|  | Calvary 
        Episcopal Church
 Memphis, Tennessee
 THE CHRONICLE
 December 22, 2002
 Volume 47, No. 44
 The Stars Have No Voice, But They Shine in Darkness
 Who has not gone out of doors on a dark, clear night and looked 
        overhead and seen sparkling lights hanging in the darkness and whispered 
        deep, deep within, "Ah!" Those lights that hang from heaven 
        are the reminders that the darkness can never overcome the light; that 
        no darkness can ever overcome us; that eternity stretches far beyond the 
        bounds of our human understanding and our planet. As we continue looking 
        upward, our necks begin to ache, and slowly it feels as if our very souls 
        are being drawn upward, to the vast beyond, which is at once frighteningly 
        unknown yet miraculously familiar.
 Psalm 
        19 proclaims,  
         The 
          heavens are telling the glory of God - and the firmament shows God's 
          handiwork. One day tells its tale to another, and one night imparts 
          knowledge to another. Although they have no words or language and their 
          voices are not heard, their sound has gone out into all lands, and their 
          message to the ends of the world.  The 
        stars have no voice, no way to herald the news of God, but they have something 
        greater than words - they shine in darkness. And those who haveeyes to see follow the light right into the presence of Jesus. Can you 
        imagine how the world would be if more of us acted like stars pointing 
        the way to God? If our spirits were so filled with light, that others 
        could find their way to God simply by following our light?
 But, 
        what does it mean to act like a star in the complexity of the 21st century? 
        Itmeans, first of all, that you feel the heat and light of God's love in 
        your own heart. It means remembering times in your own life when darkness 
        seemed your only
 companion; when in the midst of that darkness you felt the light of God 
        shining,
 however small, in the cavern of your own abyss, and you knew that all 
        hope was not lost. That you had a chance for new life. That you could 
        reach out your tremulous fingers and the Light would grasp you and pull 
        you out of the pit into the land of brightness. It's hard to be a star, 
        letting your light shine and pointing out to others where God is if you 
        have not known the terror of darkness and the reality of being pulled, 
        yourself, into God's light. The reason for this is because stars do not 
        rely on words to bear their message - words that can cleverly persuade 
        others to come to God. No, stars rely on the light of God that shines 
        through them to bear the message.
  
        What 
          star is this, with beams so bright,More beauteous than the noonday light?
 It shines to herald forth the King,
 And Gentiles to his crib to bring.
 ("Hymn 124" from The Hymnal 1982, ©Copyright 
          1985 by The Church Pension Fund)
 So, 
        if you choose to be a star this Christmas, spend time reading, reflecting 
        and praying--then re-reading, reflecting and praying again--through the 
        Gospels so that you learn what it is to follow Jesus. Then follow, by 
        offering the simplest true gestures. Offer them in the darkness, and the 
        light of God within you will grasp others from their darkness and point 
        them to the light of God.The Rev. Canon Renée Miller
 
 
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