A Christmas candle is a lovely thing. It makes no
noise at all. But silently gives itself away.” Eva
Logue
Please don’t rat me out,
but I think Buddy from Elf was wrong. One of the repeated lines from
that movie was, “The best way to spread Christmas Cheer, is singing loud for
all to hear.” The last thing that our world needs is more noise. There’s
just so much noise already in the world today, so many voices screaming and competing
for our attention. If you want to be heard, you almost have to shout or blare.
During a typical lunch hour at the University of California
at Berkeley,
spokespeople for a dozen different causes can be found on the plaza, trying to
outshout one another. One day though a lone figure sat down defiantly in the
middle of the crowd and held up a sign that said, “SILENT PROTEST.” Finally, someone
tapped him on the shoulder and asked, "What are you protesting?" The defiant
figure held up another sign which said simply, “NOISE.”
That experience reminds me of the Salvation
Army bell ringer who was informed by a police officer that a local ordinance
would prevent her from ringing her bell to invite contributions. But such a silly
law couldn’t stop such a creative and determined woman. The next day she did a
brisker business than ever as she would wave one sign and then another in the
air. The signs simply said “ding” and “dong.” I love it!
There’s so much noise in the world,
especially in those weeks leading up to Christmas — music blaring out of every
store, often in every department: impatient customers raising their voices to
get the attention of weary, overworked store clerks; the blaring of horns and
traffic jams, whining children, crabby parents. Because I find that all of the
noise can be overwhelming, sometimes when I’m shopping in the electronics
department of a department store, I’ll quietly move down the row, turning down
the volume on each TV or stereo system.
God cannot be found in noise and
restlessness. As we look at His creation, it’s very apparent that God is the
friend of the quiet, even silence. Look at how nature, the trees, flowers, and grass grow
in silence. See the stars, the moon and the sun and how they move in silence.
We need silence to hear God’s voice in the inner sanctuary of our souls.
It’s too easy to miss the real message of
Christmas and the Incarnation because it’s lost midst all of the Christmas
racket. Too often at Christmas because we over pack our lives and hustle at
such a frenetic pace, that when there is finally quiet, we find ourselves dozing
off. The quiet, instead of a time of listening and reflection, is overwhelmed by
our own weariness. Soon rather than reflecting, we’re just snoring.
An often overlooked yet vital sidelight in
that first Christmas is found in Luke 2:19, “Mary treasured up all these
things, pondering them in her heart.” This morning during our Grace Family
Christmas, take some time to “ponder.” If there’s any music that we’re
too familiar with, it’s Christmas music. We can listen to it or sing it by
heart, yet never let it touch our hearts. Or we become enamored with the beauty
of the music, we miss the message. Christmas is a time for more pondering like
Mary did.
One of the best examples of that to me is
George Handel’s Messiah. If you’re familiar with the Messiah, you know
that every word of that oratorio composed in 1741 is from Scripture, from the King
James Bible. It’s one of the best-known and most frequently performed choral
works in Western music. Every holiday season professional choirs and musicians
will do beautiful renditions of it. Yet, many of those who are playing or
singing aren’t even religious. Often, they’re atheists or God-deniers. Sadly,
they’re so focused on the voices or the beauty of the music that they miss the
power of God’s eternal Word. It’s only in God’s Word that we find forgiveness
and eternal life. The Bible is God’s written Word; Jesus came in His
incarnation to be the Living Word (John 1).
Psalm 46:10 says, “Be still, and know that
I am God. I will be exalted among the nations, I will be exalted in the earth!”
Such a simple verse from the Bible, yet one of the most difficult to follow,
particularly in our noisy world. When was the last time that you sat
still—perfectly still—for any length of time? Not just your body, but your
mind…your soul? Many of us find that very difficult. It’s a lot harder than it
sounds, yet so much more rewarding than you could ever imagine.
God reaches out to each one of us with that “still,
small voice.” Most of the time, though, we’re so busy, so active, so
preoccupied that we don’t hear what God is trying to say to us. We can’t even
hear His voice in His Word. That’s why quiet and solitude are such an important
part of the life of faith. Perhaps, it’s more vital during the Christmas season
than even at other times of the year. Because it’s in the solitude and silence
that God waits for us. The more often we practice solitude, the more often we
will find the God who waits, and the more we will hear the God who speaks.
It’s in the silence we God can give us a
glimpse into our own souls. Most of us never reflect on who we really are. It’s
only as we know who we are and the condition of our souls apart from Christ,
that we’re sinners, that we have committed crimes against a just God – that we
see our need of salvation and a Savior. Apart from reflection, we can convince
ourselves that we’re nice people. Or, at least not as bad as some of the “bad”
people out there. At best, we erroneously believe that like the Grinch we can
re-invent ourselves and create our own new heart BUT we can’t.
Jesus did not come to reform us, He
came to resurrect us. He came to give us new life. Apart from Christ, we
are all “dead in our sins” (Ephesians 2:1). That’s why over and over
again, we find in the nativity account that “He will save His people from
their sins” (Matthew 1:21). Or, “For unto you is born this day in the
city of David a Savior, who is Christ the Lord” (Luke 2:11).
Yet, it’s often only in the quiet that we
hear the voice of the Spirit compelling us not to come to the manger but to run
to the Cross. He was born to die for us. He’s God’s gift to us. Have you
accepted Christ as your Savior? Have you accepted God’s gift to you?
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