Advent Week #2-Jesus’ Justice and Peace

Dcs. Lindsay Fertig-Johnson

Director of Development & Public Relations

Share Post:

For Advent we are going to write about the justice the birth of Jesus brings into the world, reflecting on Jesus’ justice through the themes of Advent: hope, peace, joy, and love. 

One of the least discussed gifts we receive in Advent season is justice, which comes to us through the birth of Jesus. The prophet Isaiah speaks of the coming of the Messiah as the one who “will bring forth justice to the nations.” (42:1) Isaiah continues to prophecy, saying, “he will faithfully bring forth justice” (42:3) and that “he will not grow faint or be crushed until he has established justice in the earth.” (42:4) Of course, given how we in the United States have been trained to view justice as solely a means of punishing wrongdoers, justice seems to be an odd theme to mention when we are in the Advent season. 

The four candles associated with Advent represent hope, peace, joy, and love. With justice being assigned the role of exacting societal, if not individual, vengeance, it naturally becomes challenging to associate justice with Advent. I doubt you will see a Hallmark Christmas movie this season with the theme centered on justice! But yet, the coming of Jesus the Messiah is also the time when we should be celebrating Jesus’ justice as much as we celebrate hope, peace, joy, and love, for when Jesus comes into the world he comes to establish justice for all the nations. 

This week we will focus on Jesus’ justice and peace. 


One of my favorite hymns is Canticle of the Turning.

My heart shall sing of the day you bring
Let the fires of your justice burn
Wipe away all tears for the dawn draws near
And the world is about to turn!

 This hymn, which I adamantly argue is an Advent hymn, speaks of the ways that Christ (through His birth) brings forth justice and flips the ways of the world upside down creating a way for peace on the earth.

On the second Sunday of Advent, we light the candle of peace, a reminder that as we anticipate the birth of the Christ child, we remember the angel’s proclamation that through Christ there will be peace on earth (Luke 2:14).

We can’t talk about justice without talking about peace. Our call for justice is a call for peace on earth. A call for all to be seen and treated as the Imago Dei—the image of God. This call is a reminder to see the ways that the Christ child appears among us today—in our neighbors, in strangers, in the outcast, in those persecuted in the halls of power.

Peace on earth is a call to seek justice. It is a call to speak truth to power, fight with the oppressed, and stand in solidarity with those who seek to dismantle systems of oppression that prevent all from experiencing peace on earth.

From the halls of power to the fortress tower
Not a stone will be left on stone
Let the king beware for your
Justice tears ev’ry tyrant from his throne
The hungry poor shall weep no more
For the food they can never earn
There are tables spread, ev’ry
Mouth be fed
For the world is about to turn

This advent season we are reminded of the ways the birth of Christ brings forth justice among the nation and calls us to seek peace on earth for all.

Don't miss a post.

Sign up to receive The Called Activist directly to your email inbox. 

The Called Activist

Living Lives of Protest

On Saturday 8 million people marched and protested this incompetent, corrupt, and horrible administration. The trump presidency really is the worst. He has outdone his first time around and that

Read More »
The Called Activist

Reflections on Stupidity

Dietrich Bonhoeffer was a German Lutheran pastor and theologian in the 1940s and spoke out and boldly acted against Hitler’s Nazi Germany, which ended up costing him his life. I

Read More »
The Called Activist

Glimpses of Liberation

With the news of wars and ridiculousness coming out daily from the White House which is increasingly untethered to reality, common sense, or even a faint recognition of what people

Read More »

Discover more from The Festival Center

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading

The Festival Center will be closed to the public on Tuesday, February 11th, and Wednesday, February 12th due to inclement weather. We will resume regular operations on Thursday, February 13th.

Exit mobile version