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			It is funny to me that, although never mentioned in the Bible, the 
			innkeeper has managed to work his way into every Christmas pageant 
			ever.  Often portrayed as the villain of the piece, the mythical 
			innkeeper examines the wayward Mary and Joseph, and boldly proclaims 
			that there is no room for them inside; that they will have to sleep 
			in the stable.  With that, the innkeeper often exits stage left as 
			the more faithful figures of Magi and shepherds enter the scene.  
			But I think the innkeeper is actually the most important character 
			for us today. And why, you ask?  Well, because of all the characters 
			in the advent pageant, he is the closest to us.  Few of us have had 
			divine revelations, so that separates us from the shepherds and 
			wisemen, and none of us are Jesus' parents, so no go for Mary and 
			Joseph either.  But the innkeeper, here is a man going about his 
			business, simply reporting the news that the inn is full, and 
			relegating his weary travelers to the barn, which would have been a 
			reasonable place for them, historically.
 And yet we heap scorn upon him.  Didn't he know who they were?  
			Couldn't he see what he was doing?  And the answer to both questions 
			is an emphatic, "no!"  He was merely doing what he had been taught.  
			Rules are rules, we are taught, and they exist for the proper 
			ordering of society.  Sometimes those rules, regrettably, leave 
			people on the outside looking in, and that is what happened to the 
			Holy Family.  And this is where we must be careful.  If the 
			innkeeper is the villain of the piece, and if we really think he 
			missed the boat, yet he is the most identifiable, then that means 
			one thing.  As Christians, we need to be ready to break the rules.  
			We need to know when to make an exception, when to offer a pass, 
			when to toss out the guidebook. God forbid that history judge us as 
			the innkeeper has been judged, and yet it likely shall.  This week, 
			as you are considering the coming of Christmas, consider for a 
			moment the innkeeper, and ask yourself, wouldn't it have been a 
			better story if he'd broken the rules?  Wouldn't it have been better 
			if he'd let them in to the inn?  Sometimes the rules need to be 
			broken.
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            Prayer:  Holy God, help me to see those moments in my life 
			where I need to break the rules, where I need to make an exception 
			to serve someone in need.  I pray in Jesus' name.  Amen. 
              
            [Phil Blackburn, First Presbyterian Church]
 
              
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