Showing posts with label Advent. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Advent. Show all posts

Saturday, December 21, 2024

Sunday’s Blessing – 12/22/2024 – Forth Sunday of Advent – Love

Sunday’s Blessing – 12/22/2024 – Forth Sunday of Advent – Love

May the Love of the Father, embodied in the only begotten Son
Show you how to live, by giving you capacity to love others
Giving you something to give away as you encounter those in your world
In order to bring them back to the Father

May this Love, born of a virgin, sent from the Father, rebirth your spirit
To make you alive by the Spirit of God Who empowers you
Enabling you to love others beyond your ability to do so
By showing them the Father’s love in you

May the culmination of HOPE, PEACE, and JOY be realized in LOVE
Just as the prophets of old gave you HOPE of a coming Messiah
It manifested in PEACE through the Babe in Bethlehem
Bringing JOY to your world, making room to receive LOVE

Saturday, December 14, 2024

Sunday’s Blessing – 12/15/2024 – Third Sunday of Advent – Joy

Sunday’s Blessing – 12/15/2024 – Third Sunday of Advent – Joy

May the joy of knowing you are loved and accepted by the Father overwhelm you
So you may know the limitless joy found by abiding in the glory of God
Until you accept joy as a lifestyle, not just a feeling
So your joyful light may shine to every corner of your world

May you experience the source of joy Himself, whom is Jesus-Messiah
By being emersed into Christ by the Spirit of Joy
Washing away all the debris of this world and its kingdom
So you may experience a new citizenship in the Kingdom of God

May you hear the joyous sound as the Creator and His heaven
Sing songs of deliverance over you, and bring joy close to you
So you may join in singing with the chorus
Declaring the joy of the Lord is your strength, brought through hope and peace

Saturday, December 7, 2024

Sunday’s Blessing – 12/08/2024 – Second Week of Advent – Peace

Sunday’s Blessing – 12/08/2024 – Second Week of Advent – Peace

May you discover the Prince of Peace who came to earth as a human baby
So you may understand peace comes by being vulnerable
So you may remove the walls meant to protect, but actually make you a prisoner
So you can receive the precious gift of Peace, which is Jesus, the Messiah

May you sing the songs of the shepherds visited by the angel announcing the Savior’s birth
And believe and seek out the One sent to calm your soul
So you may bow down and worship Him, the Spotless Lamb sent to redeem you
And bring you back into fellowship with the Father

May you be engulfed by the Spirit of Peace whom Jesus sent when He ascended to heaven
To remain in you until Jesus returns
To give you strength to live in peace regardless of the storm you face
To allow you to find rest, even in the storm

Friday, November 29, 2024

Sunday’s Blessing – 12/01/2024 – First Week of Advent – Hope

Sunday’s Blessing – 12/01/2024 – First Week of Advent – Hope

May you embrace the hope brought to humanity through Jesus
May this hope sustain you in times of distress
May this hope comfort you in times of mourning
May this hope energize you in times of weakness

May you allow the hope found in the King empower you
To see the good in those around you
To share your life without reserve
To embrace your Kingdom purpose with resolve

Tuesday, December 19, 2023

Christmas Is a Secular Holiday

Christmas is a secular holiday, and that’s ok. I still love it. I remember as a child seeing the use of Xmas, an abbreviated form of the word Christmas. It was seen as the work of satan, and was met with cries of “keep Christ in Christmas!” Little did they know the X was the Greek letter, chi, which was often used to represent Christ. 

Xmas = Christmas

The Catholic church, who created the liturgical calendar, placed the remembrance of Advent during the month of December, a known period of celebration of the sun (the star in the center of our solar system) being reborn, since the daylight decreases each day until the winter solstice, then begins to increase each day after. This practice dates back to a time before the birth of Jesus. Giving Christians an alternative seemed like a practical thing to do. However, this secular celebration did not look anything like our Western celebration of Christmas.

Christmas as we know it today is a relatively new thing. Many of the “traditions” of Christmas were only started within the past 200 years or so. Christmas was declared a national holiday in the United States in 1870. Before that, it was just another day for most. In contrast, the birth of Christ (Advent) has been celebrated for the past 2000+ years.

Before you decide that I have forsaken my faith (some of you may have already decided that), please hear the point of all of this. For me, I have arrived at a place where I can embrace both without any feelings of guilt or condemnation. I celebrate Advent (or Christmas if you prefer) to remember the miraculous process of God (the Word) becoming flesh living among us in order to “show” us the Father. Jesus personified the Godhead and provided a way for us to get back to our origin; to once again know the Creator as a Friend, One we can “walk in the garden in the cool of the day” with, just like Adam and Eve did.

I can celebrate Advent with spiritual fervor while wearing an ugly Christmas sweater, watching a Hallmark movie, drinking eggnog, sitting by a decorated tree. I don’t see them as mutually exclusive. All the trappings of the “holiday” (which literally means “holy day”) do not diminish my faith as a Christian, nor does it dilute my love and worship for the God who provided salvation at Advent.

I fully understand there are some who only celebrate the holiday and not the holy day, but deriding them or ridiculing them will not change that. The way for them to know the wonder of Advent is not do dismiss the tinsel and lights, but to introduce them to the One who brings wonder to life every day, not just at Christmas.

So, chill out when your neighbor’s decorative lights keep you up at night. Don’t fret over the money others spend on gifts for their family and friends. Don’t chastise others for saying “happy holidays” instead of “Merry Christmas”. Keep the peace and joy which Christ brings to your heart and share it with others you meet along the way. It might wind up as a win-win for both you and them.

Wednesday, December 13, 2023

Another View of Advent

I’m probably the last person on earth to get this revelation. This morning while listening to the song, “Follow That Star” by Paul Baloche, I saw an image that made the whole point of Advent vividly clear to me.

Jesus was born in Bethlehem, in a manger, borne by a virgin, whose Father was God. There was a sign given, a star in the east, which drew people to Him. The angels announced His birth to shepherds and others (Anna, Simeon, Elizabeth, Zachariah, Joseph, and of course, Mary) which captured the attention of the magi (could have been many; only three gifts were mentioned). All of this I’ve heard from my childhood.

However, this morning as I was listening to the song several verses began to scroll in my mind. The first was Revelation 22:16:

I, Jesus, have sent my angel to testify to you about these things for the churches. I am the root and the descendant of David, the bright morning star.

Then I recalled John 3:3:

Jesus answered him, “Truly, truly, I say to you, unless one is born again he cannot see the kingdom of God.”

Here’s the image which came to mind in all of this. Jesus, who was born under the sign of a star, became The Bright Morning Star which now draws us to our birthplace (born of the Spirit). We now follow Him, the Star, to encounter our Savior who is Christ the King! The Spirit is now actively working to bring us to the stable, the manger, where we experience being born again. This is the story of Advent. It’s not that Jesus came, but that in coming, He made a way for us to come back to the Father.