Daily Reflection

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November 27

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First Sunday of Advent

Reflection

Each day is growing shorter as we are experiencing the darkest days of the year. Once the earth begins its journey back toward the sun, and, even as we face the barren, cold days of winter, little by little, the days become brighter. Advent engages us in this mystery of waiting, the balance of the visible and invisible, the tangible and intangible, dormancy and life. For us, this patience in paradox is the experience of Advent. It is the paradox that God can be expressed through what is human.  It holds the vision of a creation that is whole and integrated where our spirits are set free, our blindness, deafness, and violence are healed, and we live in hope.  We bring into our Advent reflections the needs of this earth, the cries of the hungry, the suffering, the poor and the oppressed, the pain of all who are lonely and unloved, the longing among all for unity and goodwill, and the yearnings of earth’s people for peace. It calls us to be patient in the darkness even as we work to enflesh the promise that the light of Jesus brings: that all people and all things can grow into the unity and peace of God’s reign

Prayer

A people in darkness have seen a great light.
Isaiah 9:22

Action

Create an Advent wreath to ritualize these four weeks of advent. Let it be a reminder for you to reflect on the deeper reasons and values you hold that underlie the demands made on you as you prepare for Christmas.

Suggested Readings

It is the hour now for you to awake from sleep.
For our salvation is nearer now than when we first believed;
the night is advanced, the day is at hand.
Romans 13:11

The time of Advent that we begin again today returns us to the horizon of hope, a hope that does not disappoint because it is founded on the Word of God. 
Pope Francis

Into this world, this demented inn in which there is absolutely no room for him at all, Christ comes uninvited.
Thomas Merton

At this Christmas when Christ comes, will He find a warm heart? Mark the season of Advent by loving and serving the others with God’s own love and concern.
Mother Teresa

One of the essential paradoxes of Advent: that while we wait for God, we are with God all along, that while we need to be reassured of God’s arrival, or the arrival of our homecoming, we are already at home. While we wait, we have to trust, to have faith, but it is God’s grace that gives us that faith. As with all spiritual knowledge, two things are true, and equally true, at once. The mind can’t grasp paradox; it is the knowledge of the soul.
Michelle Blake, The Tentmaker

The season of Advent means there is something on the horizon the likes of which we have never seen before… What is possible is to not see it, to miss it, to turn just as it brushes past you. And you begin to grasp what it was you missed, like Moses in the cleft of the rock, watching God’s [back] fade in the distance. So stay. Sit. Linger. Tarry. Ponder. Wait. Behold. Wonder. There will be time enough for running. For rushing. For worrying. For pushing. For now, stay. Wait. Something is on the horizon.
Jan L. Richardson

Take time to be aware that in the very midst of our busy preparations for the celebration of Christ’s birth in ancient Bethlehem, Christ is reborn in the Bethlehems of our homes and daily lives. Take time, slow down, be still, be awake to the Divine Mystery that looks so common and so ordinary yet is wondrously present.
Edward Hays

Christmas has lost its meaning for us because we have lost the spirit of expectancy. We cannot prepare for an observance. We must prepare for an experience.
Handel Brown

When Christ entered our world, he didn’t come to brighten our Decembers, but to transform our lives.
Rich Miller

Let’s approach Christmas with an expectant hush, rather than a last-minute rush.
Anonymous