How Did Advent
Come About?
Straight Answers by Fr. William
Saunders
HERALD Columnist
How did the celebration of Advent come
about? A reader in Alexandria.
The liturgical season of Advent marks the time of
spiritual preparation by the faithful before Christmas.
Advent begins on the Sunday closest to the Feast of St.
Andrew the Apostle (Nov. 30). It spans four Sundays and
four weeks of preparation, although the last week of
Advent is usually truncated because of when Christmas
falls.
The celebration of Advent has evolved in the spiritual
life of the Church. The historical origins of Advent are
hard to determine with great precision. In its earliest
form, beginning in France, Advent w as a period of
preparation for the Feast of the Epiphany, a day when
converts were baptized; so the Advent preparation was
very similar to Lent with an emphasis on prayer and
fasting which lasted three weeks and later was expanded
to 40 days. In 380, the local Council of Saragossa,
Spain, established a three-week fast before Epiphany.
Inspired by he Lenten regulations, the local Council of
Macon, France, in 581 designated that from Nov. 11 (the
Feast of St. Martin of Tours) until Christmas, fasting
would be required on Monday, Wednesday and Friday.
Eventually, similar practices spread to England. In Rome,
the Advent preparation did not appear until the sixth
century, and was viewed as a preparation for Christmas
with less of a penitential bent.
The Church gradually more formalized the celebration
of Advent. The Gelasian Sacramentary,
traditionally attributed to Pope St. Gelasius I (d. 496),
was the first to provide Advent liturgies for five
Sundays. Later, Pope St. Gregory I (d. 604) enhanced
these liturgies composing prayers, antiphons, readings
and responses. Pope St. Gregory VII (d. 1095) later
reduced the number of Sundays in Advent to four. Finally,
about the ninth century, the Church designated the first
Sunday of Advent as the beginning of the Church year.
Despite the sketchy history behind Advent, the
importance of this season remains to focus on the coming
of our Lord. (Advent comes from the Latin adventus,
meaning "coming." The Catechism stresses
the two-fold meaning of this "coming":
"When the Church celebrates the liturgy of Advent
each year, she makes present this ancient expectancy of
the Messiah, for by sharing in the long preparation for
the Saviors first coming, the faithful renew their
a dent desire for His second coming" (No. 524).
Therefore, on one hand, the faithful reflect back and
are encouraged to celebrate the anniversary of the
Lords first coming into this world. We ponder again
the great mystery of the Incarnation when our lord
humbled Himself, taking on our humanity, and entered our
time and space to free us from sin. On the other hand, we
recall in the Creed that our Lord will come again to
judge the living and the dead and that we must be ready
to meet Him.
A good, pious way to help us in our Advent preparation
has been the use of the Advent wreath. (Interestingly,
the use of the Advent wreath was borrowed from the German
Lutherans in the early 1500s.) The wreath is a circle,
which has no beginning or end. So we call to mind how our
lives, here and now, participate in the eternity of
Gods plan of salvation and how we hope to share
eternal life in the Kingdom of Heaven.
The wreath is made of fresh plant material, because
Christ came to give us new life through His passion,
death and resurrection. Three candles are purple,
symbolizing penance, preparation and sacrifice; the pink
candle symbolizes the same but highlights the third
Sunday of Advent, Gaudete Sunday, when we rejoice because
our preparation is now half-way finished.
The light represents Christ, who entered this world to
scatter the darkness of evil and show us the way of
righteousness. The progression of lighting candles shows
our increasing readiness to meet our Lord. I would
encourage each family to have an Advent wreath, light it
at dinner time, and say the special prayers. This
tradition will help each family keep its focus on the
true meaning of Christmas. In all, during Advent we
strive to fulfill the opening prayer for the Mass of the
First Sunday of Advent: "Father in Heaven,
increase our longing for Christ our Savior and give us
the strength to grow in love, that the dawn of His coming
may find us rejoicing in His presence and welcoming the
light of His truth."
Fr. Saunders is dean of the Notre Dame Graduate
School of Christendom College and pastor of Queen of
Apostles Parish, both in Alexandria.
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Arlington Catholic Herald, Inc. All rights reserved.
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