ᑲ ᑌᐯᓕᒋᑫᑦ ᓇᑐᑕᒪᐧᐁᐧ ᑭᒋ ᐱᒪᑎᓯᒋᒃ ᓂᔅᑕ ᑫ ᑎᐸᒋᒧᑐᑕᑭᒃ ᒥᓗᐧᐊᒋᒧᐧᐃᓐ
The Diocese of Moosonee...called by God to Live and Proclaim the Gospel

Archbishop Anne’s Christmas Message 2021

This depiction of the visitation of the Blessed Virgin Mary hangs in the Lady Chapel at St. James Anglican Church in Stratford Ontario. It was created by a parishioner, Laurie Richardson. I received this photo of it in a Christmas card this year.

This depiction of the visitation of the Blessed Virgin Mary hangs in the Lady Chapel at St. James Anglican Church in Stratford Ontario. It was created by aparishioner, Laurie Richardson.
I received this photo of it in a Christmas card this year.

Love came down at Christmas, love all lovely, Love divine; Love was born at Christmas; star and angels gave the sign.Worship we the Godhead, Love incarnate, Love divine, worship we our Jesus, but wherewith for sacred sign? Love shallbe our token; love be yours and love be mine; love to God and others, love for plea and gift and sign.”

(Christina Georgina Rossetti)

 

Heaven and earth meet at Christmas in unexpected ways in the ordinariness of place and time and the result is unbridledjoy and the certainty of God’s abiding presence.

The angel Gabriel appears to the God-chosen Mary at home in Nazareth and greets her with news that she will bear ason to be named Jesus.

Two women, both impossibly pregnant, meet in Elizabeth’s home in the hill country and the child John does a jig inhis mother’s womb when he hears the sound of Mary’s voice.

Righteous Joseph is visited in his dream by an angel of the Lord and told not to be afraid to take Mary as his wife, for thechild within is from the Holy Spirit.

The tongue-tied father Zechariah names his son John and his tongue is freed. He raises his voice in a Canticle ofprophecy about the child who will be called the prophet of the Most High.

A young couple deliver their first child, a son, and wrapping him in bands of cloth lay him in a manger in a stable behind anInn. They name him Emmanuel – God with us.

Shepherds living in the fields and keeping watch over their flocks by night are regaled by an angelic chorus announcingnews of great joy that a Saviour has been born.

Curious Magi, following a brilliant star enter the house where the Child is, and, offering their finest gifts of gold,frankincense and myrrh, adore Him.

Heaven and earth meet at Christmas not in the halls of power or in the palace of kings but in a crude stable as a youngfamily holds their newborn son, in a field of glorious angelic light, in an unsettled dream, in a peasant woman’s home.

Painted on the biblical canvas these encounters appear larger than life and beyond our experience. However, I suspectin the moment they seemed common place and far from ‘wonder-full’ – that it was only looking back on it that those who stood in the meeting place between heaven and earth realized the enormity of it all.

The truth is that we don’t have to look too far to see heaven and earth meeting in the ordinary moments of our lives. Atthe time they don’t feel or look like much, but when God comes to us nothing is ordinary any longer.

We find this Love Incarnate, Love Divine in 10 000 places if we have eyes to see and ears to recognise it.

A frail elder isolated by the pandemic sits with her priest at her kitchen table and holds the blessed sacrament of breadtaken, blessed, broken, and given in her hands for the first time in 22 months.

The pews of a church, mostly empty now on Sundays, are filled instead with bags and bags of gifts, packaged with loveby faith community members. Squeals of delight and the laughter of children is heard in a hall as brightly coloured presentsare opened.

Volunteers drive around town delivering hot turkey dinners to seniors carrying messages of goodwill. Though masked anddistanced, the eyes of the ones who receive the gift smile with joy.

A grandmother dying in hospital and unable to receive visitors, Facetimes with her sweet grandchild and words of loveflow with the tears.

An estranged son opens his mail and finds a greeting card from his mother with words of forgiveness and weeps bitter tears for the years that are lost.

A new father touches his partner’s belly and feels his unborn child kicking for the very first time.

Hungry high schoolers find a meal and fellowship on a Friday at noon in a parish hall.

A beloved pastor receives the gift of a virtual greeting card from his former parish and realizes how much he is loved.

My mom, Nora, having a conversation with my great-niece, Scarlett, in 2017

Worshippers following the Light gather in a borrowed church for their Christmas Eve celebration; others meet withmembers from other denominations thanks to an Advent Decree.

The cynic who lost his faith long ago tunes into a livestream service and is drawn into the message and its meaning – and anew faith awakens.

The Christmas message that the Light of Christ will overcome the darkness of our time, thoughtfully prepared by aninspired preacher, brings hope and healing to all who receive it.

Families gather around the warmth of a fire and share stories and memories of Christmases past, even as they look to anew and hopeful year.

Heaven and earth meet in an angel’s song, in a newborn child, across the threshold of a door, around a table, in a Zoomroom, and around a fire. Heaven and earth meet where God wants to be, and no power can stop it from coming.

My hope and prayer for you this Christmas is that you will recognise the moment when heaven meets earth in yourhome and that you will be filled with the unbridled joy of the gift of Emmanuel God with us.

May the joy of the
angels, The eagerness of
the shepherds,
The perseverance of
the wise men, The
obedience of Joseph
and Mary, And the
peace of the Christ
child Be yours this
Christmas.

And the blessing of God the Father, the Son and the
Holy Spirit be with you throughout theNew Year.

 

Colin and I on the deck of Bishophurst, December 23rd, 2021
Scroll to Top