December 25, 2024
+Christmas, for most of us, brings up memories of Christmases
past.
It’s just the thing we do.
And, for me, this year for some reason, I’ve really been missing
my mother.
My mother was not real big into poetry, despite having a poet for
a son.
I don’t know if she ever really “got” my poetry.
But one poet she really did love was Christina Rossetti.
And if you’re gonna love a poet, Rossetti is about as good of a
poet to love as any.
Rossetti was not one of those great love poets.
She never married.
She never seemed to have any reason deep romantic love for anyone—well,
maybe except for Jesus.
But she had deep faith.
She was a solid Anglo-Catholic who took her faith very seriously.
I’m not certain why my mother loved her so dearly.
But she did.
And when my mother died, I found myself listening to a version of “In
the Bleak Midwinter” by Animal Collective over and over again.
It was a very appropriate song (and poem) for my mother’s death,
which also occurred in the “bleak midwinter.”
In that great poems, Rossetti wrote,
Love came down
at Christmas,
love, all lovely, love divine;
love was born at Christmas:
star and angels gave the sign.
You can’ put it better than that.
That is what we are experiencing this day.
God, for
us anyway, is a God of love.
Because
we are loved by God.
Because
we are accepted by God.
Because
we are—each of us—important to God.
We are,
each of us, broken and imperfect as we may be some times, very important to
God.
Each of
us.
And
because we are, we must love others.
We must,
each of us, become like Jesus God’s love personified.
We must
let that love that came down in the bleak midwinter dwell within us.
And we
must live this love out in the world.
We must
give birth to God’s love so others can know this amazing love as well.
Knowing
this amazing love of God changes everything.
When we
realize that God knows us as individuals.
That God
loves us and accepts each of us for who we are, we are joyful.
We are
hopeful of our future with that God.
And we
want to share this love and this God with others.
That is
what we are celebrating this morning.
Our hope
and joy is in a God who comes and accepts us and loves us for who we are and
what we are—a God who understands what it means to live this sometimes
frightening uncertain life we live.
This is
the real reason why we are joyful and hopeful on this beautiful morning.
This is
why we are feeling within us a strange sense of longing.
This is
why we are rushing toward our Savior who has come to visit us in what we once
thought was our barrenness.
Let the
hope we feel tonight as God our Savior draws close to us stay with us now and
always.
Let the
joy we feel tonight as God our Friend comes to us in love be the motivating
force in how we live our lives throughout this coming year.
God is
here.
God is in
our midst today.
God is so
near, our very bodies and souls are rejoicing.
And God
loves us.
Love truly came down.
Love became flesh and blood.
Love became human.
And in the face of that realization, we are rejoice today.
We are rejoicing in that love personified.
We are rejoicing in each other.
We are rejoicing in the glorious beauty of this one holy moment in
time.
So, let us rejoice.
And let us be glad.
God is with us.
G0d’s love has come to us.
And it is very good!
Let us pray.
Holy God,
you are with us. You are present in our midst. And we rejoice in the Presence
for which we have longed for for so long. Fill us this morning with true joy,
with true hope, so that we can share this joy and hope with others. In Jesus’
name, we pray. Amen.
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