Skip to main content

First Advent: Hope

 Today is the first Sunday of Advent, which means that today is the first day of the new liturgical year. Happy New Year!

The song that is often associated with this day is "O Come O Come Emmanuel." I was looking at the lyrics and was struck by this line:

"That mourns in lonely exile here."

That basically sums up the last nine months, doesn't it? 9 months of staying home. 9 months of wondering when and where it is safe to gather. 9 months of lonely exile.

And yet, we still have hope. I feel like I have much more hope now than I did two months ago. I have hope for a vaccine. I have hope that the country will stay united -- at least, more united than I imagined it might a few months ago. I have hope for normalcy again.

It feels good to have hope.

And yet, I've learned this year that I can't place hope in human institutions, no matter how good they are. Sometimes science will come to the wrong conclusion if the data is incomplete. Sometimes government will fail at governing. Sometimes the free market won't provide everything we need.

I remember reading about the dedication of Solomon's temple about two and a half years ago. I remember thinking, "Wow, they're praying a lot for protection against the elements and their enemies! I'm so glad I live here and now where I don't have to worry about those things!" But then I thought, "Well, with the way things are going, maybe I do have to worry about these." We might not have rival nations at our doorstep ready to wreak havoc and spread fear, and we might not have the constant fear of famine hanging over us, but for the first time this year I felt how precarious our position was. Well-stocked grocery stores are not guaranteed. Liberal democracy and due process are not inevitable. As we know, as much of the world knows far too well, things can go wrong.

So, we hope that our institutions last, and we choose to trust our institutions to help them last, but we know that our hope cannot end there. We must place our hope in Christ. 

We hope that His promises are sure. We hope that He will remember us even in the midst of our greatest trials. We hope for a better world in the next life and have hope that we can create a better world here and now.

I believe it is that hope that propels us to action. It is hope in science that led to the outstanding medical advancements the past few months. It is hope in democracy that lets low-level bureaucrats stand up to powerful executives. It is hope in our Savior that brings us to our knees day after day.

And it is this hope that allows us, even amidst captivity, lonely exile, and Satan's tyranny, to sing


"Rejoice! Rejoice! Emmanuel
Shall come to thee, O Israel."

Comments

  1. One of my favorite carols with a hopeful, comforting message.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

The Morning After Harry Potter 7.2

Warning: If you want to see the movie, don't read this. So, I kind of feel like the only person in my news feed on Facebook who doesn't have some synonym of the word "awesome" followed by several hundred exclamation points to describe the Harry Potter movie. And I feel like a cynical, horrible person for this. Don't get me wrong, I liked the movie. The first 100 minutes of it, at least. But then . . . I don't know. Was I expecting the illustrated version of Harry Potter and that's why I'm disappointed? Well, maybe. It's just such an epic ending. Full of Christian themes and triumphant battles even after they thought Harry was dead and gripping conversations between Voldemort and Harry. Whereas this, well . . . HARRY: I'm at King's Cross. But it's clean. DUMBLEDORE: Oh, that's nice. Well, I've got to go now. HARRY: Wait! So Snape's patronus was a doe? So was my mother's! Isn't that a bit . . . odd to you? ...

Good News Limericks in a Year of Bad News

Every cloud has a silver lining 80. April 6, 2026 Let's get down to business; observe  The Artemis crew far from Earth. No longer mysterious, Moon's dark side seen clearly. Its Craters and peaks bring me mirth. 79. March 24, 2026 Tired of spuds boiled, mashed, in a stew? Try: on fire, delivered to you! "Why'd you cause such a jam?" "Guess I yam what I yam." "Small potatoes to douse," said the crew. https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/38509451/flaming-potato-truck-runs-red-light-blares-disco/?fbclid=IwY2xjawRafv5leHRuA2FlbQIxMQBzcnRjBmFwcF9pZBAyMjIwMzkxNzg4MjAwODkyAAEeUQdgXV423nHxs7UWVTpO79oIOBwkeFUDdhOueS72Y6j9MDMxWZRgLnzr5_Q_aem_VoeTPbde3pSzRHvICjVrrQ 78. March 8, 2026 Only so far that new money goes -- Replacing 6 doors and 9 windows. If she never showed up  Would there be this glow up? What could have been? Oh, who knows? https://www.tmz.com/2026/03/07/donna-kelce-is-remodeling-her-florida-house/?fbclid=IwY2xjawRafsZleHRuA2FlbQIxMQBzcnRjBmFwcF9pZB...

Of Microfiche and Ring Theory

In October 1985, a young man made a long distance call to a father in Kansas. "Hi, um, I'd like to marry your daughter." The man had no idea that his daughter was dating anyone so seriously, and he asked for clarification. "Who is this? How long have you been dating?" § It began a year earlier in Math 371, the abstract algebra class at BYU. He was recently home from his mission, ready to dive back into math and engineering classes. She was in her second year at BYU, flying through the credits so quickly that she was already essentially a junior though only 18 years old. They never really talked to each other. But that isn't to say they didn't notice each other. She learned his name quickly -- Todd Moon -- and looked him up on the microfiche. This predecessor to the BYU directory was the true "stalkernet" -- you could find name, number, address, and even class schedule of anyone at the school. She saw that there was another female BYU student li...