I love Christmas songs. This year especially, it seems like I have noticed, more than usual, how much the old Christmas carols speak of the Christian life and the hope that we have through the Christ child. One of these songs is “God Rest You Merry Gentlemen.” The first line says “God rest you merry gentlemen, let nothing you dismay…” Isn’t that such an appropriate message for today?
Given the current financial dire straits, I have heard frequently in recent days people say a phrase that disturbs me, and I think it disturbs me most because I have heard myself say this in years past. The phrase is some version of this, “we don’t have much money this year so we are not going to have much of a Christmas.”
As a man, carrying the responsibility of provider for my family I too have felt the anxiety of not having many presents for those I love under the tree. As a result, in years past I succumbed to the pressure of putting “Christmas” on plastic. And although we haven’t done that for years, we are still paying the ghost of Christmas past. I equated in my mind, as many others do, weather or not there were presents under the tree with “having Christmas this year.” I missed the real meaning of Christmas. As Stephen Curtis Chapman so eloquently put it “Christmas is all in the heart.”
These days I am reading in the book of Romans. It seems that Romans always takes me the longest to read. There is so much doctrine that often I am captivated and find myself meditating on the truth of just one verse. This morning, it was the first verse of chapter 8. “Therefore there is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.” This verse speaks of the same hope as this accent Christmas carol. Rest. The rest that we can experience has it’s root in the freedom from the law of sin and death. Of which the following verses speak. And yet, too often we loose sight of that and allow the world to dictate to us how we celebrate such a wonderful time as Christmas.
My brothers and sisters, this should not be! The next line of the carol calls us to, “remember Christ our Savior was born on Christmas day.” This Christmas season, are you able to rest well in the truth that you no longer stand condemned before a holy and righteous God, for He has “saved us all from Satan’s power when we were gone astray.” These are tidings of comfort and joy.
Given the current financial dire straits, I have heard frequently in recent days people say a phrase that disturbs me, and I think it disturbs me most because I have heard myself say this in years past. The phrase is some version of this, “we don’t have much money this year so we are not going to have much of a Christmas.”
As a man, carrying the responsibility of provider for my family I too have felt the anxiety of not having many presents for those I love under the tree. As a result, in years past I succumbed to the pressure of putting “Christmas” on plastic. And although we haven’t done that for years, we are still paying the ghost of Christmas past. I equated in my mind, as many others do, weather or not there were presents under the tree with “having Christmas this year.” I missed the real meaning of Christmas. As Stephen Curtis Chapman so eloquently put it “Christmas is all in the heart.”
These days I am reading in the book of Romans. It seems that Romans always takes me the longest to read. There is so much doctrine that often I am captivated and find myself meditating on the truth of just one verse. This morning, it was the first verse of chapter 8. “Therefore there is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.” This verse speaks of the same hope as this accent Christmas carol. Rest. The rest that we can experience has it’s root in the freedom from the law of sin and death. Of which the following verses speak. And yet, too often we loose sight of that and allow the world to dictate to us how we celebrate such a wonderful time as Christmas.
My brothers and sisters, this should not be! The next line of the carol calls us to, “remember Christ our Savior was born on Christmas day.” This Christmas season, are you able to rest well in the truth that you no longer stand condemned before a holy and righteous God, for He has “saved us all from Satan’s power when we were gone astray.” These are tidings of comfort and joy.
No comments:
Post a Comment