The second Advent
Antiphon is O Adonai. ‘Adonai’ is a
title, meaning ‘Lord’ or ‘master’ and given to God in the Jewish tradition; it
is a grammatical plural in form (i.e. literally ‘Lords’), which has particular
significance for Christians, who believe that God is ‘One God in three persons’
(Trinity).
Throughout Advent, an
Advent Ring sits on our dining-table: four candles surrounding a central
candle. Some years we have placed a decorative
wreath around the ring. The central
candle represents Jesus, the light who is coming into the world, whom we wait
for. The four surrounding candles, lit
accumulatively on the four Sundays of Advent, represent the Patriarchs & Matriarchs, the
Prophets, John the Baptist, and the Virgin Mary. In this way, we prepare for Christmas by
telling the story of God’s salvation, framed in a particular way:
that God called one family, Abraham & Sarah, from whom he would call-forth a people, through whom he would
bless all peoples;
that in his commitment to his plan of salvation God
sent prophets to call his people back into relationship with him when they went
astray – including messages of promise that God would send one who would save
his people;
and then,
fast-forwarding towards the main event, that God sent John to prepare the way
for Jesus’ coming;
and that God called
Mary to be the one through whom the Lord would be born into the world - through
whom a people would be re-gathered, through whom all peoples are to be
blessed...
It is a story of
faithful obedience to God’s call, of faithful response, of believing that all
things are possible for God acting in covenant partnership with human beings
(for a start, there are three miracle births in this telling: Abraham and
Sarah’s son and John the Baptist are both born of mothers too old to ovulate;
Mary’s son born of a virgin – literally, a girl who is yet to ovulate). It is a story in which we are invited to
place ourselves, to find our place, to write our chapter.
The O Adonai Antiphon
recalls the fire of the burning bush, and calls on the Lord to come bringing
light to our darkness – by redeeming us with an outstretched arm – and so I set
this prayer at the Advent ring.
I like to light the
Christ-candle throughout Advent, and to light the other candles from it.
O Adonai
O Adonai, the leader of
the House of Israel,
who appeared to Moses in the fire of the
burning bush,
and gave him the law on
Sinai:
Come and redeem us with
an outstretched arm.
Advent:
making room for Jesus – at the Advent ring.
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