Advent is a season of anticipation and expectation. My faith tradition marks the four Sundays of Advent by lighting four candles, each symbolizing a different theme. While there are slight variations, four that are quite common among many denominations are hope, peace, joy, and love. This past Sunday we lit the first Advent candle.
If ever we were in need of hope, it is now.
And yet, the pandemic rages on and the race for a vaccine is far from over.
If ever we were in need of peace, it is now.
And yet, the battle for the better angels of our collective nature rages on.
If ever we were in need of joy, it is now.
And yet, the days grow shorter and the nights longer, shrouding our outer world with the same darkness that threatens our inner light.
If ever we were in need of love, it is now.
And yet, we must choose loneliness over love as we cannot gather with those we love the most because we love them the most.
We light an Advent candle to symbolize the hope of better days to come and the despair of how long it might take for them to get here. Both are true.
We light an Advent candle to symbolize the peace that passes all understanding and the battles that make no sense. Both are true.
We light an Advent candle to symbolize joy to world and the sorrow that is engulfing it. Both are true.
We light an Advent candle to symbolize the love that is all around us and the loneliness because those we love are not. Both are true.
Advent 2020 is as much a season of opposites as it is of anticipation. Hope and despair, peace and strife, joy and sorrow, love and loneliness.
We light the candles, because both are true.
(With gratitude to Pastor Laura Robinson)