By Lynn Mills
If only that were the case.
Christmas has been defined through the ages as time spent with family and friends in the comfort of home, yet, plans can be rapidly changed by the circumstances life throws at us. A family falls on hard times and can’t afford presents for the kids. Another family struggles to put a meal on the table. Homes are broken. The elderly are placed in permanent care facilities and spend the rest of their days in loneliness. Or, an unfortunate accident occurs and the holidays are spent in the hospital. Flights are cancelled – families traveling to parents or grandparents for Christmas are trapped in airports due to storms and that keeps them from reaching “home†for December 25th. Speaking of storms, really, any type of trial and heartache can keep a person or family from celebrating the holiday with those they love. Last but not least, some simply have no place to call home.
How strange it is that one day can hold such meaning and longing for one place and so few experience it. How sad it is that the heart’s deepest longing cannot be satisfied for just one day! Is there no cure? Is there no hope?
“Of course there is hope,†you say, “Christmas is all about hope!†But where is it? Is it in the anticipation of that long awaited raise at work? Is it in a mild winter where flights are cancellation free? A healed relationship? Praying that next year there’s more room in the shelter? Where is hope?
Maybe a better question would be, “What is hope?â€
If we could travel back in time to the days of Herod’s rule, we would most likely find the Hebrew nation asking those same questions. Where is it? What is it? After 400 years of silence from the Almighty, they could not be blamed for asking, could they?
The Magi were searching it out in their scrolls, looking for the promise of His coming. The Shepherds looked after their lambs day after day, year after year, wondering if there would ever be something so pure that it could take the place of their lamb’s innocent blood. Rid the world from the guilt of sin.
What happened? A star appeared to the ones who were looking. Angels spoke to the ones who could distinguish pure from the impure. Scholars and shepherds. The great and the poor. What did they find? Hope.
“And they shall call his name Emmanuel, which being interpreted is, God with us.†– Matthew 1:23
The wise men found Him, as did the shepherds. They didn’t find Him because they were either rich or poor…they found Him because they were looking for Him. How simple the thought! What if hope could be found by simply looking for it in the person of Jesus Christ? When we reach the bottom line, isn’t that what Christmas is all about? Why can’t everyone who has found Him celebrate as if they were home for Christmas whether they sit in an airport, nursing home or homeless shelter? They can. The Babe in the manger paved the way for everyone to have a true home at Christmas, and that home is found in Himself.
“For this cause I bow my knees unto the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, of whom the whole family in heaven and earth is name that he would grant you, according to the riches of his glory, to be strengthened with might by his Spirit in the inner man.â€Â  – Ephesians 3:14-16
By Lynn Mills
First published by SGN Scoops digital magazine in December 2014, found at http://www.sgnscoops.com/2014/12/09/december-2014-sgnscoops-magazine/
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