O Come, O Come Emmanuel: The Liturgical Journey to the Manger
Isaiah 9:2-7 • Luke 1:46-55
The liturgical journey of Advent, the eschatological hope of the Church, and the Theotokos as the model of holy waiting
Roman Catholic
Sacramental theology and apostolic tradition
The Church's Holy Season
The O Antiphons
For seven evenings before Christmas Eve, the Church prays the O Antiphons at Vespers. "O Wisdom, coming forth from the mouth of the Most High... come and teach us the way of prudence." "O Emmanuel, our King and Lawgiver... come and save us, Lord our God." Each antiphon is a cry from the darkness — a prayer that names the longing and trusts the promise. When the congregation sings "O Come, O Come, Emmanuel" at Advent, they are singing the O Antiphons. The hymn is the liturgy. The liturgy is the prayer. The prayer is the hope of the entire Church, echoing across sixteen centuries.
Source: O Antiphons, attributed to the 6th-8th century / Advent liturgy
The Theotokos: Mary as Model of Advent Waiting
Maranatha: The Advent That Has Not Yet Come
Applications
- 1Pray the O Antiphons during the final week of Advent. Each night, address Christ by a different title and let the ancient prayer deepen your waiting.
- 2Follow Mary's pattern: magnify, don't manufacture. You do not create hope — you point to the hope God has already spoken. Where can you magnify God's light this week?
- 3Embrace the eschatological dimension of Advent. You are waiting not only for Christmas but for the Parousia. Let "Maranatha" become your daily prayer.
- 4Fast during Advent. Whether from food, entertainment, or distraction — let the body participate in the spiritual preparation.
Prayer Suggestions
- O Wisdom, O Adonai, O Root of Jesse, O Key of David, O Rising Sun, O King of Nations, O Emmanuel — come and save us.
- Theotokos, Mother of God, you carried the promise in your body. Teach us to carry it in our hearts. Help us make room for the God who is coming.
- Maranatha — come, Lord Jesus. We wait for the second advent as the early Church waited — with longing, with hope, with confidence in Your promise.
- Thy kingdom come. Until it comes in fullness, we light our candles, we fast, we pray, we prepare. Come, Lord. Come quickly. Amen.
Preaching Toolkit
Dunkirk (2017)
The soldiers on the beach at Dunkirk waited — exposed, vulnerable, surrounded by the enemy. They could not save themselves. They needed someone to come. And then, on the horizon: the little boats. Hundreds of them. Not a military fleet but civilian fishing boats and pleasure craft — the most unlikely rescue imaginable. The Church waits like those soldiers: exposed, vulnerable, in a world of darkness. And the rescue comes — not as a military operation but as a baby. Not in power but in weakness. The most unlikely rescue in history. And it works.
3 Voices
Powered by LensLines™ — one-liners from every TheoLens™ tradition
The O Antiphons form an acrostic: ERO CRAS — "Tomorrow I will come." The liturgy itself is a countdown. The ancient Church embedded the promise in the structure of worship.
Mary did not generate the light. She magnified it. That is your Advent vocation: not to create hope, but to point to the hope God has already spoken.
Advent is a penitential season — fasting, purple vestments, no Gloria. The Church that rushes to Christmas carols in November has forgotten: the darkness must be named before the light can be received.
More Titles
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the O Antiphons?
Seven ancient prayers prayed at Vespers during the final week of Advent (Dec 17-23). Each addresses Christ by a different title from Isaiah: O Wisdom, O Adonai, O Root of Jesse, O Key of David, O Rising Sun, O King of Nations, O Emmanuel. Their initial letters form an acrostic: ERO CRAS ('Tomorrow I will come').
Why is Advent considered a penitential season?
Like Lent, Advent involves preparation through fasting, prayer, and self-examination. The purple vestments, the suppression of the Gloria, and the restraint of celebration until Christmas Day reflect the Church's discipline of waiting — naming the darkness honestly before celebrating the light.
This Sermon in Other Traditions
See how 16 other Christian traditions approach the advent (hope & waiting) sermon.