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A Christmas message from The Bishop of Chelmsford

Faith Matters / Wed 11th Dec 2024 at 08:08am


THE Right Revd Dr Guli Franics-Dehqani, the Bishop of Chelmsford has written a message for
the Christmas season:

Music is perhaps one of the most cherished aspects of our Christmas celebrations. Familiar words
and melodies have that wonderful ability to anchor us to timeless truths and the hope that underpins
them.


But this Christmas, how can we possibly sing of stillness and peace in Bethlehem, mindful as we are
of the ongoing conflict in the Middle East. On my visit to Israel and Palestine in May of this year, I was forcibly struck by the horror and brokenness of war in the birth place of the one who is the prince of peace. The devastating reality is that stillness and peace are very far from the experience of many who live in Bethlehem, and across the whole of that beautiful but troubled region.

Credit: Diocese of Chelmsford

So, should we stop singing? Well, if we did, that would be a failure to recognise that the message of
love and peace, encapsulated in so many carols and Christmas songs, resonates with an
authenticity that touches even the depths of our pain and brokenness, whatever that looks like. At its
heart, the story of Christmas both acknowledges the messiness of our lives – the stark realties of
poverty, conflict and power struggles – and also holds out the hope that life can be different when
the Kingdom of God breaks in. At present we see glimpses of this dimly, in small acts of kindness and
love, and we long for the day when it will be revealed in all its fulness, when heaven and earth unite
to sing the song of the angels.

Jesus himself was born into a time and place that wasn’t immune to the brutality of suffering and
injustice, to a young couple far from home, later forced to flee with their newborn infant to seek
safety and refuge away from the reality of terror. It was into that place then, and into our world now,
that the everlasting light shines. The fear is real, but so is the hope with which it is met. Christians
pray in the power of this hope that, during this season, God may be born afresh in our hearts; and we
commit ourselves again to being a people who will work together for the coming of the kingdom of
justice and peace.

And so as we gather in our churches, schools, chaplaincies and beyond, to hear the joyful Christmas
music and celebrate afresh the Christmas story, may we hold on to the promises of the Christ child
who continues to be present in the broken places of o

1 Comment for A Christmas message from The Bishop of Chelmsford:

Andy Thornton
2024-12-11 18:07:20

How does it end???

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