12/24/2012
Christmas Eve
Opening Prayer
Lord,
tonight we celebrate the birth of your Son, Jesus Christ. We thank you that you have come to join us in this imperfect world, and despite the trials we face, tonight we celebrate. We pray that the hope, joy, peace and love of the Christmas Season will carry over into this New Year for all of us. Help us in our individual communities to reveal Jesus to the world every day and to make His Kingdom a reality on earth as it is in Heaven.
Song
As
we celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ, let's join together in worshiping God through music and song.
Click
on the “Listen” tab for music selections that will help your community enter
into God’s presence and reflect on the birth of Jesus.
Message
Take a few seconds and enjoy
the silence of the moment. Christmas Eve is finally here. Can you feel it?
Christmas Eve just seems to have a magical feel to it, doesn’t it? Almost a
“real time” sense, as if the events are about to transpire for the first time,
and in a sense, perhaps they are. Imagine the sights and sounds of the first Christmas Eve. Imagine what it must have been like for Mary and Joseph. As we face anxieties for the future, so they faced fear as well. Uncertainty overwhelms us from time to time, just as this young couple faced a very uncertain future. But the one significant truth that carried them forward was that something radically new had begun in the birth of Jesus.
The important thing for us to remember is that through Christ, all things are made new each day, as well as each year. The reality of the incarnation is just as true as it was over 2000 years ago. And as our time together comes to a close, let us carry that with us beyond the Christmas Season. As we reflect over the last month of Advent, let us not think of Christmas Eve as the end of our journey, but the beginning. Hope. Love. Joy. Peace. All things new. Beginnings. Emmanuel, God with us.
Click on the "Read" tab and take a look at Revelation 21:4
The important thing for us to remember is that through Christ, all things are made new each day, as well as each year. The reality of the incarnation is just as true as it was over 2000 years ago. And as our time together comes to a close, let us carry that with us beyond the Christmas Season. As we reflect over the last month of Advent, let us not think of Christmas Eve as the end of our journey, but the beginning. Hope. Love. Joy. Peace. All things new. Beginnings. Emmanuel, God with us.
Click on the "Read" tab and take a look at Revelation 21:4
Although this verse refers to the Second Coming of Christ, it's amazing that the essential truths
apply to His First Coming as well. Through Christ, our tears are wiped away. Through Christ, there is no more death, for we posses eternal
life in Him. Through Christ, our mourning, crying and pain subside, as we trust
in Him with every heartache and burden. “the
old order of things has passed away.” Jesus Christ has come into the world.
In the flash of an instant, in a single moment of time, God broke through our
earthly realm and became man. He became one of us and in a short 33 years, He
would become the perfect sacrifice for each one of us. The burden of sin was
lifted. The seemingly endless process of atoning sacrifice was satisfied. Emmanuel, God with us. He was with us. He is with us. He will be
with us. He has come. Advent. Hope. Joy. Peace. Love.
We conclude Advent with the theme of "love", and out of all the four themes, love seems to be the most powerful. Maybe it is because love is such an all encompassing emotion. It is through love that we find our "hope". It is by loving and being loved that we find "joy". And love will always be the greatest vehicle for "peace" in this world.
We conclude Advent with the theme of "love", and out of all the four themes, love seems to be the most powerful. Maybe it is because love is such an all encompassing emotion. It is through love that we find our "hope". It is by loving and being loved that we find "joy". And love will always be the greatest vehicle for "peace" in this world.
There is no greater emotion than
love. Love can envelop an eclectic collection of emotions that often
contradict each other and leave us either elated or completely confused.
Love can conjure a range of feelings from happiness, laughter and
contentment, to thoughts of anger, hatred and jealousy. Love can lift us
up, and love can bring us crashing to the ground. Love unites and love
can also divide. Love can conquer all obstacles of life and love can
leave us utterly defeated. Love can find us included among close friends
and family or leave us feeling abandoned and lonely. Love can be all,
or it can be nothing.
Love
also generates peace, a peace and joyful contentment that transforms
the very essence of who we are. It can catapult us from the often
mundane pace of life to an exciting journey that leaves us confident of
accomplishing anything that we face. Love can consume us with peace,
and most often that peace comes from being loved, rather than loving.
Being loved by others is a confirming indication that we matter. That
we are worthy of love. That the make-up of who we are, has caused
another being to be moved to this radical and all encompassing emotion:
Love.
Click on the "Read" tab and read 1 John 4:10
In this short verse, we discover a very simple and yet complex and perplexing truth: God loves us. And all that God has done through His Son Jesus Christ, had nothing to do with how much, or how little we love God, but how much He loves us. His love for each one of us is overwhelming and filled with mystery; the same mystery that revolves around the incarnation. A love so massive and without limit, and yet it was contained and confined in the limited vessel of a small child. A love that compelled the God of all that is, all that has been and all that will be, to descend into the darkness of this world and live among us. This is love: Emmanuel, God with us!
In this short verse, we discover a very simple and yet complex and perplexing truth: God loves us. And all that God has done through His Son Jesus Christ, had nothing to do with how much, or how little we love God, but how much He loves us. His love for each one of us is overwhelming and filled with mystery; the same mystery that revolves around the incarnation. A love so massive and without limit, and yet it was contained and confined in the limited vessel of a small child. A love that compelled the God of all that is, all that has been and all that will be, to descend into the darkness of this world and live among us. This is love: Emmanuel, God with us!
Closing Prayer
Lord,
as we close out time together tonight, let us leave with the unifying hope, joy, love and peace of Christ. Let us continue to hold onto hope in an increasingly dark world, let us find joy even when it is difficult, let us love unconditionally and let your peace overwhelm us. Let our lives and communities represent the essence of who you are: Love. Let us love one another, let us love our neighbors as we love ourselves and let us love our enemies with a love that only comes from you. Let us continue to remember that you are with us. Emmanuel, God with us!
Amen
May
the Lord bless you, may he keep you, and may he give you peace!
Merry Christmas!
Merry Christmas!
Reflect
Click
on the "Reflect" tab for a suggested prayer for your community and
selected questions for discussion.
See you next Sunday!