9 Advent Attitudes – #1: Uninhibited Selflessness

9 Advent Attitudes
Advent is, above all else, a season of hope – a virtue that is all too rare in our world. To live as a person of hope is to behave in such a manner as to draw suspicion that we are behaving somewhat erratically as far as worldly norms go. This new type of behavior – what some may even call erratic behavior (the behavior that led people to conclude that the Apostles were “under the influence” on Pentecost) – is characterized by 9 attitudes. I call them 9 Advent Attitudes. Today, we look at Advent Attitude #1. (Drawn from my book,
Under the Influence of Jesus: The Transforming Experience of Encountering Jesus.)

Advent Attitude #1: Uninhibited Selflessness

Did you survive Black Friday? I hope so. Come with me now into a much safer and more loving “space” – Advent.

Advent is the antithesis of Black Friday.

Black Friday is all about scarcity, limited opportunities, and fear of missing out. It is about chaos and frenzy. It is about making sure you are first in line. Everything about Black Friday screams “ME!!!”

Advent, on the other hand, offers the promise of abundance and hope. It is about calm and peace. It is about recognizing that it is, in fact, NOT about ME. Advent celebrates the dawn of an era – the coming of Jesus – marked by uninhibited selflessness: a new kind of love found in Jesus Christ.

The uninhibited love that flows in the Kingdom of God as a result of the coming of Christ is not just a warm and fuzzy, momentary feeling. It is an ongoing unselfish concern for the good of others. In fact, the better word here is charity which is kind of the love that God shows – a totally selfless love – which we are called to participate in. This kind of love involves sacrifice because it means putting our own needs on the back burner. The saints are legendary for their heroic acts of sacrifice, many of them quite dramatic. In less dramatic but no less heroic ways, ordinary people practice this kind of love day in and day out: parents setting aside their own needs to care for the needs of their children; spouses setting aside their own needs to care for one another; older siblings setting aside their own needs to tend to the needs of younger siblings; workers setting aside their own needs to tend to the needs of a customer or co-worker, and so on.

Above all things, this attitude of selflessness is the most noticeable attitude of Kingdom dwellers who are basking in the glow of the ultimate act of selflessness: God giving us his own Son: Emmanuel – God with us. So much so that Tertullian, a 2nd century Church Father, reported that the Romans often commented when observing Christians, “See how they love one another.” This doesn’t mean that the early Christians “love-bombed” one another with hugs and expressions of affection (although such displays were common) but rather, that they were known to consistently and without inhibition act, not in their own interests, but in the interests of others.

The only thing that Black Friday and Advent have in common is that they both emphasize saving: the former is about saving money while the latter is about Jesus saving us! It is the presence of Emmanuel – God-with-us – and the overflowing abundant grace that has busted down the door of sin that has ushered in an era of unbridled selflessness to effectively save us from ourselves!

Practicing Selflessness

  1. The first step in practicing selflessness is to offer gratitude: you have everything you need! If you are thankful for what you have, you have taken the first step toward freeing yourself to think of what others need.
  2. Take inventory of the selfless things you are already doing…not to pat yourself on the back, but to realize that God’s grace is already at work in you. Thank God for this grace and pray that it might multiply and enable you to practice selflessness without resentment.
  3. Express appreciation to those who show you selfless love.

For whoever wants to save their life will lose it, but whoever loses their life for me will find it. (Mt 16:25)

About Joe Paprocki 2747 Articles
Joe Paprocki, DMin, is National Consultant for Faith Formation at Loyola Press, where, in addition to his traveling/speaking responsibilities, he works on the development team for faith formation curriculum resources including Finding God: Our Response to God’s Gifts and God’s Gift: Reconciliation and Eucharist. Joe has more than 35 years of experience in ministry and has presented keynotes, presentations, and workshops in more than 100 dioceses in North America. Joe is a frequent presenter at national conferences including the Los Angeles Religious Education Congress, the Mid-Atlantic Congress, and the National Conference for Catechetical Leadership. He is the author of numerous books, including the best seller The Catechist’s Toolbox, A Church on the Move, Under the Influence of Jesus, and Called to Be Catholic—a bilingual, foundational supplemental program that helps young people know their faith and grow in their relationship with God. Joe is also the series editor for the Effective Catechetical Leader and blogs about his experiences in faith formation at www.catechistsjourney.com.

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