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By Elizabeth Jakimow
No Room for Christ at Christmas


http://www.articlesbase.com/christianity-articles/no-room-for-christ-at-christmas-1594882.htmlIn Bethlehem, over 2000 years
ago, it was hard to find a place for the Baby Jesus to be born. In the 21st
Century, we are still finding it hard to make room for Jesus in our lives.
Ironically, one of the hardest
times to make room for Jesus is at Christmas, the time when we should most be
thinking of him. Instead of preparing a room and welcoming him as an honored
guest, we treat him as an inconvenience – and one we don't have time for right
now.
Everybody is so busy at
Christmas. There's the Christmas cards to be sent, the Christmas shopping to be
done, the Christmas decorations to be put up, the Christmas lunch to be
prepared, the Christmas presents to be wrapped.
Sometimes we're so busy, we
can't even keep the Christ in the Christmas things we are doing. That's Xmas
cards, Xmas shopping, Xmas decorations, Xmas lunch and Xmas presents. I guess
'X' is less time-consuming than Christ.
Well we have to save time
somewhere and nothing else can go, can it? If we didn't send out Christmas
cards, people would think we didn't care about Christmas. If we didn't put up
an amazing outdoor Christmas light display,
we wouldn't be being very festive. To tell people we don't want to exchange
gifts would show a distinct
lack of Christmas spirit. And perhaps a cooking a smaller lunch (with say
enough food for the afternoon, not for the week) is possible, but it's
Christmas and you need to celebrate at Christmas time.
We'll get
rid of Christ easily enough, with the excuse that there's not enough time for
him. But there's no way we'll get rid of anything else that is related to the
season.
Now to be
fair, many people will fit in a church service somewhere between opening
presents and eating lunch. They might even make room for a Christmas carol or two.
(Although it is hard to find time to sing the carols about Jesus, when there's
so many songs about Santa to be sung.)
But we're
hardly treating his as an honoured guest. In Bethlehem, there was no room for
Jesus inthe inn, but they found a space for him in a manger,
with theanimals. Nowadays, there's no room for Jesus at
Christmas, except for a small parcel of time between 10 am and 11 am on
Christmas morning.
And
yet nobody seems to have a problem making room for Santa.
The next
time you see a nativity scene, take a good look at it. (Presuming you do see a
nativity scene. They're becoming somewhat endangered lately. Better make it a
good, long look. It may be the last time you ever see one.)
Anyway,
take a good, long look and ask yourself where Jesus is placed during your
Christmas time. Is he squeezed in between the donkey and cow (or Santa and
presents), placed in a manger because that's the only place he will fit,
without it inconveniencing you? Or he is given the best room and welcomed as an
honoured guest?
And may I
suggest, if you are finding it difficult to make room for Jesus this Christmas,
take Santa out of the best guest room and make him sleep with theanimalsinstead. Relegate him to the dog
kennel. You have a more important guest coming you need to make room for.
Elizabeth
Jakimow - About the Author:
Elizabeth Jakimow is an
Australian writer, who enjoys writing about faith and Christianity. Her blog
can be found at http://fringefaith.blogspot.com, where she discusses society
and culture, from a faith perspective. Elizabeth has also just published her first
book, She Thinks of Jesus, a collection of short stories told from the point of
view of women who witnessed events in the gospels. You can find She Thinks of
Jesus at
http://www.lulu.com/content/paperback-book/she-thinks-of-jesus/8064896.
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