Twentieth-century...
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Twentieth-century Anglo-American novelist Taylor Caldwell compellingly captured the meaning of Christmas: "We are never alone." All the feelings of despair and loneliness which accompany Christmas for man (Psychology Today has reported that 45% of us experience depression over the holiday) don't stand a chance. In the same spirit, the late nineteenth-early twentieth-century writer Hamilton Wright Mabie speaks of Christmas as "the season which engages the whole world in a conspiracy of love." Today, because of the events in Bethlehem we have been wrapped up, joyfully trapped, in a conspiracy of love, a compelling love which aims to trap us all and do its bidding. This is why our lesson speaks of God's grace and how we have been made a people zealous for works (vv. 11, 14).
We cannot help ourselves but be joyful when we get caught up in Christmas' conspiracy of love. It is why there is so much celebration in our services, homes, and streets. This joy conspires to trap other people for Jesus. For as Mother Teresa once said: "Joy is a net of love by which you can catch souls." Christmas' conspiracy of joyful love is out to trap us, to get us to catch a few more souls for Jesus.
We cannot help ourselves but be joyful when we get caught up in Christmas' conspiracy of love. It is why there is so much celebration in our services, homes, and streets. This joy conspires to trap other people for Jesus. For as Mother Teresa once said: "Joy is a net of love by which you can catch souls." Christmas' conspiracy of joyful love is out to trap us, to get us to catch a few more souls for Jesus.

