SOUTHERN HEIGHTS CHRISTIAN CHURCH
  • Home
  • Discover
    • Our Vision
    • Beliefs
    • Our Staff and Leadership
  • Expect
  • Grow
  • Watch
  • Give
  • Blog
  • Contact

Blog

The First Advent Reading: A Prayer of War for Christmastime

11/29/2018

Comments

 
For this year in Advent, our church is reading through the contemporary Advent Collects in the Book of Common Prayer.

The Book of Common Prayer is a literary tradition spanning back to the time of the Reformation. It was a powerful tool that the Anglican Church used to shape its people around Christ.

Not quite a hymnal, but similar, the Book of Common Prayer was valuable as many saints from all around the world forsook the world, the flesh, and the devil and sought to make their lives look more like Jesus using this book.

We are not an Anglican Church, and we are not Anglican for some very important reasons. However, we do believe that, as far as this particular tool adheres to the Holy Scriptures, it is valuable for us to grow into Christ's image.

So for the month of December, I am going to be blogging on the various readings from the Sunday Readings, called a "Collect."

Each of these Collects is a prayer around a particular theme of Christmastime. The first one is a prayer that is shockingly eschatological (meaning it is about the end times). It is draped in the imagery of war and of the end times. Of that troubling and turbulent time to come, and of the peace which is on heaven and earth, good will to men. The peace of God only comes through the invasion of Christ. Needless to say, this is not your grandmother's Christmas! It reads as follows:
Picture
Almighty God, give us grace to cast away the works of darkness, and put on the armor of light, now in the time of this mortal life in which your Son Jesus Christ came to visit us in great humility; that in the last day, when he shall come again in his glorious majesty to judge both the living and the dead, we may rise to the life immortal; through him who lives and reigns with you and the holy Spirit, one God, now and forever, Amen.
This first, this first prayer, has three important sections to it. First, it has the present. Second, it places the present in light of the eternal. Third, it pleads on the basis of the Triune God. Let's deal with each one in turn.
Almighty God, give us grace to cast away the works of darkness​, and put on the armor of light, now in the time of this mortal life in which your Son Jesus Christ came to visit us in great humility
The first prayer of the Collect is a request for God to give us the grace of repentance. This is given a vivid flare by the contrast of darkness and light. We are invited through the Collect to ask God for grace to the task to be done. Christmastime, we learn, is not a time for pithy sentimentalisms. It is a time for war, a time when we embroider ourselves with the blood of the lamb. We desperately need the grace to fight this battle well. We need the armor of light, for the task at hand. This war requires work​. This war is the most recent flare up of an eternal battle. And the campaign was started when God the Son paradropped into the sleepy town of Bethlehem.

But the Son did not come as a mighty warrior, clothed in strength and armed with power. No, he came as a low-class carpenter, swaddled in the flesh of a babe. So great is this conquering Lord, that he will gather to himself those who come to him as his Son came to earth: the hesitant and humble, the bashful and bedraggled, the forgotten and forsaken, the unloved and untouched. He will carve his image into this forgotten stone of human misery. The chief weapon of Christmas war, we see, is the humiliation of God in the flesh of man.
that in the last day, when he shall come again in his glorious majesty, to judge both the living and the dead, we may rise to life immortal
Of course, this one who conquers through being killed, who defeats through death, who overthrows every power and name by being born in a backwater corner of a backwater province of the Roman Empire, will not come a second time so. Rather, the one who was born, lived, died, rose again, and ascended, will return on high. And when he does, he will gather himself the army of outcasts, and they, this messy mob gathered from the corner of every slum there ever was, will become as he is. At Christmastime, we look forward to the glory to be revealed in us. The glory of the angels on high, sweetly singing o'er the plain, will one day be ours!

No longer will we have sunken cheeks, canyons formed by the everflowing saline springs in our eyes, the bony arms, and look of those who are in a world not their own. Rather, we will have glorious majesty, life immortal, raised with the resurrected and ascended Lord. Christmastime is when we look at that manger, the place where the sheeps and the goats feed alike, and we see the Lamb standing as though he had been slain.
through him who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen.
The final stanza of this first prayer carries us into the eternal plan of the infinite, triune God. The humble will be come the high, the meek the majestic, the gentle the glorious. We who carry in our flesh the cross of Christ will burst forth in glorious day. But this only happens through the one who was humble to the point of death, who was meek to the point of flagellation, who was gentle as a lamb led to the slaughter. And this, this is what we celebrate at Christmas. The advent of the Son of God, conceived by the Holy Spirit, commissioned by His Father, sent from the foundation of the world, and who will one day rule over the world. The Triune God is the God of Christmas Time, he is in it and through it and with it and for it and against it all at once. The Lion of the Tribe of Judah comes to us as the Lamb of Bethlehem, that sleepy shepherd town.

​And nothing would ever be the same.
Comments

    Southern Heights Christian Church

    Come here for thoughts on how to follow Jesus in our every day life!

    Archives

    January 2022
    December 2021
    November 2021
    October 2021
    September 2021
    August 2021
    December 2018
    November 2018
    October 2018
    July 2018
    May 2018
    April 2018
    March 2018
    September 2017
    May 2017
    February 2017
    December 2016
    November 2016
    October 2016

    Categories

    All
    Advent
    Anglican
    Bible
    Biography
    Blog
    Book Of Common Prayer
    Candle
    Christ
    Christmas
    Church
    Compassionate
    Conversation
    Cross
    Depression
    DL Moody
    Eschatology
    Evangelism
    God
    Gospel
    Grace
    Growth
    Holiness
    Humility
    Hurt
    Legalism
    Light
    Love
    Moralism
    Moral Therapeutic Deism
    Pain
    Patience
    Paul
    Persecuted
    Prayer
    Prodigal
    Reading
    Reformation
    Resurrection
    Saints
    Salvation
    Scripture
    Shame
    Sin
    Study
    Suffering
    Thanksgiving
    The Father
    Theology
    Truth
    War

    RSS Feed

Need to talk? We would love to hear from you! Click here to contact us


​Telephone

​(765) 649-0849

Address​

5401 Madison Ave
​Anderson, IN 46013

Services

​Sunday School  :: 9 AM
Sunday Service :: 10:30 AM
Give Now
  • Home
  • Discover
    • Our Vision
    • Beliefs
    • Our Staff and Leadership
  • Expect
  • Grow
  • Watch
  • Give
  • Blog
  • Contact