I love the national anthem. You do not question it. You stand up, straighten your back, look noble and sing it with more enthusiasm than talent. I have sung it in school halls, dusty grounds, cinema theatres, and once on our Independence Day in Austria.
Patriotic pride, yes. Spiritual experience, no.
Which is why I was puzzled when a choir in Mumbai began a Christmas carol service with the national anthem.
It felt like starting a birthday party by showing your passport. Perfectly valid, but slightly odd.
My faith and my nationality have always lived peacefully in separate rooms of my heart, occasionally nodding at each other but never competing for attention. So why the need to announce it so loudly. We are Indian. We also worship differently. Is there really a need to prove both at the same time.
It made me wonder whether something else was at play.
Not patriotism, but fear.
A quiet nervousness that says, let us clarify before someone questions us. Let us declare our loyalty to our country before someone doubts it. Fear has a way of sneaking into places where confidence once lived. It makes us explain things that never needed explaining.
Christmas, of all days, should remind us that fear is not in charge. The message of Christmas is not subtle. God did not enter the world quietly through the back door.
He arrived as a baby and managed to shake an entire kingdom.
King Herod did not panic because armies were marching. He panicked because a child, Jesus was born. And born in a poor stable. That tells you everything you need to know about real power.
The Bible repeats two words more than any others. ‘Fear not’. Not try harder. Not shout louder. Not prove yourself.
Fear not.
It was said to shepherds who were minding their own business.
It was said to Mary when her entire future was turned upside down.
It was said again and again because humans are remarkably good at forgetting it.
If there is anger today towards a tiny minority of Christians in this country, it is not because they are powerful. It is because they are perceived to be protected by something or Someone greater than numbers.
Fear often disguises itself as aggression.
When people are secure, they do not shout. They do not threaten. They do not need to sing louder than everyone else.
Christmas is not the season of defence. It is the season of confidence. Quiet confidence. The kind that does not need flags waved in sanctuaries or credentials announced before prayer.
So today, on Christmas Day, perhaps the best carol we can sing is not with a choir at all. It is with our lives.
Be Bold!
Release the spirit of fear.
Let the Spirit of victory take its place. Not the victory of noise, but the victory of peace. And let two simple words reign again, fear not.
Happy Christmas dear friend…. FEAR NOT…!
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Robert Clements is a newspaper columnist and writes a daily column, which has graced the pages of over 60 newspapers and magazines, from a daily column in the Khaleej Times, Dubai, the Morning Star, London, and in nearly every state in India, from The Statesman in Kolkata, to the Kashmir Times in Kashmir to the Trinity Mirror in Chennai.
Well said
Thank you Joseph!
So well explained, Dearest Bob. “Fear Not” indeed. Written so many times in the Word for us to remember .
Thank you so so much for the lovely message ☺️
Thank you Christine!
Fear Not. Two words but so powerful. Thank you for this timely reminder given the current enviroment.
Merry Christmas
Thank you Blaise!
Beautiful confirmation !
Fear not from the Word …….
Feels so strengthened when you are reminded of these two words .
Thank you Bob
You’re welcome Sheela!
Fear not! On the Feast of St.Stephen we were reminded of this. Thanks Bob. In the present times it will do us good to repeat these two words to ourselves every day, because HE is with us !
Very true. The angelic announcement of the birth of Jesus starts with: “But the angel said to them, “DO NOT BE AFRAID. I bring you good news that will cause great joy for all the people.” (Luke 2.10). Fear is the opposite of faith, isn’t it?
True. Thank you Michael.