 Fy份 fawr ystyrm ddyddoedd yn mwyafolaf. Mae yw'r fawr lleiwfod arlinei yn tuiwch i ddim yn droi Dan Robertson, y ministeriaeth Gerdd-Davidson-Maines-Parish Church. Fy fawr ystyrm yma, ddiolch chi i gael gysylltu arfer i gael duol i gael eu cherddau. ystod wrth fy mod i gael'r sefydliadau o'r hyn sy'n bwysig yw'r iawn, oherwydd mae'r fawr yw'r gweithio ar y syniad. Mae'r fawr eich gweithio, rydw i'r fawr wnaeth sy'n bwysig, ac mae'n rydw i ddod ddod i ddod ddod. Rydw i'r ddaeth eich holl gwaith o'r gweithio, rydw i'r holl gwaithio ar yr iddo, rydw i'r holl gwaith yw'r holl. Y top billing, Mary and Joseph, there was Angel Gabriel and Wise Men, below them were the angels in the choir, then there were the lowly shepherds. The higher the billing, the more important you were, the closer you got to be to Jesus. I remember the Joseph of my nativity feeling that being Joseph made him a somebody rather than a nobody. Some of that came out in not good ways because thinking that you're a somebody and others are nobodies has a habit of coming out in not good ways. I know about Joseph because it was me. What I missed as a five-year-old and for many years was that the Christmas story turns the whole pecking order on its head. It speaks of a teenage mother, a carpenter's stepdad, outsiders and those looked down upon shepherds being invited to get up close and personal with Jesus, who Christianity claims is actually God. It speaks of self-important King Herod being repelled. The Christmas story speaks of a loving, down-to-earth God who comes into this beautiful and broken world to save us from a I'm a somebody and their nobody inclinations. Christ at Christmas calls us to reconsider the pecking order way of living, which either sinks us when we fail to live up to other people's standards or our own or puffs us up with pride and leaves us looking down on others. The Christmas story calls us to consider that we are all more fragile and insecure and self-centred than we care to think and more loved, welcomed and wanted than we dare to believe. It goes on to deliver the good news that in Christ we have a God dying to love us, dying to forgive us and dying to be our friend. One whose love is stronger than death if he rose from the dead as is claimed. Jesus invites us to consider our value, the value of others and how close to him we want to get. Merry Christmas and happy new year.