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Advent (Hope & Waiting)Progressive~18 minClaude Opus 4.6

Advent as Resistance: The Magnificat and the World Turned Right-Side-Up

Isaiah 9:2-7Luke 1:46-55

Advent as resistance, the Magnificat as a manifesto of justice, and the prophetic hope of a world turned right-side-up

Progressive / Social Justice

Social justice and inclusive theology

Tradition vocabulary:Magnificatresistanceshalomsolidaritypreferential optionupside-down kingdomprophetic justice

Advent in a World of Empire

Advent begins in darkness — and the darkness is not abstract. Isaiah wrote to people living under occupation. The Assyrian Empire had conquered the northern kingdom, scattered families, and imposed the brutal logic of imperial power: obey or be destroyed. The people walking in darkness were walking under the boot of empire. And into that specific, political, embodied darkness, God spoke a promise — not of escape but of reversal. "The people walking in darkness have seen a great light." The light is not a candle in a private room. It is a dawn that breaks over an entire occupied nation. The promise is public, political, and cosmic. Advent is an act of resistance. To light a candle in the dark and say "the light is coming" is to refuse the narrative of empire — the narrative that says power wins, violence triumphs, and the poor will always be with us. Advent says: no. The God of Israel is doing something new. The ruler on David's throne will not rule by force but by justice and righteousness. "Of the greatness of his government and peace there will be no end." In the Anabaptist tradition, this resistance is embodied in the refusal of violence. God could have sent a warrior. He sent a baby. God could have toppled the empire with an army. He toppled it with a manger. The kingdom of God advances not through coercion but through vulnerability, not through dominance but through solidarity. Advent is the season of refusing to meet empire on empire's terms — and trusting that God's way, however foolish it looks, will prevail.
Isaiah 9:2Isaiah 9:6-7Isaiah 2:4

Oscar Romero's Advent

Archbishop Oscar Romero, three months before his assassination, preached an Advent sermon to a church under military occupation in El Salvador: "No one can celebrate a genuine Christmas without being truly poor. The self-sufficient, the proud, those who have no need of God — for them there will be no Christmas. Only the poor, the hungry, those who need someone to come on their behalf, will have that someone. That someone is God, Emmanuel, God-with-us." Romero understood that Advent is not a holiday for the comfortable. It is a lifeline for the oppressed.

Source: Oscar Romero, Advent homily (1979)

The Magnificat: Advent's Revolutionary Song

The Magnificat is the most dangerous text in the Advent lectionary. It has been banned by governments. The Guatemalan government prohibited its public recitation during the civil war. The British colonial government in India restricted its use. The Argentine military junta forbade its reading in churches. Why? Because the Magnificat is not a lullaby. It is a manifesto. "He has brought down rulers from their thrones but has lifted up the humble. He has filled the hungry with good things but has sent the rich away empty." Mary — a teenager from occupied Galilee — sings about the reversal of every power structure that keeps the poor in poverty and the powerful in palaces. She uses the prophetic past tense: not "He will bring down" but "He has brought down." The revolution is already accomplished in the purposes of God. Liberation theology has always centered the Magnificat as the interpretive key to Advent. The "good news" that the angel announces is good news for the poor — literally. Luke 4 will make this explicit when Jesus reads from Isaiah in the Nazareth synagogue: "The Spirit of the Lord is on me, because he has anointed me to proclaim good news to the poor." The Advent promise is inseparable from economic justice. The Messiah comes not to reinforce hierarchy but to dismantle it. The Anabaptist tradition adds: Mary's song is the song of the upside-down kingdom. In God's kingdom, the last are first. The humble are exalted. The hungry are fed. The rich are sent away empty — not out of cruelty, but because hoarding in a world of scarcity is incompatible with the economy of God. Advent calls the church to begin building the upside-down kingdom now.
Luke 1:52-53Luke 4:18-19Matthew 20:16

The Justice That Is Coming

"Of the greatness of his government and peace there will be no end. He will reign on David's throne and over his kingdom, establishing and upholding it with justice and righteousness from that time on and forever." Isaiah does not separate peace from justice. They are the same thing. Shalom — the peace that God promises — is not the absence of conflict. It is the presence of justice. It is a world where everyone has enough, where no one is exploited, where the systems serve the people rather than consuming them. This is the prophetic hope of Advent: not merely that a baby will be born, but that through that baby, the world will be put right. Wars will end. Swords will become plowshares. The lion will lie down with the lamb. The earth will be filled with the knowledge of the glory of the Lord as the waters cover the sea. But we live in the gap. The baby has been born, and the world is still unjust. The Messiah has come, and children still go hungry. The kingdom has been inaugurated, but it has not been consummated. Advent holds that tension — and calls the church to live as agents of the coming justice. Not to wait passively for God to fix everything, but to participate in the fixing. To feed the hungry now. To shelter the homeless now. To dismantle the systems of oppression now. To build the world the Magnificat sings about — one act of justice at a time. Light an Advent candle and let it be a protest: against despair, against injustice, against the lie that the world cannot change. The light is coming. The justice is coming. And the people who walk in darkness — the poor, the occupied, the displaced, the forgotten — will see a great light. Advent is the refusal to accept the world as it is, because God has promised the world as it shall be.
Isaiah 9:7Isaiah 2:4Habakkuk 2:14Micah 6:8

Applications

  • 1Light your Advent candle as an act of resistance — against despair, against injustice, against the lie that the world cannot change. The light is coming.
  • 2Read the Magnificat aloud as a justice text. Who are the "humble" being lifted in your community? Who are the "hungry" being filled? Join God's work.
  • 3Practice Advent justice: volunteer at a shelter, donate to a food pantry, write to your representative about an issue of justice. The kingdom is built with hands, not just prayers.
  • 4Refuse to separate peace from justice. Shalom means everyone has enough. What system in your community needs to change for that to be true?

Prayer Suggestions

  • God of justice, the Magnificat is not a lullaby. It is a manifesto. Give us the courage to sing it — and to live it.
  • God of the occupied, You know what it is like to be born under empire. Stand with those who live under occupation, exploitation, and oppression today.
  • God of shalom, we ache for the world You have promised — where swords become plowshares and everyone has enough. Let it begin here. Let it begin with us.
  • Light of the world, break through the darkness of injustice. We light our candle as a protest and a prayer. Come, Lord Jesus. Come with justice. Come with peace. Amen.

Preaching Toolkit

Movie Analogy

Les Miserables (2012)

In Les Miserables, the students sing 'Do You Hear the People Sing?' — a song of revolution that imagines a world beyond oppression: 'There is a life about to start when tomorrow comes.' The song was banned in China during the 2019 protests. The Magnificat has been banned by more governments than any other biblical text. Empires instinctively fear the songs that imagine a different world. Mary's Magnificat is the original revolutionary anthem — and Advent is the season when the Church sings it in defiance of every power that insists the current order is permanent.

3 Voices

Powered by LensLines™ — one-liners from every TheoLens™ tradition

Classic

The Magnificat has been banned by more governments than any other biblical text. Empires fear the songs that imagine a different world. Advent is the season of singing them anyway.

Pastoral

If you are walking in darkness — oppressed, displaced, forgotten — Advent is for you. The light is not a luxury for the comfortable. It is a lifeline for the walking-in-darkness people.

Edgy

God could have sent a warrior. He sent a baby. God could have toppled the empire with an army. He toppled it with a manger. Advent is the refusal to meet empire on empire's terms.

More Titles

Advent as Resistance: Lighting Candles Against EmpireThe Banned Magnificat: Advent's Revolutionary SongShalom Now: Why Advent Justice Cannot WaitOscar Romero's Advent: Good News Only the Poor Can HearSwords into Plowshares: The Prophetic Hope of Advent
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Frequently Asked Questions

How is the Magnificat a justice text?

Mary explicitly sings about God bringing down rulers, lifting the humble, filling the hungry, and sending the rich away empty (Luke 1:52-53). The Magnificat has been banned by multiple governments (Guatemala, India, Argentina) precisely because it envisions a radical reversal of social and economic hierarchies.

How can Advent be a season of justice and not just celebration?

Advent is traditionally a penitential season — a time of preparation through fasting, self-examination, and anticipation. Progressive and liberation traditions extend this to include acts of justice: feeding the hungry, sheltering the homeless, and dismantling systems of oppression. The kingdom of God is both prayed for and participated in.

This Sermon in Other Traditions

See how 16 other Christian traditions approach the advent (hope & waiting) sermon.