(What are the real blessings we can anticipate during the darkest days of 2020?)
Instead of gritting our teeth because of feelings of disappointment, frustration and anger through Christmas, can we look for a few blessings to cheer our days?
“Lay down your mind” is a valuable Korean saying. Even though things aren’t what we are used to expecting, by “laying down our minds” we can gentle our thoughts … and look for the glittering stars that bring hope and promise.
Maybe “this is a time when we can stop and take stock of how we celebrate the birth of Jesus” Richard Bott suggests. The Moderator of the United Church of Canada explains about the Jewish practice of leaving a field or orchard to go fallow every 7th year of its cultivation (see the Book of Exodus). He adds, “anything grown (that 7th year) was for people who were in poverty, and anything left by them was for the animals”. Hence the world would see what God grew in their stead. This is known as The Year of Jubilee.
That special time gives opportunity for debt to be forgiven, for people to be freed from slavery, and land ownership restored (instead of having more land accumulated by fewer people). The Jubilee Practice “resets systems of care, security and economy so they are based on celebrating the intrinsic worth of every beloved child of God”.
To think of Christmas 2020 as a Jubilee restoration time might help us think of God giving us opportunity to become present to each other in new ways.
Think of Mary and Joseph and their new baby fleeing to Egypt as a refugee family two thousand years ago. We may understand more because we are now trying to escape the Covid virus. Confined in our home or our room, we may take time to think about other refugees – those who have no home, nothing but scraps of food for their children, and no physical security. Does anyone care? Do we care? What are the gifts we have to share?
Might we consider letting our busy “mind-fields” lie fallow – so we can rethink what the message of the Christmas story really means?
It is amazing how we really can hear God speak in fresh new ways. At the darkest time of the year, maybe the angel is again telling us “Fear not!” The abundance of what is given anew can truly astound us!
(You can re-read Rev. Richard Bott’s article “A Fallow Christmas”. See www.broadview.org/covid-christmas-message/ )
All Rights Reserved | CiRCLe M Centre for Rural Community Leadership and Ministry
Powered by Churchweb Canada