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Sunday, Dec. 19, 2004
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Let's get back to the basics of Christmas
By David Chancey On the Sunday after Thanksgiving, I was driving to church and noticed that people had begun putting up their Christmas decorations. On the roof of one house on Highway 54 east, an inflated Santa stood straight and tall, waving to folks as he ushered in the Christmas season. The next day, as I was driving to work, I passed the house again, yet this time Santa was totally deflated and was up on the housetop lying flat on his face. I thought, It's not even Dec. 1, and Santa is already pooped. I hope this isn't a sign of things to come. What a picture of Christmas. If we're not careful, the stresses and strains of the season can pressure the life right out of us. But, worship pumps life right back into us and makes us stand tall again. Christmas should be a season of worship. Christmas is not a date on the calendar, but a state of mind. It's not an annual event so much as it's a state of heart. It's a time of awe and wonder and reflection on God's great gift, His Son, Jesus Christ. Christmas can be a hectic time. If we're not careful, we can get caught up in the madness of unrealistic expectations and unrestrained spending. With all of the gifts to buy, parties to attend, and things to do, the sweetness of Bethlehem can turn into the confusion of bedlam. In the 1500s, St. Mary of Bethlehem was a monastery that served as a hospital. Their mission was to care for the physically ill. Somehow, the mission changed and the monastery became a city-run insane asylum. Incredibly, the insane asylum, now known simply as Bethlehem, became a famous tourist attraction. People came from all over to pay an admission fee that gave them entrance and permission to heckle the inmates. Finally, the name Bethlehem evolved into bedlam. In time, the word bedlam referred to confusion, chaos and noise that symbolized the insane asylum. Has Christmas become bedlam for you? Maybe we need to go back to Bethlehem's basics. Maybe we need to be like the shepherds who dropped everything they were doing to visit the newborn king. They went right away and put their focus on Jesus. They were in awe as they gazed upon that baby in the manger. That's how you get back to the basics of Christmas. Put your focus on Jesus. Put your energy into worshipping Jesus as you enjoy the activities of December. Rediscover a sense of majesty and wonder as you reflect on the gift of Jesus. Let your heart be filled with adoration. Worship is more than something that happens at church. It's more than participating in a ritual, or repeating a memorized prayer, or showing up at the 11 o'clock hour each week. True worship can happen in church, but it also happens outside of church. John MacArthur wrote, Worship as scripture portrays it is always intensely practical, involving sacrifice (Romans 12:1,2); giving (Philippians 4:18); service to others (Hebrews 13:16); proclaiming the good news of salvation (Romans 15:16). The heart of worship ultimately is the attitude and realization that it's all about Him, and not about me. That's as bottom line as it gets: Christmas is all about Him, not about me. So we worship. Oh, come let us adore Him, Christ, the Lord. I wish for each of you a very, merry, blessed Christmas.
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Copyright
2004-Fayette Publishing, Inc.
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