Thursday, December 20, 2012

A Christmas Thought


Christmas Thought…
Today,when we sing the universal Christmas hymn “Silent Night Holy Night”, at the depth of our hearts, we realize the  turmoil of human pain. Elsewhere in this nation, for parents, grandparents, sisters, brothers, teachers and friends, nights are not silent. Sounds of gunshots terrify the families in Newtown, Connecticut. Sights of blood pool horrify the little toddlers. As the President lamented in his press release at White House, immediately after the tragedy at the Sandy Hook Elementary School, “ our hearts are broken today”, we feel in our minds and hearts the brokenness and trauma of  “ being the innocence of childhood is torn away and , the dreams and hopes of those little ones being massacred.” We see, sometimes, the forces that tried to stop the birth of our Lord Jesus Christ into this world, find place and prominence in the contemporary scenario. The Herodian aberrations of human power, might, weapon and arrogance manifests violently and despotically at our neighborhoods. Certainly the nights that followed the birth of Jesus in Bethlehem was not silent as we sing. We hear the cry of the innocent families victimized by the butchery of  King Herod. Here again, we mourn the savagery of a Herodian fox mind. Some of us may rationalize the motifs of the killer as a victim of child abuse, drug abuse, single parenting or dysfunctional family. My ears are deaf for such evaluations, at least for little while because my heart moves with the tiny little ones whose lives have been fatally played and untimely ended.  We have heard the cry of Christmas at our neighborhood. More than the celebrations and festivities ,light display and ornaments, cakes and wine, Santa and felis nevida,   it is these cries of Christmas makes the message of God’s love in Incarnation relevant to our life situations. It is high time that we take break from the chorales of “Silent Nights” or “holiness of Silent Nights” and begin to act on the value of Silent Nights and sacramantality of the Holiness of Silent Nights. At Christmas, God is born in to our neighborhood to be broken; breaking His life at Christmas and Calvary to heal the wounds of sin and to be broken with the broken and mourning. Before me conclude, let me cite from Howard Thurman, a civil right activist Theologian and mentor of Rev.Martin Luther King Jr., he writes about Christmas;

“When the song of the angels is stilled,
When the star in the sky is gone,
When the kings and princes are home,
When the shepherds are back with their flock,
The work of Christmas begins:

To find the lost,
To heal the broken,
To feed the hungry,
To release the prisoner,
To rebuild the nations,
To bring peace among brothers,
To make music in the heart
.
Rev.Joseph Samuel

Friday, December 7, 2012

News Letter- December 2012


From the Vicar
When there is pain in the offering….blessed be your name.
Beth Geckenberger, in her book “Reckless Faith” describes an incident of two brothers in her orphanage struggling with a toy.
Two brothers. One remote control car. One holds the control, other the car. And at the top of their lungs, each is screaming his own claim over their new toy.
At first, she tries to reason with them, though it is hard to follow her logic over the noise of their ruckus. Then she resorts to threats. It makes her feel temporally powerful, but ultimately it’s ineffective. Then she acts uninterested-but the fight continues.
Finally she says to the brothers, “ What you can’t share, you can’t have”, and she takes the car and the remote and walks away.
What we can’t share, we can’t keep for long. This story brings us to the fact and meaning of Christmas. Christmas means different things to different people. For some of us Christmas is a cause for distress rather than delight, because it charge your credit/debit card more on spending.   In fact, our distress and discouragement and sometimes even depression are generally indications that we have turned away from what the season really ought to be about. Each year we have the opportunity to behold God’s glory as it was manifested to us in the incarnation of Christ, but if we’re not thinking along those lines then we’ll miss what God has for us. In the event of Christmas or Incarnation or at the birth of Jesus the pain of offering is radically engraved, for it is God coming down to the human form and conditions to share the nature and its vulnerability in its true sense. In fact the glory of God is reveled in humility. Consider the humility of the incarnation itself, the second person of the Trinity, the eternal Son of God, taking on humanity with all of its limitations, with all of its pain and sorrow and suffering. Listen to how Paul describes it:“For you know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that though he was rich, yet for your sakes he became poor, so that you through his poverty might become rich.” (2 Corinthians 8:9)
What does that mean, “he became poor”? It means that he gave up his honor and glory, he let go of his position, he relinquished all of the riches of heaven, in order to become one of us, in order to save us from our sins. He gave up that glory in order to become a human baby. Not even an adult. That would be humility enough, to give up the glory of heaven to become a man. But instead he became a helpless little infant. The sovereign Lord of creation, had now become the very picture of weakness and powerlessness and inability – a little baby. Not even a royal baby, not the son of a king; not a wealthy baby, the son of money and privilege. But instead, a peasant child born to poverty and want, raised in very humble circumstances. Surrounded not by God’s holy angels and the glory of heaven, but instead surrounded by sinful, fallen human beings and a stinking, dirty barn.
Just as Jesus humbled himself by becoming a helpless human infant, just as he humbled himself by honoring and obeying his parents, and ultimately, as he humbled himself by dying on the cross for our sins; so we are to humble ourselves in our relationships with one another. Jesus was willing to give up the privileges of deity in order to become one of us, in order to give his life for our sins. In the same way, we are to follow Christ’s example, and respond to one another in humility. That’s where unity comes from.
Christmas is certainly not a time to show up the glory of our money and power. The message of Christmas cannot be communicated in electric display. The message of God’s love can be transmitted only through the attitude of humility and sharing in our lives. It is season for all of us to serve others in love. Serving one another isn’t just a duty or an obligation. It’s a great privilege. It’s a privilege to serve God’s people with the resources and abilities He gave us.  There’s a difference between serving out of duty and obligation, and serving out of love and humility. If you’re just serving out of duty, you’re serving at your convenience. You make yourself available according to your schedule. But if you’re serving out of humility, you serve at the other person’s convenience, according to their need.
When there is pain in sharing….blessed be your name.
All the weekends in December is busy and lot of carols coming up. We request your prayerful participation.
With Prayers,
Rev.Joseph Samuel.

Website Reloaded

Ecumenical Christmas Carol
The Ecumenical Christmas Carol will be held on Saturday the 8th December 5pm at the Main East High School, Desplaines. Our Choir will be presenting two songs, one in Malayalam and the other in English. All are welcome.


General Body Meeting
The General Body Meeting to elect the Executive Committee (Vice President, Secretary and Treasurer) will be held on Sunday the 9th December immediately after the service. All your prayerful participation is requested.

Chicago CSI Christmas Carol
We host the Chicago CSI Christmas Carol on Saturday the 15th December 5.30pm at the main sanctuary of the St.Mary’s Episcopal Church. The 6 CSI churches in Chicago will be coming together to celebrate the birth of our Lord Jesus. Dinner will be served.  All are welcome.

St.Mark’s Christmas Carol Service
We have our Christmas Carol Service on Saturday the 22nd December 6.30pm. Our choir will be presenting special Christmas carols. Rev.Biju P Simon, the Assistant Vicar of the Chicago Mar Thoma Church will be the chief guest of the event. Dinner will be served.

Youth Sunday
Sunday the 23rd December.

Christmas Service
Tuesday the 25th December 9.00am at our Church

Watch Night Service
Monday the 31st December 10pm- Testimony Service
11.30pm- Covenant Holy Communion Service

Fasting Prayers
Wednesdays 10am at the Church
Saturdays 10.30am

Almanac
12/02   1st Sunday in Advent
“Celebration of Good News”
Holy Communion in Malayalam
Genesis 18:1-15
Psalm 146
Hebrews 2:1-10
Luke 1:39-56

12/09   2nd Sunday in Advent
Bible Sunday- “Word of God: Light of the World”
Holy Communion in English
Genesis 1:2-2:4
Psalm 119: 105-112
Hebrews 4:10-13
John 8:12-20

12/16   3rd Sunday in Advent
“Deliverance from the Bondage of Sin”
Holy Communion in Malayalam
Isaiah 40:1-11
Psalm 51
Revelation 2:12-17
Mark 1:1-18

12/23   4th Sunday in Advent
“Maranatha- Come, Lord Jesus”
Youth Sunday
Jeremiah 23: 1-8
Psalm 96
Revelation 22:6-21
John 14: 8-14

12/25  Christmas
“Celebrate Grace and Truth”
Holy Communion in Malayalam
Micah 5:2-4
Psalm 19
1Timothy 1:14-17
John 1:1-14

12/30   1st Sunday after Christmas
“Warmth and Love in the family”
Holy Communion in English
Genesis 27:1-29
Psalm 127
1John 2:7-17
Luke 15:11-32

12/31   Year Ending Service
“The Lord is our Help and Redeemer”
Isaiah 55:6-13
Psalm 121
2Corinthians 13:5-13
John 12:35-36

Birthdays
12/01   Deri Christudas
12/6     Susy Cherian
12/7     Soma Lukose
12/7     Ryan Thomas
12/8     Danny Kurien
12/9     Mathew Prabha
12/15   Anna Devid
12/17   Ethan John Mathew
12/20   Tony Thomas
12/20   Sayona John
12/21   Anil Philip
12/24   Diana Oommen
12/30   Hannah Annie George
12/31   Susan Thomas

Wedding Anniversary
12/27   Soma & Joe Lukose
12/29   Sheela & T A Joseph