Advent: A Very Bread Christmas Service
How are you coping? Culture tells us that life is what we make it. It’s down to us. And yet, Christianity says we’re not designed for self-realization, so the pressure to be someone or do something has lead to a crisis of identity. At Christmas, God says something different. Life is what He makes it. And in Jesus, God comes close to us - to tell us who we are, what we’re for, and to share himself with us. When we let the one true living God in, all our questions of identity and purpose find their resolution in him. We know who we are. And we know what we’re for.
Advent: Through the Eyes of Joseph
In this talk, we look at the nativity story through the eyes of Joseph - the quiet, faithful carpenter, and adoptive parent of Jesus Christ. Even in the version that tells his side, Joseph functions like a “minor character”. He’s low on the call sheet. He sings in the ensemble. He’s an extra. He, very literally, has no lines. Yet Joseph never tries to take glory. He has all of the power, and still, everything he does shows kindness, humility, and obedience to God. Joseph goes to bed one night and meets with an angel in his dreams, telling him that the baby to be born is not only a supernatural work of the Spirit, but will be known as Immanuel, God with us. In revealing this to him, God shows that he is not only Immanuel, God with the world, but he is also Immanuel, God with Joseph. Immanuel is God seeing us, knowing us, and then meeting us exactly where we are. Not where we appear to be, not where we want to be, but where we are, with what we need.
By Tavia Grubbs
Advent: Destined for Joy
The announcement of Jesus’ arrival comes to an unlikely group: the shepherds. This rag-tag group were often looked down on, forgotten, and considered to be far from religious or noble. Yet the greatest announcement in the history of the world comes to them, not to the rich and powerful but to the lowly shepherds. It suggests to us that God hasn’t forgotten the least of us – to him, we are unforgettable. We are favored, not forgotten by the Messiah who ushers in the age of favor and forgiveness. When we grasp it, it causes joy in us to overflow. Joy that sustains in hardship. Joy that is rooted in God’s faithfulness. We were destined for joy.
Advent: God with Us
When we’re able to strip back the overly-familiar parts of the story of Christmas it reveals the heart of the Christian faith. Something isn’t quite right with us and our world. We’re not always the people we want to be. And we’ve not always treated ourselves, other people and our world as we should. As silly as it may sound, is not our recent entertainment of going ‘full on goblin mode’, at least in part an admittance that everything else we’ve tried to bring happiness and self-actualisation hasn’t quite got us to where we want to go? Christmas says what we’re in need of is not something from within us, but something from without. It’s the story of God coming in search of his people. He’s come to love us into full existence. It’s only when we know his love revealed in the person of his Son Jesus that we won’t want to ever be anyone else again. And it’s his love that lifts us up into healing, forgiveness, purpose and meaning. He it is who we’re looking for. It’s why we celebrate. We’re not alone. God is with us.
Advent: Peace
We don’t always do the church calendar thing, but sometimes it does seem to know a thing or two. Advent is all about allow ourselves to enter into the time of waiting that was the Hebrews existence for hundreds and hundreds of years. They know the messiah was coming to be the Prince of Peace, but they weren’t expecting the way he came to do it. We are not promised a peaceful life (ie - a life free of violence, persecution, conflict of tribulation) but we are promised the peace of his presence, that surpasses all understanding.
Advent: Hope in the Dark
This is the first Sunday of Advent. This time of year we reflect and celebrate the arrival of Jesus. He came into the world not to judge it but to renew it. The time leading up to his arrival was a dark one characterized by rebellion, injustice and a longing for wholeness. In the mist of this less than ideal scenario we read of Jesus’ coming as the one who brings light into the darkness. He does this in our lives, he runs into the darkness. His embodied presence and creative power means that we’re not overtaken by it because his light shines on us. This is our hope and it grows as we worship the One who can never be put out by the darkness.
Advent – Hope in the Messy
The timing of Jesus' arrival is worth noting, he comes at a height of imperial power, social unrest, and religious clashes all under a false peace. In the messiness of it all, Jesus is born in manger and of him it is declared 'Prince of Peace' and 'King'. This is something the writers of Matthew and Luke want to highlight because it shows that in our own lives, Jesus doesn't mind clashing with the things we've made kings, he isn't intimated by the mess in our personal lives, in our relationships, or in the world around us. He arrives in the midst of it all and we can know him to be the bringer of peace, and the King. This is the hope of Christmas.
Advent - What We All Need Right Now
What does everyone need right now? A bunch of hope. Which is what the whole of Christmas is about. It’s hope despite our circumstances. It’s hope even when the rest of the world is hopeless. Because this is hope that comes from outside this world. When the world is mundane, it’s miraculous. When the world is lonely, it's intimate. When the world is constrained, it’s free. And when the world is banal, it’s divine. This is what Jesus has come to earth to bring us and it’s ours if we want it!
Advent: Calling
Advent: Light
The prophet Isaiah foretells that the birth of Jesus will be like a light dawning upon a world in deep darkness. In a single moment, all instances of darkness - destroyed. But, if that’s true, why does is so often feel like we are still living in the shadows? In celebration of the first week of advent, let us consider what Jesus’ light is actually like, how it first shows up, and what it is that He comes to do.