God grant you …
- the light of Christmas, which is faith;
- the warmth of Christmas, which is purity;
- the righteousness of Christmas, which is justice;
- the belief in Christmas, which is truth;
- the ALL of Christmas, which is Christ.
All glory and honor to you, Living God.
You made our world by your wisdom,
and you sent your Wisdom into the world.You rule all things by your word,
and you caused your Word to dwell among us.You filled heaven and earth with your glory,
and you made the the very Radiance of your Glory to shine on earth.You gave us life and created us in your image,
and you have given us eternal life through your eternal Image.You formed us to be your children,
and now your eternal Son has come to claim us for brothers and sisters.Heavenly Father, your Son became poor,
and now we share in his riches.He came to be despised and rejected,
and now you have accepted us through him.You laid our sins on him,
and now we come to you with his righteousness.You sent him to live the life that we failed to live,
and now we have his life in us.By your will, he came as a slave,
and now we reign with him.He was conceived, lived, died and rose by your Spirit,
and now he has given that Spirit to us.Renew us therefore, by that same Spirit, we pray.
By him, unite us to Jesus so we bear much fruit and bring you glory.
By him, fill our hearts so we cry out to you with the voice of your Son.
By him, bind us together in the gospel of Jesus and speak the truth in love.
By him, transform us to the image of our Lord, with ever-increasing glory.
By his power, deliver us from discouragement and idolatry,
and fill our hearts and lives and mouths with grace,By him, make us proof of your manifold wisdom before the powers and authorities,
so that the powers of darkness should not prevail,
and we might press on through the night to the dawn;
warmed by the light of your Son. ~ Amen.
Original Source: TGC @ Australia (12/25/21)
Author Martin Cothran, opens a piece he wrote for Intellectual Takeout, Charles Schultz’s Pushback Against Secularism, with these words:
We often think of the secularization of Christmas as a very recent thing. But its origins go back to the nineteenth century with the writing of “The Night Before Christmas,” and the Thomas Nast version of Santa Claus: the jolly, plump, white-bearded rendition we know today.
It’s not so much that a war has been raging against Christmas since the 19th Century. It is more that there are at least two different takes on what Christmas is supposed to be about. There is the Christian celebration of the birth of the long-promised Messiah, through whom God would redeem and reconcile a People to himself, and through whom “everything sad will come untrue.” And there is the more secular take, which seems to take delight in the Judeo-Christian virtues promised in the Messiah: “Peace on Earth” and “good-will to all men (and women)…”, but replaces Jesus as the focal-point of this holiday with a host of other figures: Santa Claus, Frosty the Snowman, just to name two.
In the same story cited above, Cothran ends with these words:
In many ways secularism has sidelined the real meaning of Christmas, and commercialism has covered it up. But truth has a way of intruding on our world of secular pretense and profit. At a time when it sometimes seems as if all is going dark, there are still places where there is a spotlight trained on the most important story of all.
I think Cothran has a point.
Now, I have no aversion to the festivities of the culture during this season of the year. In fact, I quite enjoy them. For the most part. But – and this is a big “but” – in recent years I have become less inclined to try to reconcile the two expressions of Christmas with one another. I am much more comfortable accepting the two divergent ways as co-existing. It seems to me that Christian attempts to synergize the celebration of the Christ-child with the merriment and cultural icons of this season are often times a source of the confusion of the meaning of Christmas.
Why not just recognize that, for Christians, there are two coinciding celebrations going on throughout December? Let’s recognize that these two celebrations have many aspects that overlap. Let’s promote the common ground values of joy, peace, hope, and love. Let’s strive for and contribute to “peace on earth, and goodwill toward mankind”, rather than warring against those who are (or, at least who may seem to be,) at war with Christmas.
But, for the Christian, we cannot stop there. For we know all of our striving will not lead to peace, but rather to more strife. That is because we have a sin problem, not just an absence of peace problem. And that is problem that we cannot save ourselves from. It will take God to intervene. So we need to pray. We need to pray that God will bring peace to this earth; and that God will work good-will among mankind. And… we do well to remember – and to celebrate – that God has intervened.
In Galatians 4.4-5, the Apostle Paul tells us:
4 But when the set time had fully come, God sent his Son, born of a woman, born under the law, 5 to redeem those under the law, that we might receive adoption to sonship.
That is what Christmas is all about – for all who Believe. (John 3.16)
As much as I appreciate and enjoy the traditional Christmas hymns and carols – O Come All Ye Faithful high up on my list – here is a worthy addition to the Christmas song catalog: O Come All You Unfaithful. Though not an especially new song, (it has been around for several years,) this song beautifully captures the heart behind the reason for the Incarnation.
In Luke 5, Jesus declared:
31 “Those who are well have no need of a physician, but those who are sick. 32 I have not come to call the righteous but sinners to repentance.”
Advent/Christmas should be a season during which we remind ourselves, and remind one another, of God’s love for the broken, the outcast, and even the sinner – like me.
“The saying is trustworthy and deserving of full acceptance, that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners, of whom I am the foremost.” (1 Timothy 1.15)
“God shows his love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us.” (Romans 5.8)
As Brennan Manning wrote in The Ragamuffin Gospel:
One of the mysteries of the gospel tradition is this strange attraction of Jesus for the unattractive, this strange desire for the undesirable, this strange love for the unlovely.
As C.S. Lewis wrote in Mere Christianity:
The son of God became a man to enable men to become sons of God.
Are some Christmas hymns better than others? Consider what Martin Luther says to his Anglican friends in this imaginary discussion, from Lutheran Satire.