Monday, December 26, 2011

Christmas 2011: A New Beginning

"It is, after all, the most important moment in human history, the birth of Jesus Christ, son of Mary, son of God, in a shelter for animals, a cave in the hills outside of Bethlehem. This is the heart of it all, the point." -Brother Matthew Kelty, a monk from the Abbey of Gethsemani

First Baptist Rome on Christmas Day
Once again the Christmas and Advent seasons have come and gone, as well as the concerts and themed parties. The Christ candle has been lit. My old man sang "Ten Thousand Joys" at the Christmas Eve service. Our church congregation has raised their candles during an a capella verse of 'Silent Night.' A family picture was taken, and the Christ Child has been born.

We look forward to Christmas Day traditions every year: running into the den to see what Santa brought, opening the rest of our gifts, stuffing ourselves with food, a 9-hour drive to Arkansas (or a Christmas light tour through Rome) and playing with our new gadgets, assuming our parents already had batteries. Oh the misery of having to wait another 24 hours if they did not.

We put up the decorations, throw out the tree, take down the wreath outside on the chimney and start on a list of New Years resolutions. Some of us are not quite ready for the celebration to be over so we wait until the Wise Men have come from the East and Epiphany is over to start these processes. The wait for the next Christmas inevitably ensues. Back to normal, right? Not hardly.

Christmas is the celebration of a birth, the beginning of our Savior's life and a reminder of the sacrifice God gave to the world when He sent His begotten son. In itself Christmas is the remembrance of a start, something anew.

Now that the season of Christmas has passed and we return to the real world, let us try and do as Ebenezer Scrooge said he would in Charles Dickens' famed A Christmas Carol, "I will honor Christmas in my heart, and try to keep it all year long."

First Baptist Rome on Christmas Eve

2 comments:

  1. beautiful sanctuary pics and reflection. bonus points for knowing your liturgical calendar.

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  2. Thanks Graham. Reading your comments added even more meaning to my Christmas experiences this year.

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