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Tuesday, November 1, 2011

It’s not Christmas yet!


Already I have been witnessing Christmas decorations going up in the stores, and all I can think of is, “ITS NOT CHRISTMAS YET”. Thanksgiving and advent haven’t even come yet.  Thanksgiving was plenty early for me as a kid to get all excited about Christmas, and now stores are trying to make up for more conservative shoppers by pummeling them with Christmas shopping before they have even had a chance to buy after Halloween candy at half price.  It is no wonder that the message of Christmas is being lost in the hustle and bustle of Christmas preparation. 

This is what makes observing the church year so valuable, because it gives the year a structure that is centered on Jesus’ life and his teachings.  Each season contains a different focus that emphasizes a different part of his life or teaching that provides a full look at who Jesus is over the course of a year.  Even Advent, which comes before Jesus’ birth in the church year, helps us to understand Jesus’ life through the stories of John the Baptist and the predictions of Jesus’ coming.  We see Jesus through his life as a baby through Adulthood and also after the resurrection.  By using this focus, it helps prevent a one sided view of Jesus as his miracles, parables and teachings come out throughout the year, as seen in his teachings.  This also simplifies the year, by not having to decide what parts of Jesus’ teachings and ministry to cover in the Gospel lesson from week to week because they are all spread out in a carefully planned order, in order to present the full teachings of Jesus.

The use of the Liturgical year helps the modern church connect to the historical church through the passing down of simple traditions.  The church year did not spring up overnight, but slowly grew and evolved to help shape the worship of the church.  Easter was the first and most prominent season, because of the early church’s focus was upon the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ.  That mortal focus helped remind Christians each year of the salvific work that Jesus accomplished through his death on the cross and his resurrection from the tomb.  The rest of the year grew from the leading into and from Easter, giving the actions of Holy Week more context to Christians.  By going through the entire narrative of Jesus’ life the historic church was simply reading through the Gospel week to week.  This structure comes from the texts that we profess and it is good, right, and beneficial that we let the texts guide our worship life.

As we go through this November, we should remember Christmas and the joy that came on that first Christmas day, but we should remember that we have more than a day, we have an entire year that remembers the blessings and teachings of God in Christ Jesus.

God’s Blessings
Vicar Shupe

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