Category: Christmas

  • Books in Stock in our Office

    Books in Stock in our Office

    We can ship these immediately for your Christmas gift list!

    Theology

    Restless Spirit – Paperback (Office Stock)

    Original price was: $6.99.Current price is: $3.99.

    39 in stock

    Why Four Gospels? – Paperback (Office Stock)

    Original price was: $13.99.Current price is: $8.99.

    23 in stock

    Devotional

    Taking a Walk with Whitehead – Paperback (Office Stock)

    Original price was: $16.99.Current price is: $11.89.

    2 in stock

    They Will Run and Not Grow Weary – Paperback (Office Stock)

    Original price was: $9.99.Current price is: $6.99.

    2 in stock

    Ministry

    Project Nebo – Paperback (Office Stock)

    Original price was: $17.99.Current price is: $12.59.

    8 in stock

    Christian Living

    Long Shot – Paperback (Office Stock)

    Original price was: $24.99.Current price is: $14.99.

    120 in stock

    Faith Never Stands Alone – Paperback (Office Stock)

    Original price was: $16.99.Current price is: $12.89.

    6 in stock

  • From World Prayr: Christmas Erupts

    Can there be any other reaction when one has encountered the amazing grace of God, than an overwhelming eruption of emotional joy and praise towards God?
    If so, then why do we see so few eruptions? Why are the volcanoes of our hearts not erupting with gratuitous affections and instead are often silent? Have we not met this very same grace?
    Read more …
    World Prayr is author of Energion title Walking in God’s Grace.

  • A Very Process Christmas

    Let me be the first person to wish you “A Very Process Christmas.” Process theology and Christmas just seem to fit together. That might surprise you, especially since process theology asserts that God acts naturally, through the regular processes of nature, and not supernaturally, showing up from the outside every so often to overturn the laws of nature to perform a miracle or defeat an enemy. Just the same, process theology joyfully proclaims the birth of Jesus, Mary and Joseph’s beloved child, and the boy who grew up to be healer, reconciler, prophet, and world-changer. God was in the stable and God is in our lives, too! Every day is an advent adventure in which can train eyes for signs of new birth in a world of threat and challenge.
    Alfred North Whitehead asserts that the world lives by the incarnation of God. God moves everywhere and in all things, seeking beauty and love. Each moment emerges from God’s inner inspiration. God midwifes each person’s journey, seeking to bring forth the holiness within. God seeks abundant life for every creature, urging all things toward wholeness.
    The world incarnates God! Emmanuel, “God with us,” is just as real today as it was in Bethlehem’s stable. A child is born in Bethlehem and a baby cries in a refugee camp, recalling the fact that shortly after Jesus’ birth, the holy family set out on a refugee journey to Egypt.
    Walt Whitman once said, “All is miracle.” Meister Eckhart affirmed that “all things are words of God.” Julian of Norwich rejoiced that something as small as a hazelnut contained the fullness of God’s energy. If a hazelnut can emerge from the fullness of God, so can the baby growing in a mother’s womb.
    Process theology proclaims that each moment is an epiphany and every encounter an incarnation. Christ is in us, and we can become Christ-bearers in our place and time.
    Bethlehem’s stable is not an anomaly but the revelation of what God is doing everywhere. Our world is full of wonder, and the same love that grew day by day in Mary’s womb grows in every person’s life. God gives life to our souls, but also our cells, even at the moment of conception.
    The birth of Jesus expresses the wonder-full world in which we live. The child in the manger is a miracle child, manifesting God’s holy light and giving light to all creation. But, my grandchildren and the children in your life are also “miracles,” energetic incarnations of divine love. They too take birth in an amazing, complicated, and often challenging world.
    At Christmas, we listen for angelic voices, and for process theologians there are angels around every corner. Every moment brings a message from God and divine messengers abound. God’s angelic messengers speak in our hearts, inviting us to share in the birth of God in our world today.
    God also comes to us as the magi from the East, revealing God’s many-faceted wisdom giving life to every authentic spiritual quest. The unique revelation of God in Jesus of Nazareth also shines in the holy words and people of other faith traditions.
    Christmas celebrates God’s birth in a baby in an occupied land. Today, Christ’s brothers and sisters will take birth among Syrian refugees, inner city parents, Appalachian coal miners, grieving friends and relatives Las Vegas, Newtown, Paris, and Beirut, and suburban households.
    The word in all its messiness and tragic beauty lives by the incarnation of God! Look under the Christmas tree and you’ll discover God with us. Have a very process Christmas!
    Bruce G. Epperly is the author of over 45 books and a number of Energion titles, including Process Theology: Embracing Adventure with God and Process Spirituality: Practicing Holy Adventure He is also the author of various Energion scripture studies including, Experiencing God in Suffering and Jonah: When God Changes as well as Angels, Mysteries and Miracles: A Progressive Vision.

     
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  • Is there a war on Christmas? —YES!

    [EDITOR’S NOTE: This post is part of our series on controversial questions. A NO post will normally follow a YES post.  Join in by posting your comments.]

    by Elgin Hushbeck

    PicIs there a war on Christmas? If “war” is understood in a metaphorical sense as a deliberate effort to diminish and/or change, and Christmas is understood as the religious meaning and Christian roots of this holiday, there clearly is. Nor is this anything new. The first drafts of the introduction to my book Christianity and Secularism were written back in the 1980s. There I wrote concerning the secularization of society,

    “It is not simply a matter of society turning its back on religion, for a segment of society in general, and government in particular, is becoming increasingly hostile to religion. There is a conscious effort by many groups to oppose religion wherever and whenever they can. Christmas and Easter, for example, have become the seasons of lawsuits over nativity scenes and crosses. In most schools, Christmas and Easter vacations have been renamed winter and spring breaks. The traditional Christmas nativity plays have been replaced by those with non-religious themes. Christmas has become an almost completely secular holiday, with all reference to Christianity being removed. Christmas has become merely a day of celebration; a day of celebration without anything to celebrate.”

    Since I wrote those words, things have only become more visible, so much so that a bit of a backlash has started. Sometimes this backlash is distorted into an objection to inclusive phrases such as “Happy Holidays.” But this misses the point, as those objecting to these changes did not get upset when people used “Happy Holidays” but only when people were told that they must use “Happy Holidays” and could not say Merry Christmas. They did object when non-religious Christmas songs were sung, but only when Christmas hymns are removed, or even rewritten to remove any religious references. It is not inclusiveness that they object to, but the exclusion of Christianity.
    Some claim there is no war on Christmas by pointing to all the commercialization, often while lamenting the same commercialization. But to me the commercialization is a result. The “war” is not on Christmas per se, but on the Christian underpinnings of Christmas. School do not ban the celebration, they just change it to a secular celebration.   They do not stop singing songs, they just remove or edit out references to Christ. Rather than Christ being the center of Christmas, Santa Claus has taken his place, at times even to the point of the being the one to whom we are supposed to pray, and the North Pole being where good people go when they die to become one of Santa’s helpers.
    Ultimately, the war on Christmas is just a more focused form of the larger conflict resulting from the growing secularization of society in general. Many who reject that there is a war also support this growing secularization, some because they are themselves secular, others because their view of Christianity differs from traditional Christianity and its value, and still others because they desire a purer form of Christianity unhindered such cultural celebrations.
    While one can certainly question how “Holy” Christmas was in the past, seen by the culture in general, there is no question that the sense of Holiness in the season has been greatly diminished. When you remove Christ from Christmas all you are left with is the crass and commercialization.


  • Our Advent question for today

    We at EDN are in a period of reflection and contemplation for these important seasons of Advent and Christmas. Over the next few weeks, our attention will be on raising certain questions that we invite you to comment on.  We will return to
    our series probing controversial questions on January 4th.

    TODAY’S QUESTION: As we anticipate Christmas, which story surrounding the birth of Jesus in the Gospels best informs the meaning of Christmas for you?

  • Our Advent question for today

    We at EDN are in a period of reflection and contemplation for these important seasons of Advent and Christmas. Over the next few weeks, our attention will be on raising certain questions that we invite you to comment on.  We will return to our series probing controversial questions on January 4th.

     

     TODAY’S QUESTION:  John the Baptist suggested several ways for his disciples to show their repentance in Luke 3. How would you convert these to our time?

    And the crowds asked him, “What then should we do?” In reply he said to them, “Whoever has two coats must share with anyone who has none; and whoever has food must do likewise.” Even tax collectors came to be baptized, and they asked him, “Teacher, what should we do?” He said to them, “Collect no more than the amount prescribed for you.” Soldiers also asked him, “And we, what should we do?” He said to them, “Do not extort money from anyone by threats or false accusation, and be satisfied with your wages.”

  • Our Advent question for today

    We at EDN are in a period of reflection and contemplation for these important seasons of Advent and Christmas. Over the next few weeks, our attention will be on raising certain questions that we invite you to comment on.  We will return to our series probing controversial questions on January 4th.

     

    TODAY’S QUESTION: If your denomination or congregation doesn’t celebrate Advent, how do you prepare for Christmas?

  • Advent question of the day

    We at EDN are in a period of reflection and contemplation for these important seasons of Advent and Christmas. Over the next few weeks, our attention will be on raising certain questions that we invite you to comment on.  We will return to our series probing controversial questions on January 4th.

    According to the Gospel of John, Jesus is the light that is coming into the world. Where it shines, darkness (evil) is revealed and overcome.

    TODAY’S QUESTION: What aspect of human life are you waiting/working most for in which Jesus needs to be revealed more fully?

  • Advent question for the day

    We at EDN are in a period of reflection and contemplation for these important seasons of Advent and Christmas. Over the next few weeks, our attention will be on raising certain questions that we invite you to comment on.  We will return to our series probing controversial questions on January 4th.

    John the Baptist is a perfect Advent voice as he prepared the way for the coming of the Lord.

    TODAY’S QUESTION: How does the preaching of John the Baptist help you to prepare for Christmas, the coming of the Lord?

  • Advent question for the day

    We at EDN are in a period of reflection and contemplation for these important seasons of Advent and Christmas. Over the next few weeks, our attention will be on raising certain questions that we invite you to comment on.  We will return to our series probing controversial questions on January 4th.

    As you may have noted in our posts on the “war on Christmas,” or by merely observing the commercialization of this holiday, there are many forces at work to distract us from “the reason for the season.”

    TODAY’S QUESTION: If your congregation celebrates Advent, how does this help you to prepare for Christmas?

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