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Tuesday, December 22, 2015

Brown's Daily Word 12-22-15

Merry Christmas to you, all our family and friends around the corner and around the globe with whom we are linked through grace and love of Jesus.  It is going to be the warmest Christmas Eve in the Northeast Region of America the beautifulWe spent a few days in Boston last weekend with our grandchildren and with their parents.  It was a  treat.  We treasure the times and moments we get to share and celebrate with our grandchildren.  We will be spending Christmas Eve with our church family in worship and celebration. The worship service on Christmas Eve will be held at 6:30 PM.  We are spending Christmas day with our family.  Thank you all for your love and affection that you have embodied in the forms of gifts and many other blessings. Thank you for all the love shared with us over the years.      
 

    I will not posting any blogs for next few days.  I will be busy playing with our grandchildren.

 

    In C.S. Lewis' book The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe, Lewis takes us to the land of Narnia.  When Narnia is living under the authority of the witch, it is "always winter, but never Christmas." Can you imagine how discouraging that would be to a child?  Still, there are people today who are living in a winter, and Christmas never comes to them.  What joy could be theirs if only they would allow Christmas to come to their hearts!

 

    Every year at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, there is displayed, beneath the great Christmas tree, a beautiful 18th century Neapolitan nativity scene.  In many ways it is a very familiar scene.  The usual characters are all there: shepherds roused from sleep by the voices of angels; the exotic wise men from the East seeking, as Auden once put it, "how to be human now"; Joseph; Mary; and the Baby.  All are there, each figure an artistic marvel of wood, clay, and paint. There is, however, something surprising about this scene, something unexpected here, easily missed by the casual observer.  What is strange here is that the stable, the shepherds and the cradle are set, not in the expected small town of Bethlehem, but among the ruins of mighty Roman columns.  The fragile manger is surrounded by broken and decaying columns.  The artists knew the meaning of this event: The gospel, the birth of God's new age, was also the death of the old world.

    The Herods of the world know in their souls what we perhaps have passed over too lightly: God's presence in the world means finally the end of their own power. They seek not to preserve the birth of God's new age but to crush it.  For Herod, the gospel is news too bad to be endured.  For Mary, Joseph and all the other characters it is news too good to miss.

 

    “Christmas is built upon a beautiful and intentional paradox; that the birth of the homeless should be celebrated in every home.” 
― G.K. Chesterton,

    

    "I have always thought of Christmas time, when it has come round -- apart from the veneration due to its sacred name and origin, if anything belonging to it can be apart from that -- as a good time: a kind, forgiving, charitable, pleasant time: the only time I know of, in the long calendar of the year, when men and women seem by one consent to open their shut-up hearts freely, and to think of people below them as if they really were fellow-passengers to the grave, and not another race of creatures bound on their journeys."  CHARLES DICKENS, A Christmas Carol

 

 

        "To an open house in the evening Home shall men come,
        To an older place than Eden And a taller town than Rome.
        To the end of the way of the wandering star,

        To the things that cannot be and that are,

        To the place where God was homeless"  G. K. Chesterton

 

Pastor Brown