As
Christmas approaches there’s a plethora of Christmas stories bought to our
attention. Books to buy, movies to see; mostly focussing on family
togetherness, holiday fun, the generosity of the human spirit; all great things,
but often skirting around the central story of Christmas.
I recently heard a speaker from the Dickens Society
talking about the stories which Charles Dickens wrote about Christmas; A
Christmas Carol, The Chimes, The Cricket on the Hearth, to name a few. A Christmas
Carol, perhaps the most well-known, has been read and re-read, modernised, seen
on stage, screen and DVD. I wonder if it’s better known and paid more attention
than the real story of Christmas – the birth of the Saviour of the world.
Could there be a more compelling, moving, joyous
story than that of Jesus’s birth? Especially when we know that it’s a never
ending story, a life-giving and life-changing one for millions upon millions of
people.
There
are many beautiful aspects of the Christmas story which can be explored and
applied in novels, movies, poems, pageants, plays and song. Themes of
forgiveness, joy, grace, acceptance, love, reconciliation, peace can be brought
to our attention in beautiful, challenging and moving ways. These are the
themes I want to write about in all my novels, in the hope that a reader will
be challenged to seek God.
However, Christmas gives a special opportunity to
speak to hearts and minds that at other times of the year might be quite closed
to these ideas. Many hundreds of people will sit at a Carol’s night in a park
and sing songs about the baby Jesus, the Saviour of the World; people who may
never talk of such things in their everyday life. People who don’t usually go
to church will attend a Christmas service and hear the Biblical story, or watch
a Christmas pageant, or gaze on the nativity scene. No doubt God’s spirit can
do wonderful things with such an opportunity.
I love this quote from Dicken’s Christmas Carol. “I
will honour Christmas in my heart, and try to keep it all the year. I will live
in the Past, the Present and the Future. The spirit of all three shall strive
with me. I will not shut out the lessons that they teach.”
How wonderful if more people could really honour the
Christmas story – the coming of Christ to a broken world – all year, and allow
His spirit to bring new life to them all year round. I pray this Christmas, the
central truth of His story will begin in the hearts of many who have not really
heard it before.
Carol's novels are historical fiction, based on her family ancestry in Australia, dating back to the First Fleet.
You can find Carol on her website www.carolpreston.com.au
Or on her FB author page www.facebook.com/writingtoreach
Or see her books on www.amazon.com/author/carolpreston
Lovely Carol, you're right, we must remember the gift given to us in Jesus. Merry Christmas my friend!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Carol. Really love that quote from A Christmas Carol! Gave me lots to think about. God bless.
ReplyDeleteHi Carol
ReplyDeleteIt's so true that so much of today's consumerism skirts around the central issue of Christmas. Even trying to get 'religiously-themed' Christmas cards in a local supermarket is all but impossible. This is such an important reminder...
Thanks ladies. A very blessed Christmas to you all
ReplyDeleteWell said, Carol.
ReplyDeleteLoved the quote Carol. A blessed Christmas to you too. So nice to hear about the real Christmas instead of the guy on radio the other day that talked about the 'heroes of Christmas like Santa and Rudolph.' I was gritting my teeth.
ReplyDeleteCarol, great post! I love the Dicken's quote. Thanks for sharing :)
ReplyDelete