Thank you Allison Gingras at Reconciled To You and Elizabeth Riordan at Theology Is A Verb for hosting Catholic bloggers at Worth Revisiting. It is a privilege for us to share our work with you and your readers.
Some Christmas Memories
Most of us recall the joy and excitement
we experienced as young children singing Christmas carols and happy
birthday to Jesus while waiting to see what gifts Santa would leave
under our tree. How many times
did my siblings and I resolve to catch the jolly old man in the act only
to fall fast asleep – many hours later than Mom and Dad would have
liked? Strange how we could not
quite understand why they looked so tired as we exploded into their
bedroom at 3 A.M. and at fifteen minute intervals thereafter until they
finally conceded defeat, crawled out of bed, and witnessed our glee and
excitement.
(Image source: Wikimedia Commons) |
In 1968 I was more than 8000 miles from
home, in a nation at war. We spent much of a brutally hot and humid day,
filling sandbags to reinforce our sagging bunkers, only to spend most
of that night in those same shelters, seeking to shield ourselves from a
seemingly unending barrage of rocket and mortar fire. The night was not silent. There was no peace; little good will was evident. This is what happens when men forget the Prince of Peace.
Fifteen years later, some 20 miles from
home, I found myself surrounded by an ocean of razor wire and
unwelcoming prison staff, upset they had to be on duty instead of being
with their families. The inmates we came to visit, on the other hand,
radiated the joy and peace of the Season, appreciative that someone
cared enough to come as a representative of a merciful and forgiving
God. Tears of gratitude for
this gesture of love flowed from Juan’s eyes, as he handed me a
Christmas card. It had cost him $2.50, his entire weekly salary. It was
my turn to cry.
In 2007, our son came home for Christmas. How excited my wife and I were to pick him up at the Rochester airport Christmas Eve - his cross country flight so long delayed because of wintry weather conditions. What
a great Christmas gift! We enjoyed his company as we chatted nonstop
during the drive home, arriving there shortly before 1 A.M. Our
son was exhausted. It was difficult to just drop him off at our home
and immediately leave, but we had a long standing and important
commitment to fulfill. He
understood that a magnificent gift awaited his parents just a mile away.
It was quiet and peaceful as we entered the Adoration Chapel in our
Church where for the next two hours we were blessed to celebrate
Christmas with and to be in the presence of the Prince of Peace.
(This post is excerpted from my book, Fleeting Glimpses of the Silly, Sentimental and Sublime)
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