When Simeon saw baby Jesus he was filled with joy! Everything he had hoped for had finally arrived in this tiny bundle! In Jesus, Simeon recognized the salvation that God had promised thousands of years ago.
Wednesday, December 28, 2016
Tuesday, December 20, 2016
Great Joy!
The Christmas story is very familiar - so much so that the nativity scenes on display at Christmas bring the whole story to mind. Joseph, Mary and the baby Jesus in the stable - the shepherds in the fields watching over their flocks - the angels appearing with their message.
In the account in Luke chapter two all of the narrative details are given their meaning by the message that the angel delivered to the shepherds. There is a very specific reason that this scene should be the cause of great joy. Don't miss the message in the middle of the scenery.
"For unto you is born this day in the city of David, a Savior who is Christ the Lord!"
In the account in Luke chapter two all of the narrative details are given their meaning by the message that the angel delivered to the shepherds. There is a very specific reason that this scene should be the cause of great joy. Don't miss the message in the middle of the scenery.
"For unto you is born this day in the city of David, a Savior who is Christ the Lord!"
Sunday, December 11, 2016
Something To Celebrate
Some groups that call themselves "Christian" do not celebrate Christmas. But the Bible focuses a lot of attention on the incarnation of Christ. If we believe what the Bible teaches about the birth of Jesus is calculated to make us worship. We have something that is worth celebrating!
Wednesday, December 7, 2016
Something To Celebrate
Should Christians celebrate Christmas or not?
Some groups say, "NO!" because of ancient syncretism between Christianity and Paganism in the Christmas celebrations.
The modern pagan's certainly agree. One recent morning, Lola and I sat in our local McDonalds and realized that all the Christmassy sounding songs were devoid of any mention of Christ. The songs are all about Santa Claus, Rudolph, White Christmases and so on - but no Christ.
Where possible, they scrub Christ right out of Christmas and end up with "Happy Holidays" without any explanation of why these days might be considered happy or holy. Christmas has continued its slide into crass commercialism - all about buying more, newer, bigger stuff.Christmas Holiday Trees can be decorated, of course, and presents can be wrapped. There is plenty of nostalgia for Christmases "long long ago" - as long as you don't mention Christ. The legal eagles of the "Freedom From Religion" group are ready to swoop down wherever they think they can force people to remove Manger Scenes.
So, back to my original question. Should Christians celebrate Christmas or not?
Well, we certainly should not celebrate Christmas the way our pagan culture does. If Christmas is not about Christ, then what is it about? Seems that materialism, greed and excess are all that is left. If that is where our hearts are, then even putting up a manger scene will not redeem it.
We should celebrate Christmas if Christmas is about Christ. Christ should be at the center of a Christian's Christmas. We should spend the season reflecting on the biblical accounts - prophecies promising Christ would come, announcements to Joseph, Mary and Zechariah about his coming, the songs of praise from Mary and Zechariah and Simeon, the birth of Jesus in the stable, the angelic announcement to the Shepherds and their response, the testimony of the magi who traveled from Arabia to meet the new King.
"Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners..." That is what Christmas should be about for Christians and we should focus on that. When we do focus on that, how can we help but celebrate?
Some groups say, "NO!" because of ancient syncretism between Christianity and Paganism in the Christmas celebrations.
The modern pagan's certainly agree. One recent morning, Lola and I sat in our local McDonalds and realized that all the Christmassy sounding songs were devoid of any mention of Christ. The songs are all about Santa Claus, Rudolph, White Christmases and so on - but no Christ.
Where possible, they scrub Christ right out of Christmas and end up with "Happy Holidays" without any explanation of why these days might be considered happy or holy. Christmas has continued its slide into crass commercialism - all about buying more, newer, bigger stuff.
So, back to my original question. Should Christians celebrate Christmas or not?
Well, we certainly should not celebrate Christmas the way our pagan culture does. If Christmas is not about Christ, then what is it about? Seems that materialism, greed and excess are all that is left. If that is where our hearts are, then even putting up a manger scene will not redeem it.
We should celebrate Christmas if Christmas is about Christ. Christ should be at the center of a Christian's Christmas. We should spend the season reflecting on the biblical accounts - prophecies promising Christ would come, announcements to Joseph, Mary and Zechariah about his coming, the songs of praise from Mary and Zechariah and Simeon, the birth of Jesus in the stable, the angelic announcement to the Shepherds and their response, the testimony of the magi who traveled from Arabia to meet the new King.
"Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners..." That is what Christmas should be about for Christians and we should focus on that. When we do focus on that, how can we help but celebrate?
And Mary said, “My soul magnifies the Lord,
and my spirit rejoices in God my Savior,Luke 1:46–47
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