Reflections: Season of hope

It’s that time of year when Christmas preparations are getting into full swing – families and companies are hosting Christmas parties, friends are planning gift exchanges, and children everywhere are compiling their Christmas wish list – and for some, this can be a hard season. Social media feeds are filled with Christmas photos, decorated homes and beautiful table settings, and these can be trigger points for those who don’t have family to take photos, or a home to decorate, or a table to set.

Unfortunately, feelings of grief and loneliness are often augmented during seasons such as Christmas. For anyone suffering strained familial relationships, to say that Christmas can be a challenge would be an understatement. For anyone who is grieving, the celebratory season of Christmas can cause an inconsolable heart to break even more. But it doesn’t have to be that way. 

When we redirect our attention from the family get-togethers, the food, and the gift exchanges, and we look to understand the true meaning behind Christmas, this season can become what it was originally meant to be: a season of hope.

Christmas is a season which celebrates the birth of Christ, beginning with Advent (which always starts the Sunday closest to Nov. 30; Nov. 27 this year) and ending on Christmas Day. Advent is a key part of fully embracing Christmas. Taken from the Latin word adventus, Advent literally means “coming.” People who celebrate Advent usually explore different themes for the four weeks of December leading up to Christmas, traditionally themes of hope, faith, peace, love, or joy. 

Hope can be a very difficult thing to grasp, especially for anyone who is grieving or alone. Christmas, the first advent of Christ, is all about hope. You cannot have Christmas without hope. Christ’s birth gives us hope in that it is the fulfillment of several prophecies in Scripture: The virgin birth (prophesied in Isaiah 7:14), the incarnation of Christ (prophesied in Isaiah 9:6), the timing of Christ’s arrival on Earth (prophesied in Daniel 9:24), man’s rejection of Christ (Isaiah 53:1-4), Christ’s crucifixion (Psalm 2), and Christ’s resurrection (Psalm 16). 

Christ’s birth gives us hope because through it, God highlighted the significance of all those who were without hope. Who was instrumental in Christ’s birth? Not Queens and Kings, not the rich and powerful, and certainly nobody famous. The unnoticed, the overlooked, and the under-appreciated; these were the people who played a role in the first advent of Christ. Mary and Joseph and the shepherds were not celebrities. What they were was faithful despite the dark season and refusing to give up hope when it seemed like there was no hope to be found. 

C.S. Lewis wrote that, “The birth of Christ is the central event in the history of the Earth, the very thing the whole story has been about.” Christ’s birth gives us hope because His coming to Earth was for you and for me. We are all familiar with John 3:16, “For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.” 

Advent is a time where we grow our faith and abide in hope that things will not always be like this, that there is a better day to come, and that Christ will make His triumphant return. Christmas is a season for the grieving, for the lonely, for the sad, for the hopeless—Christ’s birth gives us Hope because it serves as a reminder that God gave His Son for you and I. Christ took on all our grief, loneliness, sadness and hopelessness, so that we might find true hope in Him.

Submitted by Hope Reidt, Hope Reflected

Hope Reidt