Look for any podcast host, guest or anyone

Listen

Description

As we enter the season of Advent, preparing to celebrate the birth of Jesus, we begin a four-week series on “Keeping Vigil.” Lisa Watson talks about what keeping vigil is and how to keep vigil over hope. [Luke 2:8-9]


Resources


Poem: “Hope,” by Lisel Mueller


It hovers in dark corners

before the lights are turned on,

it shakes sleep from its eyes

and drops from mushroom gills,

it explodes in the starry heads

of dandelions turned sages,

it sticks to the wings of green angels

that sail from the tops of maples.

It sprouts in each occluded eye

of the many-eyed potato,

it lives in each earthworm segment

surviving cruelty,

it is the motion that runs the tail of a dog,

it is the mouth that inflates the lungs

of the child that has just been born.

It is the singular gift

we cannot destroy in ourselves,

the argument that refutes death,

the genius that invents the future,

all we know of God.

It is the serum which makes us swear

not to betray one another;

it is in this poem, trying to speak.


Communal confession


[Leader]

Dear God, King of peace and mercy.

Make your rest here this morning;

may your grace be ever before us.


[All]

Have mercy on us, O God,

according to your steadfast love and abundant mercy.


[Leader]

We confess our selfish actions that seek

to advance our kingdom instead of yours.

We confess the ways we’ve hurt others,

both knowingly and unknowingly.


[All]

Have mercy on us, O God,

according to your steadfast love and abundant mercy.


[Leader]

Take from us our bad intentions and motivations

that pursue our own glory instead of yours.

Take all from within us that does not seek to help others.


[All]

Have mercy on us, O God,

according to your steadfast love and abundant mercy.


Wash us clean of our sin and make us new.

For today we take refuge, again, in your steadfast love and abundant mercy.

Amen.


Candle-lighting liturgy (courtesy of our friends at Vox Veniae)


Today is the first Sunday of Advent.

Advent is a season of anticipation. Of waiting.


In this season of expectation,

we prepare to welcome Christ Jesus, Messiah,

into the bustle of our lives

and the hard-to-find moments of solitude.


We prepare to welcome Christ Jesus, Messiah,

into our homes and situations,

along with friends and families.


We prepare to welcome Christ Jesus, Messiah,

into our hearts and those often-hidden parts of our lives

for beneath the surface of your story

is an inescapable fact.


You entered this world

as vulnerable as any one of us

in order to nail that vulnerability to the cross.


Our fears, our insecurities, and our sins,

all that separate us from God,

exchanged by your Grace for Love.


We cannot comprehend the reasoning,

and only marvel that Salvation comes to us

through a baby born in a stable,

and reaches out to a world in need.


In this season of anticipation,

we prepare to welcome Christ Jesus, our Messiah,

and we light a candle of hope to honor you,

Immanuel, God with Us.