Tuesday, December 22, 2020

Forsake Not the Assembly . . . .

I recently posted on my personal Facebook page a blurb about Christmas in which I said that Christmas 2020 just doesn’t seem like Christmas. What with the isolation of the Covid-19 Pandemic; virtually all of our social institutions being closed under the guise of preventing the spread of said virus; the lack o people in the stores; the absence of Christmas music and decorations in public areas; and, restrictions placed on travel and gatherings has robbed many of us of the things that reinforce the spirit of Christmas in our daily living. 

I spoke in my last posting about the fact that the governmental attempts at bringing the Covid-19 Pandemic under control has led to te systematic disassembling of the institutions in society that are essential for our social well-being. As humans we were created by God to be social in nature. We need places to assemble socially as much as we do food and drink. Churches, bars, restaurants, clubs etc did not grow out of an economic need but out of our need to “break bread together.”  

I am old enough to recall in my own extended family when the single most important event of the year


was the annual family gathering at Christmas. We celebrated the birth of our Lord Jesus but we were at the same time celebrating the importance and value of family and community. Now looking back over my 70 plus years I can see the gradual decline of our social structure and in the year 2020 the virtual dismantling of our social institutions rom the most secular to the exclusively religious and everything in-between. We now have governmental leaders not only ordering the closing of church and public businesses but also banning family gatherings. One has to wonder what is really driving these actions . . . .

From the very beginning when God created man God Himself observed that “It is not good for man to be alone.”  Here is something in community that allows for both the development and expression of our individuality. As surely as we live and breath we need community. We draw strength from one another. Someone long ago said it, “There is strength in numbers.” Even the military understands the concept of “overwhelming force.”  Perhaps that is why we are seeing all this ridiculous closings. If there is strength in numbers then it is also true that to win the day “one must divide and conquer” or control. As I see it that is precisely what is being done. 

These institutions are essential to the survival of a free and democratic society. I suspect that our own American Revolution was hatched in the pubs, churches and boarding houses of the colonies long before it reached the state houses. Those who support and enforce these draconian measures lie when they say it is in your best interest. It is in furtherance of their gaining absolute control of the nation and of your life.  

So, when the stores are empty, when the restaurants have no patrons, when the churches are empty of worshipers and yes, when the bars are closed we are weakened as individuals and as a society. Isolated means segregated . . . . separated into easily controlled units. If what I red is true this isolation is the occasion for a significant rise in suicide, divorce, elder abuse and violence of every kind.


How does this relate to Christmas you ask? Well, the Christmas season, both secular and sacred, is the most powerful community event of our culture. Oh, sure it has been, as the old time preachers warned, both commercialized and secularized far too much.  But in spite of this it still at every level screams hope for a better tomorrow. It celebrates light, life and renewal. It is truly a group celebration.  Shepherds came as a group and wise men traveled in a caravan. The child whose birth we celebrate would become known as the “Light of the World.” Gathering in His name became so essential to the health of individual Christians that the Apostle Paul warned against failure to assemble for fellowship, edification and service. 

What I am trying to say is: Not only is religious assembly a right it is a necessity and what is true for the church should also be true about so many of our institutions that allow us to gather for conversation, edification, and social interaction of all kinds.   

Use this year and its bogus isolation to determine to put an end to forced isolation and plan family events in 2021, support stores, churches, restaurants and other institutions that encourage socialization. Don’t let these traditions die. They are not just relics from the past they are necessary for a free, independent and democratic society to exist and thrive.

And finally lets put the joy of Christmas with all its lights, sounds, smells, joviality, worship, celebration, remembrance and hope for the future in full view. 


                                                                                                                                   

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