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Jim Denison explains the mind and motives of radical Islam, telling you what you need to know about the greatest threat our nation has ever faced.

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Customers shop at Macy's department store in New York November 25, 2011. (Credit: Reuters/Eric Thayer)How do you feel about the way our society celebrates Christmas?

A record 226 million people visited stores and websites during the last four days, up from 212 million last year.  Black Friday accounted for $11.4 billion in sales, the largest amount ever spent on that day.  Earlier hours seemed to make the difference--24 percent of Black Friday shoppers were in stores at midnight.  And online shopping last Friday was up 26 percent from a year ago.  With Cyber Monday today, more people than ever before are expected to shop online.

All this buying is good for our recession-burdened economy, right?  But with the frenzy came the violence.  On Thanksgiving night, a woman in Los Angeles used pepper spray on 20 people to get the video game she sought; she later turned herself in to police.  Another California shopper was shot and wounded in a suspected robbery while walking to his car.  A scuffle in a New York store injured two women; a Black Friday fight in Florida put a man behind bars.

Do you ever wonder what Jesus thinks of the way we celebrate his birthday?

There are two ways to see the issue.  On one hand, Christmas is a manufactured holiday.  Jesus was most likely born in the spring, as the shepherds were "living out in the fields nearby, keeping watch over their flocks at night" (Luke 2:8).  The earliest known reference to December 25 as the date of Jesus' birth is found in a manuscript dated to A.D. 354.  Some historians suggest that its proximity to the winter solstice prompted Christians to use the date to celebrate the birth of the sun/Son.

If December 25 isn't really the date when Jesus was born, perhaps all the secular trappings and shopping frenzy surrounding the holiday aren't so bad?  On the other hand, everyone I know thinks of Christmas as the time when we celebrate Jesus' birth.  Our Lord had "no place to lay his head" (Luke 9:58)--what would he say about the extravagance of our holiday?  Have you ever been to a birthday party where everyone gets presents except the guest of honor?

What would Jesus want for his birthday?  He told us that when we feed the hungry, house the stranger, clothe the poor, and visit the sick and imprisoned, "whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers of mine, you did for me" (Matthew 25:34-40).  What if Christians viewed Christmas as an opportunity to show our culture who Jesus really was and is?  What if we seized this occasion to do what he did--touching the "lepers" of our day, washing feet, loving the unloved?

How do you think Jesus would want you to celebrate his birth?
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Comments  

 
0 # Annette Ardoin 2011-11-28 10:25
I would so love to see your idea of our "gift to Jesus" brought to fruition throughout this world. No gifts to each other....only to those in NEED! What a beautiful celebration that would be. I am so tired of the "hoopla" that surrounds Christmas. We are all guilty in getting caught up in it and it would be so nice to see it take a totally different direction. Imagine the money spent on decorations, etc. that could help so many! But only through the media and social networking could that happen, and we KNOW that won't happen. Perhaps we should pray for that change.
Thank you!
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+2 # Karl 2011-11-28 10:27
I think it's irrelevant whether or not Jesus was born on Dec. 25th. That's when we celebrate His birth, whether our reckoning is correct or not.

Many other holidays and events are also celebrated on other than the days of their historical occurrence: Monday holidays, Independence day (hisorians say the founders may have signed the Declaration on a different day than the 4th), the queen's birthday in England is a fixed date regardless of the actual birthday of the current regent, the Cherry Blossom Festival in DC is a fixed date regardless of whether the cherry trees have bloomed, and so forth.
The important thing is WHAT we're celebrating and WHO we're honoring, not the precise historical date. The important thing is that we are honoring God and our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. We should do that every day of our lives. But it's also appropriate that we set aside a special day for it, as well, whenever that may be. If we can focus on glofifying Him instead of materialism, Santa Claus, or red nosed reindeer, then we will be doing well regardless of the calendar date.
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0 # Marlene 2011-11-28 11:02
You asked, "Do you ever wonder what Jesus thinks of the way we celebrate his birthday?" I think of little else - or of what His Father thinks of the way we celebrate His only begotten Son's entrance to a world for the purpose of redeeming it back to Him. Black Friday (and now Thanksgiving Thursday, Cyber Monday, etc.) is the antithesis of Jesus Christ. It is a intense portrait of the materialism, greed and instant, self-gratification of our culture - one that is endorsed and participated in by a huge percentage of self-proclaiming Christians. Honoring and celebrating the coming of the Christ? Hardly. I think Jesus is sad.
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0 # P. B. Cooper 2011-11-28 11:02
It's the second half of that verse that is the most convicting: What you do NOT do for the least of these, you do NOT do for me. Several years ago, we started exchanging donations to each other's favorite charities as Christmas gifts. It works really well!!!! No regifting problems here. They choose and we donate.
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+2 # Bonnie Shoemaker 2011-11-28 17:06
It is my thought, after reading the devotion and responses, that Jesus does not expect us to celebrate His birth. Humbly, Jesus would rather that we, in His name and on a daily basis, honor His father.
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