First Lutheran Church

First Lutheran Church Join us for worship at 10a.m. on Sunday!

12/22/2025

May you have a Blessed
Fourth Sunday of Advent!

THE LORD IS NEAR! ALLELUIA!

HOPE PEACE JOY LOVE

The Fourth Sunday of Advent: The Lord Is Near

The Fourth Sunday of Advent stands at the very edge of Christmas. Waiting gives way to imminence. Hope, peace, joy, and love are no longer abstract virtues we admire from a distance; they converge in a single, staggering truth: the Lord is near.

Advent is not about nostalgia or decoration. It is a disciplined spiritual posture—learning how to wait rightly. By the fourth candle, waiting is almost complete. The Church shifts from preparation to expectancy. God is no longer “coming someday.” He is at the door.

The four candles tell a theological story, not a decorative one.

Hope is lit first because faith begins with trust in a promise we cannot yet see. Biblical hope is not optimism; it is confidence anchored in God’s faithfulness. If hope collapses, everything else follows.

Peace follows hope because reconciliation with God produces interior order. This is not the absence of conflict, but the presence of right relationship—shalom—the soul aligned with God’s will.

Joy, marked traditionally by the rose candle, interrupts the purple seriousness of Advent. It is not denial of suffering. It is defiance of despair. Christian joy exists precisely because God enters a broken world instead of avoiding it.

Finally comes Love, the summit and fulfillment of the season. Love is not merely one candle among others; it is the fire that gives meaning to all the rest. The Incarnation is not an idea—it is love made flesh. God does not send instructions. He sends Himself.

“The Lord is near” is not poetic exaggeration. It is the radical claim at the heart of Christianity: that God chooses closeness over distance, vulnerability over power, and relationship over control.

As Advent closes, the question is no longer whether Christ will come, but whether we are prepared to receive Him—not sentimentally, but truthfully. Not with perfection, but with openness.

Christmas does not begin in comfort. It begins in surrender.

And that is why Advent matters.

12/19/2025
12/14/2025

Third Sunday of Advent

The Candle of JOY

Loving God, on this Gaudete Sunday we
light the Candle of Joy and rejoice in
your nearness. Fill our hearts with
gladness that comes from trusting your
promises, even amid waiting and
uncertainty. May your Spirit renew our
hope, strengthen our faith, and help us
share your joy with all we meet, as we
prepare to welcome Christ, our Savior
and our peace. Amen.

The Candle of Joy – Gaudete Sunday

The Third Sunday of Advent, known as Gaudete Sunday, marks a turning point in the season of waiting. The name Gaudete comes from the Latin word meaning “rejoice.” In the midst of Advent’s quiet longing and preparation, the Church pauses to remind us that joy is not postponed until Christmas—it is already present because God is near.

The Candle of Joy, traditionally rose-colored, stands out among the Advent candles. Its color softens the deep purple of penance and expectation, visually proclaiming hope. This candle tells a profound truth: Christian joy does not depend on circumstances. It flows from trust in God’s promises, even when life feels uncertain or unfinished.

The prayer of Gaudete Sunday captures this beautifully. It acknowledges waiting and uncertainty rather than denying them. Joy here is not shallow happiness or forced cheerfulness. It is a steady gladness rooted in faith—confidence that God is faithful, present, and at work even when answers are incomplete.

Lighting the Candle of Joy invites believers to examine their own hearts. Where has waiting grown heavy? Where has hope weakened? Gaudete Sunday does not rush us past these questions; instead, it meets them with light. The Spirit renews hope, strengthens faith, and calls us to become bearers of joy to others.

As Christmas draws near, the Candle of Joy reminds us that Christ is not only coming—He is already with us. Our task is to notice, to rejoice, and to share that joy generously. In doing so, we prepare not just our homes or traditions, but our hearts to welcome Christ, our Savior and our peace.

Joy, on this Sunday, is not an emotion we manufacture. It is a gift we receive—and a light we pass on.

12/07/2025

DEC 07, 2025

2nd Sunday OF Advent

“Prepare the way of the Lord,
make straight his paths.”

The Meaning of the 2nd Sunday of Advent – A Call to Prepare the Way

The Second Sunday of Advent stands like a firm wake-up call in the liturgical year. While the First Sunday invites us to watchfulness, the second goes further: it demands action. The Gospel for this day introduces the prophetic voice of John the Baptist, thundering through the wilderness with a message that is both simple and uncompromising: “Prepare the way of the Lord, make straight his paths.”

This is not poetic decoration. It is a directive—urgent, deliberate, and intensely practical. The image of preparing a road was easily understood in biblical times: before a king arrived, workers cleared debris, leveled rough places, and straightened crooked paths. The king’s arrival demanded readiness, not excuses.

Advent borrows this imagery to challenge us. If Christ is to enter our lives more deeply, then something must shift within us. Straightening the path means confronting the twisted parts of our habits, intentions, and motivations. Preparing the way means clearing out whatever clutters our interior life: resentments stored like old junk, fears that choke hope, hurried routines that leave no space for prayer or reflection.

Advent preparation is not sentimental; it is transformative. It asks us to examine our priorities with an honest mind and a steady heart. It invites us to replace spiritual passivity with deliberate choices—choices that make room for grace.

The candles in the Advent wreath accompany us on this journey. The candle for this Sunday symbolizes faith, repentance, and preparation. Its soft light is not merely decorative; it signals that change is possible, that God desires closeness, and that the human heart can become a fitting place for divine arrival.

Every Advent season becomes a rehearsal of the same truth: Christ comes to those who prepare for Him. Not perfectly, but sincerely. Not with noise, but with openness.

This Sunday reminds us that the wilderness in Scripture is not a lonely desert—it is the raw, honest space where God’s voice becomes clear. When we dare to enter that interior wilderness and listen without distraction, the command to “prepare the way” becomes less of a burden and more of a liberating invitation.

Advent preparation, therefore, is not about performing religious tasks mechanically. It is about restoring alignment—straightening what has become crooked, softening what has become hardened, and making space where we have allowed life to become overcrowded.

If we take this invitation seriously, Christmas will not arrive as just another date on the calendar. It will come as a spiritual breakthrough—God entering a heart that has been made ready.

12/01/2025

First Sunday of Advent
The Candle of Hope

Lord, as we light the Advent candle of hope, fill our hearts with Your steady light. In the darkness of uncertainty, remind us that Your promises never fail. Renew our trust in Your presence, strengthen our spirits for the days ahead, and help us carry Your hope into the world.
Amen.

The Meaning of the Advent Candle of Hope

Advent begins with a deliberate act of orientation: placing hope at the forefront. The first candle—traditionally purple—signals a shift in posture. It is not optimism, which depends on circumstances, but hope, which relies on God’s fidelity. The early Christians understood this distinction clearly. They lived in a world defined by unpredictability, political tension, and hardship. Yet they held to the conviction that God’s promises were not fragile or uncertain. Lighting the first candle re-echoes that ancient stance.

The candle is simple, but what it represents is not. Hope in Christian understanding is not a psychological comfort or a motivational slogan. It is a theological virtue, anchored in the belief that God acts in history and in the life of each person. When believers pray for a “steady light,” they acknowledge a world that often feels unstable. Advent does not deny darkness; it confronts it. The prayer in the image names uncertainty directly and refuses to let it dictate the final word.

The first candle also addresses the human tendency to forget. The prayer’s request—“remind us that Your promises never fail”—acknowledges how easy it is to lose perspective when life tightens, slows down, or unravels. Advent forces a recalibration. It asks people to remember past faithfulness so they can face the present with clarity rather than fear.

Strength is another theme embedded in this candle. The prayer asks for strengthened spirits, not escape from difficulty. This points to a mature approach to faith: one that expects effort, endurance, and participation. Hope does not eliminate challenges; it equips the believer to meet them with calm resilience.

Finally, the candle is outward-facing. Hope is not meant to be hoarded. The request to “carry Your hope into the world” recognizes that despair rarely stays private. Neither does hope. The early Church spread rapidly not because of wealth or influence, but because their hope was visible in how they lived, helped, and persevered. The first Advent candle continues that call.

Lighting the Candle of Hope is therefore not a sentimental ritual. It is an intentional stance rooted in memory, strengthened by faith, and directed toward action. It begins Advent by clarifying what kind of people Christians are invited to be: those who acknowledge the world’s darkness without surrendering to it, those who trust in promises that have endured, and those who move forward with a hope that is steady, substantial, and shared.

Attention: if your family last name is Swanson, Anderson, Peterson, Johnson, Larson, Olsen, Nelson or perhaps Linn…..the...
12/16/2024

Attention: if your family last name is Swanson, Anderson, Peterson, Johnson, Larson, Olsen, Nelson or perhaps Linn…..there is a good chance your relatives originated in Grenna, Sweden and were part of the original congregation of Attica’s First Lutheran Church. The congregation was established as the Swedish Evangelical Lutheran Church in 1858. They got right to work to build the actual church which was ready for its first service in the building by Christmas Eve 1859.

This year our Christmas Eve service will mark 165 years of church services in our church building. We want to invite everyone to come and experience what your potential ancestors experienced in our little historical church. Service begins at 7pm on Christmas Eve, hope to see you there!

11/04/2024

For anyone who remembers Pastor Karl Korbel from First Lutheran Church, he will be leading worship this Sunday, November 10th at First Lutheran along with his daughter Faith.
Worship starts at 10am.

Pictures from the Mission Guatemala trip that Pastor Will and Becky Jones participated in.
08/13/2023

Pictures from the Mission Guatemala trip that Pastor Will and Becky Jones participated in.

Address

204 E Pike Street
Attica, IN
47918

Opening Hours

10am - 11:30am

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