For Your Planning Team
The Christian church’s liturgical calendar begins with the season of Advent. Faith communities intentionally adorn their worship spaces with a Hanging of the Greens ceremony, a precursor to Christmastide. The ceremony is held directly before the first Sunday of Advent, and it emphasizes symbols of everlasting life (circular evergreen wreath), the light of Christ (Advent candles), Chrismon symbols hung on the evergreen tree that “direct our attention to the nature and ultimate work of Christ and primary Advent themes.” These symbols can include the crow, descending dove, fish, Celtic cross, Jerusalem cross, shepherd's crook, orb, crown, fish, star, anchor, chalice, shell—all made in the colors of white and gold (purity/perfection, majesty/glory), and clear lights. The Hanging of the Greens ceremony also creates a sacred space that builds or strengthens an ethos of koinonia, a community intentionally setting forth on a divine journey with God and with one another.
Planning Notes
The season of Advent is a highlight of any congregation’s life. It is a time of joy, color, light, and anticipation. And it is a time of worship. This is a season that calls us to fall to our knees in worship of the awesome God. Advent is the season where we remember that God chose to put on flesh and dwell among us. God reached down from incomprehensible heights to touch the life we live. And God chose to be born in the humblest of ways, in a manger, in a barn, or a cave, or on the side of the road. The Creator God Almighty crying in the prickly hay, fodder for animals. There is no proper response, other than worship.
At the same time, Advent is a reminder that there is more to come, that we are on a journey toward a new reality, a new way of being. Advent, from the Latin “venio” – coming and “ad” – to, is more about what is next than what was before. It is less a remembrance of the first coming and more an anticipation of the completion of the promised kingdom. Yet, the seeds of the return and reign of Christ were planted in the first coming, which is why the power of Christmas is so strong. Our constant struggle is to pay attention to the need of the church to anticipate the return of Christ and the fulfillment of the promised kingdom, when our congregations are longing to celebrate Christmas and all the beauty and tradition and sentiment of that season—especially since our culture has been pushing Christmas on us for months now. So, how do we live in the balance? How do we anticipate what is to come, even as we celebrate the traditions and the excitement and the wonder that is Christmas?
We suggest a journey. You’ve made journeys before in this season: the journey to Bethlehem; perhaps, the journey to Christmas. Perhaps this year, our horizons are a little farther and a little broader. Perhaps this is a journey to a place you have longed for and yet have never quite reached. Perhaps this is a journey you have heard about since you first became a follower of Jesus. And you are not alone; many have been on this journey and longing for this destination since the beginning of the people of God. So, they will be our partners on this journey, companions as we travel.
We’ve chosen to weave together the Gospel and the Hebrew Scripture passage in this Advent+ series. An occasional reference to the Epistle and the Psalter will appear, but we’ll stick primarily to those two texts each week. We’re calling this an Advent+ series because we have included suggestions for Christmas Eve, for the Sunday after Christmas, and for Watch Night. Your local traditions may make it hard to use the theme for those services, but we wanted to give the full scope of the season of anticipation and hope.
Journeying together this Advent+ season will be the whole family of God, the ones who occupy the seats beside you as you gather together for this shared experience. Present and not present, these are the ones who occupy your minds and hearts as you seek this new place, this new way of being together. Invariably, when you travel together, some are more anxious than others. Some may prefer to stay where they are. Others are so hopeful of what is to come that they may begin to overwhelm the rest. Some just want the journey to be over. Others are content to enjoy the ride. Journeys impact us in different ways. But even with the best of intentions and the joy of community, it won’t be long before someone says, “Are we there yet?”
This season, let that question not be a whine from an uncomfortable back seat or an impatient traveler; let it be a plea for God to break into our reality and bring us the glorious fulfillment of the promise; let it be a hope that God remains in charge, despite the trouble we see in the landscape through which we travel; let it be a call to work and worship in this season of light.
Are We There Yet?
Advent Candle Lighting Liturgy 2019
Reader One: Every journey faces the unknown. And anxiety can sometimes overwhelm us. There is too much to do; our lists are long; our calendars are filled up; we worry that something will go wrong, or we won’t end up in the right place or take the right route. Getting lost is a real possibility on a journey. And yet. We claim hope for the journey, because we follow the one who will travel with us and sustain us on the way.
Reader Two: Isaiah says that there is one who is to come who will be the fulfillment of all our hope. The Spirit of the Lord will rest on this one, the spirit of wisdom and understanding, the spirit of counsel and might, the spirit of knowledge and the fear of the Lord. We place our hope in this one.
Reader One: We light the candles of peace and of hope to give us strength for the journey.
(Light two candles on the wreath.)
Reader Two: Come, let us go up to the mountain of the Lord, that God may teach us the ways of peace and hope.
Congregation: Come, O Come, Emmanuel.
Advent Worship Liturgies (Upper Room 2019)
Speak: “Blessed be the Lord, the God of Israel, who alone does wondrous things” (Ps. 72:18).
Light the second candle for peace. Let us see peace in the Lord!
Read: Isaiah 11:1-10 and Romans 15:4-13
Reflect: Where do you see peace in Isaiah 11 and Romans 15? Where do you see signs of peace in an anxious world?
Engage: Slow down and reflect on your story. Bring your family together to share stories of gratitude and salvation.
Pray: Gracious God, we seek you everywhere with expectant eyes that invite us to see peace in the world today. Amen.
Liturgical Resources of the Season
Cynthia A. Wilson (copyright 2019)
CALL TO WORSHIP
Leader: God’s Spirit has led us here.
People: And where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is PEACE.
Leader: God’s Spirit has led us here.
People: And where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is HOPE.
Leader: God’s Spirit has led us here.
People: And where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is JOY.
Leader: God’s Spirit has led us here.
People: And where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is LOVE.
Leader: There’s a sweet, sweet Spirit in the place,
ALL: And we know that it’s the Spirit of the Lord!
CALL TO WORSHIP
Leader: The Liberator is on the way!
People: We’re watching and waiting.
Leader: The Liberator will arrive soon!
People: Blest is the One who comes in the name of the Lord.
Leader: Lift up your hearts; Lift up your heads,
People: So that the Liberator can come in.
Leader: We are watching; we are waiting; we are anticipating….
ALL: The Coming of our Liberator, The King of Glory, The Savior of the world!
BENEDICTION
People of God, we wait with hope; we wait with courage; we wait with joy unspeakable, full of glory; we wait with the assurance that The Liberator will come in power, in justice, and in peace. Go now, trusting and believing that it is so . . . in the name of Jesus, the Christ!
SYMBOLS OF THE SEASON
The Advent Wreath is circular and evergreen, signifying God’s eternity and endless mercy without end. The four candles represent Jesus’ light for a dark and sinful world and our call to reflect the light and grace of God in the world.
JAPANESE KANJI SYMBOLS FOR ADVENT
COLORS OF THE SEASON
The purple candle represents the penitent spirit. Some faith communities have replaced purple for blue (royalty) to distinguish Advent from the Lenten Season. The one pink or rose candle sometimes used to celebrate Gaudete Sunday (from the Latin word for “rejoice”) symbolizes joy. One of the four candles is lit for each Sunday of Advent. In the center is one white candle called the Christ Candle. It is traditionally lit on Christmas Eve or Day, where there is a service on these days.
Synonyms of the Season for Advent Prayers, Litanies, Calls to Worship, Benedictions: Arrival, Coming, Onset, Entrance, Visitation, Approach, Occurrence, Appearance
Planning January 2020 checklist:
- A Call to Prayer and Self-Denial – January -March
- Feast of the Holy Name of Jesus – January 1
- Epiphany Sunday/Epiphany of the Lord – January 5-6
- Human Trafficking Awareness Day – January 11
- Baptism of the Lord – January 12
- Week of Prayer for Christian Unity – January 18-25
- Human Relations Day – January 19
- The Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr’s Birthday Observance – January 20
- Ecumenical Sunday – January 26