A Community of Misfits on a Mission

Peace without Spiritual Bypassing

Comfort Ye (advent series)

This week’s Advent message wrestles with the theme of peace—not as an escape from reality but as a profound and embodied hope amid life’s struggles. The sermon critiques “spiritual bypassing,” a harmful practice where spiritual truths are used to suppress or dismiss valid emotions like grief, anger, or fear. This bypassing denies the real pain of injustice and suffering, fostering toxic positivity instead of genuine peace.

Drawing from personal experiences and scriptural insights, the sermon highlights how Advent invites us to face the world’s brokenness. The birth of Jesus doesn’t deny the harsh realities of his time—poverty, oppression, and violence—but enters into them. Jesus, born as a member of the disinherited, embodies God’s solidarity with the vulnerable. Stories like Pastor Munther Isaac’s rubble-filled nativity in Bethlehem remind us that Advent exists wherever there is longing for consolation, from Gaza to Ukraine.

True peace, the sermon emphasizes, doesn’t come from avoiding emotions but from God’s presence in the midst of them. Spiritual practices like prayer, creative reflection, and communal care can help heal trauma and reconnect us to God’s promise. As Isaiah’s prophecy and St. Simeon’s hope affirm, God’s peace speaks into our cries for justice and comfort.

Advent teaches us that peace is not escapism but God’s active presence, embodied in Jesus—the Prince of Peace—who offers a promise we can hold onto even in a world on fire.