Skip to main content

Advent 1--Are you Ready?

            It’s the first week of Advent and no one expects you to be ready for Christmas, but if you are not ready for Advent you will miss this amazing spiritual oasis in the middle of a season full of pressure, empty promises and stomach aches.  The Advent Season begins with HOPE.  You light the first candle hoping in the promises of the prophets of old that have yet to be fulfilled—His second coming to rule the world in peace, and the ones that were fulfilled in the birth, life, death and resurrection of Jesus on earth.
            If you live your life focused on the words of Jesus, Advent Season might show you that you are ready.  Jesus didn’t create a church calendar.  It was put together by our church fathers who wanted to give us a way to focus on the life of Christ through special Feast Days and Seasons that celebrate Jesus’ life.  We definitely need it and it is biblical.  They followed the pattern of a calendar year that God Himself set up for us in the seasons by giving us spiritual seasons to deepen our intimacy with Christ. 
            In the spiritual season of Advent we are asked to focus on the first and second coming of Jesus.  During Advent, we prepare our hearts for the first coming of Christ that we celebrate on the Feast of Nativity--Christmas which marks the birth of Christ and all the miracles surrounding that world-changing event.  The Church Fathers were not fighting a culture that creates pandemonium and mayhem out of a church celebration without a church.  They were simply aware of how easily we forget that the birth and second coming of Jesus Christ are two of the most significant events that are spoken about in the Bible. 
            Jesus only gave us instructions about His second coming.  He didn’t say, Take a season of Advent to think about My return to earth.  Rather He said, You must be ready all the time (Luke 12:40).  It’s doubtful that He will return during Advent, but He might.  What is hoped through focusing your heart on Advent is that you will keep looking every day of your life.
            If you are looking for a scripture to start your Advent season, let me recommend Luke 12:35-48.  There you will find Jesus’ own words about preparing your heart for Advent.  He advises that we be looking for His second coming as a good servant looks for His Master to return home after a long journey to a distant country.  We should get up in the morning and think, What if this is the day that Jesus comes back for me?  What has He asked of me in keeping His home ready for His return?  Now that is real hope.
            In fact, that is a wonderful spiritual discipline to practice in the Advent Season and beyond.  Look at each day as if it were to be the day that Jesus returns and make each decision for His glory.  Now human nature may cause some to think, If that is the case then I will eat, drink and be merry.  Christians have been known to react this way (The Thessalonians); however, that is not the idea.  Rather, consider what God has asked of you to help make His house ready for His second coming. 
            One thing Jesus promises about His return is that He will come when we least expect Him.    Luke 12:40 says, You also must be ready, because the Son of Man will come at an hour when you do not expect him.  Honestly, I don’t expect Him right now as I am writing this devotion to share with you.  I do know that He has called me to write this weekly inspiration.  Writing each week is one of the ways I hope for His return.  What will you do today that is prompted by God?  Those are the ways you practice Advent.  
Light the first Advent Candle:  Read Jesus’ own words about our hope and expectation in Luke 12:35-48.  Also here are the more traditional readings for the first week of Advent:  Isaiah 11:1-10; Luke 1:26-38; Isaiah 7:10-14; Matthew 1:18-24.
Copyright © 2011.  Deborah R. Newman www.teatimeforyoursoul.com  All Rights Reserved.

Comments

  1. Wonderful thoughts Deb. As a "newbie" to the liturgical side of worship I have never really paid much attention to the calendar, but have been toying with getting a Book of Prayer and using it as my daily quiet time. I think you just nudged me into it. Now I have my New Years Resolution and it's not even December!

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Fifth Monday in Lent through Palm Sunday

Fifth Monday in Lent: Righteousness Needed Jesus is all about bringing us righteousness yet we are too worldly focused to think we have much of a need for righteousness. Most of us think we need healing or exciting miracles. We might try to get a little righteousness by going to church on Sunday and giving some spare change to a beggar. God sees the bigger picture and knows that there is nothing which we are more bankrupt than righteousness. He sees that we are totally incapable of getting the righteousness we need through our own actions, so He sent Jesus to give us His righteousness through His sacrificial work on the cross. Lent is a season of repentance and preparation for the Easter celebration. No matter how sacrificial your Lenten fast, it could never be enough to earn your righteousness. I have been practicing Lent for   years, and every year at the end of my fast I come face to face with how far I am from righteousness. Some of the first recorded words of Jesus in th

A Pilgrimage that Started with Tears

                Who would think I would shed tears deciding to set out on a wonderful journey that I have longed to take for many years?   Before I was ready to fully accept God’s invitation for a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, I had to journey to a place of agreement between what my soul wanted and what the Lord wanted for me.   For years I have been declining opportunities to travel to Israel—not because I didn’t want to go but because I wanted to go with my husband by my side.   I know that God could have arranged that for me, but instead He asked me to accept that He wanted me to be willing to go and leave everything behind.   When I was asked to make a decision about going on a Pilgrimage to Jerusalem, God gave me this verse in answer to my prayer -- Debi, observe therefore all the commands I am giving you today, so that you may have the strength to go in and take over the land that you are crossing the Jordan to possess (Deuteronomy 11:8).   I decided through tears that I would go on

The Troubled Christian Life

              When I surrendered my vocation to God back when I was seventeen-years-old, He called me to a life of walking through the most broken realities that people face in a first-world country.  The verse that led me to this life was 2 Corinthians 1:3-4.  Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of compassion and the God of all comfort,   who comforts us in all our troubles, so that we can comfort those in any trouble with the comfort we ourselves receive from God .  I began counseling others at the ripe age of 23.  I looked like I could have still been in high school, and the patients given to me rightly had their doubts.  I had my doubts too.  I knew that I didn’t have the wisdom to counseling people double my age.  I didn’t have a lot of experience of deep wounds either so I couldn’t talk to them from my own experiences of deep brokenness.  I was only helpful to them because I relied totally on the word of God and the presence of the Holy Spirit