"We
celebrate tonight God-with-us
beyond our words, beyond our images,
for we know God is beyond those things.
beyond our words, beyond our images,
for we know God is beyond those things.
But
tonight we find joy in the image of God
coming to us in the form of a child.
coming to us in the form of a child.
We
sense God’s presence in creation
and in the immensity of our universe,
in the incredible display of life on this planet,
and in our consciousness
of something far greater than ourselves.
and in the immensity of our universe,
in the incredible display of life on this planet,
and in our consciousness
of something far greater than ourselves.
As
Christians we rejoice in the birth of Jesus.
In him we see the fullness of possibility
to make God visible in our lives.
In him we see the fullness of possibility
to make God visible in our lives.
Like
all of us he grew in wisdom as he aged.
He questioned. He searched for meaning.
He shaped his convictions.
He questioned. He searched for meaning.
He shaped his convictions.
He
experienced love and came to know
love’s connectedness with God.
love’s connectedness with God.
He
stood firmly in his own religious tradition
and
preached good news to all people dreaming
of a
better humanity.
We
rejoice that he taught us not to imagine
a
manipulative, intervening God,
but
one who is as close as breath
and as soft as a whisper,
yet as powerful in the focus of our lives,
and as soft as a whisper,
yet as powerful in the focus of our lives,
as
were the mighty (prophets) in the Old Testament
drawing
us toward the good.
We
rejoice that Jesus led people to discover
the sacred in the ordinary,
the sacred in the ordinary,
in
the lowly, in everyday life,
in
human yearnings to be better people,
and
in being neighbor to one another.
Bread
and wine,
the
fruit of vine and earth.
May
these ordinary things be blessed.
For
they represent both the ordinary and the extraordinary
as
Jesus calls us to follow him.
And
when we go out, may we share
generously of this wonderful gift we have received."
generously of this wonderful gift we have received."
These are the inspired words of Jane
Keener-Quiat and Rex Hunt
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