Waiting & Wonder: Reclaiming the Beauty of Advent and Christmas

Waiting & Wonder: Reclaiming the Beauty of Advent and Christmas

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This year, letโ€™s reclaim the beauty of Advent and Christmasโ€”two distinct but deeply connected times of waiting and wonder. My Advent guidebook is here to help you slow down, savor the season, and prepare with daily devotions, traditions, and prayers. And new this year, my Christmas guidebook brings the joy of the 12 days into your home with reflections, recipes, and ways to celebrate all the way to Epiphany!

As the air turns colder and the days grow shorter, a rush seems to overtake everything around us. The “holiday season” barrels in right after Halloween, all bows and bustle, sweeping us into a whirlwind of to-do lists, shopping carts, and holiday obligations. Before we know it, weโ€™re hurtling full speed toward December 25th, exhausted, frantically trying to wrap up the holiday season before itโ€™s really even begun.

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But, deep down, many of us feel that nagging sense that something is missing from how we approach this time of year. The pressure to go, do, and buy creates a season thatโ€™s often a blur of stress and noise, leaving us feeling worn out and disconnected from the quiet beauty that this time of year could hold. What if there was a different way to enter these upcoming weeks? What if we reclaimed the seasons of Advent and Christmas as two distinct but deeply connected times of preparation and celebration?

Advent: A Season of Quiet Waiting

The season of Advent begins four Sundays before Christmas and is a time set aside to prepare our hearts for the coming of Christ. We prepare for the birth of Christ on Christmas Day and also Christโ€™s second coming when he will set the world to rights.ย 

Advent is all about slowing down, waiting, and longing for the fulfillment of Godโ€™s purposes. The season marks the beginning of the Christian year. It invites us to pause, quiet our hearts, and enter a time of preparation for the coming of Christ. Advent doesnโ€™t demand that we start celebrating right away. Instead, it calls us to prepare, wait with intention, and experience the quiet anticipation of a promise not yet fulfilled.

Rather than diving into decorations and festivities, Advent allows us space to reflect on why we celebrate. Itโ€™s a gentle shift from the hurried rush we often associate with โ€œthe holidays.โ€ We prepare, yes, but we prepare inwardly. We reflect on the hope of Christโ€™s coming, allowing our hearts to enter a space of longing and waiting.

Imagine easing into the season instead of racing toward December 25th, lighting a candle for each week of Advent, saying a prayer of anticipation, and letting the meaning of Christmas gradually settle into your spirit. Itโ€™s a time to slow down, focus on whatโ€™s to come, and make room in our hearts for the joy that awaits. Advent shows us that there is holiness in waiting and that preparation can be peaceful, reflective, and filled with the quiet hope of promises yet to be fulfilled.

Christmas: A Season of Joyful Wonder

Then, when the preparatory season of Advent is fulfilled, we enter Christmas with a heart made ready to celebrate, full of expectation and longing finally fulfilled on Christmas Day. As it was traditionally celebrated, Christmas doesnโ€™t end on December 25thโ€”it begins there. The Christmas season, lasting 12 days until Epiphany, is a time of true celebration. All the preparation for Advent finds its fulfillment in these days, which are meant to be a joyful, extended feast.

When we let Christmas begin on December 25th, it becomes more than a single day of celebrationโ€”it unfolds as a season of wonder, joy, and thanksgiving. Itโ€™s an invitation to fully enjoy the gifts of friends, family, food, and fellowship without the underlying rush to wrap it all up in a single day. Christmas becomes a time to embrace the light that has come into the world, to truly enter into the โ€œgood news of great joyโ€ that Advent has prepared us for.

The Beauty of a Double Season

When we see Advent and Christmas as two distinct but beautifully connected seasons, it opens the door to a different experienceโ€”one that is more restful, more meaningful, and ultimately more fulfilling. Embracing this rhythm allows us to savor each season for what it truly is: Advent as a time of preparation, expectation, and hope, and Christmas as a time of great joy and celebration.

Imagine the difference this could make: Instead of starting Christmas Day exhausted and burnt out, we could begin it having truly prepared our hearts, feeling renewed, having let our hearts fully experience both the waiting and the wonder.

This is why I created the companion guides The Liturgical Home: Advent and the newly released The Liturgical Home: Christmasโ€”resources that walk through each of these seasons in a way that feels intentional and life-giving. I hope that they guide you and your family into a slower, more sacred experience of both Advent and Christmas, embracing each season in its fullness and finding rest in the quiet spaces we often miss.

So this year, what if we did things a little differently? Letโ€™s step off the fast track to December 25th and allow ourselves to journey through Advent with intention so that when Christmas finally arrives, we can enter it with open hearts and unhurried joy. Letโ€™s reclaim the beauty of these special seasons and find, in its rhythm, a deeper and more meaningful way to celebrate.


Image by Jonatan Pie, courtesy of Unsplash.

Author

Ashley Tumlin Wallace

Ashley Tumlin Wallace, the author of the Liturgical Home series of books and articles at Anglican Compass, is a homeschooling mom of four and the wife of an Anglican priest. She and her family live in the panhandle of Florida.

View more from Ashley Tumlin Wallace

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