Whom is Christmas addressing? Whom did it address then, 2000 years back? Bobby Jose Kattikad says that Christmas addresses vulnerabilities and the vulnerable: the weak, the wounded, the humiliated, and so on. He had no space in the inn. He is born in a cattle shed which is an address-less space; he creates it into a new address. God creates a new space where all would find space and peace; shepherds, angels, kings, and many more find space and peace there. The angle sings, “glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace to all people.” People poured into the manger. We are saying thee kings from the count of gifts, but early chronicles say that there must have been many wise people who came to the manger. Footfall is important. How many come to my house? How many come to my organisation? One of the factors that indicate the health of a home is to see how many people come to that house. Even animals and birds visit a house where there is kindness and generosity. To some houses eve...
Shakespeare’s famous words from Macbeth, "full of sound and fury, signifying nothing," may well describe our times: everyone with content and without content, with credibility and without credibility, is showing up and showing off on social media and on other public platforms. Paul instructed the early Christians in 1 Thessalonians 4: 11 “Make it your goal to lead a quiet life, minding your own business and working with your hands.” It is said that Buddha, the enlightened one, lived a quiet life and passed through this world noiselessly. Look at a day in the life of Jesus (Mark 1: 29-39), he is preaching in the synagogue, praying alone in a silent place, healing people, casting away demons, and more. The devil could not keep silence; but Jesus did not allow them to talk about him. Many were searching for him to hear him or to be healed by him, and some others perhaps were also searching for him to destroy and kill him. Jesus makes no big noise about neither of them. He live...