Advent Confusion
By Steve Manskar
When the church truncates Advent and reduces it to syrupy, sentimental waiting and preparing for the birth of Jesus in your heart it annually misses the one season of the liturgical calendar the focuses on the destination toward which this world is moving.
Laurence Hull Stookey says this much better than I can in his book Calendar: Christ's Time for The Church: "The beginning of the liturgical year takes our thinking to the very end of things. For 'end' means not only the 'end of time,' but the central purpose or goal of creation. We are not aimlessly wandering in a wilderness, even though we may be tempted to think so. Rather, history is headed somewhere by direction (though not dictation) from God. It is necessary that the liturgical year begin with this focus on a central, holy intention; for otherwise the story of jesus, which is about to be rehearsed from conception and birth to death and resurrection, may seem less than what it is: the deliberate fulfilling of divine purpose , worked out through historical process. Only this focus on the central purpose of God in history can keep the story of Jesus from falling into the superstitious or almost magical understandings that often afflict the Christian community, on the one hand, or into the trivialization and irrelevance that characterize secular interpretation, on the other hand."
If the church is to be missional, which means that it is engaged in and participating with God's mission for the world, then it needs to take Advent seriously. A missional church needs to remember and rehearse annually the goal that is before us: the reign of God on earth as it is in heaven. When we begin the liturgical year focused on the wrong things, it is no wonder we are where we find ourselves today.