Plan for: Thanksgiving | Advent | Christmas

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Summary: A special couple have a special baby should have been the headline. We know Christmas is really about Jesus but many of miss the headline even today.

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The Gospel According to Luke reports a local Jerusalem couple, Zacharias and Elizabeth, are expecting a baby boy. Witnesses testify this good news may be connected to a Temple incident including Zacharias. Temple police continue to identify witnesses as an angelic proclamation is currently being investigated. Zacharias remains mute on the matter. Elizabeth is unable for comment at this time. (Luke 1:26-38)

Lighting of the Advent Candle:

We live in a time of uncertainty and civil unrest continues to be an issue in current American culture. Peace on earth sometimes feels elusive. Nostalgic remembrances can be a catalyst for self-reflection and for attempts at simplifying contemporary daily life. Advent is commonly called a season of preparation. We can examine our own hearts and identify what may need to be moved out so that hope can move in. This season is about preparing to hear some Good News. God has come near.

The voice of one crying in the wilderness:

“Prepare the way of the LORD;

Make straight in the desert[a]

A highway for our God.

4 Every valley shall be exalted

And every mountain and hill brought low;

The crooked places shall be made straight

And the rough places smooth;

5 The glory of the LORD shall be revealed,

And all flesh shall see it together;

For the mouth of the LORD has spoken.” Isaiah 40:3-5 NKJV

Today we begin our 4 week trek to Christmas. A season in the Christian year we’ve traditionally called Advent. This year we have decided to step back in time to period when America was a in a transition from being a nation at war with one another, to a country looking for its soul.

After the American Revolution, English customs fell out of favor, including the celebration of Christmas. In fact, Congress was in session on December 25, 1789, the first Christmas under America’s new constitution. It wasn’t until President Ulysses S. Grant declared Christmas a legal holiday in 1870 that American’s began to celebrate Christmas as we know it today.

By placing the vision of peace within the hearts of American families, President Grant was trying to sooth a period of class conflict and turmoil that many today can now imagine in the wake of what has happened in Ferguson, Missouri. The North and South were divided on the issue of Christmas, as well as on the question of slavery. Many Northerners saw sin in the celebration of Christmas; to these people the celebration of Thanksgiving was more appropriate.

However President Grant’s declaration held and actually did bring opposing forces together and help the nation rebuild by placing the vision of peace that passes all understanding within the hearts of Americans.

Do you think of peace when you think of Christmas or something else? What’s memories do you have around Christmas? Personally, Christmas has always been a let down. I can remember one year in which my younger sister and I sat on the steps at 5am waiting for my parents to wake up. Finally, around 7 they came down grabbed a cup of coffee and gave us the okay to open our presents. It was a scene of paper flying like the Tasmanian devil had been let loose in the living room. We opened our presents quickly and within minutes we all sat quietly looking at our stuff – like a family out to dinner with iphones. We all entered our own little worlds. It was quiet but there was no real peace. Not really. Dad was picking up the wrapping paper to burn in the fireplace. Mom was cooking breakfast. The sisters and I played with our gifts. And then Christmas remorse set in. We had built up this morning to be something unrealistic and like a sugar cookie high, it was over in an instant. It made me wonder, is this all there is to Christmas?

It’s often said, “Christmas is for the children.” However, is it really? Because if it is, then my family must have been doing it wrong. It never felt like it was for the children. It felt more like a forced family gathering, a trip to an overcrowded church in uncomfortable clothes, a reason for my relatives to come into town, and for everyone of age, to be over-served. Maybe your Christmas memories are different but the entire season had always left me baffled.

That is until recently. The season came alive for me when a friend recommended that I read the scriptures to understand the deeper meaning of Christmas. What great advice. I found the traditional Christmas scriptures and read them. It was the first of many ah-ha moments in my journey to my own new birth.

The headlines from the front of the bulletin really do tell the first of many stories that offer inspiration and contemplation. On this first week, we look at this time as a time of waiting by taking a moment to review the first part of Luke 1:5-25. It’s the story of Zechariah and his wife Elizabeth. I don’t want to spoil the story for you so I won’t read it but there are some key facts and moments. Zechariah was a priest. He and his wife had no children which was a real stigma in that time. I’m sure many a person asked the questions, “How such a good couple could not have any children? Is there some hidden sin?” It wasn’t just a stigma it also was a practical concern because children were the social security system of that time. And then one day, Zechariah was chosen for temple duty by the throwing of some dice called lots to proceed into the temple while everyone else stayed outside. It was in the temple, at the incense altar, that Zechariah met the angel Gabriel who informed him that his wife, who was very old, would have a child - a special child who would never drink wine, be anointed with the Holy Spirit and he would be a great evangelist. To which, Zechariah questions the angel. Not a great idea. He then is made silent until his son, John (the Baptist) was born.

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