The Four Candles of Advent

On the afternoon of the first Sunday of Advent, I lit the Hope candle for the first time in my own apartment. Afraid an open flame would set off the smoke alarm, I opened the sliding patio glass doors and let the winter air inside. Suddenly, the universe was charged with significance. The bookcases and chairs and tables and things of the everyday receded as if they were shadows. The only things of any importance were the flame and the night. Who would win? The cold? Or that little flame glowing uncovered on the coffee table? The candle flickered in the draft, but did not go out—and for a second I saw stars and galaxies and bonfires and all the array of heaven in a candleflame. The Hope candle did not go out.
I settled back in my chair and remembered to breathe. The door was still not shut against the cold. It was a part of my life. Shutting it out was like a form of denial. But somewhere along the way I’d forgotten about the candleflame. This too was true.
The next Sunday, I lit a second candle. The Peace candle. I had never stopped to think about what peace meant to me, and I was dismayed to find the only sense of peace inside was the silence after a battle. Peace was exhaustion. Peace was absence of emotion. Peace was the quietness of death. That was never what I’d been taught. I’d lost sight of this candle as well. It wavered, just out of reach.
On the third Sunday, I lit the pink candle. It represents Joy. I didn’t need to check. Joy was not an emotion I remembered. I had a vague recollection of it, but no living memory. Satisfaction, relief, a flicker of happiness—those I could conjure up. When it came to joy—I drew a complete blank. It was still one of those emotions that made me wary as a feral cat. Next year, I ruefully concluded. In 2026, I would try again.
On the fourth Sunday, I lit the Love candle. This one, to my relief, I recognized. I had never let go of people when I grew disillusioned with everything else. This light still flickered brightly. Quiet, domestic, flexible, connecting people to each other despite their differences. It made sense to me. Hopeful, heroic in the dark places, tough and wiry when it needs to be, soft and cushiony when it gets a chance. For most of us, it’s love that gives meaning to the everyday. God is the Lord of the Dance and the dance He invites us into is loving.
One by one, three of the four candles in my heart had snuffed out, without my noticing. Now, one by one, I pledged to relight them. I stopped and thought for a second, and decided I had my 2025 New Year’s Resolution: to relearn Peace, Joy and Hope.





