December 24, 2023
+ Well, it’s Christmas Eve, in case
you hadn’t noticed.
And, well, let’s face it:
This is what it’s all about.
This is why we celebrate.
This is why we do what we do at Christmas.
This is what we hope for.
It might be dark and cold outside, but here, tonight, we celebrate Light.
And that is what I really love about
this night!
We celebrate the Light that has come
to us wherever we might be in our lives.
We celebrate the Light that breaks
through into our darkness, in the darkness we might have in our own lives.
We celebrate the Light that has come
to us when we’ve been sad or frustrated or fearful.
And as it does, no doubt most of us
are feeling two emotions tonight—the two emotions Christmas is all about: hope
and joy.
Hope—in our belief that what has come
to us—God has sent Jesus to us as a glorious and wonderful gift.
And now that Gift is here among us
And Joy—at the realization of that
reality.
As we come forward tonight to meet
with joy and hope this mystery that we remember and commemorate and make ours
this evening, we too should find ourselves feeling these emotions—hope and joy—at
our very core.
And it is a mystery.
We will never fully understand how or
why Jesus the Messiah, Jesus the Word of God made flesh, Jesus the ultimate
gift of love from God, has come to us as this little child in a dark stable in
the Middle East, but it has happened and, because it happened, we are…different.
We are better as a result of it.
God has reached out to us.
God—this God who truly does love us,
who truly does know us, who truly does care for us---has reached out to us.
Just think about that for a moment.
God loves us enough to actually reach
out to us.
And by doing so, we know
tonight—without a doubt—that we are loved, we are accepted, we are truly known
by our God.
Knowing that, what do we feel?
Hope!
And joy!
Because God knows us, loves us,
accepts us, our lives are different because of what happened that evening when
God sent us a sign of that love and acceptance.
Yes, we may have known fear before, we
have known dread before, but tonight, with God so close and so near, everything
we feared and dreaded has been driven away.
When we look at it from that
perspective, suddenly we find our emotions heightened.
We find that our joy is a joy like few
other joys we’ve had.
We find that our hope is more
tangible—more real—that anything we have ever hoped in before.
And that is what we are celebrating
this evening.
Our true hope and true joy is not in
brightly colored lights and a pile of presents until a decorated tree.
Our true hope and joy is not found in
the malls or the stores.
Our true hope and joy does not come to
us with things that will, a week from now, be a fading memory.
Our hope and joy is in a God who sent
us a Baby who, as he comes to us, causes us to leap up with joy at his very
presence.
Our hope and joy is in a God who reaches
out to us right now, where we are, and gives us love born in this innocent
child, born to a humble teenager.
Our hope and joy is in a God who gives
us love in very concrete terms—love that has a face like our face and flesh
like our flesh—a God who allows love to be born, like we are born.
Our hope and joy is in a God who comes
to us and accepts us and loves us for
who we are and what we are—a God who does not leave us alone in our hurts and
our pains.
God loves us.
God knows each of us by name.
Each and every single one of us.
We are each precious and loved by our
God.
That is what this night and this
season of Christmas is all about.
This is the real reason why we are
joyful and hopeful on this beautiful night.
This is why we are feeling within us a
strange sense of longing.
God is here.
God is in our midst.
God is so near, our very bodies and
souls are rejoicing.
So, let greet God tonight with all
that we have within us.
Let reach out to the God who is
reaching out to us.
Let us welcome our God and the gift
our God has given us with true hope and true joy.
And let us welcome our God into the
shelter of our hearts, so that we can share God with others.
Amen.
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