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Please post all reflections, Advent prayers, information about Advent, etc. here!

I will do a separate Advent wreath Thread as well as a separate Advent Calendar Thread.

Come, Lord Jesus!

1 posted on 11/29/2003 8:34:00 AM PST by Salvation
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To: All
Each of the four Gospel writers wrote their Gospels from a specific vantage point and usually with a particular audience of readers in mind. The Gospel writer for lectionary Cycle C, Luke, wrote his Gospel in the middle 80's CE. Luke was probably a non-Jew who wrote to offer those who were already Christians help in understanding their faith. Luke stresses the mercy and compassion of Jesus and that the Christian message is for everyone: Gentiles, men, women, rich, poor, etc. Luke constantly reminds his readers of the joy that is shared by those who experience God's forgiving love in Jesus and emphasizes the role of the Holy Spirit in Jesus' life.

During Advent the Gospel readings from Luke highlight:
· the constant prayer needed by disciples to remain faithful to their mission
· the call of Christians to be advocates of justice (hesed)
· John the Baptist's call to repentance and penance
· the tension of maintaining the proper balance between passive waiting and proactive waiting
· Advent's wake-up call to the world-a countercultural plea to engage in the deeper meaning of the season.

The Gospel for the first Sunday of Advent deals with two primary issues: the need to give witness to Christ in the face of impending religious persecution and the necessity of persevering while waiting for his return.

The Gospel for the second Sunday of Advent introduces us to John the Baptist who called for a baptism of repentance. John called for nothing less than a complete metanoia, a turning away from sin and a turning toward the God who transforms and heals.

In the Gospel for the third Sunday of Advent, Luke insists on practical commitments when it comes to issues of conversion. Neither tax collector nor soldier was to exploit for purposes of self-gain. The citizens on the other hand were to act justly toward the needy.

On the last Sunday of Advent, Mary and Elizabeth, two great women of Scripture, listen to God and become the ultimate paradigm of disciple.

2 posted on 11/29/2003 9:07:41 AM PST by Salvation (†With God all things are possible.†)
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To: Salvation; All

5 posted on 11/29/2003 9:26:24 AM PST by MozartLover (Normal day, let me be aware of the treasure you are.)
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To: american colleen; sinkspur; Lady In Blue; Salvation; Polycarp; narses; SMEDLEYBUTLER; redhead; ...
Advent! One of the most beautiful seasons in the christian calendar!

Sometimes called the root of Jesse or radix Jesse in Latin, the Jesse tree is a visual representation of Jesus' genealogy which dates back to the father of David who was Jesse.  The biblical references used habitually to establish Christ's descent from David are the following:

In sacred art Mary is also depicted as part of Christ's family tree named after Jesse.

The Fathers of the Church and Latin hymns refer to the tree of Jesse not only when speaking about the line of David (radix Jesse) but also when speaking of Mary (virga ex radice = branch or offshoot of the root of Jesse) and Jesus (flos ex virga = flower that blossoms on the branch).  Based on these literary sources, the visual rendering of the Jesse tree shows Jesse in reclined and slumbering position, a tree growing out of his body on whose branches a changing and diverse group of ancestors can be observed.

The tree which is patterned after the tree of life in paradise and the cross as the definitive tree of life habitually shows a series of kings of the Solomonic line, or prophets and evangelists.  The top of the tree is composed of Mary, Jesus and angels, sometimes with reference to the gifts of the Spirit.  But variations are frequent. The artistic motif of the Jesse tree is known beginning in the 11th century and seems to have disappeared in the 16th century.  During the time of bloom it found many and diversified ways of realization from illuminations to bronze doors (for example, St. Zeno, Verona).  The example here presented is taken from a psalter of the 13th century, the so-called Ingeborg Psalter (1210) conserved today in Chantilly, Paris.

[Digitized image with closeup of Jesse] The tree is highly stylized and of sophisticated ornamentation.  Jesse is lying on his bed more pensive than slumbering.  He wears the typical Jewish hat.  From the mid-section of his body or rather behind it, the trunk of the tree rises to a height of four levels or tiers each once of them in the shape of a chalice.

They show in ascending order [from left to right] Abraham, David, Mary and Jesus Christ.  It is the royal line.  For this reason all figures except Christ wear crowns.

[Digitized image with closeup of Abraham] [Digitized image with closeup of David] [Digitized image with closeup of Mary] [Digitized image with closeup of Jesus]
Abraham David Mary Jesus Christ

They are flanked by Old testament figures on both sides.  We have on the left: Malachi standing next to Jesse followed by Daniel and Isaiah in ascending order.

[Digitized image with closeup of Malachi] [Digitized image with closeup of Daniel] [Digitized image with closeup of Isaiah]
Malachi Daniel Isaiah

To the right of Jesse we have Aaron, Ezekiel, and an exception to the group of prophets, a feminine figure which represents the Sybil of Cumae.

[Digitized image with closeup of Aaron] [Digitized image with closeup of Ezekiel] [Digitized image with closeup of the Sybil of Cumae]
Aaron Ezekiel Sybil of Cumae

These figures are in all likelihood characters taken from a mystery play, the so called mystery of Rouen.  They present, with the exception of Aaron who is designated as high priest and holds the blooming staff, open scrolls with part of their vision about the coming Savior (not necessarily corresponding to the exact Scripture quote).  The Cumaean Sybil reminds the reader of the finiteness of all creation.  Ezekiel speaks about the closed door (reference to Mary's virginity) through which God alone will proceed.  Malachi proclaims the grandeur of God's name, whereas Daniel in his visions of the four beasts celebrates God's definitive victory over evil.  Isaiah announces the rule of Immanuel.  The dove next to the prophet's head indicates the presence and inspiration of the Holy Spirit.

Jesus Christ, who is enthroned at the top of the tree which, in fact, is not a tree but an edifice symbolizing the house of David, rules as the Pantokrator both blessing (right hand) and judging (book in the left hand).  He is surrounded by two worshiping angels and the seven doves, symbols of the seven gifts of the Spirit: "The Spirit of the Lord shall rest upon him: a spirit of wisdom and of understanding, a spirit of counsel and strength, a spirit of knowledge and of fear of the Lord, and his delight shall be the fear of the Lord" (Isaiah 11,2-3).



8 posted on 11/29/2003 3:56:52 PM PST by NYer (Keep CHRIST in Christmas!)
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To: Salvation
smashing post. God Bless. Thanks for all your work
9 posted on 11/29/2003 6:55:50 PM PST by Catholicguy
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