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			 As tempting as it is to argue for one or the 
			other, I want to hold up that whichever came first, isn’t it enough 
			to be thankful for both? 
 Sometimes, we get so caught up in the minutia—or even about being 
			right—that we miss the point entirely. Often, we miss the simple 
			gift that might be in front of us, right now.
 
 The Christmas season is no different. So much energy has been 
			invested in how we communicate the gift of the Christ child with our 
			words. Do we say this or that? Is it okay to use an ancient symbol 
			for Christ (the X), or must we keep the whole word?
 
 In our efforts to promote our ideologies, we miss the significance 
			of what happened in the Incarnation—the gift of Love in the child 
			Jesus.
 
 Isn’t that the reason for the season? Those who walk along the Jesus 
			Way to God remember that Christ interrupted humanity’s strange 
			obsession with being right and powerful.
 
			
			 
			 
 Isn’t the birth of Christ more about God’s faithfulness and promise 
			never to give up on the world and less about whether or not we make 
			Christmas great again?
 
 After all, the Incarnation interrupted the narrative that greatness 
			is found and defined by worldly powers.
 
 This interruption by God at the nativity of Christ reminds me of a 
			Christmas pageant I was in as a kid. It was a director’s worst 
			nightmare. Joseph forgot his lines. Mary tired of walking around 
			with a football under her dress and threw it out half way through 
			the play. Just as things seemed they couldn’t get any worse, one of 
			the shepherds bumped into the Christmas tree, causing it (along with 
			the manger) to tumble down.
 
 As the crowd gasped and the shepherds started to cry, John the 
			Baptist proclaimed, “At least baby Jesus is okay!” Upon the young 
			actor’s proclamation, the crowd erupted into laughter, and the 
			dejected director smiled.
 
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            Christmas is a time for Christians to use their 
			lives, ministries, and voices to interrupt our culture’s 
			narrative—the one that tells us that presents are better than 
			presence; love is available only to those who enter the world “like 
			everyone else”; and your story is only believable if you look like 
			Santa Claus from the western world. 
 To limit Christmas to anything other than God’s affirmation upon 
			creation’s goodness, the belovedness of human community, and the 
			gift of every living creature, is to deny the true reason for the 
			season—that God is with us, never against us, and always restoring 
			us.
 
 Resist getting lost in the details. Disrupt the idea that your way 
			is the only way. Instead, celebrate that God made God’s own self 
			known to us in the messiness of a birth. In the unlikeliest of 
			places to an unlikely family but in a particular time, God gifted 
			the world with Love. This Love would grow up to teach us with 
			Christ’s own life that God is with us. Every time we alleviate the 
			pain of those who are hurting, every time we tend to the needs of 
			those who are despairing, every time we tear down fences and walls 
			to welcome the outcast or stranger, and every time we listen to our 
			own life, we usher in the Reign of God, not unlike Mary and Joseph 
			did some 2,000 years ago.
 
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