What Is Advent? Fun Animation That Drives The Meaning Home!

by Advent and Christmas, Jesus Christ, Liturgical Seasons, Mass

A fun and animated video that presents two very different views of what the Advent season is all about. It was released by  Xt3.com.

As always, I encourage that when we see these videos, we watch them not just for ourselves, rather that we understand them as an authentic way of doing apostolate to others too. Speaking from my own experience, you never know the impact that the videos can have on other’s lives. Amongst all the counter messages that people see and hear with respect to the Holidays, we need to do all we can to remind them that the reason for the season is the coming of the Lord Jesus Christ!

In order to deepen in the question: What is Advent? I suggest that you read a few selections of a reflection done by Pope Benedict XVI. Every year the Holy Father gives a special message for the season.

What Is Advent? 

Dear Brothers and Sisters,

Today, together with the Church, we are beginning the new liturgical year: a new journey of faith to experience together in Christian communities but, as always, also to be taken within world history so as to open it to God’s mystery, to the salvation that comes from his love. The liturgical year begins with the Season of Advent. It is a marvelous period in which the expectation of Christ’s return and the memory of his first Coming — when he emptied himself of his divine glory to take on our mortal flesh — reawakens in hearts.

“Watch!” This is Jesus’ call in today’s Gospel. He does not only address it to his disciples but to everyone: “Watch!” (Mk 13:37). It is a salutary reminder to us that life does not only have an earthly dimension but reaches towards a “beyond”, like a plantlet that sprouts from the ground and opens towards the sky…

Today, Isaiah, too, the prophet of Advent, with a heartfelt entreaty addressed to God on behalf of the people, gives us food for thought. He recognized the shortcomings of his people and said at a certain point: “There is no one who calls upon your name, who rouses himself to cling to you; for you have hidden your face from us and have delivered us up to our iniquities” (cf. Is 64:6)

How can we fail to find this description striking? It seems to reflect certain panoramas of the post-modern world: cities where life becomes anonymous and horizontal, where God seems absent and man the only master, as if he were the architect and director of all things: construction, work, the economy, transport, the branches of knowledge, technology, everything seems to depend on man alone. And in this world that appears almost perfect at times disturbing things happen, either in nature or in society, which is why we think that God has, as it were, withdrawn and has, so to speak, left us to ourselves.

In fact, the true “master” of the world is not the human being but God. The Gospel says: “Watch therefore — for you do not know when the master of the house will coming, in the evening, or at midnight, or at cockcrow, or in the morning — lest he come suddenly and find you asleep ” (Mk 13:35-36)

The Season of Advent returns every year to remind us of this in order that our life may find its proper orientation, turned to the face of God. The face is not that of a “master” but of a Father and a Friend. Let us make the Prophet’s words our own, together with the Virgin Mary who guides us on our Advent journey.”O Lord, you are our Father; we are the clay and you are our potter: we are all the work of your hand” (Is 64:8).

 

 

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