Advent: The Season of Hope

Last Sunday I participated in lighting the first Advent candle in church. When I was a child, what I knew about Advent could be encapsulated in the song Mrs. Hammondtree taught all the kids in Sunday school to sing – 4 More Weeks ‘Til He Arrives.

advent candles - A Season of Hope - kimberlymitchell.us

Last Sunday I participated in lighting the first Advent candle in church. When I was a child, what I knew about Advent could be encapsulated in the song Mrs. Hammondtree taught all the kids in Sunday school to sing – 4 More Weeks ‘Til He Arrives.

It was a simple song, and meant to be sung with an echo. Near the beginning of the service each Sunday in Advent, the pastor called all the kids to the front of the huge sanctuary (at least it seemed huge at the time). The kids sang the words, and the rest of the church echoed them.

4 more weeks ’til he arrives.

He who filled and changed our lives.

Let the bells ring loud and clear,

Let the children shout and cheer.

Let all kinds of drums be heard,

Let all people get the word.

Let’s clap our hands and slap our thighs, raise our voices to the skies,

Sing and play our songs and drums, ’til that special baby comes.

4 more weeks til he arrives,

Hallelujah, Hallelujah,

Hallelujah, Hallelujah.

You can’t hear the tune or the echo in my head, but I promise you, it’s catchy. So catchy that I haven’t forgotten a word some thirty years later.

What is advent? Why do (some) churches celebrate it? It turns out, Advent is the first season in the traditional church calendar. I think it’s cool that looking forward to the arrival of Christ is the first church season, and it kicks off the year in December instead of January. I’d rather start my year in December, with all the festivities and joy of Christmas, instead of the winter blues January can bring.

christmas candle - Advent: A season of Hope - kimberlymitchell.us

Advent comes from the Latin word ‘advenire’ meaning ‘to come, coming.’ As my children’s song proclaimed, it’s about an arrival. Advent is the celebration of the long awaited birth of Christ, but it’s also the anticipation of the return of Christ. It’s a season of Hope, Love, Joy and Peace. Many churches light candles representing these aspects of Christ each Sunday in Advent, leading up to the lighting of the Christ candle.

Advent calendars have also become a common Christmas decoration. I remember looking forward to the day it was my turn to open the calendar when I was young. Since I was one of four children, that day didn’t come around too often in December! Advent calendars were traditionally used to mark the number of days before Christmas, and the celebration of the coming of Christ. You can find advent calendars with all sorts of decorations, from Santa, to snowmen, to Star Wars. Admittedly, many of the calendars have gotten away from their original intent to tell the story of Advent, but you can still find traditional advent calendars that tell the Christmas story, or you can make your own.

advent-calendar- Advent: A Season of Hope - kimberlymitchell.us

Advent Readings are another way to remember what the celebration of Christmas is all about. You can easily download a variety of different readings online, or if you prefer a book format, there are a number of advent books available as well. I’m trying out Advent readings this year and hoping it keeps me centered on what’s important in a holiday season that can feel busy and overly-commercialized.

This week we lit the candle of Hope. I’m feeling more hopeful this year as I look forward to another Christmas season, another celebration of the arrival of Christ and the anticipation that one day, Christ will come again.

How are you celebrating the season?

Christmas Tidings - Advent: A Season of Hope - kimberlymitchell.us

 

 

A “Ruff” Winter Storm

As we celebrate the first snow day of 2015 (finally!), I remember a winter storm that had a lot more bite to it.

Kimberly Christmas Bows
Yours Truly on Christmas morning 1980 something…

Christmas night, 1987, a freezing rain started hitting our raised deck. Still in the excitement of Christmas, we watched as the ice quickly glazed over the multi-colored Christmas lights on the deck railing until the lights cast a soft rainbow glow across the thickening ice.

After a day of Christmas gifts, holiday food and, miracle of miracles, a white Christmas, I could hardly sleep that night. I awoke to a fairy tale land. This wasn’t snow that crunched merrily underfoot and padded your fall when you slipped. Ice encased the trees, bowing the limbs to the breaking point. It covered the driveways and streets in its deadly glaze.

We tried sledding, but the ice was unpredictable. After a terrifying slide sideways down the hill, my sisters and I gave in and played Monopoly and watched Star Wars from the warmth of the living room. Its many windows gave us a view of the sparkling world outside while we lounged in front of the fire.

That night, Mom let our big dog, Ruffy, off leash as usual. The black Gordon Setter liked to roam the neighborhood for an hour before returning home for the night. At our house, barking dogs were a given. As we watched another movie, though, we realized Ruffy was using his high-pitched Lassie bark to tell us something was wrong in his world.

“Go see where the dog is,” my mother said. I went to the front porch and listened. Ruffy’s bark was coming from “the woods,” the grove of trees covering the front half of our acre lot that dropped steeply into a ravine.

Ruffy
Ruffy

Ruffy’s bark came from the very bottom of that ravine. I carefully tiptoed over the ice to the edge of yard and peered into the darkness. “Ruffy?” I called.

An answering bark came from below. I spotted his black form scrabbling on the hard, frozen ice of the creek at the bottom of the ravine. I went inside and informed the family Ruffy was stuck in the creek bed and couldn’t get back up the steep hillside to the house.

What followed was a dramatic rescue event. We got a rope and tied it to a tree, then threw it down into the darkness. I started to slide down the hill on my bottom and quickly lost control, rough riding it over rocks and tree roots until I hit the bottom right next to the dog. He greeted me enthusiastically, hot dog breath in my face and fluffy tail wagging. I looked back up the hill to where Mom and Dad stood at the precipice, peering down anxiously.

“I’m okay,” I called out and gulped. “We’re going to get you out of here,” I reassured the dog and myself. First I tried pushing, but an eighty pound dog being pushed by an eighty pound kid up a a frozen hillside doesn’t work. After we slid back several times, my parents tried a new tactic.

My twin came sliding down with several towels. We started placing towels in front of the dog. Once Ruffy stepped on it, we could move him forward and place another towel in front of him. It provided just enough traction. Lindsay and I alternated who moved the towel, hauling ourselves up the rope inches at a time. The other stayed behind the dog to help push him to the next towel, then fling it forward for the next step. We inched up that icy hillside, two girls and a dog.

Finally, the ground began to level out. We didn’t have to cling to the rope to keep from sliding back down. Ruffy barked impatiently. When we got close enough, Mom reached down and grabbed his collar, helping him up the last few feet. Lindsay and I sat on the small railroad tie wall that marked the edge of the yard and looked warily down the icy slope while Ruffy barked joyfully and wagged his tail. The world still looked like a winter fairy tale, but I had a new respect for how slick and dangerous that beauty could be.

Christmas Snow on our deck.
Christmas Snow on our deck.