What’s your favorite Christmas movie?

What’s your favorite Christmas movie?

In our family, the list includes Elf, Home Alone, A Christmas Carol, Polar Express, Rudolph, A Charlie Brown Christmas, and just about any Hallmark movie (my wife loves a predictably happy ending sentimental love story!).

Most intriguing to me is our granddaughter’s fascination with the Grinch. Brenna was here for an overnight this weekend and we watched two versions of the Grinch. I asked her why she liked him and her response was short and to the point, “he’s funny looking.”

Of all the characters in Christmas movies, my least favorite are those who steal the joy. The Grinch is atop that list. Buddy the Elf’s father, the crooks in Home Alone, Mr. Potter in It’s a Wonderful Life, and Ebenezer Scrooge in Dickens’ Christmas Carol round off the group of curmudgeons.

Granted, the antagonist has an important role to play. Their portrayals all seem to fit the stingy, shrewd, and selfish contrast that invites us into the story of contrast. We root for the characters who humbly and responsively receive the true meaning of Christmas.

In the biblical Christmas story, King Herod is the striking example of grinch-like pride. His earthly rule is threatened by the declared prophecies of a new king. 

In this world, there are far too many who are stealing the joy of Christmas, replacing the Jesus story with substitutes that simply don’t point us back to the Christ child. 

Who is your favorite Christmas character?

Thankfully, there are several to choose from, this year and every year, that we accompany to the manger with wonder and joy. The Messiah Jesus is surrounded by characters in worshipful support of his coming: Mary, Joseph, the angels, shepherds, and wise men.  

Indeed, the promised coming of Jesus is worthy of our humble adoration. Miraculous. Monumental. Messianic. 

Let’s acknowledge the reality of those who will seek to steal our joy, and instead, let’s be protagonists for Jesus as Advent comes to conclusion and we’re ushered into Christmastide once more. 

Merry Christmas to you and yours, from all of us at Leadership Transformations!

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Steve Macchia

Founder & President

The Rev. Dr. Stephen A. Macchia is founder and president of Leadership Transformations, Inc. (LTI), a ministry serving the spiritual formation, discernment, and renewal of leaders and learners since 2003. For more than 20 years he was the Director of the Pierce Center for Disciple-Building at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary, where he continues to serve as an adjunct faculty member in the Doctor of Ministry Program. From 1989-2003 he was the president of Vision New England, the largest regional church renewal association in the country. Earlier in his ministry life, Steve was a member of the pastoral staff of Grace Chapel in Lexington, Massachusetts for 11 years. He is the author or co-author of 17 books,  including Praying the Parables of Jesus (NavPress/Tyndale), The Discerning Life (Zondervan Reflective), and Crafting a Rule of Life, Becoming A Healthy Church (LTI), and Broken and Whole (IVP).  He and his wife Ruth live in the Boston (MA) area and are the proud parents of two married children and grandparents to three adorable grandchildren. Steve’s personal website is www.SteveMacchia.com.

My soul comes alive singing the great hymns of the church and enjoying the beauty of God’s creation. I’m in awe of God for fulfilling the dream for LTI that he birthed in my heart, for the team he has assembled, and the transformational impact experienced in the leaders and teams we serve.

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Mitzi Mak

Selah-West Faculty & Emmaus Faculty

Mitzi started her professional life as a high school social studies teacher. She and her husband Jerry then served cross-culturally for ten+ years, living abroad first in India and then Kurdistan, N. Iraq. In addition to being a Spiritual Director, she now serves as a Formation and Care pastor in her local church in Houston, TX. She has graduated from LTI’s Selah Spiritual Direction training as well as LTI’s Emmaus Formational Leadership Program.

Mitzi enjoys engaging conversation, reading fiction, doing jigsaw/crossword puzzles, ocean gazing and exploring the world with Jerry through food and travel.

God has two main callings in Mitzi’s life: to care for those who care for others and to be a guide in helping others have a healthy relationship with the Trinity – recognizing God’s loving presence and activity in their lives and how to faithfully respond.

Selah was a transformative experience for me – allowing the contemplative within to emerge and to beautifully co-exist with my extraverted personality.