Christmas message from Christine Bryant

Christine Bryant, Lay Minister, St John’s.

A generous friend phoned me yesterday to ask if she could help prepare food for one of our Christmas services.  We got to talking about who she and her husband would celebrate Christmas with.

“The family is all coming here”, she said; “I’ve already started to prepare”. She then told me that she had also invited a distant relative
plus new partner because the children of them both would not be with them for Christmas.

“I couldn’t let them have a sad, lonely Christmas!” This clearly reminds me of Mary and Joseph arriving in Bethlehem with nowhere to stay.

It was Joseph’s ancestral village, his marae, but no distant whanau invited them in. It was left to the innkeeper who was already full up to show them to a stable area where they could shelter.

Little did he know that the Son of God would be born is his stable that night. More than any other time of the year, Christmas is about being generous – not with material goods – but with time, hospitality, love and caring.

“Te harinui” said the angel; “I bring you good news”. The Son of God came to bring love and peace. Whilst Christians everywhere pray for peace among peoples, especially between Israel and Palestine, also Ukraine and Russia, on behalf of all at St John’s, I wish you peace in all your homes and whanau. And I ask: Is there room for one more at your inn this Christmas? – Lay minister Christine Bryant

More Recent News

Grants value underlined

An appeal not to gut their discretionary grant allocation will be part of  the Te Awamutu-Kihikihi Community Board’s submission on Waipā District Council’s long term plan. Member Jill Taylor warned at the board’s latest meeting…

Life changing and life saving

Recognising and responding to people experiencing a mental health crisis or challenge is a skill every New Zealander should have, says Pirongia mental health expert Sarah Keelty. She is team lead at Manaaki Raatonga aa…

Menzshed in mourning

Members of the Te Awamutu Community Menz Shed are mourning the loss in April of two long-standing members of their organisation. David ‘Taffy’ Francis, and Erick Saunders were Menz Shed members for some years. Taffy…

333: the mark of success

A series of free meetings tomorrow and Saturday signals an important stage in the launch of a book chronicling seven years of research into Te Awamutu’s historically rich architecture. It will bring the public up…