20/12/2019
A spiritual comment and prayer to start the day with Bishop Jo Bailey Wells
A spiritual comment and prayer to start the day with Bishop Jo Bailey Wells
Good morning.
As Christmas approaches, we cook 鈥渇or鈥 friends coming to stay from far away, we labour to choose a present 鈥渇or鈥 that tricky family member, we offer charity 鈥渇or鈥 those who are homeless.
Lots of doing-for gestures are generous and noble. But I wonder, do they work? Does our hospitality bring that much-needed conversation to happen? Does the gift bridge the rift with my relative? Does the gesture of charity bring us closer to those in need?
I鈥檝e realised recently that 鈥渇or鈥 isn鈥檛 the preposition God chooses at Christmas. The angel says to Joseph, 鈥溾楤ehold, the virgin shall conceive and bear a son, and they shall name him Emmanuel,鈥 which means, 鈥楪od is with us.鈥欌 At the start of John鈥檚 gospel we read: 鈥淭he Word became flesh and lived with us.鈥 I suggest the word that lies at the heart of Christmas and at the heart of the Christian faith is that word 鈥渨ith.鈥
At Christmas, God doesn鈥檛 sort the world out, or shower us with blessings. We may wish God would - to make everything happy and surround us with perfect things. Rather, the good news of Christmas is that God celebrates by being 鈥渨ith鈥, by becoming flesh in Jesus so that from that point on everything else in the world may be founded on a fundamental, unalterable, everlasting, and utterly unswerving God is with us, Emmanuel.
I invite you into a listening prayer today. Hear the words God speaks to us unambiguously:
I am 鈥榳ith鈥 you. Behold, my dwelling is among you. I鈥檝e moved into the neighbourhood. I will be with you always. My name is Emmanuel.
Amen.