Presumably, we have sung
the carols, lit the candles, opened the presents, attended the parties, and
eaten the Christmas dinner. Now what? Do we forget about Christmas until next
year when we, once again, begin to think about decorating, shopping and planning
our activities? Has Christmas become routine for us; or, have we come to allow
its true meaning to come alive in our hearts and minds? Is Christmas solely a
celebration of the birth of our way-shower, Jesus; or, have we come to
understand that it is our story as well? Have we accepted the truth that the
Christ is the only begotten idea in the Mind of God for all humanity, and that
includes each of us; or, are we still holding to the idea that that cannot
possibly be our truth? Have we opened to allow the birth of the Christ within
our own consciousness?
If we have allowed the
Christ consciousness to be born within us, will we continue to engage in the
endless cycles of awakening and drifting back to sleep; or, will we choose to
nurture the Christ that has been born in our conscious awareness and give it
the time and attention it needs to grow and mature? Will we, this year, choose
to keep the Christ alive in our consciousness and begin to embody and live from
it?
Each of us must answer for
ourselves. I encourage us, if we have not already done so, to allow this
Christmas to be a momentous one for us. Let us make the conscious decision to
awaken to the Truth that we are God expressing in the world as the Christ. Let
us make this Christmas a celebration, not just of the birth of Jesus, our
teacher and guide, but also a celebration of the birth of Christ as us. And,
invite our own personal revelation of what that means for us.
Metaphorically, Jesus’ life
represents our own. Just as Jesus grew and matured in his awareness and
embodiment of his Christ nature, so must we. Just as we are born into these
physical forms and grow and mature into adults, so must we grow and mature in
our spiritual incarnations as the Christ. It is time for us to not only awaken
to the truth of our Christ nature, but to actively engage in our own conscious
evolution from babies to mature adults in Christ, and there is no time like the
present to begin.
Let us, this year, choose to not just observe Christmas as an
annual celebration, but to open ourselves to the realization of what it means
for us to be the Christ in the world. I encourage us to keep Christmas alive in
our hearts and minds as we move through a new calendar year. When December 25
comes around again in 2020, may we honor, not only the birth of the Christ, but
also our new level of maturity as one who is growing in Christ awareness.
Thank you. Happy New Year.
ReplyDeleteOur personal Christmas story unfolded following the Christmas Eve message and our family supper. The leftover chicken soup was transferred to a mason jar to go home with a family member. Sometime later the phone rang. “I hope you didn’t want the mason jar returned. On the way to my car, I saw a homeless man huddled on the sidewalk in the cold. I gave him the soup and he clutched it to him exclaiming gratefully about it still being warm.” It’s these small blessings that we will acknowledge to express over and over in the new year.
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