Friday, December 24, 2021

Wishing you a Merry Christmas

December 24 - a day to tie up loose ends.  Finish wrapping presents.  Putting the finishing touches on the menu.  Reminding the family a half a dozen times that the car is leaving for Christmas Eve services at a set time so don't be late (at least in our family!).

For me this is a different kind of Christmas.  For the first time in over 25 years I didn't have a service to plan or a sermon to write.  I'll be sitting with the worshippers instead of in the chancel.  I won't be giving directions on how to hold a lit candle so that wax doesn't get on the chair or pew, floor or clothing.  It will be different.

Still, I'm looking forward to tonight.  Our entire family will be worshipping together.  That hasn't happened in a long time.  Afterward, we'll head over to my oldest daughter's house for lots of good food and drink.  And I'll probably get to bed at a decent hour.

I pray that your Christmas celebration fills your heart with joy.  Jesus is the best gift you can receive.  He comes gift wrapped - in humility but with a birth announcement that can't be beat - "For unto you is born this day in the city of David a Savior: He is Christ the Lord!"

I'm taking a break from the blog but I'll be back next year (Jan.3) Below, I've provided you with a devotion that I wrote a few years ago.  If you have about six minutes I encourage you to read it.  It's entitled, "What Are They Thinking?"  And have a Merry Christmas!

What Are They Thinking?

              We have a beautiful Nativity set that was given to us by a friend.  It is very pretty and very much enhances our Christmas celebration.  I’ve noticed that we set it up just like practically every other Nativity set – with all the characters gazing toward Jesus.

              That only makes sense, right?  The babe of Bethlehem is the focal point for this night.  He is the reason for the season.  It is because of the Christ child that Christians all over the world have gathered for worship, gathered to give thanks to God the Father for the gift of His only-begotten Son.  Tonight, the whole world looks into the stable and gazes upon the manger.  There on a bed of straw, wrapped in swaddling clothes, is the baby, the Christ.

              So it’s very easy to imagine that all eyes were on Jesus that first Christmas.  I wonder what they were all thinking?  How were they all feeling?  Luke’s Gospel tells of the birth straight away.  But there is no reporter on the scene, asking the parents and the shepherds, “How do you feel?  Can you describe your emotions?”  We just don’t know.

              Maybe Joseph was thinking back to the dream he’d had nine months before.  An angel appeared to him and told him to take Mary as his wife.  Yes, Mary was pregnant, said the angel,  but the child was not conceived by any man but by the Holy Spirit.  The angel also explained that because God is the Father, the child would not be named Joseph.  Instead, the baby would be given the name Jesus.  That name means, “the Lord saves.”  Jesus would save his people from their sins.  So maybe Joseph was thinking, “There He is, as plain as the nose on my face -  the Savior of the world.”

              What were the shepherds thinking?  They were the first to learn the good news.  They left everything, even their sheep to find the child.  There might have been other babies in Bethlehem than night.  But there would only be one wrapped tightly in strips of cloth and sleeping in a cattle trough.  Perhaps they looked on and thought, “There’s the baby the angel of the Lord spoke of.  But how will a baby be the Savior of the world?  We’ve got to tell everyone about this.”  And according to Luke, that’s what the shepherds did.  However, they didn’t talk about how cute the baby looked as he lay in the manger.  They told everyone they saw of what they had heard about the baby, God’s Savior.

              And then there is Mary.  She must have been exhausted.  The trip from Nazareth to Bethlehem was hard.  She did not travel first class.  There is no first class section when riding on a donkey.  As she looked into the manger, what was she thinking?

              The angel had revealed to Mary part of God’s plan in telling her that “the holy one to be born will be called the Son of God.”  Now, the shepherds have come to find the baby and they certainly told Joseph and Mary all they had seen in the fields outside of the village.  To all of this, the Scripture tells us that Mary “treasured up all these things and pondered them in her heart.”  Interestingly, the word “pondering” means “putting together.”  So maybe, as we look at our Nativity Set, Mary is looking and pondering how this baby of hers could be the one of whom such things were spoken.

              Throughout the entire life of Jesus, Mary would be putting together the meaning of all these words.  But on this Christmas Eve night, we are moved not to ponder but to celebrate.  The Bible reveals to us the mercy of God’s plan.  That plan called for God Himself to enter our messed up, hard to figure world of ours and be our Savior.

              This is the good news of Christmas – His good news!  And my friends, this news is for you!  “For unto you is born this day in the city of David, a Savior, who is Christ the Lord.”  The Christ child – He is the One who is for you from God.  He is your Christmas gift.  Priceless.  Full of mercy and grace.  There is no one like Him.  He loves You…He will die for you…He will give you new life.  For unto you is born your Savior, Christ the Lord.

              For some of you this good news might be hard to believe.  Perhaps because of some of the things you’ve done or the mistakes you’ve made, you might be wondering if God could really love you.  Or maybe you’ve gotten separated from your paycheck and the job market doesn’t look so good and you’ve begun to question if God has forgotten you.  Unfortunately, when we encounter tough times we are tempted to think such things.

              In God’s heavenly workshop, as He worked on the mercy of His plan to bring salvation to the world, He had your picture posted on His bulletin board.  Your name on was that grand list of all those for whom Jesus would come to save.  The birth of the Christ child is your absolute guarantee that God has not forgotten about you. In Jesus, God has done all that is needed for your salvation.  Now if God can handle something as big as granting you forgiveness and new life, He can certainly take care of the day to day problems we encounter.  He can see us through chemotherapy and 401K and job applications and surly teenagers and diet and exercise programs.  You can trust God.  He is for you.  All you have to do is join Mary and Joseph and the Shepherds and look in the manger.

              As you look upon the child, what are you thinking?  What are you pondering as you gaze at the manger?  I pray that the good news of this night – God’s good news – will fill your heart with thanksgiving and joy.  God’s merciful plan is realized in Bethlehem.  God’s Son, God’s gift, is born for you.  He is Christ the Lord.  Amen.