Tuesday, December 22, 2015

Transforming Message of Christmas



Sometimes the euphoria of the Christmas season does not match the emotions of our heart. Perhaps events invading our personal lives make our emotional lives more like the steel gray skies of December than the bright glittering ornaments hung on a Christmas tree. Many may enter into this Christmas season with more emotional uncertainty than perhaps they have had in many years.
     Maybe personal difficulties have bruised one’s emotional psyche. A disturbing medical exam, financial uncertainty, family crisis, or the death of a friend or family member has altered a spirit of celebration transforming it into a caldron of emotional perplexity as one tries to process unfathomable news. Compounding these personal dilemmas are the national and international events announcing terrorism, death, hatred, and all sorts of unspeakable mayhem. The cascade of turmoil seems to sneer at the refrain of “peace on earth and good will to men.” How can we even mouth those words when we live in a world of pain, individually and on the international stage?
     We have the tendency to look at current history as the defining moment of all history. While our present circumstances are important, they are not empowered to process and interpret our past nor define and determine our uncertain future.  It may be true that we currently live in extremely uncertain and difficult times; however, this state of despair is not new to the planet earth. This came into sharp focus recently as I read and reflected on the words to the familiar Christmas carol “I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day” written by the American poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.
     His world had received one difficult emotional blow after another. Two years prior to writing the poem “Christmas Bells,” from which the carol is derived, his dear wife was killed in an accidental fire. Then in November 1864, his son, Charles Appleton, a Union soldier in the Civil War, was seriously wounded in the Battle of New Hope in Virginia. Longfellow was submerged in a world of grief. Compounding all of this was the seemingly endless national tragedy of the bloody Civil War. For years this war had deposited human tragedy into every community in the country. On Christmas day 1864, encompassed by a world of pain, Longfellow sat alone and penned his words of honest struggle and emotional despair.  He concluded with words of hope that assuaged his own wounded heart. Eight years later the poem he wrote was set to music by John Baptiste Calkin. Longfellow’s words, birthed in the midst of turmoil, have over the years sounded a bright word of hope in a dark world of despair.
     Longfellow wrote how that Christmas the bells announced a familiar message of “peace on earth, good-will to men.” Events in his life, however, had caused him to question that joyous message. He honestly admitted, “And in despair I bowed my head: ‘There is no peace on earth,’ I said.” He reasoned, “For hate is strong, and mocks the song, Of peace on earth, good-will to men.” If he had stopped his poem there, how bleak his world would have been. Thankfully he adds, “Then peeled the bells more loud and deep: God is not dead: nor doth He sleep.’”  When he allowed his view of life to be impacted by the truth that God was not detached from human tragedy nor inactive in the lives of people his perspective changed.
     He confidently concludes his poem by writing, “The wrong shall fail, the right prevail, With peace on earth, good-will to men.” That realization changed his view of life. He noted, “The world revolved from night to day.” His dark world of despair was altered by the bright hope that a living active God can bring into a life shrouded in a cloak of difficulty and uncertainty.
     Several weeks ago in Germany I met a Syrian Muslim refugee who joined the million refugees flooding into that country. To say that this man was living in a world of hurt would be an understatement. His home and business had been bombed into oblivion. He had fled the murderous intentions of political leaders and terrorists to find a safe haven in Dresden, Germany. There he heard the message from the Bible that Longfellow wrote about, “God is not dead nor does he sleep.” He learned that God sent his Son, Jesus, at Christmas. He discovered that he was so loved by God that that same Jesus came to die for him and offered him a new life – one that is eternal. He accepted that gift that God offered by His grace, believed, and is now identified as a believer in Jesus Christ. This year he sees Christmas as a believer, not as disbeliever. I saw the joy and peace in this man's face. He still lives in a world of hurt and remains submerged in difficult circumstances. He has nothing of this world's goods, but on the other hand he now has every blessing in Christ Jesus. He has a perspective that is very different from the one he once had.
     Luke records Jesus’ birth announcement made by angels saying, “I bring you good tidings of great joy which will be to all people. For there is born to you this day in the city of David a Savior, who is Christ the Lord… ‘Glory to God in the highest, And on earth peace, goodwill toward men!’” (2:10-13). There is a message that can transform even our deepest gloom into glorious hope!