Wednesday, December 28, 2016

Christmas Eve

There are no Bah Humbugs tonight.  For those that joined us through the Advent season, we journeyed through Charles Dickens a Christmas Carol.  Ebenezer Scrooge was encountered by the Ghost of Christmas Past, Present, and Future as his ice solid heart began to melt.  Through his visits from these three spirits, he learned that joy does not come through the self security of money.  Joy comes from engaging the community around him, using his resources as a means to bring healing and wholeness to others. 
One small voice, one small person, impacted him the most in this transition from selfish greed to overwhelming joy and that is the child of his employee, Tiny Tim.  Tiny Tim, gathers with his family on Christmas Eve, unable to walk without the use of a crutch, and even in his weakness, even in his slowly dying body, he proclaims:  God Bless Us Everyone. 
God bless us everyone.  God has blessed us everyone.  As the Angels break forth in the night sky and proclaim the Good News to the Shepherds that a Savior has been born unto them, the proclaim that this is good news for all the people.  All the people, extending away from Bethlehem, away from Jerusalem, away from Israel, to the far reaches of the land where the kings of foreign lands understand that they too are invited to witness what God is doing in the world. 
Mary and Joseph may have found no room in the inn, they may have had to dwell in a lowly stable stall, but God was not keeping this birth a secret.  There are no bah humbugs here, as shepherds are amazed and go with haste to see if what the angels have told them is true.  There is movement, there is hope, there is amazement, there is a sense of the sacred, the divine, the amazing power of God in this moment of time. 
God bless us everyone.  Ebenezer Scrooge emerges from his former self, a man on a mission, a man filled with life, because he finally understands, he finally gets it, he finally embraces that life is about community, about relationships, about blessings, and so he sings and he dances and he goes out into the streets and he goes to his nephew’s home and asks to be invited in.  The doors are opened, and a new day begins for Ebenezer and his nephew and for Tiny Tim.  Ebenezer learns that Christmas is more than just another day, a day, he would say is one without pay.  But rather, he learns that Christmas is a day that brings new life, a day where he falls in love with life, a day where, in his opinion, meaningless traditions fall away, but a day when he becomes family.  He does not just reach out to help Tiny Tim with costs for medical care, but, the story tells us, he becomes like an uncle to Tiny Tim.   They build a relationship, they become family. 

Christmas is the new day.  God has opened the door of love for all of us to receive.  We are all invited in.  We are to engage the community, and build relationships, and embrace the blessings, and leave the bah humbugs behind.  A baby has been given to us.  Babies are easy to fall in love with.  Will we this night, tomorrow day, find the gift of new life given to us in this baby?  Will we fall in love with him, fall in love with life, fall in love with the good news of God’s blessings?  For the message of Tiny Tim rings out above and beyond the bah humbugs, God Bless us Everyone.  Amen.  

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