Skip to main content

Christmas Day Message 2021 (Luke 2:1-20)

It was tough times in Judea in the 1st Century when Jesus was born. They had been part of the Roman Empire for a while. They lived through wars and rebellions. Herod the Great, the king of this region, was instrumental in putting Caesar Augustus on the throne. This is a people torn apart by challenges, circumstances, differing opinions and sentiments - much like today.

 

Covid-19 in this country is polarizing many people. The rules, regulations, and restrictions by the governments and our organizations do not seem to be consistent. The pandemic is a real concern and each attempted solution seems to either make it worse, or at the very least, not make it any better.

 

Many people are getting sick, suffering physically: not only from Covid-19 but from our healthcare, hospitals, and/or governments being unable to treat people with other serious ailments. Many people are suffering emotionally – suicide is on the rise, as is Medical Assistance In Dying. Drug use is on the rise. The Opioid Crisis is a real concern and each attempted solution seems to either make it worse, or at the very least, not make it any better.

 

In BC, we have just had the floods that caused loss of life, destruction of homes, highways, businesses and farms and livestock – chickens and cows and other animals have perished. People have been cut off. Our supply lines have been disrupted.

 

The debt and deficit in this country are so bad that I don’t know if anyone has any idea how to find a way out.

 

And now winter is hitting our own community really very hard. We are expecting this week some of the coldest weather ever recorded in our Valley. We are partnering with many other agencies to try to find a way to keep the Drop-in Centre open so people don’t freeze to death.

 

It is into a time not unlike this that God sent His Only Begotten Son to our world in the First Century. Jesus was sent to a people who were struggling. Jesus lived and taught with a people who were struggling. Jesus died and rose again to save a people who were struggling - and he can save us too.

 

There are many struggles that we all corporately have today. There are possibly infinitely more struggles that each and every one of us has personally each and every day. Christmas Day marks the day God sent His Son so that we can be saved even in the midst of our turmoil and saved even unto eternity.

 

Advent Season is about remembering the wait for Jesus’ birth and Advent Season is about our waiting for His return. Jesus has saved us so that when He returns there will be no more death, no more suffering, no more pain, no more tears and until that time we have His Holy Spirit and Immanuel, God With Us.

 

God is with us in all of our struggles today. No matter what happens today, no matter what happens tomorrow, God is with us. We can bring all of our struggles to him – all or our pain, all of our sadness and all of our fears and He will deliver us from them. After all perfect love drives out fear and Jesus is perfect love.

 

And this my friends is what Christmas is all about. So on this Christmas Day let us celebrate the birth of our Saviour who has provided for our salvation us in the midst of all of our struggles and who has made it possible for us to live and grow in that salvation forever.

 

Let us pray.


 


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Psalm 147:7-11: Does God Prohibit the Kilt?

  7 Sing to the Lord with grateful praise;     make music to our God on the harp.   8 He covers the sky with clouds;     he supplies the earth with rain     and makes grass grow on the hills. 9 He provides food for the cattle     and for the young ravens when they call.   10 His pleasure is not in the strength of the horse,     nor his delight in the legs of a man [or ‘the warrior’]; 11 the Lord delights in those who fear him,     who put their hope in his unfailing love.   Psalm 147:10 : “His pleasure is not in the strength of the horse, nor his delight in the legs of a man.” I thought this was an appropriate passage to look at on Robbie Burns Day. For Christmas one year Susan bought me some Bible Commentaries on Psalms. In one of these books the author, Peter C. Craigie, from Scotland, writes:   …. It was the custom in Scotland for boys to ...

Low Saturday (Genesis 3, Revelation 21)

  Hello, I am Major Michael Ramsay from TSA. As well as running The Salvation Army, the Bread of Life soup kitchen, shelter and The Salvation Army thrift store, I am a Christian pastor / teacher. This weekend is Easter. That is the most important time on the Christian Calendar. Christians acknowledge Jesus as God. Our teachings tell us that God, as creator, created the whole world. And when He did it was perfect. Not only did we not harm each other, ourselves or the earth; but we never got sick, we never got injured; and the earth itself – the trees did not fall to the ground and die. Animals did not eat animals. All of creation was in perfect harmony. The Creator even walked in this Garden He created with people He created. Then something happened. The first people created made a choice.   Because of this choice, death, decay, harm and hurt entered the world. Where there was none before, now there was illness, injury and death for all of creation. Plants, animals and al...

Luke 24:38-34: Revelation of a King

James V, the King of Scotland used to go around the country disguised as a common person. That is because he wanted to meet the everyday people of the country not just the rich and powerful. He wanted to see how the normal people lived. One day he was dressed in very old clothes and was going by a place known as Cramond Brig, when he is attacked by robbers who don’t know who he is. There is a fierce struggle and he is nearly overcome when, at just the right moment, a poor farm worker - Jock Howieson - hears the commotion comes to the disguised king’s aid. Now Jock, the poor labourer, who works on this portion of the King’s land, Cramond Brig, unawares takes the undercover king home and gives him a dinner of broth and Jock - as the king is recouping – naturally asks the man who he is. The King responds ‘I’m a good man of Edinburgh.’ ‘And where do you live in that city and where do you work?’ ‘Well,’ says James, ‘I live at the palace and I work there too.’ ‘The palace, is it?...