December
19, 2006 Just to complicate Christmas preparations a
bit more this year, I'll be off to Bethlehem on Wednesday with some of my colleagues.
We're planning to be there for a few days just before Christmas, and with luck
– we'll be back in time for Christmas Eve. Like most
people, I guess, when I hear the name ‘Bethlehem' I think warm and comforting
thoughts. It's somehow a warm and comforting word. And most people of my generation
anyway think of ‘O little town of Bethlehem, How still we see thee lie.'.. And
what will we see when we get there this week? We'll see what every visitor sees,
what many who've never been there would love to see – a place made holy, made
warm, you could say, by centuries of prayer and thanksgiving. And I know that
we'll have kindness and welcome from the local people and a chance to worship
in the great ancient church of the Nativity. Some of
it's going to be a lot harder, though. We're visiting Christians who suffer terrible
economic hardship and daily anxiety about their homes and their security. We'll
be alongside people, Christians, Jews and Muslims, whose lives have been wrecked
in different ways by terrorism and by the sense that they're hated and feared
by each other. We'll be with people who are really desperate to find some sort
of hope, some way out of the cycle of violence and insecurity. And
seeing all that simply reminds you that this was also the kind of world into which
Jesus was born – because the twisting and turning of human hearts isn't all that
different today from what it was 2,000 years ago. God's love came among us at
Christians just because we need help from beyond ourselves if we're going to find
hope. So when you hear ‘O little town of Bethlehem' sung
in the next few days – and you will, because it's one of the all-time favourites
– think of us and all the pilgrims who want to travel to Bethlehem; think of the
people who'll be there to greet us. Pray for everyone in Bethlehem and all of
the Holy Land who's longing for hope and new beginnings. And you might even slip
in a prayer that we all get home in time for the Christmas Eve carol services.
Rowan Williams 2006 Lambeth Palace Anglican
Communion News Service, London |