I put out an Advent Boot Camp last year and the response was great, so I thought I’d do it again. Just a little tweaking since Christmas isn’t always the same day of the week. Read the intro here or just dive right in and prepare for the Spirit to pump you up.1
This “Advent Boot Camp” is a guideline, not a foolproof plan. Feel free to substitute anything. What’s essential is that you’re spending time in silent prayer–not just prayer but silent prayer–and that you’re easing into it.
Each day’s prayer starts with a 5 minute warmup. It’s hard just to snap from all the noise of the world into prayer, so take some time to slow down, talk to the Lord about what’s weighing on you, and get quiet. Then see what God has to say to you through his Word, his Saints, and the prayers of his Church. Finally, spend some good time in silence, either processing what you’ve read, talking to God, or trying to be still in his presence. If your prayer life has consisted solely of grace before meals and Mass on Sunday, this might be tough. But it will get easier. And what better time to seek silence than in the mad bustle leading up to Christmas?
Week 1: Begin each day with 5 minutes of prayer, make one chapel visit
- Day 1: 5 minute warmup; Isaiah 40; 5 minutes silence
- Day 2: 5 minute warmup; Isaiah 9:1-6; one decade of the rosary, 5 minutes silence
- Day 3: 5 minute warmup; the Office of Readings2; 5 minutes silence
- Day 4: 5 minute warmup; Catechism 522-526; one decade of the rosary; 5 minutes silence
- Day 5: 5 minute warmup; Luke 1:26-38; 10 minutes silence
- Day 6: 5 minute warmup; Chaplet of Divine Mercy; 5 minutes silence
- Day 7: 15 minutes of prayer: your choice
Week 2: Begin and end each day with 5 minutes of prayer, attend one extra Mass
- Day 8: 5 minute warmup; Isaiah 11; two decades of the rosary; 5 minutes silence
- Day 9: 5 minute warmup; reading from St. Bernard of Clairvaux; 10 minutes silence
- Day 10: 5 minute warmup; Luke 2:1-21; one decade of the rosary; 10 minutes silence
- Day 11: 20 minutes of prayer: your choice
- Day 12: 5 minute warmup; the Office of Readings; 10 minutes silence
- Day 13: 5 minute warmup; Stations of the Cross
- Day 14: 5 minute warmup; “In the Bleak Midwinter”; 1 John 4; 10 minutes silence
Week 3: Begin and end each day with 5 minutes of prayer, attend two extra Masses
- Day 15: 5 minute warmup; John 1:1-18; reading from St. Gregory Nazianzen; 10 minutes silence
- Day 16: 25 minutes of prayer: your choice
- Day 17: 5 minute warmup; “O Come, O Come Emmanuel”; 15 minutes silence
- Day 18: 5 minute warmup; the Office of Readings; 15 minutes silence
- Day 19: 5 minute warmup; full rosary (joyful mysteries); 5 minutes silence
- Day 20: 5 minute warmup; Isaiah 61-62; 15 minutes silence
- Day 21: 5 minute warmup; make a good examination of conscience, asking God to cast light into all the areas of sin in your life and to make you truly repentant and grateful for his love and mercy; go to confession; 15 minutes silence
Week 4: Begin and end each day with 5 minutes of prayer, make two chapel visits
- Day 22: 5 minute warmup; memorize Isaiah 9:5 (“A child is born to us…”); 10 minutes silence
- Day 23: 5 minute warmup; Jeremiah 31; 15 minutes silence
- Day 24: 5 minute warmup; Isaiah 35; reading from St. Augustine; 20 minutes silence
- Day 25: 5 minute warmup; Matthew 1:18-2:23; G.K.Chesterton “The House of Christmas”; 20 minutes silence
- Day 26: Half an hour of prayer: your choice
I’ve compiled the non-Biblical readings here if you want to print them in advance: Advent Boot Camp readings
This is going to max you out at 30-35 minutes of prayer at one time. If you feel like you can do more than that, go for it. But if you’re a beginner when it comes to non-liturgical prayer, this might be a good way to get started. Whether you’re interested in this approach or not, do spend some time praying about how you’re going to try to grow closer to the Lord this Advent. But don’t stress about it–it’s supposed to be a time of preparation and peace, not frantic anxiety, despite what the mall might do to you this time of year. You might consider starting to read the Bible through in a year using this schedule. Or read Caryll Houselander’s The Reed of God. Just be sure you do something more than bake and shop to prepare for Christmas this year. The Christ Child is coming, after all. Offer him your heart.
- Ten points if you read that in your Hans and Franz voice. [↩]
I love this! I will try to do it, in addition to the readings and journal I’ll be keeping this Advent!
Read this post earlier today and thought “hm, this looks awesome!” Then went to Confession and the priest told me that I needed to use Advent to start going to the spiritual gym…spiritual gym, spiritual boot camp, I THINK THE LORD IS TRYING TO TELL ME SOMETHING. So thank you for putting this together! 😀
YEAH he is–shoot!
Thank you.
I think that making two chapel visits a day, which requires driving, with a one-year-old in winter seems too hard! Am I being wimpy, or do you think it would be reasonable to substitute something else for the second chapel visit that week? What if we also have other daily family Advent prayer activities?
Thank you for compiling this (at least one year ago). I am going to try to do all of the meditations! Except that I think I’m already behind because I didn’t start yesterday. Oh, well.
Oh, no, two visits a WEEK! That’s more doable 🙂 But if you can do one a day, that’s fantastic!
But then, how is the fourth week building from the third week? Isn’t two chapel visits less than two extra Masses? Or are you just letting us have it easy that week because we will be busy with our more temporal Christmas preparations?
Yeah, because you’ve really only got Monday and Tuesday before Christmas Eve and with travel and all I don’t want people to make it all the way to the fourth week and then feel like they’re failing. But you’re welcome to go to 3 extra Masses that week 🙂 Give my love to Chad and Henry!
This has been a great tool for me during this advent, thank you so much for putting this together!