Tag: Christmas

  • Christmas: Why Christians should imbibe giving culture – RCCG Pastor

    Christmas: Why Christians should imbibe giving culture – RCCG Pastor

    Pastor of the Redeemed Christian Church of God, Mount Zion Cathedral, Bolumole, Ibadan, Pastor Sunday Oyewo, on Sunday urged parishioners to emulate the culture of giving and Thanksgiving.

    Oyewo made the call while delivering a sermon during the Christmas Service of the church.

    Delivering a sermon on the “Perfect Gift’’, Oyewo urged Christians to emulate God Almighty who gave His only begotten son to redeem mankind.

    “Our God is the perfect Giver as He demonstrated in John 3:16,’’ he said.

    John 3:16 says: “For God so loved the world that he gave His only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth on him should not perish, but have eternal life.’’

    “He gave us the best gift in the person of His son Jesus Christ.

    “We are made in the image of God; we should emulate that attitude of giving, especially during the Christmas season,’’ Oyewo said.

    According to him, man lost his worth in the Garden of Eden, but God, in His infinite mercy. redeemed mankind through the gift of Jesus.

    Oyewo remarked that everyone who received Christ would enjoy at least five benefits: sufficiency and prosperity, success, fruitfulness, freedom from bondage and eternal glory.

    He urged people to use the opportunity of Christmas to accept Jesus (God’s perfect gift) and remain in Him steadfastly.

    “As you accept this perfect Gift and keep Him, all of those benefits and more will be your portion.

    “More so, you will end gloriously and be able to see God and the Heroes of Old because Christ in a man is the hope of glory,’’ he stressed.

    Oyewo thanked God for bringing the Church and country to the last Sunday in 2022 and prayed that He would grant the congregation the best blessing reserved for the end.

    The Christmas service was dominated by praises, worship and thanksgiving.

  • Soludo felicitates Anambra people at Christmas

    Soludo felicitates Anambra people at Christmas

    Governor Chukwuma Soludo has sent warm Christmas greetings to Christians and the people of Anambra State.

    Mr Christian Aburime, Press Secretary to Soludo reported the governor as expressing gratitude to God Almighty for the gift of life and the grace to celebrate another Christmas this year.

    He said that Christmas was a time for hope and a season for a renewed inspiration from the Lord and Saviour, Jesus Christ, whose birthday was celebrated on the solemn occasion the world over.

    Soludo called on the people to embrace the timeless message of God’s love, hope and redemption of mankind which were the cardinal significance of the occasion

    He assured that adequate security had been put in place for a hitch-free yuletide, adding that the vision to make Anambra a livable and prosperous homeland remained fully on course.

    “As we join our families and friends in our homes and communities to celebrate Christmas, let us share the gift of God’s love with one another

    “With joy and happiness in my heart, I welcome the people of Anambra, including those coming home and those already in the homeland for this year’s Christmas celebration.

    “Once again, on behalf of my family and the State Government, I wish Ndi Anambra a Merry Christmas and a Prosperous New Year,” he stated.

  • Christmas: Jonathan calls for unity, peace

    Christmas: Jonathan calls for unity, peace

    Former President Goodluck Jonathan has called for love, unity and peace among Christians and others around the world.

    Jonathan made the call in a statement issued by his Media Aide, Ikechukwu Eze, on Friday in Abuja to mark the 2022 Christmas celebration.

    He urged Nigerians to approach the season of Christmas with optimism and renewed faith in themselves and the country.

    “At Christmas, we celebrate love, hope and joy, which the birth of Jesus heralds to the world.

    “As individuals and as a nation, we face different challenges. But we should not allow that to weaken our faith in God and our country, as well as imperil our shared promise of greatness and prosperity.

    “Let us approach this season of Christmas with optimism and renewed faith in ourselves and our country.

    “Let us exhibit love, tolerance, sense of unity and peace towards our neighbours and all around us during this season and beyond,” he said.

  • Christmas: Okowa urges prayer for a peaceful nation

    Christmas: Okowa urges prayer for a peaceful nation

    Gov. Ifeanyi Okowa of Delta and Vice-Presidential Candidate of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), has urged Nigerians to pray for the peace of the nation as the elections draw close.

    The governor gave the charge in his Christmas message through his Chief Press  Secretary, Mr Olisa Ifeajika, as Christians across the world celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ.

    Okowa reassured Nigerians and the people of the state that the mission to recover Nigeria was on course and would be realised.

    He called on Christians to continue in their prayers for a peaceful nation, especially as the elections were close.

    He said that the 2023 polls would usher in a new and positive life for Nigerians.

    Okowa reminded citizens that Christmas was a season of love and care for one another as Jesus Christ came with joy and peace to save the world.

    He, therefore, urged everyone to use the opportunity of the season to promote peaceful co-existence across the country.

    He lauded security agencies for their commitment towards stamping out insecurity in the country and urged them not to lower their guards.

    ”As the world celebrates Christmas, the birth of our Lord and Saviour, Jesus Christ, I call on all Christians; and indeed, all people of Delta and Nigerians, to reflect on the virtues and teachings of Jesus Christ in their lives and activities so that Nigeria and the world will be a better place for all of us.

    “While I congratulate all Christians for another Christmas season, I advise all to use the festive period for sober reflections and total spiritual renewal and devotion towards living in peace and harmony with adherents of other religions.

    “Let me emphasis that there is hope for the rebuilding of this country as we are about entering the year of transition, and as Christians, we are admonished to pray for the greater good of the nation,’’ Okowa said.

    He said that Christmas offered the people the opportunity to reach out to the less-privileged in the society in adherence to the wish and teachings of Christ.

    “The period presents opportunity for us to return to God and be steadfast in promoting the virtues of Christ, which are love, peace and harmony in all our endeavours,” the governor said.

    He urged Nigerians to unite and pray for peace and co-existence, and eschew bitterness and hatred on the basis of faith, ethnicity or political persuasions.

    “I thank our Christian leaders and their counterparts of other faiths in the state and country for conducting themselves peacefully in their religious activities and for joining government in promoting religious and ethnic harmony among Nigerians.

    “I urge all religious leaders not to relent in their prayers for the state and country.

    “As a state, we have taken measures to ensure that we have a wonderful and very peaceful Christmas celebration across our communities,” he said.

    He reaffirmed the administration’s commitment to completing landmark projects and people-oriented policies and programmes, which had direct impact on the lives of the people.

    “It is my sincere hope and assurance that the New Year, 2023, will usher in more progress, greater prosperity and enduring fulfillment for all Nigerians.

    “As a state and country, we have faced several challenges but because we didn’t give up, we surmounted them and I believe that we can all look forward to 2023 and beyond with greater optimism and hope as my administration works towards finishing strong,” he said.

    Okowa wished people and all Nigerians, a Merry Christmas and a Happy and Prosperous New Year and prayed for the warmth of God’s love to fill every heart and home in the yuletide.

  • Christmas: Passengers lament high cost of air ticket

    Christmas: Passengers lament high cost of air ticket

    Some passengers at the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport (NAIA), Abuja have condemned the increase in airfare during the yuletide.

    The passengers made this known in separate interviews on Saturday in Abuja.

    They said that it was just necessary for them to travel by air to celebrate Christmas with relatives as travelling by air i”s fast and safe”.

    A passenger, Mr Kayode Enitan, who expressed displeasure on the increase of ticket price, observed that upsurge in passengers travelling could be as a result of Christmas among other reasons.

    “I have determined to celebrate this Christmas with my family. For the past four years, they celebrated in Lagos, while I celebrated both Christmas and New Year in Abuja because of work.

    “About three days ago, I booked with Arik Air for a return ticket from Abuja to Lagos for N170, 000. That is N85 for one way. God will save us in this country, “ he said.

    Mrs Evelyn Chukudi, a passenger, who frowned at skyrocketing of airfare, said that passengers had not felt any impact on addressing the scarcity of aviation fuel.

    According to her, the local airline operators have been referring to JETA1 as the major reason for the increase in airfares.

    “Truly, they just keep increasing the ticket prices. I am going to Port-Harcourt with my husband. The fare was about N85, 000 each. We actually booked a few days ago with Air Peace.

    “This is too much. It is all about your choice of airline. The local airlines` fares are seemly similar, “ she said.

    Another passenger, Alhaji Muhammed Kabiru, was also disheartened over the increase in the ticket price.

    According to Kabiru, he chose to travel by air to Kano due to comfort, safety and timeliness.

    “Big thanks to President Muhammadu Buhari, who paid us our salary on time.

    “The airfare now is too high. I paid N90, 000 one way from Abuja to Kano; I booked with MAX Air yesterday. I just need to travel to catch fun and enjoy my leave in Kano, “ he said.

    Checks at both arrival and departure sides in the Abuja airport showed that passengers at the departure were extremely populated, while passengers at the arrival were scanty.

  • Christmas: Peter Obi sends message of hope to Nigerians

    Christmas: Peter Obi sends message of hope to Nigerians

    The Presidential Candidate of the Labour Party, Mr Peter Obi, has urged Nigerians to remain hopeful for a better nation, especially as they prepare to take back their nation come 2023.

    Obi made the call while delivering his Christmas message to Nigerians through his Media Aide, Mr Valentine Obienyem, on Saturday in Enugu.

    He said that celebration of Christmas birthed hope in the world, while urging Nigerians to “hold unto that firm hope for a better and more productive nation”.

    According to him, Christmas is a season of love and the celebration of the birth of Christ should be a constant reminder of how God gave His only begotten son for the salvation of humanity.

    “We, as humans, should therefore, endeavour to make sacrifice, even when it is painful, for the good of others and for our society,” he said.

    Obi encouraged Nigerians to go beyond the festivities and glamour associated with the Christmas season and strive to live out the true essence of the celebration.

    The Candidate noted that fraternal love and giving to the poor are the hallmark of Christmas celebration, and enjoined all to lend helping hands to one another.

    Obi urged Nigerians to see the year 2023 as a very significant year in the history of the nation.

    He said it presents Nigerians the opportunity to turn around the trajectory of the nation by giving only competent leaders access to power.

    “I also wish Nigerians a productive and prosperous New Year,” he said.

  • Spain’s King Felipe denounces war in Ukraine in Christmas speech

    Spain’s King Felipe denounces war in Ukraine in Christmas speech

    Spain’s King Felipe VI has denounced the Russian war against Ukraine and its consequences in his Christmas speech to the nation.

    The conflict has “already caused a level of destruction and ruin that is hard to imagine,” the monarch said in his Christmas address broadcast on radio and television on Saturday evening.

    Felipe warned of the consequences of a war of “global significance” that has affected Spain’s security.

    Against this backdrop, he said, Spain must “strengthen collective defence” with its allies.

    At the same time, however, peace must be sought with the international community.

    Democracy and the European Union are “the two pillars” on which Spain’s present and future are based, the 54-year-old explained.

    But there were three main risks facing democracies today, Felipe warned: these were “division,” the “deterioration of coexistence” and the “erosion of institutions.”

    In his speech, which was recorded a few days ago and lasted about 12 minutes, the head of state also spoke about the economic and energy crises as well as inflation in many countries.

    Spanish families, he said, were badly affected by this.

    “The rise in prices, especially food, is causing households to feel insecure,” he said.

    People are having to make sacrifices, some of them very large.

  • Christmas ceremonies begin in Holy Land

    Christmas ceremonies begin in Holy Land

    Christians from all over the world celebrated Christmas, the festival marking the birth of Jesus Christ, in the Holy Land on Saturday.

    The traditional Christmas procession arrived in Bethlehem in the afternoon.

    The procession to Bethlehem had set off from Jerusalem at noon (1000 GMT), led by the head of the Catholic Church in the Holy Land, Pierbattista Pizzaballa.

    He covered the last part of the way to the site where Jesus is believed to have been born in Bethlehem on foot.

    Once there, he was received by Christian representatives.

    Tens of thousands of visitors are expected over the Christmas holidays, far more than in the past two years when coronavirus restrictions were in place.

    The Israeli Tourism Ministry said it expected at least 120,000 pilgrims from all over the world.

    A huge Christmas tree with a star on top adorns the square in front of the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem, now a small town in the West Bank.

    In his Midnight Mass sermon, Pizzaballa warned that violence was increasing in the Holy Land.

    “With our eyes, we see that violence seems to have become our main language, our main way of communicating.

    “Violence is increasing, first of all in the language of politics,” Pizzaballa told worshippers.

    “This year, moreover, we have seen a terrible increase in violence in Palestinian streets, with a death toll that takes us back decades.

    “It is a sign of the worrying increase in political tension and the growing unease, especially among our youth, regarding the increasingly distant resolution of the ongoing conflict,” Pizzaballa added.

    Israel’s army has been conducting more raids in the West Bank, following a wave of terror in Israel in the spring.

    According to the Ministry of Health in Ramallah, more than 140 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli forces this year, many of them minors.

    Israel conquered the West Bank and East Jerusalem in 1967.

    The Palestinians want the territories for their own state, with East Jerusalem as its capital.

    Pizzaballa said that the Palestinian issue no longer seems to be the focus of the world’s attention.

    “This, too, is a form of violence, which hurts the conscience of millions of Palestinians, left increasingly alone and who, for too many generations, have been waiting for an answer to their legitimate desire for dignity and freedom,” he maintained.

    In their Christmas message, the patriarchs and heads of the churches in Jerusalem also lamented what they said was an increase in attacks on Christians, discrimination, and a declining Christian population.

    “Such a disheartening atmosphere has led to a lack of hope, especially among our Christian youth, who increasingly feel unwelcome” in the land of their ancestors, the message read.

    The percentage of Christians has continued to decline in the Holy Land.

    Out of about 5 million Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, fewer than 2 per cent are Christian.

    According to the latest figures from the Israeli Bureau of Statistics, there are about 185,000 Arab Christians living in Israel.

  • Christmas in the Age of ‘Delete’ – By Chidi Amuta

    Christmas in the Age of ‘Delete’ – By Chidi Amuta

    Jingle bells! Jingle bells!! Jingle all the way!!!

    Christian clergy and congregations all over the world will today flock and dance all the way to the altar in an ancient commemoration of the birth of Jesus Christ. Joy to the world and food in abundance to those who can afford it are emblematic of a season of goodwill and peace to all of believing humanity. Christmas has become more than the holy birthday which it was originally intended as. It now has something to offer to all and sundry including those whose hope fopr salvation is tilted in different directions.

    The current commercial and mercantile essence of Christmas is ironically an aberration, an act of disobedience and defiance of an early injunction from the messiah himself. Those familiar with the biblical chronicles will recall the image of a young swash buckling Christ on horseback who rode in anger to the Holy Temple in Jerusalem to disperse traders and gamblers who had made the Temple their shop floor. Ostensibly with horse whip in hand, he scattered their wares, upset their trading tables and in anger whipped them as they scampered in different directions. He charged them with defilement f a holy place by converting the temple into a ‘den of theives’ and a haven of iniquity. He left them with an eternal injunction that the temple was never intended as a place of commerce. It was an act of defilemnet to convert the place of worship into a place of trade. In other worlds, the work of God and its holy places was never to be degraded through commercialism and the drive for profit.

    By an irony of history, after several centuries of that mass flogging and original injunction, humanity has become curiously united in the global retail frenzy and annual ritual of consumerism of the season of Christmas. The familiar tunes of Christmas – ‘Jingle Bells!’, ‘Rudolf the Red Nosed Reindeer!!’, “Noel Noel!!!”, “Silent Nights, Holy Nights!” now openly clash with the clanging of tills and cash registers in mega retail shops as millions of shoppers get immersed in orgies of Christmas shopping all over the world.

    Soon after Christmas day, it has become customary for retail business managers, accountants and executives to tall’y their sales figures and sum up their books as the best way to terminate the monotony of the ‘’jingle bells” season. They grin and dance ‘all the way’ to the banks. In the 2021, for instance, total retail sales over Christmas in the United States alone was $889.30 billion. In the 19 countries of the European Union, the numbers were a staggering 3.1 trillion Euro. The figures for 2022 are expected to be even higher in spite of economic hardship and the earlier lull caused by the Covid emergency. The profit creed of retail consumer executives the world over has now overwhelmed the sober celebration of the birth of a sectarian messiah. Gold versus God has become the summation of the phenomenon of Christmas. Body over spirit.

    Largely stripped of its original religious essence, Christmas has since degenerated into more of a fixture in the revenue calendar of retailers worldwide. It is estimated that retail vendors of apparel, grocery, decorations, costumes and allied seasonal wares and accessories expect over 65% of their annual turnover to happen over the Christmas season alone. Christmas has become a holy birthday seized by the frenzy of a global market place.

    There is above all else, a certain cultural frenzy and carnivalesque effusion about the entire Christmas enterprise. It has become a season of global frenzy. City landmarks are decorated in glittering and dazzling illumination. Shops, entertainment and amusement centres and sundry retail outlets wear similar dazzle. An effusion of neon lights at night hide the depressing reality of a world that is nasty in the day. The global culture of aggressive merchandizing has since overthrown the Vatican and other high places of Christendom in the ownership of Christmas. The battle for the souls of men has nearly been overwhelmed by the scramble for the dollar in every consumer’s pocket.

    Christmas is not a lone victim of this invasion by the demons of the market place. It is like that for most important religious and cultural festivities on the global calendar. It does not matter if it the Chinese Lunar New Year, the various Muslim holy observances. These special occasions have also become important markers on the calendar of profit hungry barons and mega retailers. Take St. Valentine’s day for instance. It is no longer a day merely dedicated to the celebration of love in the tradition of Cupid. It has become more a field day for the explosion of retail trade. An array of restaurants, fast food vendors, ‘mama put’ kiosks and merchandizers of assorted inconsequential wares apparel, gifts, flowers etc. Red -themed costumes and accessories are the favourites because Cupid’s arrow of love pierced the hearts of the lovers and sprinkled the world with the blood of lovers thenceforth! Profit hungry merchandizers of Valentine’s goods nicely disguise their greed as an elaborate ceremony of love.

    Christmas is not all about shopping and merchandize trafficking. It has become a time for the global end of year travel and vacation. It is literally a period of travel frenzy. The global travel and hospitality industries have become part of the Christmas industry. Airlines, cruise companies, hotels etc witness their largest annual traffic during summer and over Christmas. It is time to catch up with family and friends. This year alone, the airline industry in the United States estimates that an estimated 10 million passengers will take 97,715 flights through US domestic airports this holiday season while an estimated 113 million Americans will drive to various destinations by road in the same period.

    In Nigeria, Christmas is a season of home going for many Nigerians especially in the southern parts. Air fares skyrocket just as transport fares by land transportation also head for the skies. In the South- eastern parts of the country, end of year homecoming is a cultural constant. It is a time of great reunion among families and communities. It is time to embark on community development projects and to renew the bonds of fraternity that hold communities together.

    In recent years, however, the disrepair of the Nigerian state has adversely affect this cultural practice. The places that we used to call home have become strange and dangerous. Danger and violence now lie in wait at nearly every turn on the way home. Kidnappers and bad people lie in wait. A good number of people can no longer go home. Christmas used to be another name for this ritual of home going. These days, when people from those parts are asked: “Will you go for Christmas?”, the spontaneous answer is now: ”There is no more Christmas!”

    The Nigerian state in its incremental meltdown has killed Christmas for most Nigerians. Food inflation and serial poverty have taken away food from most tables. A bad state has put a knife in the things that once gave us hope and held us together. We can sum up the present realities of our nation in the idiom of the great novelist Chinua Achebe. As he lamented, “things have fallen apart”. There is no longer a center let alone one that can hold a nation or a people together. The arrows of a bad god have felled many good people and the nation is “no longer at ease”. The 2023 election now comes down to a frantic and desperate search for “a man of the people”!

    Among the things that once used to mark out Christmas as memorable, the Christmas card used to be iconic and ever present. But the Christmas card is dead! Long live the spirit of Christmas fellowship and seasonal greetings. Christmas greeting cards used to be a sizeable chunk of the wares of book sellers, stationers, grocery shops and road side kiosks all over the world at this time of the year. It used to be part of the ritual of Christmas observance in homes and offices to stage an elaborate display of all manner of Christmas cards from years past . It was part of domestic and office decor if only to display the expanse of one’s social network and sphere of good will.

    All manner of adaptations of designs became part of the Christmas card world. The most traditional were the ones foregrounded in the snowy white landscapes of the arctic. Rudolf the Red Nosed Reindeers, the dog sleighs and reindeer drawn wagons of the frigid arctic were the readiest design motifs on most traditional Christmas cards. As cultural diversity came, so did the diversity of designs on Christmas cards come to reflect the multitude of landscapes. Turkeys and rams on their way to the guillotine, cooking pots and frying pans and ovens of Christmas luncheons joined the parade of artistic motifs. Individuals were joined by corporations and institutions as dispensers of Christmas cards.

    Suddenly, technology crept in to erode aspects of this Christmas tradition. The once thriving industry of Christmas cards and associated printed wares has suddenly been supplanted by a digital revolution. The Christmas card made the good wishes of friends and loved ones tangible pieces with a diversity of messages. You had something to hold and keep even after the season.

    The information age and its enabling gadgets of computers, tablets, and assorted cellphones has come to snatch away the good old Christmas card. Digital instant messaging by SMS, emails, Whatsapp, Tweets etc have since become the most widespread formats of sending and receiving messages on nearly every subject under the sun. Christmas wishes are now exchanged mostly through these freeways of the new technologies. Through a litany of applications and formats, individuals can now design and customize their messages on nearly every subject and every occasion. People can even print beautiful greeting cards if they so choose.

    Those who have no time for such creative indulgence just send the lazy “Merry Christmas” and copy and paste it to a multitude of recipients including total strangers on your contact list. In a few seconds and at the touch of a button on the keyboard of a two penny cellphone, your good wishes to everyman for Christmas are shared and forwarded to myriads of people all over the world.

    Distance has been erased. In nearly every country, the postal services have lost most of their revenue and almost died. Post boxes are becoming moribund. Courier companies have similarly been bled and compelled to find work in ferrying gifts and presents on behalf of Amazon and other mass merchandizing multinational companies. Thank God some people still send and receive gifts at Christmas.

    In Nigeria, some smart companies no longer encourage the elaborate spending on Christmas gifts. The now say there is something called Corporate Social Responsibility. It is better to aggregate the gifts of the company and instead of giving them to individuals or even staff, let every one join the company by surrendering their Christmas gifts in support of a ‘good cause’. No one has audited how many of these companies really support any good or even bad or doubtful causes. Smart executives have found a way of saving money for these companies through support for phantom charities and ‘good’ or bad causes.

    By far the most selfish outgrowth of this digital invasion of the world of good wishes and camaraderie is the coming of fantasy digital Christmas food and drinks ferried around the social media. Welcome to the era of digital celebrations. Countless Emojis, templates and minute designs of cocktails, clicking glasses, fancy cakes, eye popping turkeys and mouth watering set dinners and other celebratory fares are sent across great distances to friends and well wishers on their special occasions. Christmas, birthdays, anniversaries, weddings etc. If you ask too many old questions, you get a microwave answer: ‘the important thing is the thought!!’ ‘ At least someone remembered you even from afar!!!’

    Like most things in this digital age, people choose what is important to in every handheld device. Our freedom of choice has been reduced to the keyboard in every miserable device. Choose your favourite button on the keyboard.

    For me, the most important button on the keyboard is the ‘delete’ button. If a caller becomes an irritant, press delete. If a contact becomes a pest, press delete. If a relationship becomes a headache, press delete. If you succumb to greed masquerading as love with a sharp eye for that bank alert from you, press delete. If family harasses the life out of you for money and support, press delete. If a friendship goes cold, press delete. When the messages on your Whatsapp folder become too many, press delete. After this Christmas and its barrage of exchanges of good will and unwarranted greetings, real or imagined, press delete. After all, there is no way of remembering to whom those messages of goodwill went and for what reason.

    Some greetings were acts of ritual. Others were acts of genuine affection and familiarity. Some may be for old time’s sake. But the majority may have been spontaneous reflex acts of seasonal fashion. Whatever may have prompted those spontaneous bulk Christmas SMS, emails, Whatsapp messages, Tweets, Instagram posts etc, they all die a common death and are buried in a common cemetery: DELETE!!

    Merry Christmas everyone! Please do not DELETE this wish.

  • [Devotional] IN HIS PRESENCE: No Christmas without “Christ”

    [Devotional] IN HIS PRESENCE: No Christmas without “Christ”

    By Oke Chinye

    Read: Luke 2:1-20

    Meditation verse:

    “For there is born to you this day in the city of David a Saviour, who is Christ the Lord” (Luke 2:11).

    Now there were in the same country shepherds living out in the fields, keeping watch over their flock by night. And behold, an angel of the Lord stood before them, and the glory of the Lord shone around them, and they were greatly afraid. Then the angel said to them, “Do not be afraid, for behold, I bring you good tidings of great joy which will be to all people. For there is born to you this day in the city of David a saviour, who is Christ the Lord.  And this will be the sign to you: You will find a Babe wrapped in swaddling clothes, lying in a manger. “And suddenly there was with the angel a multitude of the heavenly host praising God and saying: “Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace, goodwill toward men!” – Luke 2:8-14

    Over two thousand years ago, an angel of the Lord stood before certain shepherds in a field, proclaiming the birth of a child as ‘good tidings of great joy’. But what was so special about this birth? It was the arrival of the much-awaited Messiah, Jesus Christ, who would save mankind from destruction and death. It was such great news that a multitude of heavenly host burst into singing and rejoicing. The essence of Christmas is the celebration of the birth of the saviour of mankind, Jesus Christ. 

    In every celebration, the celebrant is the object of focus; there can be no Christmas without Christ. How do we celebrate this day? Are we so focused on the pomp and pageantry that we fail to remember that Jesus Christ is the reason for the season? Here is God’s word for you as you celebrate this day and season in commemoration of His arrival on earth: “but above all these things put on love, which is the bond of perfection. And let the peace of God rule in your hearts, to which also you were called in one body: and be thankful. Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly in all wisdom, teaching and admonishing one another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing with grace in your hearts to the Lord. And whatever you do in word or deed, do all in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father through Him (Colossians 3:14-17). 

    Merry Christmas!

     

    IN HIS PRESENCE is written by Pst (Mrs) Oke Chinye, Founder of The Rock Teaching Ministry (TRTM).

    For Prayers and Counseling email rockteachingministry@gmail.com

    or call +2348155525555

    For more enquiries, visit: www.rockteachingministry.org.