The Bishop of Derry and Raphoe, Rt Rev Andrew Forster, has issued his annual Christmas message.
The Church of Ireland Bishop of Derry and Raphoe says Christmas is a time for giving gifts to others, and for giving ourselves to Christ.
In his festive message, Bishop Andrew Forster says the “love and peace of Christ are among the greatest gifts any of us can ever receive.”
“It’s one of the paradoxes of generosity that in giving we receive; so this Christmas, I invite you to follow in the footsteps of the Magi and step out in faith. By giving our lives to Christ – just as the wise men did two thousand years ago – we are transformed, and our lives, too, are changed immeasurably, irrevocably, and for the better.”
Bishop Forster’s annual address centres on the Magi, or wise men, who journeyed far to give the first Christmas gifts to the baby Jesus all those centuries ago.
“We know precious little about the Magi, or wise men. We don’t know their names or precise occupations – some believe they were kings, some think astrologers – and we can’t even be sure how many of them there were, and yet there they are, woven inextricably into the Nativity story,” he said.
He continued: “Matthew tells us they came from the east, on a quest to find the one who’d been born ‘King of the Jews’. They were obviously men of deep faith, following a star all the way to Bethlehem. We know they were overjoyed when it stopped over the place where Jesus was. We’re told they ‘bowed down’ and ‘worshipped’ him, and opened the treasures they’d brought with them – gold, frankincense and myrrh – extremely expensive gifts in biblical times.”
“The wise men’s lives must have been changed radically by their encounter with the Christ child. We know they defied Herod afterwards, refusing to betray Jesus’s whereabouts, and returned to their country by another route.”
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Bishop Forster says we can learn from the story of the wise men.
“Many of us, nowadays, are on a quest of our own, searching for something different, something deeper, something that will transform our lives for the better. As we contemplate the nativity scene, the answer is there, right in front of our eyes. As with the wise men, it’s to be found in that humble stable where, as John writes, ‘the Word became flesh and made his dwelling among us’.”
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