Where Meek Souls Will Receive Him

Of all our Christmas decorations the one I love the most is a hand carved nativity scene made out of olive wood. I bought it in December, 28 years ago, in Bethlehem. The Palestinian shopkeeper, when he discovered I was from Australia, took me to the back of his store and introduced me to his father, a very old man who told me how he had watched Australian soldiers drive the Turks out of those hills, just before Christmas in 1917. So they sold me the nativity set at what they said was a discounted price that I couldn’t refuse – although I suspect they did quite well out of it. But I love it anyway. It reminds me of one of the most memorable Christmas experiences I’ve ever had.

Less than two hundred metres away stood the Church of the Nativity, said to have been built on the site where Jesus was born. When the Roman Emperor Constantine came to the throne and ended 3 centuries of persecution of Christians, he sent his mother Helena, who was a British princess and a Christian, to the Holy Land to discover the sites where Jesus had been born and died, so that he could build churches on those sites. The Church of the Nativity is one of the results.

I went inside and made my way to a spot where a low doorway opens onto stone steps leading down into a crypt. That crypt was originally a cave over which Helena’s church was built. It was the stable where local belief said Jesus had been born. The ceiling is hung with beautiful lamps and at one end of it there is a kind of stone niche in the rock wall, with sixteen silver lamps hanging over it lighting a silver star that has the inscription, “Here Jesus Christ was born of the Virgin Mary.”

When I got there I waited for the other people to leave so that I could sit quietly with my own thoughts, but they were soon interrupted by the sound of more people clattering down the stone steps. It was a family group with everyone from the old grandparents to little children. At first I felt annoyed that my moment of quietness had been taken away. By their clothes I could tell they were not well-off, and listening to their voices I guessed they were from Greece. They weren’t the sort of people who would take regular overseas holidays, and I suspected that they had probably saved for a lifetime to bring the whole family on this one visit to the place of Jesus’ birth, just before Christmas.

When they got to the bottom of the steps they saw the little grotto and knelt before it in silence. I could just see the tears streaming down their cheeks and the look of wonder and joy on their faces. Then they began to pray quietly and softly sang some sort of hymn. Then, after a few minutes they got up and left in silence, their faces shining with joy. And I remember thinking to myself that I’d gladly trade every Christmas gift I’ve ever had for one minute of the joy and wonder that had been theirs.

It was almost like seeing the poor shepherds coming to worship the baby Jesus after the angels had told them of his birth; and it reminds me of that wonderful line from the Christmas Carol, O Little Town of Bethlehem: ‘Where meek souls will receive him, still the dear Christ enters in.’

Posted in Advent, Appreciation, Bethlehem, Christmas, Faith, inner peace, Inspirational, Jesus, Joy, Nativity, Religion | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Signals of Light

The worst time of Stella Thornhope’s life was the Christmas just after her husband died of cancer. Her sorrow was such that she couldn’t bring herself to get out the decorations. But it all changed when a kennel owner delivered a box to her door. In it was a six week old puppy and a letter from her husband, written just before he died. The puppy, he said, was his last gift to her and it was to keep her company until she joined him again. Well the first thing Stella did after she had read the letter and picked the puppy up was to go and find the box of Christmas decorations.
Like her husband, God has a way of sending us signals of light to remind us that life is stronger than death, light is more powerful than darkness, and faith is greater than despair. That’s what Christmas is. The ancient prophecy said it well; “The people walking in darkness have seen a great light. On those in the shadow of death, a light has dawned.”

Posted in Advent, Christmas, emptiness, Encouragement, Faith, God, Grief, Healing, Hope, Inspirational | Leave a comment

WYSIWYG

Back in the days when I was being dragged kicking and screaming into the computer age, computer nerds, trying to explain the wonders of it all to me, used to spout unintelligible terms that just confused me more. Most of them I’ve forgotten. But one I do remember. It was WYSIWYG, an acronym for ‘what you see is what you get.’ It is, of course, related to what you see on the computer screen being the same as what would print out on your piece of paper. But I’ve often thought that that term also explains why it is that for some people the story of Christmas is a thing of unutterable beauty that brings enormous comfort and meaning to life, while for others it is a futile attempt to try to recreate the magic of childhood at a time in life when a bit of fun is about as close as they can get to it.
What you see is what you get. What I see is the coming of Immanuel – God with us – as much this Christmas as he was that first one.

Posted in Advent, Awareness, Christmas, Contentment, emptiness, Faith, God, Hope, inner peace, Inspirational, Jesus, Living Life, Nativity, Religion, Remembrance, Spiritual Insight, thankfulness, Trust in God | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Where’s the Baby?

A wealthy European family decided to have their baby baptized in their grand mansion. Dozens of guests arrived dressed in their finery. After depositing their elegant wraps on a bed, the guests were entertained royally until the time came for the ceremony. But they couldn’t find the baby. The child’s governess ran upstairs and returned with a desperate look on her face. Everyone searched frantically until someone recalled having seen him asleep on one of the beds. The baby was on a bed all right—buried beneath a pile of coats, jackets, and furs. While the celebrating took place, the object of the celebration had been forgotten, neglected, and nearly smothered.
It makes you wonder whether the baby whose birthday we celebrate at Christmas has also been lost beneath the piles of stuff we keep adding to the celebration.

Posted in Advent, Awareness, Christmas, Faith, Inspirational, Jesus, Living Life, Nativity, Religion, Remembrance, Spiritual Insight | Tagged , | Leave a comment

‘No one ought ever do that again’

The first person to ride down Niagara Falls was Annie Edson Taylor, a sixty three year old schoolteacher who used a wooden barrel packed with inflated pillows, a mattress, and an anvil. When they fished her out she said: “No one ought ever do that again.” The most recent attempt was Robert Overacker on a jet ski. He died because his parachute, which opened as planned, wasn’t tied to his back. But even those who stared death in the face there and lived to tell the tale couldn’t cheat it forever. Bobby Leach for example, who rode the falls in a steel barrel, survived, only to die fifteen years later after slipping on an orange peel n New Zealand.
It reminds me that the Bible says: ‘Don’t boast about tomorrow, your life is as uncertain as the morning mist.’ That’s why we should plan as though we’ll live forever; but live as though we’ll die tomorrow.

Posted in Awareness, Faith, Hope, Life's journey, Living Life, Luck, old age, Uncertainty of Life | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Staring at the Ground

A few years ago a man in England taking a walk with his dog and metal detector found a gold coin that turned out to be the most important single coin find ever, dating from the eighth century and the only one of its kind yet discovered. A couple of years later he sold it for just under half a million pounds. It wasn’t a complete accident that he found the coin. He is an amateur metal detector enthusiast who always keeps an eye open for metal on the ground, even while walking his dog. No doubt he continues to keep his eyes on the ground even more after this find. Unfortunately he doesn’t get to look at the sky and the trees and the flowers all that much; which I suppose is a pity because a one-off discovery, even like that one, can never compensate for a life spent staring at the dirt.

Posted in Appreciation, Awareness, Contentment, Hope, Inspirational, Life's journey, Living Life, Luck, Money, Personal Growth, Riches, satisfaction, wealth, Wisdom | Leave a comment

Alive in our Hearts

Anna Pavlova was probably the greatest ballerina of all time. But her most memorable performance took place after her death. She was to play the role she made famous, the Dying Swan, at the Apollo Theatre in London. Tragically, she caught pneumonia and died two days before the event. However, on opening night, a packed house watched the curtain rise and a spotlight bathe the stage in a pool of light where Anna should have been. And, as the light danced and the orchestra played, they could still see her, and when the music stopped, they gave her her greatest ovation ever. An empty stage with only a spotlight, but in their hearts she was alive.
It reminds me that for people of faith, the remembrance of Jesus Christ is all that and more. He said, “Where two or three are gathered together in my name, there I am..”

Posted in Appreciation, Awareness, Easter, Faith, Hope, Inspirational, Promise, Remembrance, Senses, thankfulness | 1 Comment

A Class Act

The term “class act,” describes behavior so virtuous that it puts normal behavior to shame. It was a class act when wealthy Benjamin Guggenhiem, gave his life jacket to a woman passenger on the Titanic and then put on white tie and tails so he could die “like a gentleman.” It was a class act when writer Laurence Housman removed his jacket at a very proper English tea party so that a man who had just arrived in shirt sleeves wouldn’t feel embarrassed. Even simple good sportsmanship can rise to the level of class act, as it did with tennis player Matt Wilander in the semi-finals of the French Open. At match point, a shot by Wilander’s opponent was ruled out. Wilander walked over to the umpire and said, “I can’t win like this. The ball was good.”
Simple nobility of character makes each of us a class act.

Posted in Christian Courtesy, Contentment, Encouragement, Generous spirit, Gentlemanly behaviour, Inspirational, Life's journey, Respect, Truthfulness, Wisdom | Leave a comment

Finding Our Song

Annie Chapman tells about a woman she found sitting sadly alone at the back of the church after everyone had left. She sat down next to her and the woman began to tell her story. Her oldest son suffered from muscular dystrophy and had spent his life in a wheelchair.Her other two children had a variety of learning and emotional difficulties. Then she whispered, “I’m married to a mean, hateful man who makes my life miserable. And I buried my father this week. At the funeral I learned he’d disinherited me because he hated my husband. So I came here to ask God to kill my husband. I told him I feel like a bird in a cage. And then, when I prayed that prayer, God spoke to me as clearly as I’ve ever sensed His voice. He said, ‘Even a bird in a cage sings.’ So now I guess I need to find my song.”
Perhaps some of us do, too.

Posted in Awareness, Bitterness, Encouragement, Faith, Grief, Healing, inner peace, Inspirational, Life's journey, Loneliness, marriage, Promise, Trials and testings, tribulation and trouble, Wisdom | Leave a comment

Grief Shared

There is an old legend from India about a woman whose only child had died. In her distress she went to a prophet to ask for her child back. The prophet told her to go and get a handful of rice from a house into which death had not come. If she could get hold of rice in this way, he promised to give her the child back. So she went from door to door asking the question, “Are you all here around the table — father, mother, children — none missing?” But always the answer came back that there were empty chairs in each house. As she continued on, her grief and sorrow softened as she found that death and sadness had visited all those families. And the more she shared the grief of others, the more she was able to bear her own.
That’s why the Bible tells us also to:‘Carry each other’s burdens.’

Posted in Awareness, Generous spirit, Grief, Healing, inner peace, Inspirational, Life's journey, Loneliness, Personal Growth, relationships, Sorrow, Spiritual Insight, Sympathy and Support, Trials and testings, tribulation and trouble, Unselfishness | Leave a comment