Thursday, December 9, 2021

12.12.2021

Campus Ministry Bulletin - December 12th, 2021
Tammy Norcross-Reitzler, Director of Campus Ministry
Rev. Ross M Epping, Chaplain
Lauren Bollweg, Coordinator of Music Ministry
Nicky Gant, Coordinator of Service & Justice
Claire McCarthy, Graduate Assistant


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In our heart of hearts, we find that we are all seeking - seeking peace, seeking purpose, a place of belonging, a meaning and sense of worth beyond what our own lives and world provide us. We yearn for more.

We look for a star to guide us, or an angel to lead us, or family and friends to embrace us. We desire authentic lives lived with real connection to others and to ourselves, a desire that is one of ongoing tension and ongoing struggle. We search high and low, often finding that the comfort we thought would fulfill us was only fleeting.

Our seeking is only heightened today, as we witness so many different aspects of our lives and relationships changed, or robbed, or shifted because of the ongoing pandemic.

If there is a remedy to our common struggle, if there is an answer to our questions of yearning, where can it be found?

Many of us know the birth story well – how the whole of Bethlehem was clogged by travel, folks occupying the beds and rooms across every inn and home in town. Not a single space remained, apart from an old shed out back filled animals. It was this place where Mary and Joseph found themselves, with a small feeding trough to lay their child.

This is where we tend to leave the story: two loving parents leaning over a child, surrounded by warm animals, and bathed in heavenly light. But at some point, the heavens had to close up, the angels returning back to heaven, the warm animals burrowing themselves into sleep. The night grew cold and the reality of the world began to set in for the new parents – fear, anxiety, darkness, a place to belong instead of competing with sheep for a place to sleep.

Here, in this reality, is the place the child was born, the baby in that lie nestled in the trough. The child was named Emmanuel, which did not so simply mean God, but God With Us. The God who came to the world in the midst of real life, not fairy tale. The God who came to a world filled with anxieties and fears, with struggles and strife.

When we celebrate Christmas each year, we are afforded the opportunity to remember. We remember the story of the two parents and the little town of Bethlehem. We remember the God who became flesh. And here, we haul our hopes and fears of all the years, and place them at the feet of the child.

With all our pain and all our joy, with all our loneliness and all our hope, with all the suffering throughout the world, we remember each Christmas that God desired to be there, right in the middle of it all. To be right here, in the midst of our own homes and lives. To accompany and to love. To be in relationship and to bring meaning.

Far off, in some distant field, sat a group of shepherds tending to their sheep. And as the night grew old, there appeared to them an angel. “Do not be afraid; for behold, I proclaim to you good news of great joy that will be for all people,” the angel announced. “Today, in the city of David, a savior has been born for you who is Messiah and Lord.”

And away up the hill, from the direction of town, came the sound of a newborn baby’s cry.

How else could God gain the trust of creation?  How else could I be persuaded that God knew my life inside and out, that God earnestly and completely cares, unless God lived a life like mine? God risked it all to get close to us, in hopes that we might learn to love, and be loved, once again.

Wishing you all the peace of God as you enter into Finals Week. And as you return home, or wherever it is you find yourself this Christmas, remember that God has decided that the best place for him to be, the greatest of all places to build his home, is right in your arms.

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EMAIL US at ministry@sau.edu.

Tammy Norcross-Reitzler, Director of Campus Ministry
Rev. Ross Epping, Chaplain
Lauren Bollweg, Coordinator of Music Ministry
Nicky Gant, Coordinator of Service & Justice
Claire McCarthy, Graduate Assistant



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