I love the Advent season. The hymnody of the four weeks cannot be surpassed; the lessons and Gospel texts are rich in meaning.
.....Why don't pastors take the bull by the horn and whip the worship and music committee into line? Or do the pastors blur the line between the two seasons?
Instead of the 12 days of Christmas, we now celebrate 35-36 days of Christmas until January 6 -- not far behind the shopping centers.
A timely assertion, being caught between these two worlds of church culture and the secular setting and doing neither particularly well.
There is much to like about Advent, for me the hymns and the wreath in particular.
What I don't like about Advent is having two sundays of John the Baptist hollering. From a lectionary point of view it works, but I pity those souls who decide they'll check out the local Lutheran church and find the focus to be in a substantially different place than what they are likely expecting.
Our preaching reflects this tension in the obligatory "preparation" sermon in advent, where we intone "just as we prepare for Christmas we prepare our hearts through repentance". Christmas is being drawn into the discussion because it's relevant to what is going on in our lives the rest of the week. I wonder if we could have an advent without the word "Christmas" being uttered...or at least until 4th sunday of advent.
I currently serve a church that also has an annual advent/christmas cantata. It's a tradition that predates me, and after some experiments with different dates times we've returned to the second Sunday in advent. I too find it disruptive to the season of Advent, and causes tension with hymn selection.
Adding some Christmas songs in Advent 3 or 4, ramping up to Christmas would be my preference, but when all the old Christmas favorites have been sung on Advent 2, it leaves the next two weeks in this wish-wash of Advent and Christmas.
By the time we get to Christmas eve, well, it's a bit of a let down. I'm considering moving the cantata to the 3rd week in advent, that'd be a step in the right direction for us.