When family and friends gather at our home for Christmas or Thanksgiving, I compose a prayer for the occasion. It usually coincides with themes that are engaging me at the moment. Here is what I plan to pray this Christmas day:
Almighty and Eternal God, infinite and holy, whose being genius cannot fathom, whose works galaxies cannot contain,
Before you we gratefully come, celebrating the day when you, the Almighty, did not count omnipotence a thing to be grasped, when Eternity played by the calendar, when Infinity was checked by gravity, when Holiness mixed it up with sinners, when the Creator of intergalactic space became a body and moved into our neighborhood.
Today we revel in the revelation that we who were light-years distant have been drawn to you as breath in lungs, that we who had lost touch can now feel the wounds in your hands and feet, brushing up against the holy body that bore the sins of the world, and the cold flesh that, soon enough, turned warm and whole, and soon enough, made all things new.
We, like the shepherds in the field, like the woman at the tomb, are astonished, trembling in wonder and in fear.
If all this is true, if a love like this is the blood that courses through all reality, behold, all things are new.
On our better days, Lord, we long to be transformed by the wonder. But most days, it scares us to death to be changed, even by love.
Yet it is not to the bold that you have come, Only to the trembling And not to the wise, But only to the foolish.
Give us ears to hear the glad tidings of great joy, and lungs to sing with exuberant praise, and legs to dance spritely around the strawy trough that cradled the Love who redeems the cosmos.
Amen.
Mark Galli is senior managing editor of Christianity Today. He also blogs occasionally at markgalli.com.
Copyright © 2011 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.
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