| Current Poll |
Should members of the LSU Board of Supervisors disclose who receives their scholarships?
View Results
|
|
Story Archives: Christ child's birth greatest story told
- 2013 - 801 articles
- 2012 - 1954 articles
- 2011 - 2029 articles
- 2010 - 2139 articles
- 2009 - 2066 articles
- December 2009 - 163 articles
- December 31st, 2009 (Thursday) - 30 articles
- December 29th, 2009 (Tuesday) - 2 articles
- December 24th, 2009 (Thursday) - 26 articles
- December 23rd, 2009 (Wednesday) - 1 articles
- December 22nd, 2009 (Tuesday) - 3 articles
- December 17th, 2009 (Thursday) - 27 articles
- December 15th, 2009 (Tuesday) - 1 articles
- December 13th, 2009 (Sunday) - 1 articles
- December 11th, 2009 (Friday) - 35 articles
- December 9th, 2009 (Wednesday) - 1 articles
- December 8th, 2009 (Tuesday) - 1 articles
- December 7th, 2009 (Monday) - 1 articles
- December 6th, 2009 (Sunday) - 2 articles
- December 5th, 2009 (Saturday) - 1 articles
- December 3rd, 2009 (Thursday) - 29 articles
- December 1st, 2009 (Tuesday) - 2 articles
- November 2009 - 166 articles
- October 2009 - 231 articles
- September 2009 - 161 articles
- August 2009 - 136 articles
- July 2009 - 153 articles
- June 2009 - 126 articles
- May 2009 - 164 articles
- April 2009 - 242 articles
- March 2009 - 204 articles
- February 2009 - 163 articles
- January 2009 - 157 articles
- 2008 - 1757 articles
|
Christ child's birth greatest story told The birth of Christ more than 2,000 years ago will always be one of the greatest stories ever told, one of great hope in a world which certainly needs hope more and more as the years pass.
The world was a different place when Christ was sent. Life was shorter. Comforts were few. Choices were limited. Much evil existed, though.
As the commercialism of Christmas continues to evolve as time moves on, the story of little baby Jesus sometimes gets lost in the frenzy surrounding the Christmas holiday season. Children who are taught the story of Christ's birth, though, are more awestruck over that than any tale concerning Santa Claus.
Imagine a time when shepherds tended sheep, guarding the lambs that would soon be used for Passover. Imagine Mary and Joseph, man and wife, looking for a place to rest in Bethlehem as the birth of Christ neared. They settled for the most meager accommodations.
Then came the birth of Christ.
The Bible tells us an angel appeared before the shepherds, announcing that "today in the city of David there has been born for you a Savior, who is Christ the Lord." Joyous, they went quickly to see the newborn King.
In the book of Matthew we are told, "Now when Jesus was born in Bethlehem of Judea in the days of Herod the king, behold, there came wise men from the east to Jerusalem, saying, 'Where is He that is born King of the Jews? For we have seen His star in the east and are come to worship Him.'"
There is much more to the story of Christ's birth, of course, and for centuries it has been told and retold.
Along the way, though, the story about the birth of Christ has been overlooked by too many people in too many corners.
It's been overlooked because we live in a time when Christmas displays depicting the nativity are banned on government property, when prayer is considered offensive to some parents of school-age children, when the Ten Commandments cannot be displayed in a court of law, and when Christ is considered a myth or legend, untrue and too simplistic.
Those who rush through this wonderful season without a thought of Bethlehem and the Christ child and the heavenly magic of the birth of Christ are missing much. Those who are intolerant of believers, who attempt to dismiss the celebration of the birth of Christ, are foolish.
Instead of ignoring the foolish, we should teach them about Christ, for it is obvious they do not realize what they are missing in their lives. |
|
|