Thoughts on Christmas
and the New Year
By Anne Perry
We
have just had our last regular Sunday programme for this
year, because next Sunday will be Christmas Day. It does
not seem like a full year since last Christmas, but obviously
it must be. Time has rather escaped me. Am I the only
one, or do lots of people feel that it must have passed
when they were looking the other way?
So
I apologize because I am late with my letter, and it is
Sunday evening. I have been traveling a lot lately — been
home only in fits and starts, changing suitcases, doing
laundry and catching up with letters and bills. Now I have
a few weeks at home — in my own bed — lovely thought. However
I do like meeting people, and there is always the chance
that the next stop could offer something wonderful.
Will
next year offer us wonderful things? Yes, the best of all,
the chance to try again, do better. Christmas itself offers
us the chance to come back from anywhere, to which we may
have wandered, and return to the pathway upwards towards
the light. Because Christ came, lived, faced Gethsemane and died, there is forgiveness. There is no hell so deep
or so far away, no sin, if repented of, that cannot be washed
away. That is the greatest gift that can exist, and it
is God’s gift to us, his children.
The
New Year offers us more time in which to try harder to attain
more wisdom, exercise more courage, be kinder, more patient,
more honourable to fight harder for what needs our support, our help,
our strength, and to forgive old wounds, and be forgiven.
Is that not also one of the sweetest of gifts? Time is
infinitely precious. One of my resolutions with myself
is to value it more, use it with more gratitude and make
ALL of it count.
Recently
I was watching a story on television in which a young mother
was prepared to risk death by torture in order to save her
child. (And she did die!) It was totally believable.
Would we not risk everything to save those we love, and
who are vulnerable and dependent upon us, who are part of
our lives and our hearts?
How
much greater than our love is God’s love? And He is our
Father — not our creator who made us, but our Father who
begot us! There is a vast difference, which many in the
world, because of their faiths, see differently from the
way we do. But if God is the ultimate Father, and we are
even dearer to Him than those we love and cherish are to
us, then what would he not do to give us the very best,
the sweetest and most beautiful that we long for — IF we
will strive to make ourselves ABLE to receive it? Not fit
to — we can never fully be that — but able. There is no
point in giving us what we CANNOT hold onto, what we will
not open our hands to receive, or hallow and refine our
hearts and our minds to treasure, and value truly so that
we may keep it through all eternity.
I
pray this Christmas and New Year that we will labour to refine our souls to be strong and gentle, generous
and brave, and have faith in the Father who would teach
us how to behave like Him, so we may have joy which can
never fade or slip away from us, never take for granted
that which is marvelous or cease to see the glory in it.
Wishing
you an understanding of happiness now, and a greater and
greater light for ever.
Happy
Christmas, and faith and strength of heart in 2006.