Tish’s words are better than mine so in lieu of a review wherein I wax poetic about how much her writing means to me I’ve just pasted some of my favorite excepts from this book -
“We begin our year not only by waiting but by readying ourselves to receive the gifts of repentance, healing, and restoration that God gives by grace. We come to God openhanded, holding our imperfect and incomplete lives before him. We need him to come to us, to rescue and restore us, even today, in our everyday lives.”
“In Advent we take time to reflect on how Jesus, whom the people of Israel longed for, meets us today. We look at the places in our own lives where we yearn for Christ to come, places where we need hope, encouragement, help, and deliverance.”
“Advent is the season when we practice watching for grace. It is a time when we pay extra attention to how Christ continues to come, how he enters into the darkest corners of humanity and of our own lives. It is a time when we invite Christ to meet us and, in the words of Rich Mullins, to "shake us forward and shake us free.”
“Advent asks us to name what is dark in the world and in our own lives and to invite the light of Christ into each shadowy corner.
To practice Advent is to lean into a cosmic ache: our deep, wordless desire for things to be made right. We dwell in a world shrouded in sin, conflict, violence, and op-pression. Christians must be honest about the whole of life-both death and resurrection, both the darkness and the light.”
“Advent is training in hope because this season tells us that when things lie fallow they do not lie in waste; things that seem dormant are not dead, and times of waiting are not without meaning, purpose, or design. God is working, sometimes almost imperceptibly, deep beneath the surface of time. Waiting is part of his redemption. It is part of his gift to us. It is part of his grace. Above all, trust in the slow work of Gody
writes Teilhard De Chardin. ‘We are quite naturally impatient in everything to reach the end without delay. We should like to skip the intermediate stages. We are impatient of being on the way to something unknown, something new.’ But, he says, "’Give Our Lord the benefit of believing that his hand is leading you, and accept the anxiety of feeling yourself in suspense and incomplete.’"
“Yet all of our waiting— our struggles and sorrows, our doubts and fears, our days and weeks—will be a vital part of the story. It will be part of the "hallelujah" that echoes from a creation that once groaned. It will be part of the restoration of all things. It will be part of what is being born.”