One Sunday evening, a mother overheard her five-year-old daughter practicing Hark! the Herald Angels Sing , a song she’d been rehearsing that morning in church for the Christmas program. It was all the mother could do to suppress her laughter when, in place of “with angelic host proclaim” she heard her daughter sing “with the jelly toast proclaim”. [1] We laugh at that child’s rendition of a well-loved Christmas carol; but I wonder: how much do we know about the angelic host vs. jelly toast? I want to meditate with you for a few moments on the angels of Christmas. I would like to ask and try to answer four important questions: Who are the angels of Christmas? What is their work? What is their perspective on Christmas? Why does it matter? Who are the angels of Christmas? The word for angel in Hebrew means “one going” or “one sent”, “a messenger”. The word in Greek also means “a messenger”, either divine or human. Today I want to focus with you on the divi