Saturday, December 24, 2022

T’was the day of the Night Before Christmas

 And all through the house, the cold was still seeping, through holes made by a mouse.

We’re still under a wind chill advisory. It looks like Santa will be taking the Arctic chills back North with him as he returns to the Pole. If you’re at all like me, be sure to leave him an extra cookie or two as a way of saying thanks. If I wanted to live in this kind of weather, I’d move to North Pole, Alaska, where someone named Santa Claus actually lives.

what stories does the snow tell?
what stories does the snow tell?
Photo by J. Harrington

I bought myself a Christmas present, a book entitled From What Is To What If. In an effort to approach the world more optimistically, or at least more enthusiastically, I’m reading it as part of my makeover for next year. I’m curious to see whether my cynicism or the book’s positivism prevail as I read it. Odds are my reactions will appear in these postings from time to time.

As an interesting, perhaps telling, coincidence, yesterday brought us an article in MinnPost about how progressive some elements of our “Republican-leaning” county can be: One farmer set off a solar energy boom in rural Minnesota; 10 years later, here’s how it worked out. I’m flashing back to when I used to watch The X-Files on tv and the scenes with the poster on the wall, noting “I want to believe.” 

Isn’t this a time of year when we celebrate many of our beliefs and the start of a new year? What stories will shape how we spend that year? Are there other, better, stories to which we should pay more attention? Who is telling those stories. Are we doing anything to create new stories? What new story, or variation on an existing story, would we like to put under the tree next year to share with our loved ones and, maybe, the world? Think about it.


The Story of the Christmas Guest

Adapted by Helen Steiner Rice from an old German Legend>

It happened one day at the year's white end;
Two neighbors called on an old-time friend.
And they found his shop, so meager and mean,
Made gay with a thousand boughs of green.

And Conrad was sitting with face a-shine,
When he suddenly stopped as he stitched a twine,
And said, "Old friends, at dawn today,
"When the cock was crowing the night away…

"The Lord appeared in a dream to me,
And said, 'I'm coming your guest to be'.
So I've been busy with feet astir,
Strewing my shop with branches of fir.

"The table is spread and the kettle is shined
And over the rafters, the holly is twined.
And now I will wait for my Lord to appear,
And listen closely so I will hear.
His step as He nears my humble place,
And I open the door and look in His face."

So his friends went home and left Conrad alone,
For this was the happiest day he had known.
For long since, his family had passed away,
And Conrad had spent a sad Christmas Day.

But he knew with his Lord as his Christmas Guest,
This Christmas would be the dearest and best.
And he listened with only joy in his heart,
And with every sound, he would rise with a start.

And look for the Lord to be standing there,
In answer to his earnest prayer.
So he ran to the window after hearing a sound,
But all that he saw on the snow covered ground…

Was a shabby beggar whose shoes were torn,
And all of his clothes were ragged and worn.
So Conrad was touched and went to the door,
And he said "Your feet must be frozen and sore.
And I have some shoes in my shop for you,
And a coat that will keep you warmer, too.

So with grateful heart, the man went away,
But as Conrad noticed the time of day,
He wondered what made his dear Lord so late,
And how much longer he'd have to wait.

When he heard a knock, he ran to the door,
But it was only a stranger once more;
A bent old crone with a shawl of black,
A bundle of faggots piled on her back.

She asked for only a place to rest,
But that was reserved for Conrad's Great Guest.
But her voice seemed to plead, "Don't send me away,
Let me rest for awhile on Christmas Day."

So Conrad brewed her a steaming cup
And told her to sit at the table and sup.
But after she left, he was filled with dismay,
For he saw that the hours were passing away.

And the Lord had not come, as He said He would.
And Conrad felt sure he had misunderstood.
Out of the stillness, he heard a cry,
"Please help me and tell me where am I?"
He stood disappointed, as twice before.

It was only a child who had wandered away,
And was lost from her family on Christmas Day.
Again Conrad's heart was heavy and sad
But he knew he should make this little girl glad.

SO he called her in and wiped her tears,
And quieted all her childish fears.
Then he led her back to her home once more,
But as he entered his darkened door,

He knew that the Lord was not coming today
For the hours of Christmas had passed away.
So he went to his room and knelt down to pray,
And he said, "Dear Lord, Why did You delay?

"What kept you from coming to call on me?
For I wanted so much Your face to see."
When soft in the silence, a voice he heard:
"Lift up your head, for I kept My Word.

"Three times My shadow crossed your floor,
Three times I came to your lonely door.
For I was the beggar with bruised, cold feet.
I was the woman you gave to eat.
And I was the child on the homeless street."



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