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Tuesday, December 12, 2006
i was reading this from RBC daily bread (Christmas Edition)
During the Great Depression that hit the United States in the 1930s, a family in the Midwest struggled to put food on their table. they had no money for luxuries.
One day posters all over town announced that a circus was coming. Admission would be $1. A boy in the family wanted to see the show, but his father told him that he would have to earn the money on his own. The youngster had never seen a circus before, so he worked feverishly and was able to buy a ticket.
On the day the circus arrived, he went to see the performers and the animals parade through town. As he watched, a clown came dancing over to him, and the boy put his ticket in the clown's hand. Then he stood on the curb and cheered as the rest of the parade moved by.
The youngster rushed home to tell his parents what he had seen and how exciting the circus was. His father listened then took his son in his arms and said, "Son, you didn't see the circus. All you saw was the parade."
That story is a parable of Christmas. Many people get excited about the festivities but miss the main event. During this season, let's remember what happened in a humble and what Jesus' birth means to us. - Haddon Robinson
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