longing of the Old Testament faithful for the promised Messiah, and learning to share that longing, stirring up the dying embers of a cold heart with the little glimpses of glory that wake you from complacency and contentment with too little.

What does waiting look like? First, we are to live out of a faithful discontentment. Things are not the way they should be. That needs to settle in your gut and be formative for the way that you function. So you begin to live that way. But then you hear the Satanic whisper: The world is OK, don’t overreact—relax and enjoy yourself. This is a world that has a lot to offer. The battle is to reply to that whisper: No, I am not at ease in this world. The corruption of this world is not normal. God’s world is certainly filled with good things, and even now we enjoy them. But they are not what life is about.

Waiting is also working. In light of what we know, now, in this era, we work hard. Paul says, “If I am to live in the flesh, that means fruitful labor for me” (Philippians 1:22). What does fruitful labor look like? It depends. It may mean doing another load of laundry, or playing Candy Land again with your 4-year-old daughter. It’s a relationship pursued strategically for the sake of the kingdom. It’s your job in the marketplace done well to please the Lord, or a conversation carried out deliberately, alertly, bringing words of encouragement or challenge to those who need them. In this era you do the work the Lord gives you to do.

Last, waiting is praying. Our prayers have an essential, God-appointed role in His bringing about the completion of all that He will do. Does this surprise you? Life is about praying. That unproductive addendum to life, that activity of the margins, turns out to be the heart. We pray for the realization of the purposes of God. In the end it boils down to a one-word prayer, Maranatha. We wait for the Son.

Friday – December 22nd

Readings: Revelation 21: 1 – 6; 22: 1 – 7, 12 – 21

The second of these Advent meditations about “Waiting for His Coming” was one I found on an internet page on “Praying Advent”. The article was anonymous but it captured my focus when it came to the title: “The Three Comings of Jesus”

While Considering One, We Prepare for Another

Advent Meditations – Week 4, December 17 – 25

The final week of Advent has as its theme: LOVE.

The previous three weeks had as their themes: PROMISE, FAITH, AND HOPE. God had promised to Israel a coming Messiah – the law and the prophets had testified of this. Those who longed for his coming cried out to God for the Advent of the Messiah.

Those who trusted in God had faith to believe the unbelievable; and their hope was that God would do what he had promised.

What they longed for, and looked for, was one who would come to deliver them from their Roman oppression. What they didn’t understand, perceive, or believe, was that God was going to send his Son through a virgin as a baby – hidden from everyone save a few shepherds and a young poor Jewish couple.

All of this was an act of God’s love. He came to bring His Kingdom upon the earth, and to make a way through the obedience of His Son to sow the seed of His Kingdom – a seed, like yeast in the dough that would grow and grow until the whole world confesses Jesus Christ is Lord.

This is the final week in our Advent journey. There are two extra days added to this week and it will take us to Christmas Day.

Sunday – December 17th

Readings: Galatians 4:4; John 13:31 – 14: 6, 15-21

Reflect on this: The heart of Jesus’ coming is that it comes “at just the right time” and demonstrates the simplest and most profoundest thing: God has sent his son as a display of his glorious Love. The old Negro spiritual exclaims: “Love Came Down…let’s dance!” Not a bad idea, even if you’re like me and dancing is not one of your most enjoyable thoughts.

When you go to Worship today you might not dance, but open wide your heart and allow this thought to invade your heart and mind – “God came down…for me…” and go ahead, tap your feet!

Lord, you have said “I am the Way” —
not that we shall never be confused.

You have said, “I am the Truth” —
not that we shall have all the answers.

And, “I am the Life” —
not that we shall never die.

Teach me to know you here on earth,
in its tangled maze of pathways.

To know you as the Way in its unanswerable mysteries.
To know you as the Truth in the face of suffering and death,
To know you as the Life.

Thank you, Lord, for not offering us a method,
saying “This is the Way.”

Thank you for not granting us a set of propositions,
saying, “This is the Truth.”

Thank you for not delivering us from being human,
saying, “This is the Life.”

Thank you, Lord, for saying instead, “I AM,”
and for giving us yourself.

— Elisabeth Elliott

Monday – December 18th

Readings: Matthew 1:1 – 25

Joseph is at the end of a long line of people! Think about it, we live in a day that many people get excited by the discovery of their genealogical history. Who is it that is in your line? Mine were all Germans from Northern Germany who came over in the mid-1800’s. Some people can trace their genealogy back through several generations. It’s an interesting thing to discover your Great-great-great-great-great… Grandparent was _________ (fill in the blanks) in __________ (fill in the country).

Matthew spends a great amount of energy telling us the human line of Jesus’ birth…all the way back to Abraham. That reminds me, us, that God knows us. He knows where we come from, and He knows who we are – through and through.

Look at the list – not everyone in this list is known for doing great things: Jacob, who deceives; Judah, who sleeps with Tamar; David, who bore Solomon, but very clearly took Uriah’s wife to do that (notice Matthew doesn’t say Bathsheba). There’s Uzziah, who makes a huge mistake and suffers the consequences of his sin, and Manasseh (no one was called more wicked as a ruler in Judah). Altogether Matthew lists 42 names that precede the final name – Joseph.

It’s Joseph that the final chapter of God’s knowing the geneaology that will become Jesus’ earthly dad.

It’s Joseph that doesn’t understand what in the world is going on until the Angel of God visits him in the night.

It’s Joseph who hears God in another dream and takes him to Egypt to avoid the insane King Herod’s violence.

It’s Joseph who fades into oblivion from the life of Jesus in the story of the Gospel.

What happened to Joseph? How long did he live? Did he get to see Jesus the Man, or did he fulfill his purpose in Jesus the Boy?

We don’t know…but this we do know, God Knows. He knew the right time, He knew the right people to entrust his gift to the world, and He knows you and me too!

An Advent Meditation,

This was to fulfill what had been spoken by the Lord through the prophet,

“Out of Egypt I have called my son.” - Matthew 2:15

by Joan Vinall-Cox

It was a dark time -

Mary had wanted to be glad
Joseph had chosen her
but that strange dream ...

and old Elizabeth, swollen with child,
calling her blessed, saying a
Child was growing in her
too, yet she’d never...
except in that strange dream;

and she had swollen
and Joseph,
angry and sad and puzzled,
had planned to hide
her disgrace, but he dreamed too,
and married her but slept apart and would not look at her.

It was a dark time.

It was a dark time -
the rulers had decided
to count them all where
their ancestors had lived
so Joseph and Mary must walk

for days, weeks, and her so
large and tired, and both so
puzzled and hopeful and fearful.
Could the Holy One really have chosen them?

Still they must walk,
as the rulers
demanded, in the cold,
in the darkening time, they must
walk into Bethlehem, this ancient
town, filled with others obeying
the rulers who wanted to count them and did not care
about walking, or a room for a
young woman with her time
pressing on her,
with the Holy One’s Gift demanding
His time on earth,
and no room for this family

It was a dark time.

There was light at His birth -
light in Mary’s eyes and
light in Joseph’s smile and
light flowing out, pulsing out
around the wondrous Child

light that brought the amazed shepherds,
and star light that
brought the Wise Ones from
afar to worship Him

and light that the eyes in
the dark could see, whispering to
a man with too much power
that he was nothing
beside such Light,

and the Holy One sent another
dream to guard the Light, to
hide it in a foreign land

and Mary and Joseph fled
into Egypt, carrying the Light
away from the darkness of
Herod’s massacre of babies.

It was a dark time.

It was a dark time -
waiting in a foreign land,
watching Him grow, and learning
patience and trust, waiting
for a new dream, yearning for
home
and then


out of the dark time,

the dream came.

Tuesday – December 19th

Readings: Galatians 4:4; Matthew 1: 1 – 25

I think most people are inclined to skip over genealogical records – unless of course it’s there own family. The story of Jesus is the story of God’s promise coming “at just the right time”.

As you meditate on this passage today, think about God’s work “at just the right time” in your own life.

Here’s the words of a Michael Card song:

The Lord God said when time was full
He would shine His light in the darkness.
He said a virgin would conceive
And give birth to the Promise.
For a thousand years the dreamers dreamt
And hoped to see His love.
But the Promise showed their wildest dreams
Had simply not been wild enough.

The Promise was love
And the Promise was life.
The Promise meant light to the world.
Living proof “Jehovah saves,”
For the name of the Promise was Jesus.

Michael Card
“The Promise”

I love the words, “For a thousand years the dreamers dreamt and hoped to see His love, but the Promise showed their wildest dreams had simply not been wild enough.”

What is it in your life that you’ve dreamt of concerning God’s promises?

Have you ever thought that your dreams have not been wild enough?

Let’s go back to Mary’s response to the Angel’s message – “Nothing you say is impossible”

Wednesday – December 20th

The adoration of Jesus, Master of the Trebon Altarpiece, Before 1380, Tempera on spruce, Alsová Jihoceská Galeria, HlubokáReadings: 2 Cor 4:6, John 1: 1-18

Did you see the verse in John’s Gospel that says Jesus “tabernacled” amongst us… He “took up residence” is what the NIV translates the Greek words as.

The Word became flesh and took up residence among us. We observed His glory, the glory as the unique Son from the Father, full of grace and truth. JOHN 1:14

It is a great thing to meditate on the glory of God coming to live among his creation. Calvin Miller wrote a meditation on this – God’s glory coming into our midst.

THE GLORY WE BEHELD

The glory we behold in Christ is the light of grace and truth. Consider this great trinity of words: glory; grace, and truth.

Glory! It is the state of being that transcends our poor, dull, ordinary lives. It implies a dazzling illumination, a splendor in seeing, a heightened euphoria, a state of elevated reality. Glory is that moment of elation when truth and reward come together to kneel before the grand approval of God. Have you never felt His exhilarating glory? Then you have never confessed your sin and turned your face toward the wonderful face of your Redeemer. Glory is the glistening garment of God—a garment that He is all too eager to throw around us, to welcome us into His everlasting light. Glory is the food of the believer. Eat it once, and a kind of joyous addiction is born in your life. One taste and you must eat it forever.

Grace! It is the unmerited smile of God. If glory is our dance with God, grace is the ballroom—wide and free. But grace is not a tiny little dance with thin music and stingy steps. This dance never constricts. It is set to the open steps of elation. Grace saves with celestial music and redeems us, with Christ as our life partner.

Truth!.This is the mortar that binds grace and glory together. Truth is Jesus; He never told a lie. He never sinned. He is never out of love with those for whom He died. Truth says that when you take any action, needing God to be there, He will be there. Truth says that if Jesus has said it, it is settled; you may count on it.

Jesus was revealed to us in glory. That glory is full of grace and truth. The moment you received Christ, all three—glory, grace, and truth—were united as a trinity of lovers to rule from the throne of all your dreams.

AN ADDITIONAL READING – 1st Thessalonians 4:13-18

We have grown so accustomed to this particular coming of Christ—this baby-in-a-manger coming, this wise-men-and-shepherds coming—that we sometimes forget to be watching for His next coming. What keeps His next coming from being a more real part of your life? ‘What is here now that won’t be so much better then?

PRAYER:

Lord, I have beheld Your glory; full of grace and truth. What a life is now mine—glory, grace, and truth bulging in the same small space I once gave to dullness, stinginess, and deceit. And what a life now awaits me—glory, grace, and truth in greater measure than I have ever imagined. I love You for filling my heart with Your presence, for being just what my dull heart needed.

Excerpted from: The Christ of Christmas By Calvin Miller

Thursday – December 21st

Readings: Luke 1: 67 – 69; John 14: 1 -6 & 28 – 29

Two Advent articles that I ran across have wonderful reflections on the idea of waiting for the Son. Advent is a season of prayerful waiting for Christmas to arrive; but it is anchored in the hope of Jesus’ second coming also. I’m going to use these over the next two days.

This first reflection is called “Waiting for His Son”.

Waiting for His Son from heaven. This is what the Christian life is about—waiting for His coming, remembering the longing of the Old Testament faithful for the promised Messiah, and learning to share that longing, stirring up the dying embers of a cold heart with the little glimpses of glory that wake you from complacency and contentment with too little.

What does waiting look like? First, we are to live out of a faithful discontentment. Things are not the way they should be. That needs to settle in your gut and be formative for the way that you function. So you begin to live that way. But then you hear the Satanic whisper: The world is OK, don’t overreact—relax and enjoy yourself. This is a world that has a lot to offer. The battle is to reply to that whisper: No, I am not at ease in this world. The corruption of this world is not normal. God’s world is certainly filled with good things, and even now we enjoy them. But they are not what life is about.

Waiting is also working. In light of what we know, now, in this era, we work hard. Paul says, “If I am to live in the flesh, that means fruitful labor for me” (Philippians 1:22). What does fruitful labor look like? It depends. It may mean doing another load of laundry, or playing Candy Land again with your 4-year-old daughter. It’s a relationship pursued strategically for the sake of the kingdom. It’s your job in the marketplace done well to please the Lord, or a conversation carried out deliberately, alertly, bringing words of encouragement or challenge to those who need them. In this era you do the work the Lord gives you to do.

Last, waiting is praying. Our prayers have an essential, God-appointed role in His bringing about the completion of all that He will do. Does this surprise you? Life is about praying. That unproductive addendum to life, that activity of the margins, turns out to be the heart. We pray for the realization of the purposes of God. In the end it boils down to a one-word prayer, Maranatha. We wait for the Son.

Friday – December 22nd

Readings: Revelation 21: 1 – 6; 22: 1 – 7, 12 – 21

The second of these Advent meditations about “Waiting for His Coming” was one I found on an internet page on “Praying Advent”. The article was anonymous but it captured my focus when it came to the title: “The Three Comings of Jesus”

While Considering One, We Prepare for Another

One way of really enriching our Advent journey is to keep in mind the three comings of Jesus, and how they relate to one another.

Jesus was born into our history - at a fixed point in time in the past. Jesus comes to us now, in a whole variety of ways. Jesus promised that he will come again in glory, at the end of time.

The Incarnation: Jesus has come.

This is not the coming we await. The first coming of Jesus has already happened. Our preparation to celebrate his birth is the occasion for our deeper reflection. On the first level, it is so important that we really let ourselves experience the power of the Incarnation: God is with us. That God became one of us means that "human" is one of the ways God can be. The deeper we contemplate this mystery the more we enter into the grace of "God with us." The more we let ourselves be touched by this mystery, the more we see the connection between Christmas and Easter: all of this is "for me" - for my salvation - to free me from the power of sin and death.

My Life Now: Jesus comes to me.

When we open our hearts and our mouths and plead, "Come, O Lord," we are most directly experiencing our desire for the Lord to come to us and touch us with the grace of salvation - that we might live it with greater freedom and peace. Jesus is present whenever we need him to be present: actually, whenever we turn to him - even with empty hands. Jesus is alive and active in us when we read God's Word and let it into our hearts. Jesus promised to be present with us whenever two or three are gathered together in his name. And, we know Jesus comes to us whenever our sacrifices and our sufferings unite us with his own mission. Advent is a special time to experience our longing for the presence of Jesus with us now - in all the places we need him most.

Our Future: Jesus comes again, in glory.

One of the most transforming graces of Advent is given us as our longing deepens. The more grateful we become for how God saved us in Jesus, the more deeply we enter into the mystery of how Jesus is with us now. The closer we come to experiencing joy at how our Lord, Jesus Christ came into our world, faithful to God and faithful to our life journey in the flesh, the closer we come to experiencing the mystery of salvation in our everyday lives. And, as our longing is filled with the utter fullness of God's gift to us, we begin to long with the ultimate freedom: we long to be with him in God. We live more at home in this world because our God made a home in this world. But the whole story draws us to a complete picture of who we are and where we belong. Then our prayer begins to change, in our hearts and on our lips. We still are singing, "Come, Lord, Jesus!" but our song is transformed into the free and complete song of the lover: "Come, and take me with you."

Now we watch for the day,
hoping that the salvation promised us will be ours
when Christ will come again
in his glory.

Saturday – December 23rd

Today is the last day of this week, but there are two more Advent meditations to follow – Christmas Eve and Christmas Day. Thus I’m going to make this a light day – one reading, and a time to express this in prayer.

Reading: Matthew 1: 18 – 23

Consider this: Joseph is the man God chooses to be his Son’s earthly father. Why? Perhaps a clue up front is that Joseph was obedient enough to God’s word that he was going to give Mary a release from their marriage commitment, and humble enough to be teachable when God showed him what was going on.

A Prayer time might be to ask God to help us be both obedient and humble in our response to Him.


Sunday – December 24th, Christmas Eve

Readings: Isaiah 11: 1 – 11; Luke 2: 1 – 5

If you and I could have picked up the Jerusalem Post Newspaper on this day, what might have we read in the headlines of the day?

  • “Ceasar’s tax decree create scarce accommodations for travelers”
  • “Herod decrees new taxes”
  • “Roman Army moves on Gaul
  • Cairo School to open”

And more of the same…But was anyone noticing the movement of a young couple riding a donkey from their home town in Nazareth to Bethlehem, because that was where Joseph was originally from? Did anyone notice?

Today, all around the world, people will gather in churches, cathedrals, basilicas, and even houses, and the purpose of this – to celebrate the coming of Christ Jesus, our Savior. John Piper wrote this meditation for Christmas Eve and it’s worth contemplating on all over again.

A BIG GOD FOR LITTLE PEOPLE - Luke 2:1-5

Have you ever thought what an amazing thing it is that God ordained beforehand that the Messiah be born in Bethlehem (as the prophecy in Micah 5 shows), and that He so ordained things that when the time came, the Messiah's mother and legal father were living in Nazareth, and that in order to fulfill His word and bring two little people to Bethlehem that first Christmas, God put it in the heart of Caesar Augustus that all the Roman world should be enrolled each in his own town?

Have you ever felt, like me, little and insignificant in a world of 4 billion people, where all the news is of big political and economic and social movements and of outstanding people with lots of power and prestige? If you have, don't let that make you disheartened or unhappy. For it is implicit in Scripture that all the mammoth political forces and all the giant industrial complexes, without their even knowing it, are being guided by God, not for their own sake but for the sake of God's little people. The little Mary and the little Joseph who have to be got from Nazareth to Bethlehem. God wields an empire to bless His children. Do not think, because you experience adversity, that the hand of the Lord is shortened. It is not our prosperity but our holiness that He seeks with all His heart. And to that end He rules the whole world. As Proverbs 21:1 says: "The king's heart is a stream of water in the hand of the Lord; He turns it wherever He will." He is a big God for little people and we have great cause to rejoice, that unbeknownst to them, all the kings and presidents and premiers and chancellors of the world follow the sovereign decrees of our Father in Heaven that we, the children, might be conformed to the image of His Son, Jesus Christ.

Silent Night, Holy Night.

All is calm, All is bright,

Round yon virgin,

Mother and child,

Holy Infant

so tender and mild,

Sleep in Heavenly Peace

Sleep in Heavenly Peace

Silent night, holy night.
Shepherds quake at the sight
Glories stream from heaven afar
Heavenly hosts sing Alleluia!

Christ, the Saviour is born
Christ, the Saviour is born

Silent night, holy night.

Son of God, loves pure light,

Radiant beams from thy holy place

With the dawn of redeeming grace

Jesus, Lord at thy birth

Jesus, Lord at thy birth


Monday, December 25th, Christmas Day

Reading: Luke 2: 6 – 20

Merry Christmas to you!

Advent is a time of waiting, and now our waiting is over…almost. We have waited through these days to meditate on the coming of Christ, our Lord. We have rehearsed God’s Promise to us, and understood the Faith, the Hope, and the Love of this journey – both ones – the one from God through his son to this world, and the one from our heart back to God in salvation.

As you open presents and exchange the joy of what God has done in your life, remember the gift of God that has given us in the birth of His Son.

“For God so loved the world, that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever would believe in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.” (John 3:16)

The angels message that first Christmas day is worth repeating: Luke 2:14 (NIV)
14 "Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace to men on whom his favor rests."

So, who are these people on whom his favor rests?

The shepherds…common, everyday workers…coffee shop, waiters, janitors, secretaries, bus drivers, and more of the plain and the nameless. His favor rests on all of those who receive the gift of his life.

You.

Me.

Merry Christmas beloved…Merry Christmas friend!

Joy to the world, the Lord is come!
Let earth receive her King;
Let every heart prepare Him room,
And Heaven and nature sing,
And Heaven and nature sing,
And Heaven, and Heaven, and nature sing.

Joy to the world, the Savior reigns!
Let men their songs employ;
While fields and floods, rocks, hills and plains
Repeat the sounding joy,
Repeat the sounding joy,
Repeat, repeat, the sounding joy.

No more let sins and sorrows grow,
Nor thorns infest the ground;
He comes to make His blessings flow
Far as the curse is found,
Far as the curse is found,
Far as, far as, the curse is found.

He rules the world with truth and grace,
And makes the nations prove
The glories of His righteousness,
And wonders of His love,
And wonders of His love,
And wonders, wonders, of His love.


One way of really enriching our Advent journey is to keep in mind the three comings of Jesus, and how they relate to one another.

Jesus was born into our history - at a fixed point in time in the past. Jesus comes to us now, in a whole variety of ways. Jesus promised that he will come again in glory, at the end of time.

The Incarnation: Jesus has come.

This is not the coming we await. The first coming of Jesus has already happened. Our preparation to celebrate his birth is the occasion for our deeper reflection. On the first level, it is so important that we really let ourselves experience the power of the Incarnation: God is with us. That God became one of us means that "human" is one of the ways God can be. The deeper we contemplate this mystery the more we enter into the grace of "God with us." The more we let ourselves be touched by this mystery, the more we see the connection between Christmas and Easter: all of this is "for me" - for my salvation - to free me from the power of sin and death.

My Life Now: Jesus comes to me.

When we open our hearts and our mouths and plead, "Come, O Lord," we are most directly experiencing our desire for the Lord to come to us and touch us with the grace of salvation - that we might live it with greater freedom and peace. Jesus is present whenever we need him to be present: actually, whenever we turn to him - even with empty hands. Jesus is alive and active in us when we read God's Word and let it into our hearts. Jesus promised to be present with us whenever two or three are gathered together in his name. And, we know Jesus comes to us whenever our sacrifices and our sufferings unite us with his own mission. Advent is a special time to experience our longing for the presence of Jesus with us now - in all the places we need him most.

Our Future: Jesus comes again, in glory.

One of the most transforming graces of Advent is given us as our longing deepens. The more grateful we become for how God saved us in Jesus, the more deeply we enter into the mystery of how Jesus is with us now. The closer we come to experiencing joy at how our Lord, Jesus Christ came into our world, faithful to God and faithful to our life journey in the flesh, the closer we come to experiencing the mystery of salvation in our everyday lives. And, as our longing is filled with the utter fullness of God's gift to us, we begin to long with the ultimate freedom: we long to be with him in God. We live more at home in this world because our God made a home in this world. But the whole story draws us to a complete picture of who we are and where we belong. Then our prayer begins to change, in our hearts and on our lips. We still are singing, "Come, Lord, Jesus!" but our song is transformed into the free and complete song of the lover: "Come, and take me with you."

Now we watch for the day,
hoping that the salvation promised us will be ours
when Christ will come again
in his glory.

Saturday – December 23rd

Today is the last day of this week, but there are two more Advent meditations to follow – Christmas Eve and Christmas Day. Thus I’m going to make this a light day – one reading, and a time to express this in prayer.

Reading: Matthew 1: 18 – 23

Consider this: Joseph is the man God chooses to be his Son’s earthly father. Why? Perhaps a clue up front is that Joseph was obedient enough to God’s word that he was going to give Mary a release from their marriage commitment, and humble enough to be teachable when God showed him what was going on.

A Prayer time might be to ask God to help us be both obedient and humble in our response to Him.


Sunday – December 24th, Christmas Eve

Readings: Isaiah 11: 1 – 11; Luke 2: 1 – 5

If you and I could have picked up the Jerusalem Post Newspaper on this day, what might have we read in the headlines of the day?

  • “Ceasar’s tax decree create scarce accommodations for travelers”
  • “Herod decrees new taxes”
  • “Roman Army moves on Gaul
  • Cairo School to open”

And more of the same…But was anyone noticing the movement of a young couple riding a donkey from their home town in Nazareth to Bethlehem, because that was where Joseph was originally from? Did anyone notice?

Today, all around the world, people will gather in churches, cathedrals, basilicas, and even houses, and the purpose of this – to celebrate the coming of Christ Jesus, our Savior. John Piper wrote this meditation for Christmas Eve and it’s worth contemplating on all over again.

A BIG GOD FOR LITTLE PEOPLE - Luke 2:1-5

Have you ever thought what an amazing thing it is that God ordained beforehand that the Messiah be born in Bethlehem (as the prophecy in Micah 5 shows), and that He so ordained things that when the time came, the Messiah's mother and legal father were living in Nazareth, and that in order to fulfill His word and bring two little people to Bethlehem that first Christmas, God put it in the heart of Caesar Augustus that all the Roman world should be enrolled each in his own town?

Have you ever felt, like me, little and insignificant in a world of 4 billion people, where all the news is of big political and economic and social movements and of outstanding people with lots of power and prestige? If you have, don't let that make you disheartened or unhappy. For it is implicit in Scripture that all the mammoth political forces and all the giant industrial complexes, without their even knowing it, are being guided by God, not for their own sake but for the sake of God's little people. The little Mary and the little Joseph who have to be got from Nazareth to Bethlehem. God wields an empire to bless His children. Do not think, because you experience adversity, that the hand of the Lord is shortened. It is not our prosperity but our holiness that He seeks with all His heart. And to that end He rules the whole world. As Proverbs 21:1 says: "The king's heart is a stream of water in the hand of the Lord; He turns it wherever He will." He is a big God for little people and we have great cause to rejoice, that unbeknownst to them, all the kings and presidents and premiers and chancellors of the world follow the sovereign decrees of our Father in Heaven that we, the children, might be conformed to the image of His Son, Jesus Christ.

Silent Night, Holy Night.

All is calm, All is bright,

Round yon virgin,

Mother and child,

Holy Infant

so tender and mild,

Sleep in Heavenly Peace

Sleep in Heavenly Peace

Silent night, holy night.
Shepherds quake at the sight
Glories stream from heaven afar
Heavenly hosts sing Alleluia!

Christ, the Saviour is born
Christ, the Saviour is born

Silent night, holy night.

Son of God, loves pure light,

Radiant beams from thy holy place

With the dawn of redeeming grace

Jesus, Lord at thy birth

Jesus, Lord at thy birth


Monday, December 25th, Christmas Day

Reading: Luke 2: 6 – 20

Merry Christmas to you!

Advent is a time of waiting, and now our waiting is over…almost. We have waited through these days to meditate on the coming of Christ, our Lord. We have rehearsed God’s Promise to us, and understood the Faith, the Hope, and the Love of this journey – both ones – the one from God through his son to this world, and the one from our heart back to God in salvation.

As you open presents and exchange the joy of what God has done in your life, remember the gift of God that has given us in the birth of His Son.

“For God so loved the world, that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever would believe in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.” (John 3:16)

The angels message that first Christmas day is worth repeating: Luke 2:14 (NIV)
14 "Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace to men on whom his favor rests."

So, who are these people on whom his favor rests?

The shepherds…common, everyday workers…coffee shop, waiters, janitors, secretaries, bus drivers, and more of the plain and the nameless. His favor rests on all of those who receive the gift of his life.

You.

Me.

Merry Christmas beloved…Merry Christmas friend!

Joy to the world, the Lord is come!
Let earth receive her King;
Let every heart prepare Him room,
And Heaven and nature sing,
And Heaven and nature sing,
And Heaven, and Heaven, and nature sing.

Joy to the world, the Savior reigns!
Let men their songs employ;
While fields and floods, rocks, hills and plains
Repeat the sounding joy,
Repeat the sounding joy,
Repeat, repeat, the sounding joy.

No more let sins and sorrows grow,
Nor thorns infest the ground;
He comes to make His blessings flow
Far as the curse is found,
Far as the curse is found,
Far as, far as, the curse is found.

He rules the world with truth and grace,
And makes the nations prove
The glories of His righteousness,
And wonders of His love,
And wonders of His love,
And wonders, wonders, of His love.

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