It’s
the day after Christmas. All the presents have been opened. Discarded boxes,
bows and wrappers are bagged and waiting for the trash man to pick them up. The
family has come and gone. We all had plenty to eat. They are now standing in
line at the local big box store to get a deal at the after-Christmas sale or
returning that which did not fit. So much activity goes into this season, it is
hard to sometimes really sit down and contemplate what it all really means. And
what exactly does it mean? Is it just about satisfying our material wants for a
day before we follow the pack back into a crowded retail store for the next big
sale? We have been shopping for everything we want to include in this season
ever since the Thanksgiving Day sales – maybe even before then this year. There
have been cyber deals, holiday performances, light shows and classic TV
specials. There is music we only listen to during this time of the year. We
wrap so much into Christmas – what are we really taking away from this special holiday?
Here
are my thoughts. At the heart of the matter, I think Christmas is about the few
things that truly last in life. I suppose it is because I have reached an age
in life where I have seen plenty of things that I thought would last my
lifetime that did not. I have come to realize that very few things in life are
permanent. Most of them are temporary. Many of my mentors have grown old and
some of them have died. They were leaders I once leaned upon for advice. That
was a temporary situation. My kids are not young children any longer. They grow
up into adults and make their own decisions. Childhood is a temporary gig. Jobs
and careers are not permanent. They begin and they come to an end. Where you
live will someday change and someone else will live in your space, sleep in
your bedroom and spill food on your kitchen floor. And what about the stuff you
unwrapped yesterday? Will it bring you joy and happiness for the rest of your
life? It also is temporary. By this time next year, will you even remember what
was wrapped up under the tree? So that feeling you had when you unwrapped it is
also a fleeting feeling, it does not stick around for very long.
So
what is permanent in life? I have heard it said that when all the temporary
stuff is stripped away, we are left with three permanents in life: Faith, Hope
and Love. If you dig below all the crinkled paper, underneath the tree needles,
the glow of the lights and cookie crumbs, you will find these three in the
roots of the Christmas story that became our tradition. Take a moment and
examine this with me.
Why
do we give gifts at Christmas? At the heart of it is the concept of Faith –
believing in something even though you have not fully seen it for yourself. It
begins with the gift of the Magi – the Wisemen who were following a star,
convinced they were going to find a newborn king in Israel. Scholars have said
these Magi likely traveled from ancient Persia (modern day Iran) to Bethlehem
based upon their reading of a 500-year-old scripture (the book of Daniel) and
the appearance of a star. Based on that, they had enough faith to travel over
750 miles to seek out this new king and to bring costly gifts to present before
him. It is said when they found the child, they bowed down and worshiped him
and presented him with gold, frankincense and myrrh. Faith is one of those
lasting attributes that doesn’t fade away. If you have faith this day after
Christmas, you have something truly special.
Hope
is also at the root of Christmas. Hope is that wonderful quality of believing
that there is something better beyond your present circumstances, particularly
when circumstances are not good. At the top of our Christmas tree is an angel.
I am reminded of the first Christmas when an angel made three appearances,
first to an old man named Zechariah whose wife was infertile, to give him a
message of hope – your wife will have a baby boy. He gave a childless couple
the hope that this son would be the forerunner of the Christ – that their lives
would give hope to all people. That angel appeared again to Mary, the mother of
Christ, to announce she, too, would bear a baby boy that would change people
from the inside out. The third appearance came to a group of shepherds. This time,
when the angel appeared to bring the message of hope – that the baby who would
be the savior of the world was born – he brought a host of angels. Unlike the
cutesy cherub images we have of angels, ancient scripture describes them as
looking like warriors; massive and glowing like bronze in a furnace. Anyone
coming into contact with an angel was always terrified at the sight of them. So
it was with these shepherds in the middle of the night. The angel appeared, the
glory of God shone about them, and they were terrified. The message that the
angel spoke was one of hope, "Fear not: for, behold, I bring you good tidings
of great joy, which shall be to all people. For unto you is born this day in
the city of David a Savior, which is Christ the Lord.”
Hope
is often confused with optimism. They are not quite the same. Optimism is a
wonderful quality, but can run counter to reality when we refuse to take stock
of the true situation we find ourselves in. Hope understands the present
situation, but believes that the current situation is temporary and there is
something better beyond bad times – something permanent that chases away your
worst fears. If you have hope, you have a wonderful treasure that transcends
your current trappings.
Love
is also at the heart of the first Christmas. It is scattered throughout the
story of Christmas. The crux of love was the real reason the Christ child was
born. It is said that God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten
son… Why did this need to happen? Simply because people were in trouble and
needed an intervention from God. At this point in history, tyranny reigned. He
who was the strongest subjected those who were weak under his heel. It is not
much different today. A crazy man reigned in the land of Israel. His one intent
was to maintain his power and put down anyone who would threaten it, including
his own family. He had a wife and three sons put to death for fear they would
try to take over his throne. He had baby boys murdered in Bethlehem on the same
threat. On a larger scale, the emperor of Rome was proclaiming himself to be a
god and deciding who would live and who would die, who would move ahead and who
would succumb to the end of the line. There was no love in their actions. It
was much different with the action of God, who decided to give a gift of love
with the birth of Christ to be the savior of the world. This is also at the
root of our gift giving at Christmas. It is not about the newest toy sensation
or the hot-selling electronic game. It is about sharing from your heart to
people whom you love. If you came away from Christmas with a gift of love, you
have something that will not wear out.
On
this day after Christmas, I hope you take time to look at the permanent gifts
and treasure them in your heart; Faith, Hope and Love. May they sustain you
throughout the entire year and beyond.