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Sunday

Grateful for the Gift of Guilt?


Grateful for the Gift of Guilt?

Guilt is a gift, but it’s probably not on your Christmas wish-list. It’s certainly not on mine.

We all know guilt can become an unbearable burden. Ask any psychiatrist, psychologist, counselor or clergyman about the grievous perils of long-term guilt.

Look around. How many downcast eyes do you see? Count the pointed fingers, as we accuse others of faults we hate most in ourselves.

Seriously? Guilt is a gift? You’ve got to be kidding.

Guilt can be good, but only for a moment. It all depends on what we do with it.

If we tuck our guilt away in a secret spot within our souls and let it fester, it is likely to ferment into shame, discouragement, bitterness and despair.

But if we allow ourselves to feel the grief that comes with guilt, it can be a springboard to survival. A moment of guilt can open our hearts to repentance, which allows us to receive forgiveness and enjoy reconciliation with God and others.

The Apostle Paul put it this way:

“For the kind of sorrow
God wants us to experience
leads us away from sin
and results in salvation.
There's no regret for that kind of sorrow.”
(1 Corinthians 7:10a, NLT)

God hates our guilt – probably even more than we do.

I think it breaks the Father’s heart to see us trudging along with heavy loads of remorse and regret. He hates to see His children hurting, particularly when it’s not necessary.

God already paid for our guilt, so it must upset Him when we try to carry the costs of a purchase He has already made.

I witnessed a similar frustration recently, although on a much smaller scale.

Yesterday, I stood in a crowded checkout line in a large discount store, right smack in the middle of the holiday shopping season, behind a harried and hurried mother with her preschooler son. The boy repeatedly pulled a Christmas puzzle out of the bagger’s hand and put it back on the tram.

“Your mom already paid for that,” the cashier reminded the youngster, as she handed the purchased item back to the bagger.

This happened three times before the mom corrected the child.

At first, I found myself rolling my eyes and frowning at the shopper behind me. We both chuckled at the apparent folly. Then I realized the truth.

Don’t we play the same game with God?

Jesus, the Babe in the manger that came to die to save us from sin, has already paid the price for our guilt. That’s the amazing gift of Christmas and Easter and every day of our lives. But we take our guilt off the cashier’s conveyor, so to speak, and try to hold it in our own hands.

Why can’t we just let God tuck our forgiven sins into the bag and toss them away? Actually, He has already done exactly that. The work is finished (see John 19:30). We just pretend it’s not.

If we’ve given our guilt to Him, accepting the completed redemption offered by the crucified and resurrected Savior, the Wonderful Counselor and Prince of Peace, then it’s gone.

Any guilt we choose to carry now is false guilt. And that’s no good at all.

Remember the frustrated mom with her persistent preschooler? Why should she pay twice for the same puzzle? As God’s children, why would we insist on paying for our puzzling guilt, if He’s already borne the unfathomable cost? God would rather have us adoring Him for His love and mercy.

True guilt is a gift, if it leads us into His arms, so He can take it off our backs with his own nail-scarred hands.

“He personally carried our sins
in his body on the cross
so that we can be dead to sin
and live for what is right.
By his wounds you are healed.”
(1 Peter 2:24, NLT)

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Saturday

Frenetically Frazzled

Frenetically Frazzled

I love Christmas. And I have to admit that I grin a little, every time I see one of those emails or social networking posts that take a somewhat mock-militant stance against the increasingly generic and politically correct holiday greetings folks seem to bandy about these days.

Happy-Merry-Hanu-Kwan-Mas!

Seriously?

It’s Jesus’ birthday, for Christmas’ sake! It’s also Hanukkah and Kwanzaa. If our holidays are worth celebrating, don’t they merit full greetings?

Again, I love Christmas. But I’m growing less enthusiastic each year with the frenzied preparations and overblown expectations we seem to place upon ourselves and one another.

Christmas celebrates the birth of Christ, the wonder of the world. True to form, however, mankind has spent 21 centuries making it all about us.

“What do you want for Christmas?” we ask each other. Occasionally, we may come up with an altruistic-sounding answer, such as peace and goodwill. But even as we offer such selfless suggestions, we may still be reviewing our must-have lists in our own minds.
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Are you stressed out yet?

The month of December is filled with baking, shopping, wrapping, socializing and special events. No wonder folks become overwhelmed during this season.

It’s positively contagious.

How many gift catalogs arrived in your mailbox today? Can you count the coupon codes in your email in-box?

We know what we want … don’t we?

Last week, at a holiday party, I heard a young mother say she’d be sending a master list of gift requests for her middle schooler. She's making a spreadsheet of stuff her kid wants from Santa and other well wishers.

“That way, he won’t get three of the same thing,” she explained.

What’s next? Maybe Christmas gift registries will one day become as popular as their counterparts for weddings and baby showers.

In the meantime, we chase frantically from store to store and click quickly from website to website, searching for the ideal gifts for our loved ones. Perhaps we drop not-so-subtle (iPad) hints (iPad) for Santa (iPad), if he’s listening (iPad).

Maybe we even pick up a few extra items for ourselves, while we shop for gifts for others.

Then we hurry home to compose our Christmas letters, choosing our most flattering photos and listing all of the achievements (and none of the struggles) of our family members in the past 12 months. Is anyone impressed yet?
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Some of us grow cynical about celebrating.

Someone close to me told me recently that he’d rather not do Christmas at all. “All the gift-giving just piles on my to-do list, running around to buy stuff people probably don’t want, anyway,” he said.

Christmas is supposed to be fun! Or is it? Why bother, if it’s not? (Read on. It’s worth it.)

When did it become our Christmas, anyway?

Preaching to the mirror, as I am often wont to do (if I’m honest with myself), I have to wonder. What are we giving Jesus for His birthday this year?

“Ascribe to the LORD
the glory due His name;
worship the LORD
in the splendor of His holiness.”
(Psalm 29:2, NIV)

Suddenly, I have an inclination to leave the still-unwrapped gifts in the closet a little longer and to linger a moment. Did I just feel a nudge from an unseen visitor? Maybe it’s time for me to refocus on the One for whom Christmas began.

I’m taking my Christmas list and writing "Alpha and Omega" (see Revelation 22:13) on the top and the bottom of it. Maybe then I’ll remember to give to Him first and last and in-between.

We call Him the “Reason for the Season,” but He’s so much more than a cute, hackneyed slogan.

What does Jesus want for Christmas?

I love the words of Christina Rossetti (1830-1894), found in her classic Christmas poem, “In the Bleak Midwinter”:

In the bleak mid-winter
Frosty wind made moan,
Earth stood hard as iron,
Water like a stone;
Snow had fallen, snow on snow,
Snow on snow,
In the bleak mid-winter
Long ago.

Our God, Heaven cannot hold Him
Nor earth sustain;
Heaven and earth shall flee away
When He comes to reign:
In the bleak mid-winter
A stable-place sufficed
The Lord God Almighty
Jesus Christ.

Enough for Him, whom cherubim
Worship night and day,
A breastful of milk
And a mangerful of hay;
Enough for Him, whom angels
Fall down before,
The ox and ass and camel
Which adore.

Angels and archangels
May have gathered there,
Cherubim and seraphim
Thronged the air,
But only His mother
In her maiden bliss
Worshipped the Beloved
With a kiss.

What can I give Him,
Poor as I am?
If I were a shepherd
I would bring a lamb,
If I were a Wise Man
I would do my part, –
Yet what I can I give Him,

Give my heart.
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Once again. I love Christmas. I enjoy gathering with family and friends to celebrate. I am pleased to receive holiday greetings from long-lost friends and current ones too. But most of all, I love Jesus. And that’s enough.

Pass the gingerbread, please. Let’s have a birthday party!

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Wednesday

Everyday Exceptions and Eternity’s Expectations

Excuse me. Can you tell? Is there something in my eye?

No, it’s not a speck of sawdust. It’s much bigger than that. It’s probably a plank, or at least a big boo-boo. At the very least, it’s one more opportunity for me to learn firsthand about God’s unique flavor of grace.

"Why do you look
at the speck of sawdust in your brother's eye
and pay no attention
to the plank in your own eye?”
(Luke 6:41, NIV)

Was it something I said?
How about an unspoken thought that should never have been thought?

Daily, I find myself in some sort of proverbial pickle or another, where I must stop and ask God (and maybe others) for grace.

Today, I stepped in it, so to speak, by 6:30 a.m. You don’t want to know the details, but it began with the realization of a lost pocketbook. (Yep, the errant handbag eventually turned up, so no lasting harm was done. Or was it?)

The mishap did offer me a chance to demonstrate apologies (What? Again?) to my own kids and a neighbor’s teen, who happened to pop up in my kitchen at that early hour on a weekday and see me in all of my non-glory.

Sometimes a simple “I’m sorry” teaches us much more than we might learn, had we’d never goofed. When we don’t try to bargain with God, making excuses and exceptions for errors, we open the door to apologies and restored relationships with Him.

Trust me. I’ve had a bit of practice.

“Watch and pray,
that ye enter not into temptation:
the spirit indeed is willing,
but the flesh is weak.”
(Matthew 26:42, KJV)

Who’s keeping track here, anyway?

Isn’t it curious how we may make exceptions for all sorts of missteps, particularly when others make them? But how do we measure ourselves when we step over the line somehow?

Sure, plenty of folks try to magnify the mess in others’ lives and minimize that in their own. We may attempt to fool ourselves and wink at our wrongdoings, as if they weren’t so bad, after all.

But how many of us elevate our expectations of ourselves to such unreachable heights that we can never even come close? Isn’t it easy to berate ourselves and build big piles of self-guilt over our all-too-frequent shortcomings?

OK, God’s standard is perfection. He is flawless and complete. To measure up, we would have to have spotless conduct, pure speech and ever-loving attitudes. And we can’t.

Ding! Game over!

We would all be losers, if He left us there. Some of us can jump really high or run super-fast. Others seem so successful in any number of ways. A few may meticulously mind their manners, their mouths and even their minds.

But none of us comes close – not by a country mile.

Thank God for the Savior! Every day, I thank Him for keeping His arms open to me, for not giving up on me, and for calling me back when I think I’ve stepped too far away. His love is greater still.

And He feels the same way about you!

“You were saved by faith in God,
who treats us much better
than we deserve.
This is God's gift to you,
and not anything you have done
on your own.
It isn't something you have earned,
so there is nothing you can brag about.”
(Ephesians 2:8-9, CEV)

Isn’t that what Advent, the coming of Emmanuel, is all about? What a gift, which we could never earn, but which we can freely accept.

Even so, come, Lord Jesus. We thank You for coming, and we welcome You.


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Monday

Devotion, a Dream and a Donkey

Devotion, a Dream and a Donkey

Have you ever ridden a donkey? Maybe you’ve taken a spin on a bouncing burro, an amble on an ass or a stroll on a saddled-up donkey at a county fair or a farm visit. How did it feel?

OK, here’s a tougher question.

Did you ever take a trail ride on a donkey? I have, and it’s a very different experience than riding a horse. Donkeys tend to trudge along, and it can be a bit of a bumpy ride. Often reluctant, these smaller equids may require a bit more persuasion than ponies or other swifter steeds.

Imagine Mary and Joseph, facing a journey across the wilderness to Bethlehem.

Can you picture young Mary, wide-eyed and wondering, as she carried the Christ child inside her body? Still a virgin, she had only the word of the Lord’s angel to point to the prodigious path she was to walk. Friends and family members scorned her when she turned up pregnant before marriage.

And Mary was probably no more than 14 years old.

How about Joseph, the earnest carpenter, who arranged with Mary’s parents to wed their teen daughter? Good-hearted, he offered to call off the wedding quietly, when his bride-to-be began to bloom in maternal anticipation. Waking up from a dream, in which an angel clued him in to God’s secret plan, confirming his beloved Mary’s claims, Joseph was emboldened to marry the pregnant teen.

Then Caesar Augustus called for his census.

The emperor’s decree called for all men in the Roman world (which then included the Holy Land) to travel to their birthplaces and register for a census. That order sent Joseph packing for Bethlehem, about a 65-mile trek from his carpenter shop in Nazareth.

He loaded his bride, then in the final stages of pregnancy, onto the donkey for the trip. The journey took Joseph and Mary through rough terrain, mostly uphill. They likely slept outdoors on the ground, warming themselves by campfire, with the donkey grazing nearby.

Perhaps Joseph offered Mary his own robe in the night chill, hoping to comfort her in her full-blown prenatal expectancy.

Riding a donkey, bumping up and over rocky hillsides, would have been enough to send nearly any expectant mother into labor.

If you wonder how this trip might have felt for the faithful couple, take a look at “The Nativity Story” (2006). Here’s the movie trailer. Look particularly at 1:38 (and following) in the video.

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Finally, after many days, they ascended the hills of Judah to Jerusalem (where Jesus would again enter by donkey, some 30 years later) and then continued to Bethlehem, where Mary bore the Christ child in the stable of an overbooked inn.

This story has always puzzled me a bit. I have often wondered about the arduous ordeal Mary and Joseph faced.
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Why would God not have kept Mary more comfortable, as she carried His own Child?

The Virgin Mary faced rumors of premarital infidelity and likely fears of her own, probably from the very onset of morning sickness and the earliest confirming signs that a child was forming in her womb. Turning up unmarried and with child could be cause for stoning in that age.

Plus, motherhood is challenging enough, but those last days of pregnancy can be downright difficult. Why didn’t Jehovah Jireh, the Provider, make more amenable arrangements for the mother of the Son of God?

Joseph likely was mocked by his peers in Nazareth, as he took in a wife who bore another’s child. Maybe folks assumed the baby was his own, snickering about secret transgressions.

Certainly, Mary and Joseph were uncomfortable most of the time. Their entire journey was anything but convenient. Still, they continued to trust God.

What was the Lord trying to prove by sending His Son under such circumstances?

The mind of God is unfathomable. We may never fully understand His plans and purposes. Maybe He leaves such questions unanswered, so we must trust Him anyway.

Could it be that the Almighty is more concerned with our adoration than our accommodations? Is God focused on our commitment or our circumstances, on our hearts or our homes, on our prayers or our pain, on our wonder or our wealth?

Maybe it’s not all about us, after all.

The birth story of the Messiah is filled with humanity and humility. Jesus arrived in nitty-gritty down-to-earth drama, even as young Mary bore Him in a lonely stable with animals rustling around nearby.

The King of Kings and Lord of Lords needed no elegant horse-drawn carriage or gilded cradle. There, in a barn, rough-hewn from a mountain cave, Jesus arrived in humble holiness. Angelic midwives, seen or unseen, drew Him forth.

And the Heavens erupted with song.

Glory to God in the highest heaven,
   and on earth peace
to those on whom His favor rests.”
(Luke 2:14, NIV)

What more do we need?
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Image/s:
Promotional Stills from
The Nativity Story
New Line Cinema (2006)
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Sunday

Cairo’s Camels and Classic Comedy

Cairo’s Camels and Classic Comedy

God is funny. C’mon, you know it’s true.

I love God for so many reasons. He is holy, loving, mighty, all-wise and beyond compare. He’s also positively hilarious. I am convinced that the Lord God has the greatest sense of humor of all.

Seriously, have you taken a look around at some of the amusing situations His children get into?

Can’t you just see the Heavenly Father, chuckling fondly over the antics of His children, like you and me?

I can picture the adoring Adonai, nudging an angel and remarking with a godly grin, “Hey, look at my daughter, tripping over her own words. Isn’t she adorable?”

Or He might poke Jesus and say, “Aha! Did you see that hotshot there? That’s cute. He thinks he’s building that tower on his own. How long shall we let him go along, before we clue him in?”

"Psst! Gabriel. Take a gander at that guy. He honestly believes he's training that dog, while the dog is actually training him. Isn't that cute? Gotta love that guy."

The Almighty One could even peek at a cocky kid with a wild rainbow-colored hairdo and a couple of nose rings and say to Himself, “He’s sure shocking his parents, but he’ll grow out of it. What’s funnier … I know what he looks like as a middle-aged man.”

Sometimes, I think God laughs out loud to see some of the wacky scenes we live. Hey, God created humor, so He certainly excels at it. Of course, our loving Heavenly Father's humor probably doesn't ridicule or hurt anyone. More likely, He's just smiling ear to ear and taking divine delight in the mirth of our mere mortality. 

Like a parent with precocious preschoolers, God is apt to find it funny and endearing to see us try too hard or consider our own efforts to amount to much more than they do.

Take my recent trip to Egypt, for example.

Yep, our group journeyed right through Tahrir Square in Cairo, just a week before the most recent revolts took place there. While we stayed in our hotel by the Nile River, the Arab League held a momentous meeting about a block away. By God’s grace, our trip was unaffected by these situations.

Then there was the crazy camel ride.

My friend and I, both horse lovers, rallied our fellow travelers (all non-equestrians) for camel rides in the desert behind the famous pyramids. 

Our savvy tour guide warned us not to speak to the camel wranglers in front of the pyramids, who aggressively approached travelers to offer extra-pricey rides.

Instead, the guide collected the fees from all of us and paid a strategically designated camel owner directly. Apparently, this dromedary dealer was the most trustworthy of the lot, and he owned enough camels to carry the lot of us.

So we loaded up for the big camel ride in the desert.

Our camel handler led us down a hill and off into the now-setting sun for several minutes before stopping to take our photograph. Then he asked my friend if he could keep her baseball cap.

“If I can’t have your hat,” he said, “I’ll make my camel run away with you.”

There we sat, atop a giant four-legged creature, trying to negotiate with a whip-brandishing stranger, who suddenly pretended to understand less English than a moment earlier.

Nearby, the other camel handlers urged our fellow travelers to part with wristwatches, fancy sunglasses, bracelets and other possessions. Tentatively, at least, we all held our ground, while hanging onto the camel saddles.

Finally, the camels trudged back up the hill to the starting point, where they crouched for us to dismount. We handed the camel handlers a few American dollars as tips and thanked them.

Close call! Think God found it funny, watching a couple of American cowgirls and our friends trembling on top of a pack of camels outside Cairo?

I’d bet He absolutely chortled at the sight, even as He dispatched His best guards to stop the camels from bolting with His children.

Someday in eternity, I hope the Mighty One will roll the tapes, showing us the now-unseen spiritual slapstick comedy of our own daily shenanigans and funny foibles. Maybe then, when His character work in us is complete, we will be able to take a joke and laugh hysterically along with the heavenly hosts.

“The LORD makes firm the steps
   of the one who delights in Him;
though he may stumble, he will not fall,
   for the LORD upholds him with His hand.”
Psalm 37:23-24, NIV
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Cairo Camel Ride
Photos copyrighted by Nickers and Ink


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Saturday

Bethlehem bummed me out a bit

Bethlehem bummed me out a bit

OK, I admit it.

Frankly, I hesitate to say so, but it’s true. I was a little saddened to behold Bethlehem, once I finally saw it for myself.

All my life, I longed to visit the birthplace of the Savior. A year ago, I signed up and paid my deposit for the long-awaited bucket-list journey to the Holy Land. I counted months, then weeks, then days until departure.

Bethlehem was one of the top spots on my list of must-sees, along with Jerusalem and Galilee.

What happened in Bethlehem?

This ancient city carries rich history and spiritual significance, filled with meaning for believers. The City of David, as well as the city of Jesus’ birth, Bethlehem was part of the hill country of Judah.

There, in the town once known as Bethel, Jacob’s beloved Rachel was buried. (Jacob, of course, fathered the 12 tribes of Israel. Rachel gave birth to Joseph and Benjamin.)

Also, David was crowned king in Bethlehem, the city whose name actually means “House of Bread.”

What an appropriate spot for the birthplace of the King of Kings, the Bread of Life and the Light of the World. To Christians, Bethlehem is one of the most sacred locales in the entire world, as it has been since the birth of the Savior.

What’s Bethlehem like now?

Today, the Palestinian-controlled city of Bethlehem is part of the West Bank. This frequently contested community sits on a hillside overlooking Jerusalem.

Atop the hill is the Church of the Holy Nativity, the traditionally recognized birthplace of Jesus Christ. This church, begun in 327 AD and rebuilt in 565 AD, now houses three different monasteries: Armenian, Greek Orthodox and Roman Catholic. Using separate entrances, this trio of organizations practice their devotions according to clearly defined schedules of accessibility to the facility.

Forgive me. I digress.

Before visiting Bethlehem, our group had to drop off our Israeli tour guide in Jerusalem and pass through a Palestinian checkpoint. There, a Palestinian tour guide boarded our bus and took us directly to a local banquet hall. After we bought our lunches, he loaded us onto the bus and led us nearly next door to a souvenir gift shop. The store owner boarded our bus to make his sales pitch before allowing us to disembark and visit the premises, where salespeople nearly outnumbered the members of our group.

Here’s a free tip for travelers.
You can pretty much assume
prices are inflated for tourists
when merchandise in a foreign country
 is marked in American dollars.

Enter through the gift shop.

We browsed politely for a while. A few folks purchased olive wood nativity scenes and Christmas tree ornaments. Some picked up rosary beads for Catholic family members and friends.

Stepping outside the shop, we ran the gauntlet of sidewalk sellers, hawking Pashmina shawls and wooden beads, to re-board our bus. At last, we would see the spot where Baby Jesus came to earth.

The tour bus parked in a multi-tiered garage. Our brusque guide hustled us along a busy thoroughfare, past souvenir shops with names like “Nativity Crib” and “Holy Family Imports.” Crossing the street for the final steps up to the Church of the Holy Nativity, we stopped by a police car with flashing lights and an officer offering wooden nativity sets.

Stand in line, and duck for the door.

We passed under a political banner with a life-sized portrait of Yassir Arafat on the way into the church’s parking lot. There, we waited to enter the church complex through a tiny door.

Inside the building, we queued up to hear our guide asking our pastor-leaders if they really wanted to stay for the expected one-hour wait. (Actually, wait times can often be considerably longer.)

Well, of course we wanted to wait, after traveling halfway around the world to be there.

Finally, we inched up to the curved stone stairs leading down to the sacred spot. With pilgrims pressing us on all sides, we linked arms to keep from falling into the mysterious underground niche.

Once inside the holy grotto, we had but a moment to stoop and view, or even touch, the silver star marking the spot where the Virgin Mary is believed to have birthed the Holy Child. 

We turned and viewed a metal crib-like structure, presumably marking the spot where Mary may have placed the precious God-man newborn  in the manger.

The actual site in Bethlehem was like no nativity scene I have ever seen.

Almost immediately, the crunch of the crowd moved us to a set of exit stairs, which deposited us back on the main level of the church. There, our guide pointed out altars representing various Christian sects and outlined the rules governing their ability to worship the Lord in the sacred site.

And then it was over. We exited just in time to see a Greek wedding party lined up in the street, complete with sobbing flower girl and blushing ring bearer. We stepped back to let them pass. Immediately, our hasty tour guide bade us depart for the bus.

“Quickly, please!” he called, as a few fellow travelers stopped to browse through sidewalk souvenir displays.

As we settled into our seats, a comic scene unfolded. There, in the parking garage, a particularly motivated young man poked his head into the bus to sell wooden King David flutes. One clever guy in our party talked the kid  down to two for a dollar before collecting cash from about a dozen people and grabbing up the musical merchandise with the bus already rolling. There in Bethlehem, another sales star was born.

All told, our sojourn to the Savior’s birthplace took about five hours, including the requisite luncheon and souvenir stops and border checkpoint delays. Our actual turn in the designated holy place, the grotto of the Church of the Holy Nativity, lasted less than five minutes.

I want my childhood Bethlehem back!

Without a doubt, I am grateful that I had the chance to step into the spot where Jesus was likely born. If it wasn’t exactly that site, we can be sure it was someplace very close to it. But I came away from that iconic experience feeling definitely disappointed and somewhat abashed as a Christian.

I have no doubt that the architects, designers, builders and caretakers of the Church of the Holy Nativity poured their hearts and souls into creating a facility that would honor the birthplace of the Son of God. Surely, they sacrificed time and treasure to make such a spot possible.

Still, it felt somehow like one more example of how humanity clutters the basic secrets of Emmanuel, God with us. Despite our best intentions, how often do we make His love more complex than it really is?

Jesus’ arrival on earth was absolutely earthy.

I love the picture of the beautiful infant Christ, sleeping peacefully in a pile of straw, with farm animals peeking in to adore His sweet face.

Maybe it’s because I am a barn girl. I am most at home when my boots are dirty and my animals are happy. But I can’t help feeling that God Himself might agree. I wonder if perhaps God Almighty scratches His head in wonder sometimes, wanting to part the heavens and simply ask, “My precious children! Why have you complicated My truth? It’s so simple!”

The Lord of the Universe could have sent His only Son to be born anywhere on earth. He could have picked a royal princess as His mother. He could have orchestrated His nativity in a castle or a fancy temple.

Instead, He chose a barn in a tiny town. In fact, it was probably more like a dirty cave. He placed His Beloved One in the hands of a teenager, surrounded by smelly livestock.

If that was good enough for my humble Lord, most high and holy, then it’s good enough for me.

Returning home from the Holy Land, I couldn’t wait to march into the stables, stand in the manure-filled hay, hug on my horse’s neck, and thank God for His daily blessings.

Sometimes the holiest moments come in unexpected ways. And sometimes the most anticipated spiritual milestones do not prove as meaningful as everyday touches from the hand of God.

The truth is simple. Oh, how He loves you and me!
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Image/s:

Bethlehem and Nativity Scene photos
copyrighted by Linda Ann Nickerson
 Nickers and Ink

Church of the Holy Nativity 
Altar of the Nativity photo 
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Advent: An Adventure in Faith

Advent: An Adventure in Faith

December 1st marked the beginning of Advent, a season of anticipation and hope for believers everywhere.

Personally, this season has inspired me 
to do an alphabetical series of blog posts, 
from A to Z. 
If I double-up at least once, 
I'll finish by Christmas!

What is Advent?

As a word freak, I love to explore the origins of terms we use. “Advent” is derived from an old Latin word, “adventus,” which means coming.

Advent speaks of an awaited arrival, as well as a new start. Oh, how I need that daily!
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Advent heralds a new beginning.

As we open daily doors on our Advent calendars, eagerly ticking off the days till Christmas, it’s easy for us to think about holiday parties, gift shopping, cookie baking, visits with Santa Claus, choral concerts, family gatherings and other events of the Christmas season.

Tomorrow, in churches around the world, faithful ones will light candles on Advent Wreaths (see link to explanation below) and ponder the perfect Son of God, who took on frail flesh to save the world from itself.

What a gift. Who can fully understand what this means ... and the dear cost it required?

What does Advent really celebrate?

Advent points to the coming of Christ, the incarnation of the Holy One, the tiny Babe born into dirty straw in a Bethlehem barn. His arrival split history (HIS story) into two pieces, before Christ (BC) and Anno Domini (AD), the year of the Lord.

Without the coming of Christ, we would have no Christmas, no Good Friday, no Easter and no hope.

Thank God for Advent and for sending the Savior of the world.

“But the angel said to them,
‘Do not be afraid.
I bring you good news of great joy
that will be for all the people.’”
Luke 2:10, NIV


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Image/s:
Advent Wreath
By Micha L. Reiser
Creative Commons Photo

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