Sometimes in secret moments I lament that Christmas
has lost its magic. When I was little –
like most other kids I knew – Christmas and birthdays were high points of the
year. Christmas had the added delight of
a whole season of preparation and societal festivities. It seemed forever away and the anticipation
was dizzying. The feast day burst upon a
family with lights, sweets, song and presents.
Fast forward to adulthood and some of that sparkle
often becomes a bit lackluster. Actually
making the preparations, ticking off
my mandatory gift list, dragging out boxes of decorations (and the thought of
putting them away again) aren’t as fun as they were when my responsibilities
ended with letting my parents know what I wanted
for Christmas and letting sugar-plums dance through my head.
It helps to have children in the house to recapture some
of that magic. It makes it more fun when
we put on Christmas for them. We decorate and revive the customs we grew up
with, adding new ones, perhaps. We teach
them through our observances and celebrations what Christmas is.
Hopefully, they’ll be left with a more complete understanding of the
great greatness that is the Incarnation of the eternal God; the Mystery of
Christ.
I was talking about this with my friend, Laurie,
recently. She is the youngest of eight
children in a family that stirs up thoughts of the Waltons TV show. She described her family’s Christmas morning:
a lavish cornucopia of giving! Her
family was not particularly affluent, materially anyway. They were rich in children and love.
Her favorite part as a child was waking up and rushing
down to see the Christmas tree deep in a sea of gifts. With eight kids, each receiving a gift from
and giving to parents and exchanging with each other, you might need a slide
rule to figure the present count. They
went to morning Mass and ate a big breakfast before plunging into the
gifts. Laurie remembers that she would do
her best to delay the opening as long as she could because she knew the magic
lay in the anticipation, in the hope - the unopened gifts. Once they were unwrapped, something was lost. Once it began, the end was near.
This reminds me of Caryll Houselander’s meditation on
Mary’s Advent, her expectation the Incarnation of the Word of God.
“Humanly speaking, the time of Advent
must have been the happiest time in Our Lady’s life. . . . But sometimes a pang of grief must have shot
through her; for example when the young wheat grew and she saw it pierce the
earth with little swords. Perhaps the
first sword to pierce her heart was a blade of green wheat.
For was
not her precious burden a grain of wheat sown in a field?
Was He
not bread? The world’s bread that must
be broken?”
When I focus only on the magic of Christmas – the gift giving, the decorations, the feasting
- I might miss the mystery of
Christmas. The Mystery of Christ
includes His life, death, resurrection and return. To overcome death, He had to die. It is what He was born for – on Christmas.
Caryll Houselander goes on:
“This is what it meant to Mary to
give human nature to God.
He was invulnerable; He asked her for
a body to be wounded.
He was joy itself; He asked her to
give Him tears.
He was God; He asked her to make Him
man.
He asked for hands and feet to be
nailed.
He asked for flesh to be scourged.
He asked for blood to be shed.
He asked for a heart to be broken.
The stable at Bethlehem was the first
Calvary.
The wooden manger was the first
Cross.
The swaddling bands were the first
burial bands.
The Passion had begun.
Christ was man.”
True as this may be, it would be wrong to not celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ,
even knowing it heralds His death. Mary
did. The Angels did. The kings of the world adored Him, the second
person of the Blessed Trinity, contained in the tiny being lying in a manger. They brought Him the best the world had to
offer. If I wish to be wise, I ought to
do the same.
Let us bring Him our gold. In a literal sense, I can give of my plenty
to Him in the “distressing disguise of the poor.” While I feast, I should help others to
feast. It is fitting that we all feast
on Our Lord’s birthday. I will give more
generously.
Let us bring Him our frankincense. Incense is offered to God. I should look inside my heart to see if the
God who created and redeemed me is the god I truly worship. Or, do I adore His gifts? Do I give Him my first and best? I will examine my conscience, confess and
amend my life.
Incense represents our prayers rising to God. Are my prayers like a burning thurible,
sending fragrant smoke billowing up to Him?
I will pray better. I will seek
to open my heart to His.
Let us bring Him our myrrh. Myrrh means “bitter” and was used to prepare a
body for death. Do I offer my life to
the One who died for me? Am I willing to
receive as a gift all the bitterness that comes so it may unite me to His
redemptive work? Am I willing to lay my
life down – if not in bodily death, in the death of inconvenience – for those
He loves? I will need Your help, Lord,
to pour out myself to the last drop as You did.
And so, as I make the preparations for Christmas this
Advent, I will strive not so much to create magic,
but to enter into the mystery of
Christ. I wish for Jesus to abide in my heart as Mary carried Him under her heart on the journey to Bethlehem.
With the gifts under the tree in
the living room, let me place my whole self on the tree of the cross with
Him. I wish to give him my
vulnerability, my joys and tears, my hands and feet, and my heart. He will open my gift and transform it into a
life more fully lived.
I suspect when I give myself as a gift to Our Lord,
the results will be magical.
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You can find this meditation in Caryll Houselander's book, Reed of God, available through my Amazon affiliate link (from which I might get a little remuneration if I'm lucky!). Click here!
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You can find this meditation in Caryll Houselander's book, Reed of God, available through my Amazon affiliate link (from which I might get a little remuneration if I'm lucky!). Click here!
Love the last line. That is all he truly wants. All of me. Blessings!
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