Advent week 1

An art meditation for the first week of Advent

Advent is about joyous anticipation, but it is also about preparing for Christ's return.
Arts & Culture

Mountains of garbage, an overturned container ship, displaced animals: What do these have to do with Advent? Isn’t Advent supposed to be a season of joyful anticipation? Are not these four weeks intended to prepare us for the celebration of the nativity of our Lord Jesus Christ? Why this foreboding imagery in a season marked by hopeful expectation?

Advent is about joyous anticipation, but it has two distinct emphases. The season is a time of preparation for the celebration of Jesus’ birth and a time of preparation for his glorious return. Unfortunately, this second emphasis may often get lost in the buildup to Christmas.

The readings of the first week of Advent, especially those from the prophet Isaiah, help frame this second focus. Recontextualized in this liturgical season, Isaiah’s words portray a beautiful, eschatological reality in which the kingdom of God is realized in our world. However, Isaiah’s words also challenge as they describe God’s judgment.

In the gospel reading of the first Sunday of Advent, Jesus himself levels this challenge: “For as the days of Noah were, so will be the coming of the Son of Man. For as in those days before the flood they were eating and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage, until the day Noah entered the ark, and they knew nothing until the flood came and swept them all away, so too will be the coming of the Son of Man” (Matt. 24:37–39).

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Ark, Alexis Rockman, 2014, oil and alkyd on wood, 44 x 56 in.

From the beginning of his pontificate, Pope Francis has spoken about the pernicious evil of indifference. He has even spoken of a “globalization of indifference.” But what does indifference look like? Alexis Rockman’s startling painting Ark shows us an example of what indifference looks like. We are confronted with polluted waters, landscapes of refuse, the suffering of creation, meticulously rendered rusty intermodal containers, discarded plastics, and mangled ecosystems—all the results of indifference or worse.

This is not some distant future that Rockman has rendered in grimy greens and leaden grays. It is now.

However, now can also be a time of “ecological conversion” as Pope Francis has eloquently stated in his prophetic encyclical Laudato Si’ (On Care for Our Common Home). The debased waters, suffering animals, and throwaway culture that Pope Francis speaks of and Rockman depicts with unblinking clarity do not have to persist.

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In fact, Advent is an excellent time for us to challenge ourselves to greater ecological conversion. Before the annual buying sprees of throwaway culture get into full swing. Before partaking in all of the Christmas parties with their conspicuous consumption and nonbiodegradable accoutrements. Before resources are used for novelty rather than aiding the world’s environmental victims.

Before any of this, Advent invites us to a spiritual practice of ecological conversion. We are called to be awake and alert and see the flood forming around us. We are called to prepare for Christ’s glorious return by tending to those most in need. That includes creation.

This reflection is one of four meditations on various works of art for Advent. The meditations will be collected here as they are published.

These essays are also published in our December 2019 issue of U.S. Catholic (Vol. 84, No. 12, pages 12–17). Click here to subscribe to the magazine.

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About the author

John Christman

John Christman holds degrees in art and theology and often instructs and writes in the fields of art, theology, and spirituality.

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