Entering Advent, Entering Light

The life of faith turns our ideas upside down.

As we entered a new church year this past weekend, we moved out of the liturgical color of green. When I sit at traffic light and see the light turn green, I – in my impatience – start talking to the driver ahead of me: “Okay, driver who hasn’t  instantly accelerated (thereby slowing down my effort to get where I’m going), green means take your foot off your brake and put your foot on the accelerator.  Green means go.”

Instead of getting the green light to go full speed ahead during Lent, we shift into purple.

“Great,” we might be tempted to say.  “Purple is the color for royalty.  We shift into royal gear.”

Not so fast.  During Advent, we are invited to slow down.  Further, it is not us who is the royalty.

On the first Sunday of Advent, we heard in the second reading – Romans 13: 11-14 – to waken from our sleep.  We heard to throw off the works of darkness and to put on the armor of light.  We heard in the Gospel that we know neither the day nor the hour when Christ will return.  We await in watchfulness.

For all this upside-downness, turning to Christ and Christ’s royal return really does turn our life upside-down. A right-side-up, as we discover.

“For it is no longer I, but Christ who lives in me”- Galatians 2:20.  When we let Christ live in us, he transforms our very being (during this time of both waiting and living anew during the Catholic both/and!).  We become a new creation.  The light of Christ – during this darkest time of the geographic year (for those of us in the Northern hemisphere) – transforms our very being. 

We are a week past Christ the King.  It is Christ who is the royalty.  We, as servants, must learn to serve.  The more we learn to live in faith’s juxtapositions, the more God leads us into the fullness of life that God intends for us. (Also, the people who know me and who read this blog remind me occasionally that I sometimes grow into the concepts I write about slower than I write about them. Humility is good for us!)

Kim Burkhardt blogs about faith at The Hermitage Within. Thank you for reading this faith blog and for sharing it with your friends. While you are here, please feel welcome to provide support to sustain this blog ($$).


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