Christmas

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What do we take for granted?

Monday, January 16th, 2012

I woke up the other day, and following my usual routine  I went to the kitchen to make a cup of tea before checking my email on the computer.  After I checked my email, I sat down to do my morning devotions.    I use  Portals of Prayer and usually also read from  another year long devotional book, and then I say my prayers.  When I got to my prayers,  it hit me!  My hip did not hurt at all.  I wasn’t limping as I had been doing for many days prior.  I had been praying daily for relief from the pain in my hip, and when I received an answer in the affirmative to that prayer, I did not even recognize it immediately.  I unconsciously  had taken it for granted that my hip worked without any pain.

The fact is that God is answering our prayers every day!  He is blessing us every day.  And more often than not, we do not recognize it, let alone acknowledge it.  We take so much for granted.

I took my good health for granted for 57 years and only truly appreciated it when I contracted a rare disease while on the Peru mission trip in 2004 , which resulted in many physical problems, not the least of which is difficulty swallowing.  Oh, my goodness, who ever thought of swallowing as a gift?  I do now because I struggle with it every day!  We take so much for granted.

Think of the miracle of our body!  Our heart beats, our eyes blink, our food digests, we can taste food, we can walk and talk, and those are the obvious things.  We take so much for granted!

What about the air we breathe?  The wonderful clean water we are fortunate enough to have to drink?  Our homes?  Clothing?  Jobs?  Friends?  Family?  Our church family? The freedoms we enjoy?  The list could go on forever.  Let’s face it.  We take so much for granted!

We are in the season of Epiphany…..the season where Jesus is revealed to the world as our Savior. The season we are called upon to share the Good News. We were so excited at Christmas by the birth of Jesus, but now that have we taken down the tree and packed away the decorations ….are we taking Him for granted?

Let us rejoice and give thanks for the gifts God has bestowed upon us….especially the gift of Jesus our Savior. Yes, He is always with us.   Let us not take Him for granted!

 

 

It’s Still Christmas

Thursday, January 5th, 2012

     Some of you, eager to let go of the old and get on with the new in the New Year, are contemplating taking your Christmas trees down.  Maybe even…tonight!

     Don’t do it!

     Not yet.  It’s still Christmas!  Right up to Epiphany.

     This year will be different, if you hold on to what you found – the joy and the hope and the light – at Christmas.

     Well o.k., if your tree is a live one and really dry, with needles falling off all over the carpet, then at least, at least, keep a few Christmas cards around the house.  I’ve got one with the most beautiful image of Mary, her face aglow as she gazes down in wonder at the newborn Savior in her arms.  I think I’m going to keep this card out where I can see it all year long, with my other family pictures.  (Mary is part of God’s big family and so am I, so that makes us family.)

     Mary is not just a character in a treasured old story that I tell my kids once a year.  She’s alive in spirit with God because of His son, her Lord and Savior!

     Jesus Christ, the Savior of the world, lives – now and into the New Year – in me.

     Is He alive in you?

Worthwhile

Tuesday, December 20th, 2011

     Every year, right about this time, in exasperation and exhaustion, I ask myself, ‘why do we do all of this anyway?’

     Do you know what I mean?  The shopping and the wrapping and the decorating and the baking, and that big stack of cards that I have yet to fill out…why?  What does it all have to do with the birth of our Lord Jesus Christ?

     Yesterday I took time to pray.  A full half hour – time I don’t have this time of year!  I found an Advent prayer – a lovely one, so rich in hope – in an old Lutheran Book of Prayer (from 1941) that used to belong to my mother-in-law.  Then I sat in the house here and prayed it over and over.  After that, I prayed for the many broken and hurting and ailing people in the world.

     And now, somehow, everything has changed.

     I’m back to shopping and wrapping and decorating, and will soon be baking (sugar cookies) – and I am rejoicing in it all!  I’m looking forward to sending out Christmas cards, with that message so rich in hope, to the many broken and hurting and ailing people in my part of the world.

     Oh, and this morning when my daughter gave a gift to one of her crossing guards on the way to school and wished him a “Merry Christmas!”, well, that look in his eyes made it all worthwhile.