It began with singing in a traditonal Lessons and Carols, which we used to do at All Saints Vevey. Lately, L&C services have made their way into many church calendars, usually leaning towards a song/reading format bereft of liturgical sense, however; ie not much waiting involved.
Christ Church followed King's service in Cambridge, our music director taking cues from the Ralph Vaughn Williams era of the service's history. It was very moving to participate in the evening, creating something together.
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preparing for the L&C by studying Sainsbury's supermarket's well-produced ad this Christmas, marking various
truces between British and German soldiers; 2014 marking the 100th
anniversary of WWI, as did the Tower of London's art installation:
a sea of approximately 900K ceramic poppies representing the UK dead. 
WWI was the immediate context for Cambridge's Lessons & Carols Service, inaugurated 1918 by an army chaplain, remembering "those in a distant shore" in the bidding prayer. Misery and bloodshed accompanies Christmas, historically speaking, as in King Herod's slaughter of the innocents and evoked in the melancholy of many carols: the bleak midwinter, indeed.
The L&C service readings from Genesis and Isaiah foretell the coming of the messiah, mirroring a grand medieval tradition of the Jesse Tree:
"And he shall come from the root of Jesse":
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the medieval section of the MET has a smaller example! The windows vary from church to church, as do the gospel genealogies, highlighting different meanings, but all reinforcing spiritual adoption - a concept whose time has come, making sense of those birthing metaphors: "You must be born again to enter the kingdom of God."
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Aunt Stephanie has discovered many Hebraic traditions in her fellowship, introducing us to a menorah tradition.
Looking at these photos, it strikes me M&J have graced us with another cycle of youth, like a family of kids moving into the neighborhood.
It's hard to emphasize enough the waiting of advent is not waiting upon the birth - which obviously already occurred - but another coming. Lest Christmas fossilize into nostalgia, a spiritual Groundhog Day, a ruthless pounding away of the years, rather than true hope of something new.
Appropriately closing with kid art:
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