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Advent 2025: Week 3: Joy

Advent 3: Joy
Horsham: 15th December 2025

The traditional theme of the third week of Advent is joy.

Some Churches have traditions relating to this week. For some, the third candle in the advent ring is coloured pink, and clergy wear rose coloured robes. Historically, the colour pink has been symbolic of joy.

Gaudete in Domino Semper

You may know that in some traditions, the third Sunday of advent is sometimes called Gaudete Sunday. The word ‘gaudete’ means ‘rejoice’, and the introit for the Catholic mass is “Gaudete in Domino semper: iterum dico, gaudete”.

This is a Latin translation of Philipians 4:4.  ‘Rejoice in the Lord always. I will say it again: Rejoice!’.  This word ‘rejoice’ is interesting. We don’t often use it in modern English, and I want us to reflect on what it really means. Of course it is an exhortation to be joyful. Be filled with joy. Experience joy.

This joy is not the excited, enthusiastic kind of emotion we might feel when our favourite football team scores a goal. Something different is going on here.

So Rejoice!

The Greek word is ‘chairete’ (Χαίρετε). It’s another one of those words which doesn’t translate easily into English, because the Greek meaning is far deeper than just being excited about something. It is a deep, strong emotion of gladness. It has a strong, spiritual element. It is the emotion we are to feel as we look forward to the reward which awaits us in Heaven (Matthew 5:18). It is the joy which we are to feel that our names are written in Heaven (Luke 10:20).

Advent is about anticipation of the arrival of the Messiah. The joy of advent is a deep, heartfelt emotion. It is the joy of anticipation. Anticipation of something so indescribably special that it defies description.

Yes, Christ was born and became Immanuel – God with us. More than that, Christ has died. Christ is risen. Christ will come again. This is the message of the Gospel.

So rejoice. Allow yourself to experience that deep, heartfelt emotion of true joy.

“May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing, so that by the power of the Holy Spirit you may abound in hope!

Advent 3 Joy: 2024

December 2024: Horsham

Alongside the earlier themes of hope and peace, the traditional theme of this third week of Advent is joy.

Whilst my outlook on life is generally ‘glass half full’, joy is not an adjective I would generally apply to myself. It’s not that I’m always unhappy, but even when I’m excited, I don’t always express my feelings exuberantly. I have one or two friends who do just that in a big way, but I’m not sure that I would necessarily describe them as joyful.

I think that ‘joy’, as it’s used here, really expresses something much deeper. In the past, I could say that I have felt ‘joyful’ about the safe delivery of a child. A couple of years ago, I was ‘joyful’ when, having been expecting some very bad news from the doctor, the diagnosis turned out to be unexpectedly good. The feelings I experienced at those moments were so much deeper than the short term relief, excitement and delight I felt when I heard a couple of years ago that my football team (Leyton Orient, thank you for asking) had avoided relegation. I wonder whether you sense that there’s a lasting and continuing angle to this Advent ‘joy’ which I need to unpack a bit.

I’ve mentioned elsewhere in this series that Christmas is about looking back and celebrating the birth of Jesus. In the context of my faith, that is the moment when Christ took on human form and came into the world. The Angel gives Jesus the name ‘Emmanuel’ which means ‘God with us’ (Matthew 1:23). That’s a critical, defining moment of my faith. The moment when God stepped into this world in the person of Jesus. That was such an impactful moment that  connects with me in a very special way. In some way, Emmanuel gives me an inner sense of joy.

You may recall that the Apostle Paul lists ‘joy’ as one of the gifts of the Holy Spirit (Galatians 5:22). Paul says that when you recognise Jesus for who he is, the Holy Spirit impacts your life. Your life is irrevocably changed (Ephesians 4:22-24). The old self is swept away, and the new life will reflect an inner sense of, amongst other things, joy. As a Christian, joy becomes part of my character. Again, this points towards something much, much deeper than the superficial happiness which we hopefully encounter on a good day in our everyday life. It’s literally in my soul. I can only experience that kind of joy because I have this inner confidence, this faith, that Christ is real, and that in some way He has His hand on my eternal life.

Of course, the fact that it falls in our calendar in the weeks before Christmas, means that Advent is a time when our culture looks ‘forwards’ to the Nativity, celebrating the coming of the Christ child. Alongside that, people look forward to all the fun and indulgence which goes with it. Yet hold on a minute, because there is something incongruous if not illogical about looking forward to something which happened 2000 years ago. If the only thing I’m really left looking forward to is the trappings of 21st Century Christmas with it’s western commercialisation, I’m missing the point. That bit certainly doesn’t fill me with the right kind of joy.

So what should I be anticipating? Scripture tells me that Christ will come again and fully establish His eternal kingdom, and that whatever it looks like, I will be a part of it. That is at the heart of what I believe. It means that I don’t have to be anxious about the future, because Christ has it all in hand. Now that gives me a real deep and inner sense of hope, peace and joy, which happen to be the first three  themes of Advent. I can only experience these emotions because the baby of the Nativity is the same Jesus who will come again in glory. As a follower of Jesus, I will be celebrating the birth of the child, but I’m also looking forward to his return.

End Piece…

I wonder if you get the idea that the joy of Advent is about much more than clapping my hands with delight and walking round with a big smile on my face. It’s about looking forwards to something extraordinarily special. Looking forward to the day when Christ will come again. The day when ‘every tear will be wiped away, and there will be no more death, no more mourning, no more suffering, and no more pain.’ Revelation 21:4.

Of course, there will be trials and tribulations for me along the way, but just knowing that that day is coming does something deep in my soul. Alongside hope and peace, it gives me joy. It occurs to me that maybe this is the reason why I am generally ‘glass half full’. Maybe, after all, ‘joy’ is an adjective I should be using when describing myself!

As Christmas drawers near, get ready to enjoy celebrating the birth of Jesus in the stable in Bethlehem. But my prayer for you this Christmas is that you too might experience that hope, peace and joy which can only come from having confidence, having faith, in Christ and the promise of his return.

This Advent, will you allow the Lord to give you ‘a crown of beauty instead of ashes, the oil of joy instead of mourning, and a garment of praise instead of a spirit of despair.Isaiah 61:3

Richard Jackson, West Sussex: LifePictureUK