I searched for a strong Christmas message to share with some friends. Then I opened a Christmas card from my sister and found the following message shared on “Music and the Spoken Word" on November 28, 2021. This is a powerful message that deserves to go worldwide, so I will my part to pass it along.
An Invitation to Hope
Christmas lasts much longer than one day.
Weeks in advance, decorations are hung, and stores and streetlights are lit up
in happy anticipation. Music sounds merrier, more joyful. People start planning
parties and preparing special food. Advent calendars count down the days.
Children grow increasingly impatient. The very feeling in the air reminds us
that something magical is coming — Christmas will soon be here.
All of this eager looking forward is much
of the fun—and a good part of the meaning—of Christmas. During this special
season, in some small and symbolic way, we reenact the hopeful anticipation of
that first Christmas night. For what happened on that night had been
anticipated not for weeks or months but for centuries — even since the
beginning. “The hopes and fears of all the years” were met in
Bethlehem that night.1
It has been called the greatest story ever
told. It’s not a story of hardworking elves, flying reindeer, and sacks of
presents, although those stories are fun and exciting. The best thing about the
real Christmas story is that it is both miraculous and true.
This story is about a baby, a mother,
shepherds, angels, and a star. But more than that, it’s a story about a promise
fulfilled. It’s about light shining in the darkness and hope dispelling fear.
It’s about good tidings, great joy, peace on earth, and goodwill toward all.2 When
Jesus was born, so were hope and light and life — not just for an oppressed
nation in the ancient world but for us today.
This old world can seem dark and lonely,
and the way forward can seem impossible at times. But Christmas is an
invitation to hope—to look forward, to think of the joy and possibility before
us, to ponder the miraculous birth of the Christ child and its significance in
our lives. This is why we look forward to Christmas. It’s more than a holiday;
it’s the “reason [for] the hope that is in [us].”3 This season
and always, we anticipate, we celebrate, and we always remember the advent of
the Light and Life of the World. Because of Him, we can hope for good things to
come.
1“O Little Town of Bethlehem,” Hymns, no. 208;
emphasis added.
2See Luke 2:10, 14.
No comments:
Post a Comment