Spurgeon towards the end of his 1857 sermon on Luke 2:14 says
Now, I have one more lesson for you, and I have done. That lesson is PRECEPTIVE.
I wish everybody that keeps Christmas this year, would keep it as the angels
kept it. There are many persons who, when they talk about keeping Christmas,
mean by that the cutting of the bands of their religion for one day in the year,
as if Christ were the Lord of misrule, as if the birth of Christ should be
celebrated like the orgies of Bacchus. There are some very religious people,
that on Christmas would never forget to go to church in the morning; they
believe Christmas to be nearly as holy as Sunday, for they reverence the
tradition of the elders. Yet their way of spending the rest of the day is very
remarkable; for if they see their way straight up stairs to their bed at night,
it must be by accident. They would not consider they had kept Christmas in a
proper manner, if they did not verge on gluttony and drunkenness. They are many
who think Christmas cannot possibly be kept, except there be a great shout of
merriment and mirth in the house, and added to that the boisterousness of sin.
Now, my brethren, although we, as successors of the Puritans, will not keep the
day in any religious sense whatever, attaching nothing more to it than to any
other day: believing that every day may be a Christmas for ought we know, and
wishing to make every day Christmas, if we can, yet we must try to set an
example to others how to behave on that day; and especially since the angels
gave glory to God: let us do the same.
He ends
He ends
What more shall I say? May God give you peace with yourselves; may he give you
good will towards all your friends, your enemies, and your neighbors; and may he
give you grace to give glory to God in the highest. I will say no more, except
at the close of this sermon to wish every one of you, when the day shall come,
the happiest Christmas you ever had in your lives.
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