For Christians around the world, Christmas is the joyful celebration of the birth of Jesus. To affirm their beliefs — that God is present and hasn't abandoned them — the faith community at Abundant Life Christian School in Madison, Wisconsin, is embracing its holiday traditions just days after a deadly shooting there.
''When people say, ‘Where is your God?' He is more evident now than he's ever been to us,'' the Rev. Sarah Karlen told The Associated Press. ''I'm sure the phrase ‘Prince of Peace' and ‘God with us' is going to be leaned into a little more this year.''
Karlen is a pastor at City Church, which in the late 1970s founded the school where she's also the theater teacher. On Saturday, in the same space decorated with festive trees where students had performed their Christmas concert just the previous week, the church held the funeral of a 14-year-old student, Rubi Patricia Vergara. She was killed Monday when another student opened fire, also killing a teacher and wounding several others at the school on the same campus.
''When we say that God is with us, especially here at Christmas time — when we say, you know, Emmanuel ‘God with us,' that he came to Earth to be with us — I know beyond a shadow of a doubt each and every one of us here at City Church would say that in a very new way,'' Karlen added.
Decked in holiday light displays and a Nativity scene, the evangelical, nondenominational church with over 1,200 members also hosted a vigil service Tuesday.
Then, drawing from Scripture and particularly the Book of Job, pastors addressed the challenge of reconciling faith in a loving God with his allowing great suffering to occur.
Karlen also challenged some of the taunts on the school's social media that questioned its religious beliefs. To the assembly's applause, she repeatedly affirmed God's presence in the midst of the grieving and the weariness.
''None of us on our staff are saying that we understand why or how something happened. But we do understand that God sees us, sees things very differently than we do,'' Karlen said later.