Advent Reflections Calendar
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Advent Reflections
We have needed to be distant physically, and have had to interpret speech and facial expressions which are muffled by the needed life saving mask. In this milieu, one finds solace in tradition, the comfortable home where we know we find meaning and sustinence. At this time of the year we anticipate the valued tradition of the Advent Devotional, a publication which has provided insight and joy over the course of many years.
We still uphold the tradition, but present it in this new way, and it is the hope that this Advent project will carry you through the days of waiting for the birth of Jesus with song, sound, word, sight and inspiration.. When we share in this way, we draw closer to each other. There is no threat of disease or worry of boundaries. We can be together as a family in faith.
We celebrate and thank those in our church family who have shared their gifts to us all in a variety of creative ways. You are invited to experience these expressions as you travel in your own way, at your own speed, through this Advent Reflections offering of 2020.
Day 1
Advent…..a Season of WaitingDeb Shold
- We wait at the intersection for the light to turn green
- We wait at the checkout line at the store
- We wait for the seeds we’ve planted to germinate and grow to produce their fruit or flower
- We wait for a pregnancy to run its course and deliver a healthy baby
- We wait for changes in the seasons
- We wait for a paper or test to be graded or for medical test results
- We wait until we’re old enough to drive or live on our own…..or retire
- We wait for God to answer our prayers
Meditate on these scripture passages:
“For God alone, O my soul, wait in silence, for my hope is from him. He only is my rock and my salvation, my fortress; I shall not be shaken. On God rests my salvation and my glory; my mighty rock, my refuge is God. Trust in him at all times, O people; pour out your heart before him; God is a refuge for us.” Psalm 62:5-8
“For the grace of God has appeared, bringing salvation for all people, training us to renounce ungodliness and worldly passions, and to live self-controlled, upright and godly lives in the present age, waiting for our blessed hope, the appearing of the glory of our great God and Savior Jesus Christ, who gave himself for us to redeem us from all lawlessness and to purify for himself a people for his own possession who are zealous for good works.” Titus 2:11-14
“…so Christ, having been offered once to bear the sins of many, will appear a second time, not to deal with sin but to save those who are eagerly waiting for him.” Hebrews 9:28
Day 2
Juli SwansonAdvent
Dawn
“the morning light from heaven…”
Alpha -Omega
“Is about to break upon us...”
Into Being
Born of Mary
“giving light to those who sit in darkness…”
Mercy and Grace Shines
Salvation through Forgiveness
Our Lord God
“Scattering the Proud,
Exalting the Humble,
Filling the Hungry,”
“Guiding us on the path of peace.”
Waiting no longer
God with us
Emmanuel
Inspired by Mary’s Magnificat and Zachariah’s prayer.
Miriam O'BertHope
Sally SundbergAll Earth Is Hopeful
Pastor Rick MylanderWay Better than the Miracle on 34th Street!
Baby Ruth was born back in June nearly eight weeks early, at a slight three pounds and thirteen ounces. Since then she has grown amazingly, to the point where she now seems to me on par with others her age, a lovely and dimple-smiley little one who charmed the worshipers the day of her baptism. During a visit several months back, her father showed me a photo I fell in love with; I asked for a copy thinking I might use it on my blog some day. When I came across it this week it arrested me, and spoke loudly that it was to be this month’s photo of the month.
But of course, there’s another reason why the photo has struck me, why I’ve found myself snatching views of Ruth this week and contemplating her incredible beauty and the wonder of her existence. We are thinking much these days about another baby, born also in something of emergency circumstances, but without the same sanitary hospital appurtenances, to an unwed teenaged mother and a mystified surrogate father in humble, obscure and unheralded conditions. Yet, all the world over, this child’s birth is celebrated this month. Faith in this baby, “…born a child and yet a king…” according to the Advent carol Come Thou Long Expected Jesus, has become the center of my life and that of countless others.
So I commend this Child to your consideration, he who would become the Prince of Peace -- for the world, for me, for Ruth, for you.
Merry Christmas!
Pastor Rick Mylander
(This writing was taken from a December blogpost years ago that Pastor Rick had done on his blog “Naturally: Reflections on Creation and Christian Spirituality.” He thought Bethlehem might enjoy it this year in Advent 2020. The blog can be found at www.rickmylander.com.)
Joyce DenhamNativity
Threefold love of old,
Triune ancient might,
By prophets told—
O Mighty Three,
Enclosed for me
Within such small
Humanity—
Star bursts in wonder,
Angel sings,
When Godhead moves
With earthly things.
(From Circle of Prayer, by Joyce Denham,
Lion Publishing, Oxford, 2003)
Music: William Byrd- O Lux Beata Trinitas
Rev. Joel JohnsonWe Pray You Draw Near
Clyde LundChristmas Reflection
Judy Cummings & Dianne JelleVirgin Slumber Song
Dave Swanson Flight To Egypt
Dave Swanson Flight To Egypt
Music: Respighi "The Flight Into Egypt"
Elsa Piatt Unto Us a Child
Elsa Piatt Unto Us a Child
And she brought forth her firstborn son, and wrapped him in swaddling clothes, and laid him in a manger; because there was no room for them in the inn.
(click picture for full size)
Song: The Friendly Beasts from Songs for Christmas by Sufjan Stevens
Santa Lucia Festival
St. Lucia's Day is now celebrated by a girl dressing in a white dress with a red sash round her waist and a crown of candles on her head. Small children use electric candles but from about 12 years old, real candles are often used!
A national Lucia is also chosen. Lucias also visit hospitals and old people's homes singing a song about St Lucia and handing out 'Pepparkakor', ginger snap biscuits.
A popular food eaten at St. Lucia's day are 'Lussekatts', St Lucia's day buns flavored with saffron and dotted with raisins which are eaten for breakfast.
Cheryll Fong Nu Tändas Tusen Juleljus
Cheryll Fong Nu Tändas Tusen Juleljus
Pastor Kari DubordNativity Story
Shirley NormanThou Didst Leave Thy Throne
“Thou didst leave thy throne and thy kingly crown, When thou camest to earth for me;
But in Bethlehem's home was there found no room
For thy holy nativity:
Oh, come to my heart, Lord Jesus! There is room in my heart for thee.”
Theresa LundChristmas Memory
So every year we made the 1,100 mile journey home for Christmas, even after we had three more children. Walking into the old house everything looked the same as it always had at Christmas. The tree twinkled with the same old lights that pa had used electrician tape to wrap around the cords to keep them intact. The Bethlehem scene my sister Ramona and I had painted on long butcher paper years ago was in its place on the wall behind the piano and the red and white bells were hanging in the archway. Mama's prune tarts, that looked like stars were ready to be consumed.
We all gathered on Christmas Eve... my brother, two sisters and their families and us. After a chicken dinner, it was time to gather for the opening of gifts, to be followed by singing Christmas carols with our sister, LaVerne, playing the piano. Then it was pa's turn at the piano. He'd had a stroke but it didn't take away his love of music which he played by ear. An immigrant from Finland, he was the only one in the family who was not a Christian and he clung to his socialist/communist ideas, believing Jesus was a made-up story. With his thick, stiff fingers he played the songs of his homeland to which Ramona and I sang. Suddenly he gathered our graduation pictures from the top of the piano and placed them on the music rack in front of him. Then as if in a world of his own, he sang his melancholy songs to us with tears streaming down his face. Memories, joys, regrets, sadness, fears... it was all there. With tears in my eyes, my heart ached as I silently watched... oh, pa, if you could only know the saving grace of Jesus.
Pastor Rick MylanderA Nature Hymn in a Surprising Place…
It is only in recent years, however, that I have appreciated the nature verses.
The nature verses? Yes. Perhaps something was lost to me in the song’s familiarity, or in the simple joy of singing something so magnificent at such a wonderful time of the year. But the more I ponder the nature verses the more astounding the song seems to me, absolutely brilliant lyrics. Enjoy the whole prayer of praise, but note especially the lyrics highlighted:
Joy to the world, the Lord is come!
Let earth receive her king.
Let every heart prepare him room
And heaven and nature sing!
Joy to the earth, the Savior reigns!
Let all their songs employ,
While fields and floods, rocks, hills and plains
Repeat the sounding joy!
No more let sins and sorrows grow,
Nor thorns infest the ground:
He comes to make his blessings flow
Far as the curse is found!
He rules the world with truth and grace,
And makes the nations prove
The glories of his righteousness
And wonders of his love!
It is really very, very good theology, actually. The last line of the first verse reminds us that all of heaven and all of nature join in the celebration. In other words, we sing, and, somehow, all creation sings with us: Jesus said that if the people of his day failed to praise him, the very rocks would not be able to hold back (Luke 19:40); Isaiah said that the trees of the field would clap their hands as God led us forth with such joy (Isaiah 55:12); and Paul said that all of creation even waits as on tiptoe to see the marvelous coming of the King of Kings (Romans 8:19)! Indeed, the “…fields and floods, rocks, hills and plains” CAN AND DO “repeat the sounding joy!”
And what’s that in verse three about a curse? You have to go all the way back to Genesis 3 for that one: the curse is the woe to the world that came with Adam and Eve’s sin in the Garden of Eden, and the salvation of the promised Messiah is the curse’s breaking as ‘far as the curse is found.’ Add to all this the fact that Watts was said to have had Psalm 98 in mind when he wrote it, and it is no wonder that the lyrics have lost nothing of their richness over the three centuries since their writing. Woe to the world? No, joy to the world!
I don’t know about you but I will sing this song lustily this season, thrilled with these thoughts. As you sing it, too, imagine all of creation joined in praise along with you!
Blessed Advent!
Pastor Rick Mylander
(This writing was adapted for Bethlehem’s 2020 Advent from a December blogpost Pastor Rick had done on his blog “Naturally: Reflections on Creation and Christian Spirituality.” The blog can be found at www.rickmylander.com.)
Becky AndersonMagnum Mysterium
Smells of potatis korv and Swedish meatballs were just beginning to waft from the kitchen when my dad, then pastor at North Park Covenant Church in Chicago, realized that he had forgotten the bag of chestnuts on his office desk when he had left work to come home.
“Do you girls think that you can go get them ?” he asked.
We girls were quite happy to oblige, since it was a tradition to roast these treats late after gifts had been opened, and also because we hadn’t seen each other for a long time and needed to catch up. At ten years old, we had important things to share.
Our walk was a short one. Since the parsonage was only a block from church, before we knew it, the lovely gothic style church loomed ahead, standing stately against its city backdrop. It felt strange that there were no people coming in or out. That would happen the following day-Christmas!
The door opened with a creak, and we stepped in just as it closed behind us, leaving us in profound darkness. I felt along the walls for the light switches, but to no avail.
Candy said, ” How can we get the chestnuts if we can’t see where we are going?” I replied, with false certainty, “I know where everything is in the church and my dad’s office is just straight down the aisle. Follow me.” We crept along, using the pews to guide us, hearing at each step, unidentifiable sounds -bumps, cracks, rumbles and sighs. I could feel my heart beating fast as I made my way down the seemingly endless aisle, with Candy silently shadowing me. The stained glass windows offered no help, as they revealed none of their colors or stories.
A blessing; the door was unlocked, so we opened it, spied the paper bag on the corner of the walnut desk, and grabbed it. The office door closed as we exited with an echoing slam, and then we did something I was told never to do: We ran as fast as we could down the aisle until we had reached the big oak doors. We pulled them open and shot out into the bracing welcome outside air. Candy and I looked at each other, but were both quiet while I, with hands shaking, wrestled the brass key into the lock. I jiggled the door, just to be sure, before we made our way back down the steps. The falling snow had already erased our previous footprints.
Halfway home, Candy said, ”Boy, that was sure spooky!” I said, “Yeah, I sure don’t know where all those sounds came from. Maybe the radiators?” “Radiators made all of those sounds?” she asked. “Probably not, “ I replied. “I sure hope dad didn’t forget anything else!”
Before we knew it, we approached the house which was glowing with lights and family and familiar sights and sounds, oozing with the magic of Christmas Eve, and we happily joined the party, chestnuts in hand.
This thread is one of embracing the mystery and the awe, especially in the quiet spaces of life. I am very curious, but I cannot, nor do I need to know all the answers. My understanding is so minute as compared to the imagination of the Creator of The Universe. Because of this, I have, and always will, welcome the unknown-yes-sometimes tinged with a bit of fear, and I rest in the trust that it is Love that ultimately comfort and enfold me, and it is love that shall enlighten me-when it is time!
Day 1
Goto first pagePastor Rick MylanderSolstice and its Illogical Contradiction
It is curious to me that the first day of winter is also the first day of winter’s expiration, its demise. One would think winter’s opening day would portend more of the same with nothing to contradict it, nothing but cold, dark barrenness, bleakness, or as the poet says, earth standing “…cold as iron, water like a stone.” We don’t call it the ‘dead of winter’ for nothing.
But there it is, the illogical and illuminating contradiction: light. Its return mocks winter, scoffs at the cold, derides the bleakness. Each day that follows, the sun rises just a little earlier and sets just a little later. Winter anticipates spring, death foresees life, dark predestines light, cold envisages warmth: these are the paradoxes of the seasonal change we call the winter solstice.
So it is no coincidence that the early church chose to recognize the solstice as the most appropriate time to celebrate the birth of Christ. Now, in actual fact, Jesus’ birth likely took place some time during what we call October. I am not certain how that is surmised, but it has something to do with the timing of Jewish festivals and the typical season a census would have been called by Rome (see Luke 2:1-4), not likely the dead of winter.
But no. ‘Indian Summer,’ beautiful as it is, just won’t do. To celebrate something as significant as the incarnation a time is needed that makes a statement, a time that belies its context, that refutes the cold, that calls out the stony spiritual stupor right in the midst of its bleak midwinter and long underwear. Solstice. Now there is an appropriate time to celebrate the Light of the world!
And so we do. We know there is no life without light. Light begets being, a commonly known biological fact.
The same is true in the spirit world. St. John the Evangelist puts it this way: In him (Jesus) was life, and that life was the light for humanity. The light shines in the darkness, but the darkness has not overcome it. (John 1:4-5) Or later, sharing the very words of Jesus himself, he writes, And Jesus spoke to them saying, “I am the light of the world; he who follows me will not walk in darkness, but will have the light of life.” (John 8:12). Or take it all the way back to a prophet hundreds of years before Christ. Anticipating the coming Messiah, Isaiah foretold: The people walking in darkness have seen a great light; on those living in the land of the shadow of death a light has dawned. (Isaiah 9:2).
Light dispels darkness, not the other way ‘round. Open a door into a dark closet and what happens? Does the darkness come creeping into the room in which you stand? No, the opposite holds, and always will. Light trumps darkness.
So, solstice is here. I look forward to it not only because of Christmas but because it heralds the return of summer. Celebrate the Light with me. Proclaim the truth of the Christmas carol:
Light and life to all he brings,
Ris’n with healing in His wings
~~ from Hark the Herald Angels Sing by Charles Wesley, 1739
Or, if you prefer, fast forward to Bing Crosby 1963:
The Child, the Child, sleeping in the night:
He will bring us goodness and light.
Let There be Light!
Pastor Rick Mylander
(This writing was adapted for Bethlehem’s 2020 Advent from a December blogpost Pastor Rick had done on his blog “Naturally: Reflections on Creation and Christian Spirituality.” The blog can be found at www.rickmylander.com.)
RejoiceScarlet - U2
Dan, Judy, Fiona, Meara Cummings
Cathy VictorsenOh, Holy Night
Steven SwansonMarked Pages
Bethlehem Covenant Church has marked the pages of many lives. Pastors and Sunday School teachers, choir directors and youth leaders have shaped a community of Jesus followers over the decades. Diversity and dialogue were the hallmarks of real fellowship. Bethlehem taught me that you could belong even before you believe. It is a lesson that continues to shape my life and my friendships with the refugees and immigrants I meet in Sweden.
The Apostle Paul wrote these words to Jesus friends in Corinth, “You yourselves are our letter or recommendation, written on our hearts, to be known and read by all; and you show that you are a letter of Christ, prepared by us, written not with ink but with the Spirit of the living God, not on tablets of stone but on tablets of human hearts.” 2 Corinthians 2:2-3
May God continue to bless Bethlehem Covenant Church with marked pages, lives touched, and hope shared.
In Christ Jesus our Lord, Steven Swanson,
Serve Globally missionary with the Evangelical Covenant Church
Pastor Rick MylanderFinally Christmastime!
So here it is the day after Thanksgiving and I’ve already kicked off the morning with Messiah and Mannheim Steamroller. It has put me into enough of the holiday spirit that I thought I’d share a couple seasonally-fitting photo images I took while hiking in Florida earlier this year. They’re not much as photography goes, but, of course, there’s a story…
I was simply checking out the plants among the dunes at Hobe Sound National Wildlife Refuge on Florida’s east coast north of Palm Beach, and what should I come across but a small, wild poinsettia! It bore little resemblance to the cultivated variety used everywhere in seasonal displays, what with their enormous red bracts and all, so I didn’t make the connection at first. But soon the light went on and I let out an, “Oh, wow, look what’s here!” Though the close-ups make them look larger than they were, the bracts were actually very small, only a half-inch in length. So it was the unique leaf that cinched the recognition for me.
Only in researching them now do I find that the red bracts are always small like this in a poinsettia’s uncultivated form – it’s only a manipulated, grafted variety that gets large and showy like the plants we see in the stores today. I saw some this weekend at Costco that were enormous, with the ‘flowers’ twelve and fourteen inches in diameter.
Poinsettias are native to Mexico and Central America, and grow in the wild into shrubs or small trees. The particular plants I came across while hiking, or their seeds, may have come in as a cutting on some storm, blown ashore with other jetsam. The typically red ‘blooms,’ as you may know, are not the flower petals at all; the flowers are the tiny, tiny yellow blooms that barely catch our attention. And concern that the plant is poisonous? It actually only has very mild toxicity.
Cultivated poinsettias, of course, are wildly popular as Christmas decorations in the U.S., growing so in Europe as well, but this is a relatively recent development. Though the plant’s association with Christmas goes back several hundred years to rural Mexico (with the bracts only turning their color this time of year as night-time dark fully lengthens near December’s winter solstice), it took an enterprising German immigrant family from California by the name of Ecke, in the mid 1900’s, to popularize them there. Having first sold them from street stands at Christmastime, the family also perfected the graft technique that enlarged the show of red color. And the combination of the color red, symbolic as it can be to the shed blood of Jesus Christ, and the pointy leaves, which some characterize as expressive of the star over Bethlehem or Christ’s crown of thorns, it was only a matter of time before the poinsettia’s marketing would permeate the seasonal culture. And what could be bad about that, beautiful as it is?
Jesus said, “Walk out into the fields and look at the wildflowers. They never primp or shop, but have you ever seen color and design quite like it? The ten best-dressed men and women in the country look shabby alongside them! And if God gives such attention to the appearance of wildflowers, don’t you think he’ll also attend as well to you? So steep yourself in God-reality… You’ll find all your everyday human concerns will be met.” (Matthew 6:28-30,33, MSG)
Be reminded of God’s attention and intention toward you!
Have a blessed Advent!
Pastor Rick Mylander
(This writing was adapted for Bethlehem’s 2020 Advent from a December blogpost Pastor Rick had done on his blog “Naturally: Reflections on Creation and Christian Spirituality.” The blog can be found at www.rickmylander.com.)
Song: Silent Night sung by Fiona (17) & Meara (15) Cummings 2010.