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The Bethlehem Innkeepr

Tom Osmond, a new blogging friend, emailed this to me and gave me permission to reproduce it on my blog. I find it to be beautiful and insightful. Please enjoy:

The Bethlehem innkeeper never got a second chance to house the holy family, but those who seek to follow the babe born in his stable will not only make room for Christ, they will emulate his light, his love and his care for others.

That is the message I desire to share with you at this time.

The innkeeper missed his greatest opportunity the night Christ was born.

"Long years afterward, it would not do any good for him to repeat over and over again the words, 'If only I had known who they were, I would have made room for them.'"

Today, many enjoy homes with rooms for eating, sleeping, playing, sewing and TV, "but no room for Christ,". While many desire to make room in their hearts for the Savior,"no matter how successful we have been thus far. . . .I am confident we would all wish to do better." This Christmas season is the time to do so.

Life's busyness requires a "conscious committed effort to bring Christ into our homes and lives." And while opportunities to give of self are limitless, "they are also perishable. There are hearts to gladden. There are kind words to say. There are gifts to be given. There are deeds to be done. There are souls to be saved."

Someone told me of visiting a care center to see five elderly women he knew, (Ka Nooo) and after enjoying their company, he noticed one woman looking out the window, waiting for her son to come. "I wondered if he would, for there had been other Christmas seasons when he had never even called."

Those who take the time to seek out those in need emulate Christ. "As we do serve him, we will not forfeit our opportunity, as did the innkeeper of old -- to make time for him in our lives and room for him in our hearts." said by LDS Church President Thomas S. Monson during the Christmas Devotional at the Conference Center in Salt Lake City last Sunday, December 7, 2008.

President Henry B. Eyring, first counselor in the First Presidency spoke of Christmas traditions, including amateur family pageants that re-create the story of Christ's birth. After a few years, they began a pageant with Samuel the Lamanite, standing to testify on the American continent of Christ's birth in Bethlehem. (read about Samuel the Lamanite in the Book of Mormon)
Over time they added a "disbelieving crowd, armed with foil balls to throw at him as he stood above them." As the members of the angry mob grew stronger and more accurate over the years, "we had to remind them forcefully that Samuel could not be hit because he was God's protected servant," he said, drawing laughter from thousands in the Conference Center in Salt Lake City, Utah.

He said he wished he'd taken time to explain to those who played lambs in the nativity that the lamb of God would be Christ himself, who "volunteered to come down from royal courts on hight to be born in a humble stable. By his life and sacrifice he gave us all the gift of resurrection after death, the certainty that we would live again."

Those who wish to receive Christ's gift "must try with all our hearts and strength to do what he did. We cannot give the great gift he gave to others," in the atonement for sin, "But we can try to do his works and help him serve others as he would serve them."

One bishop in Rexburg, Idaho, did so many years ago as he and his family often fed, sheltered and even clothed needy travelers who passed near their home because "they welcomed strangers in need." Family Christmas traditions vary, but they will have some things in common," including drawing hearts to the Savior and acts of kindness.

As a child in Germany, President Dieter F. Uchtdorf recalled celebrating Advent, the season of light, and walking through the streets on Christmas Eve with a parent, seeing "how the smallest light penetrated the dark night."

Upon returning home, he found the other parent had decorated the tree and lit it with real candles. "Perhaps it is no wonder that I have always associated the Christmas season with light," said President Uchtdorf, second counselor in the First Presidency.

Modern Christmas celebrations, with their focus on material gifts, can "detract from the simple dignity of the season and distract us from celebrating the birth of our Savior in a meaningful way." The economic challenges that may cause some to scale back their gift giving this year may "be a blessing in disguise," he said. "I know from personal experience that the most memorable Christmases can be those that are the most humble."

Expensive gifts aren't required to make Christmas meaningful, but giving to those in need creates memories for those who serve others as Christ did. He recounted a story from Elder Glen L. Rudd, an emeritus general authority, who told of taking his own children out on Christmas Eve to gather gifts for a mother and children in desperate need, including a small boy who simply requested a bowl of oatmeal.

That night as the family gathered around their own dinner table, "they gave thanks that the little boy had received his bowl of oatmeal."

God chose to "honor the birth of his son as Jesus was found in the simplicity of a lowly stable. On that holy night, angels appeared not to the rich but to shepherds. The Christ child was born not in a mansion but in a manger," wrapped "not in silk but in swaddling clothes."

"May we remember the humble dignity of his birth, his gifts and his life. May we, through our simple acts of kindness, charity and compassion, fill the world with the light of his love."

Compiled by Tom Osmond
The Bethlehem Innkeepr The Bethlehem Innkeepr Reviewed by Unknown on Tuesday, December 16, 2008 Rating: 5

7 comments:

  1. Wonderful post. I think we do need to make room for Christ, especially in this busy world so we don't miss out on opportunities like the innkeeper.

    Thanks.

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  2. A very powerful message. I hope you don't mind that I peek into your writings. I am inspired though.

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  3. What a great reminder. It's way too easy to get caught up in the shopping to do list and all of the other less important stuff.

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  4. Wonderful post, especially from a person who is so very dear to me, and who I am so proud of.
    Some people replace the "Christ" from Christmas by an "X", and call it X-mas... Please let's not do that, and set an example. Please let us remember: Christmas IS all about Christ!
    X

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  5. That is beautiful, and very well written. Thank you Tom for writing it and sharing your testimony with us.

    And Candace, thank you for sharing it!

    Merry Christmas!

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  6. Greetings & Salutations, you Superior Scribbler, you! Melissa B. here, The Scholastic Scribe, & the "Original" Superior Scribbler! 2 things on my mind today: I've been nominated for a pretty prestigious blog award, and would greatly appreciate your vote; so if you click on over to my place, you'll see the info. It's an annual award from EduBlog, and I'm up for Best Individual Blog. And also, don't forget to come by tomorrow for the Silly Sunday Sweepstakes. Thanks for your support!

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  7. I've wondered for years about the innkeeper. Yes..if he had known who they were and their circumstances he would have given his own bed as we all would. I've come to the thinking that he did not turn them away in anger just to be mean. I think he just really did not have any room there at his inn. The town was flooded with people and their taxes. I think the manger was the perfect place the Jesus to be born. No noise, drinking, yelling to contend with. The animals there were nature and very spiritual in their own way. And it was probably not a cold night. It was April and not the wintertime we think it was. I think to this day the manger was the perfect place for Him.

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