Do you love Christmas time?
Some of us can't wait for it to get here (slide me into that camp)...but I've met others who are hurting, and can't wait to turn the page on the calendar and ring in the next year, glad to see the month of December in the rear view mirror.
However you're feeling this time of year, we, here at RLM, all desire to wish you a very Merry Christmas, and to rejoice in the humble birth of our Lord... it's with this reminder I bring you this week's blog, written with heart and sincerity from my bloggin' buddy Kent.
I'm thinking I'd love to carry Nat's crooning tune with me for a while, feels good to sit in it, and soak up the message of this beloved Christmas carol, "Remember Christ our Savior, was born on Christmas day, to save us from Satan's power when we were gone astray. O tidings of comfort and joy..."
There is joy to be found this Christmas, and I pray each of you finds it through Jesus ...and if a little help from Charlie Brown helps get you there, so be it.
And with that, I give you Kent's post:
"Lights, Please?"
Normally, Shaping Your Spirit is my forum for writing
about all things home group-ish.
However, on reading Heidi’s post last week, and more importantly, seeing
the attached Charlie Brown video, these were the thoughts that came to mind...
When I was a kid, and even up to this day, there’s no
Christmas special I look forward to quite like A Charlie Brown
Christmas. You can have your “Silent
Night’s”, your “Holly Jolly’s” and your “fa la la la la’s”; there’s nothing
like the rolling piano beat of Vince Guaraldi’s Linus and Lucy to get me in
the mood of the holidays.
There’s also something
about when Linus steps out on that stage and says, “Lights, please?” that just
makes the hair on the back of my neck stand up.
It wasn’t until years after I first began watching it, when
the story that Linus tells, (Luke 2:8-14), really began to resonate with me. I slowly began to realize, hey… they’re talking
about Jesus here!
Charles Schulz put God smack dab not only into a kid’s
holiday special, but smack dab into the middle of Christmas! Again!
Where He should have been all along!
And the theme of rampant commercialism over the true meaning of
Christmas resonates just as loudly today as it did when Mr. Schulz wrote it
almost 50 years ago. (Black Friday
slowly becoming Black Thursday? Not even
waiting for the turkey to settle before tempting us with cheap cell phones and
50 inch TV’s??! Really!!??)
One of the things today that strikes me most about “A
Charlie Brown Christmas” is how easily the story of Jesus’ birth fits into the
narrative of Schulz’ story. It seems neither
forced nor contrived. It’s just one kid
talking to another kid about what the holiday season has become, and it doesn’t
seem like it should really be this way, and it just feels like there should be
more to Christmas. And the other kid
simply saying, I can answer that…
“Lights, please?”
It also speaks to me about the whole idea of legacy over
legend. Legends can be as contrived as
you want them to be. Striking!
Outlandish! That’s kind of the
point. The mo’ grand, the mo’
eye-popping, the mo’ betta.
Not so with a legacy.
A legacy never seems forced. A legacy never seems surprising. It should
have a natural flow, resonating from a place of intimate knowledge to a place
of receptive learning; from year to year, age to age, and from generation to
generation. This is why, despite even
the controversy surrounding it when it first aired back in 1965, “A Charlie
Brown Christmas” is even more popular today; becoming one of if not the most
anticipated holiday specials of the season.
It’s a simple little story about a boy and his friends, and the search
for the true meaning of Christmas. A
story that Linus and Mr. Schulz weren’t afraid to share.
How about you?
If you’re familiar with the story of the birth of Christ,
how about making Christ’s story a part of your own family tradition and family
legacy? If you’ve come to know Jesus as
your Lord and Savior, how about sharing your
story, your testimony—with family,
with friends—over this holiday season.
Don’t force it: Being bold doesn’t mean being in-your-face.
Don’t fumble your way around it: Being meek doesn’t mean
hemming and hawing.
Just make it a natural part of who you are. Let it flow out of you; by action and deeds
to start with, if by no other means.
Nothing shows the world Jesus like enacting a little love, a little
kindness, and a little grace in an engaging, personal relationship with those
in your life. Especially, most especially, during this rushed,
hurried, hectic holiday season.
Somebody may just ask you why you’re able to keep so calm,
be so joyful, so . . . nice. Then maybe,
just maybe, you’ll have the opportunity to step forward, clear your throat a
little, blanket firmly in hand and say…
“Lights, please?”
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