"As soon as the angel of the Lord appeared to the shepherds, and the glory of the Lord shone around them, they were terrified. It had come to this, that man was afraid of his God, and when God sent down His loving messengers with tidings of great joy, men were filled with as much fear as though the angel of death had appeared with an uplifted sword. The silence of the night and its dreary gloom caused no fear in the shepherds' hearts, but the joyful herald of the skies, robed in the glories of grace, terrified them. We must not condemn the shepherds on this account as though they were timid or uneducated, for they were only acting as every other person in that age would have done under the same circumstances. Dear friends, I will first call your attention to the subject of "the fear" which I have already spoken; then, secondly, we shall invite your earnest attention to "the remedy" which the angels came to proclaim; and then, thirdly, we will endeavor to make an application of this remedy to various cases."--C. H. Spurgeon