During
our church’s Christmas celebration, I watched the choir members assemble in
front of the congregation while the music director rifled through papers on a
slim black stand. The instruments began, and the singers launched into a
well-known song that started with these words: “Come, now is the time to
worship.”
Although
I expected to hear a time-honored Christmas carol, I smiled at the appropriate
choice of music. Earlier that week I had been reading Luke’s account of Jesus’
birth, and I noticed that the first Christmas lacked our modern-day parties,
gifts, and feasting—but it did include worship.
After the
angel announced Jesus’ birth to some wide-eyed shepherds, a chorus of angels
began “praising God and saying: ‘Glory to God in the highest!’” (Luke 2:13-14). The
shepherds responded by running to Bethlehem where they found the newborn King
lying in a barnyard bassinet. They returned to their fields “glorifying and
praising God for all the things that they had heard and seen” (v.20). Coming
face to face with the Son inspired the shepherds to worship the Father.
Today,
consider your response to Jesus’ arrival on earth. Is there room for worship in
your heart on this day that celebrates His birth?
Heaven’s
choir came down to sing
when heaven’s King came down to save. (RBC)
when heaven’s King came down to save. (RBC)