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							 I’m almost afraid to write 
							anything. Before Easter I compared the covid crisis 
							to a storm that would that would come and go and 
							encouraged everyone to “shelter-in-faith” until it 
							blew by. To my credit, I don’t think any of us 
							thought we would be caught in a maelstrom the size 
							and duration of Jupiter’s Great Red Spot. 
							Does anyone else feel like this season will never 
			end? A better analogy, it seems, would have been to compare Covid-19 
			not to a storm or even a season, but an age (as in Ice Age). 
 So, you might understand if, with much fear and trembling, I call 
			upon the same words that I wrote about eight or nine months ago – 
			“this, too, shall pass.” We obviously don’t know how or when, but 
			even the glaciers of the Ice Age receded into history.
 
 Meanwhile, we press on through the fog of these ‘unprecedented’ days 
			toward equally unprecedented holidays.
 
 Don’t you wish you had a dollar for every time you’ve heard the word 
			‘unprecedented’ in 2020? I suppose that unless you are a centenarian 
			who lived through the Spanish flu pandemic of 1918 these are 
			exceptional days in our lifetimes. But the word ‘unprecedented’ 
			indicates something that has never happened before. Sadly, pandemics 
			– along with war, famine, earthquakes, floods, wildfires, and other 
			grand-scale calamities – have been around since the day creation 
			fell under the curse of death. Even the oft-ignored Old Testament 
			book of Ecclesiastes affirms, “Is there anything of which one can 
			say, “Look! This is something new?”
 
			
			So why don’t we use the ‘u’ word in its proper sense? Let’s apply it 
			to a truly one-of-a-kind happening in history.
 Like God being born as a human being - not just appearing in some 
			semblance of humanity, but embracing the full measure of human life 
			with all its wonder and frailty.
 
 Occupying a womb - risking the painful process of birth.
 
 The Power responsible for the construction and maintenance of the 
			universe becoming utterly dependent on the protection and provision 
			of a human mother? That’s never happened before.
 
 Living – Growing – Learning - coming to understand who He was (Is!) 
			and why He was born.
 
 The Greatest of All - humbling Himself among the least and embracing 
			all sinful humanity as His family.
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							Even 
			being willing to wash in the same dirty water they used to feebly 
			symbolize their change of heart and life toward God and their fellow 
			humans. That’s new, isn’t it?
 Loving - Teaching - Urging - Correcting - leading people to look at 
			their God with fresh eyes.
 
							An immovable God - who would welcome the friendless 
			sinner, touch the untouchable leper, forgive the repentant 
			adulterer, sit at the table with the notorious, and personally dry 
			the tears of the mourner. That’s especially unique.
 Wrestling – Weeping, the Author of Life travailing in sweat and 
			blood as He accepts the last and most crucial part of the mission 
			that He came to accomplish – to die in a most humiliating and 
			violent fashion at the hands of the humanity He loved so much.
 
 The kind of love that can endure such undeserved hatred is 
			truly, divinely, without equal.
 
 Rising from the dead a few days later - escaping the tomb? That’s a 
			feat not even the Great Houdini has been able to pull off. A 
			complete novelty.
 
 And he promised another advent, a coming day when He would not be 
			born, but the whole groaning world would be re-born into 
			unprecedented dimensions of peace and plenty, comfort and 
			contentment, health and wholeness when He takes control of this 
			globe gone wild. Can you imagine a world that will never again see 
			the likes of 2020 with its pandemic, elections, riots and 
			hurricanes?!?
 
 There’s only one word in our language that comes close to adequately 
			expressing all that Jesus is, has done, and will do – 
			unprecedented!
 
 How you celebrate Christmas may look substantially different this 
			year, but why you celebrate – the unprecedented birth of the 
			Son of God – can’t be touched by a virus. That’s more than 
			enough reason to have a Merry Christmas!
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