A “MARY” CHRISTMAS
Christmas is filled with things that take your breath away. In fact, one person went so far as to say that life at its best is measured not by the breaths we take, but by the breaths we miss. Life at its best is made up of times like Christmas – times of awe and wonder.
How much do you think that first Christmas took Mary’s breath away? How much was she not even able to speak? Oh, she had talked with an angel in Nazareth, and she had sung her song to her cousin Elizabeth in the hill country of Judea. But in Luke’s account of Christmas Eve, there is not recorded even one word from Mary. It is as if what was happening to her was just too deep to put into words. So it merely says, “Mary treasured all these things and pondered them in her heart” (Luke 2: 19).
We need to be like Mary and spend some quiet time around the manager. This Christmas we all need to be like Mary, who, apparently without saying a word, held her child, who was both God and human, close to her breast and pondered in her heart everything that was happening to her.
The first thing I believe she pondered was the LOWLINESS OF GOD’S APPROACH. God did not come with noise and clamor. Rather, as the beloved Christmas carol says, “How silently, how silently, the wondrous gift was given.” How often does the power of God come to us not with great noise, but instead in silence? How often is God best experienced where there is the least noise? How often is it that in the quietest of moments God most touches our lives? Yes, Christmas is a time when the world holds its breath and listens once again for the soft cry of a baby. So gracious and so holy was the time that Mary may not have said a single word. Rather she treasured all these things and pondered them in her heart, including the LOWLINESS OF GOD’S APPROACH.
And then, second, I believe she also pondered the LOWLINESS OF GOD’S ARRIVAL. There was no room for them except where the animals stayed, so Mary “wrapped Him in bands of cloth and laid Him in a manger.” Do you think Jesus hesitated? When the only begotten Son of God – pre-existent from all eternity – stood there on the balcony of heaven and counted what would be the full cost of His coming – of His emptying Himself, as the apostle Paul said. Do you think He hesitated even for a moment before He came? No, I do not think so. Instead I think that He looked down and saw it all – including the cross and all the pain and all the shame – and then willingly and intentionally came. Yes, I believe that when Mary was pondering all of these things, she was also pondering the LOWLINESS OF GOD’S ARRIVAL
And then, third, I believe she also pondered the LOWLINESS OF GOD’S AUDIENCE. The first ones to learn of His birth were some shepherds. Now I have read that the Pharisees of the day saw six professions as unworthy. One of these was being a shepherd. Shepherds were not permitted to give testimony in a court of law, and I have even read that they were not allowed to enter a synagogue because their work was considered ritually unclean. So called “good people” would have nothing to do with shepherds. But the good news of great joy was first given to a group of shepherds. At the heart of the Gospel is the truth that knowing God is not something that is given only to important and powerful people. Rather it is also given to shepherds. And you and I are like shepherds – and we are all like sheep. But the good news of Christmas is that we are all still worth everything to God.
“How silently, how silently, the wondrous gift is given!
So God imparts to human hearts the blessings of His heaven.
No ear may hear His coming, but in this world of sin,
Where meek souls will receive Him, still the dear Christ enters in.”
What I pray for you during this Advent and Christmas season, is that you will have the heart of Mary, who sat there silently and nursed her child, who was both God and human, as she treasured all these things and pondered them in her heart.
From my heart to yours I wish you a Mary – a M-A-R-Y – Christmas.
Dennis D. Nelson
Executive Director of Lutheran CORE
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LUTHERAN CONGREGATIONS SUPPORT NETWORK
I am very grateful to and for all those who are helping spread the word regarding the Lutheran Congregations Support Network and its work to inform ELCA congregations of the risks they are under and are likely coming to their congregational autonomy and property rights because of anticipated changes in the ELCA constitution and governance structure. Here is a link to their website – lutherancongregationalsupportnetwork.org
Among the resources on their website are links to three videos, which give
- Interviews with pastors and congregations that have experienced ELCA tactics
- A description of the process by which a congregation can lose autonomy and come under institutional oversight
- Publicly available information about the 2025 ELCA Churchwide Assembly
Thank you for helping spread the word.
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With the 2025 March for Life in Washington D. C. coming up on January 24, we wanted to share with you two articles from the NALC Life Ministries Team.
Making Ourselves Gods
by Pastor Mark Chavez, Chair of the NALC Life Ministries Team
All life hangs on the first commandment: “I am the Lord your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of slavery. You shall have no other gods before me.” (Exodus 20:2-3) Martin Luther’s explanation of the First Commandment in the Large Catechism ends with these words:
Let this be enough for the First Commandment. We have had to explain it at great length, for it is the most important. As I said before, if the heart is right with God and we keep this commandment, all of the rest will follow on their own. (BOC, Kolb/Wengert, p. 392)
The inverse of Luther’s words are equally true. Not keeping the First Commandment means we will not keep all the other commandments. Apart from Christ our hearts are not right with God. We have other gods. We do not keep the commandments. We do not preserve and care for life. Idolatry always leads to death.
We have many gods. They can be anything or anyone. The growth of one particular god in the current culture is especially disturbing and destructive. Culture would have us believe that we are each a god unto ourselves – “It’s my life, I can do whatever I want with it. It’s my body, I can do whatever I want with it.”
Self-idolatry is the extreme height of our sinful condition, incurvatus in se (turned or curved in upon self). Making ourselves gods, is also the height of our sinful rebellion. We attempt to displace the true “Author of life” (Acts 3:15). We think we are the authors of our lives. Our deception and delusion is profoundly tragic. Our authorship does not create, promote or preserve life. It destroys life. Not just our own life, but the lives of others as well.
Medical and scientific data has for many years proven that women who experience abortion and transgendered children and youth suffer physical, psychological and spiritual trauma. Were they to study the impact of physician assisted suicide on family, friends and the administering physicians, there is probably trauma for them as well. Culture says the above are ways of caring for life, but the truth is the opposite. Culture calls evil good.
Far too many are shaped by culture to assume life is in our hands, and we can do whatever we want with it. No wonder that the number of elective abortions, physician assisted suicides and transgendered children and youth is increasing.
Insisting we are gods is a complete rebellion against the only living God – the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit. The true “Author of life” owns every human life and body. He alone creates life. All life rests in his hands, not ours, including both believers in Christ and unbelievers. God’s ownership of a believer’s life and body is especially personal and intimate:
Or do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit within you, whom you have from God? You are not your own, for you were bought with a price. So glorify God in your body. (1 Corinthians 6:19-20)
Since we, as God’s elect, were bought with an extravagant price, the life of our Lord Jesus Christ, our whole life belongs to him. As members of his body, we are called to speak the truth to the culture. We are not gods. All life is in God’s hands.
March for Life and Y4Life Conference in January!
by Pastor Dennis DiMauro
The NALC Life Ministries team is once again preparing for the March for Life in Washington D.C. this January, but our plan is a little different. Instead of holding a life conference, NALC Life has decided to team up with Lutherans for Life (LFL) and participate in their events at the March! Their youth conference, Y4Life, will be held at the Hilton Arlington Landing Hotel (2399 Richmond Highway, Arlington, VA 22202) from Thursday, January 23rd, 2025 through Saturday, January 25th, 2025 and it has over 400 kids already registered (register at https://y4life.org/event/y4life-in-washington-d-c-january-23-25-2025/ ). We encourage all our NALC youth to participate in this free conference.
On Friday, January 24th we will be once again participating in the March for Life under the NALC banner, and I hope you can join us at 12th and Madison Sts., N.W at noon as we march to the U.S. Capitol. Before the march there is a prayer service at DAR Constitution Hall 1776 D St. NW (18th and D St.) Washington, DC 20006 starting at 8:30am. All our NALC members are invited to attend this service and our clergy are invited to participate (stoles are white). If you have any problems at the march, please contact Pastor Dennis Di Mauro at (703) 568-3346. Pastor Di Mauro can also host you in his home if you would like to stay overnight in DC. We can’t wait to see you in our nation’s capital this January!!