I feel sure that if most people could simply be got to go to a church with traditional liturgy and music and Eucharistic solemnity they would immediately feel better and start to ‘get it’ and would return, at least sometimes. The trick is to get them there in the first place. — john milbank (@johnmilbank3) December 2, 2018

Advent, we are told, is counter-cultural. While the rest of society is already celebrating Christmas, devout liturgical Christians are properly observing Advent - restoring its penitential character, avoiding Christmas carols, being a community of exiles amidst prevailing consumerism and excess.Strangely, however, the liturgical event which marks the beginning of the season - the Advent Procession - is remarkably popular. Take, for example, these statements regarding the Advent Procession:This is a liturgy centred around the creedal teaching on the Last Judgement, in which the Prayer Book collect's words echo ("when he shall come again in his glorious Majesty"), resounding not to Christmas carols but Advent hymns, illuminated not by festive Christmas lights but more subdued hand-held candles.No, the Advent character of this liturgy cannot be missed. And yet it is popular. Advent, rather than being a sectarian, counter-cultural preserve of an ecclesial few, would seem to have cultural resonance. The popularity of the Advent Procession suggests the culture has a desire for something more than a 'secular' December. A desire, in other words, for Advent.Thus the Advent Procession is another example of a High Church populism which gathers up cultural desires, yearnings, and experiences into the Church's life of prayer and praise. In the cold, dark days of early December, amidst the busy demands of commercial and social life, the Advent Procession draws the culture into an experience of Christ-centred hope, peace, and light.The High Church populism is evident in memorable hymns, in readings from the Scriptures which capture the imagination, in the use of dark and light, movement and space, in celebrating a liturgical season in a 'heart speaks unto heart' manner. The Advent Procession demonstrates, in other words, that the High Church tradition can be populist - that it contains vibrantly populist practices and spirituality.And it is a High Church populism which can confidently celebrate the beginning of the Advent season, knowing that Advent speaks to the yearnings of a culture much less at ease with its secularism than can appear.In this context, we might consider this tweet from John Milbank: There have been a number of critical responses to this but I don't think any have yet picked up on Milbank's reference to "Eucharistic solemnity". Part of the High Church tradition's populism is the recognition of the need for a rich, resonant experience of liturgical worship outside the Eucharist. Advent begins and ends with such examples of High Church populism - the Advent Procession and the Nine Lessons and Carols. Surely the lesson here - alongside the growing popularity of Choral Evensong - is to ensure that non-Eucharistic worship is not dismissed as a distraction to 'proper' (i.e Eucharistic) church or assumed to be the property of an evangelical tradition in which worship is defined by relevance rather than resonance.The High Church populism of Advent, in other words, needs to be rolled out across the Christian year, embracing feast and fast, and the events of national and civic life.