Christ-mas Writings



The Cobbler and His Guest
Author Unknown


There once lived in the city of Marseilles an old shoemaker, loved and honored by his neighbors, who affectionately called him "Father Martin"

One Christ-mas Eve, as he sat alone in his little shop reading of the visit of the Wise Men to the infant Jesus, and of the gifts they brought, he said to himself. "If tomorrow were the first Christ-mas, and if Jesus were to be born in Marseilles this night, I know what I would give Him!" He rose from his stool and took from a shelf overhead two tiny shoes of softest snow white leather, with bright silver buckles. "I would give Him those, my finest work."

Replacing the shoes, he blew out the candle and retired to rest. Hardly had he closed his eyes, it seemed, when he heard a voice call his name..."Martin! Martin!"

Intuitively he felt a presence. Then the voice spoke again..."Martin, you have wished to see Me. Tomorrow I shall pass by your window. If you see Me, and bid Me enter, I shall be your guest at your table."

Father Martin did not sleep that night for joy. And before it was yet dawn he rose and swept and tidied up his little shop. He spread fresh sand upon the floor, and wreathed green boughs of fir along the rafters. On the spotless linen covered table he placed a loaf of white bread, a jar of honey, and a pitcher of milk, and over the fire he hung a pot of tea Then he took up his patient vigil at the window.

Presently he saw an old street sweeper pass by, blowing upon his thin, gnarled hands to warm them. "Poor fellow, he must be half frozen," thought Martin. Opening the door he called out to him, "Come in, my friend, and warm, and drink a cup of hot tea." And the man gratefully accepted the invitation.

An hour passed, and Martin saw a young, miserably clothed women carrying a baby. She paused wearily to rest in the shelter of his doorway. The heart of the old cobbler was touched. Quickly he flung open the door.

"Come in and warm while you rest," he said to her. "You do not look well," he remarked.

"I am going to the hospital. I hope they will take me in, and my baby boy," she explained. "My husband is at sea, and I am ill, without a soul."

"Poor child!" cried Father Martin. "You must eat something while you are getting warm. No, Then let me give a cup of milk to the little one. Ah! What a bright, pretty fellow he is! Why, you have put no shoes on him!"

"I have no shoes for him," sighed the mother sadly. "Then he shall have this lovely pair I finished yesterday." And Father Martin took down from the shelf the soft little snow white shoes he had admired the evening before. He slipped them on the child's feet...they fit perfectly. And shortly the poor young mother left, two shoes in her hand and tearful with gratitude.

And Father Martin resumed his post at the window. Hour after hour went by, and although many people passed his window, and many needy souls shared his hospitality, the expected Guest did not appear.

"It was only a dream," he sighed, with a heavy heart. "I did not believe; but he has not come."

Suddenly, so it seemed to his weary eyes, the room was flooded with a strange light. And to the cobbler's astonished vision there appeared before him, one by one, the poor street sweeper, the sick mother and her child, and all the people whom he had aided during the day. And each smiled at him and said. "Have you not seen me? Did I not sit at your table?" Then they vanished.

At last, out of the silence, Father Martin heard again the gentle voice repeating the old familiar words. "Whosoever shall receive one such in My name, receiveth Me...for I was an hungered, and ye gave Me meat; I was athirst, and ye gave Me drink; I was a stranger, and ye took Me in...verily I say unto you, inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these, ye have done it unto Me."

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The Coldest Christ-mas Eve
by Tom Connolly


I was late -- again. Most of the time it wouldn't matter, but this was Christ-mas Eve, and I was sure that every seat would be taken by the time I got there. This was the one night of the year when everybody seemed to want to go to church, even the folks who hadn't seen the inside of a house of worship since last Christ-mas.

As I entered the sanctuary, all I could see was an assembly of gaily dressed strangers. I was just about to accept the inevitability of the situation and take my place, leaning against the back wall, when I noticed Becka sitting on the end of a pew in the back, left hand side of the room -- and no one was sitting next to her.

Becka was a sweet gal. She was just a little slow. She asked all the wrong questions at all the wrong times. When she sang -- and she always sang -- she was a bit off key, and very loud. I don't think I ever see her sit still for more than half a minute. Most of the congregation tended to stay away from her, but I thought she was fun. She had only started coming to the services in September. She was trying so hard to learn everything she could about the church, but most of all, she was trying to be a friend to everybody, somebody, anybody. She really wanted to share the joy that was building up inside of her.

The church was brightly decorated in red and green, gold silver and blue. The joyous crowd overflowed the building with hope and peace. With smiles and expectation. With dreams and prayers. Yet, despite all this, all I could do was cry. I was so lonely, so depressed, so afraid.

"What's the matter, Tom?" Becka whispered as she reached over and brushed a tear from my cheek. The genuine concern in her voice was the first sign I had heard all day that someone cared about what I thought or felt. "Don't worry about me, little lady. I'm OK." I tried to smile, but you have to have a little joy to smile. I felt like telling her the whole story, about the needless bickering and fighting, about the slamming door and the emptiness I began to feel as their taxi drove off down the street, about the remorse and the regrets and the fear, but this was Becka. She had enough trouble taking care of her own life, What could she do about mine? How could she understand what I was going through? This was Christ-mas Eve, a time for love and peace, for laughter and for sharing. But how can you feel all those things, or any of those things when you are all alone?

Oh sure, I had been alone before, but never at Christ-mas. And I had never been so alone that I forced myself to get out of the house just because the clock ticking off the wall was making too much noise for me. I had spent most of the day driving around town. The weather wasn't too bad, but deep inside of me this felt like the coldest holiday I had ever seen. I spent several hours strolling through the mall, not to shop -- I couldn't think of anyone who gave a darn what I bought them, or even if I bought them anything. I just wanted to be around other people. What I would have given if just a little of their joy rubbed off on me. But it didn't work, their laughter just made me more lonely than ever.

Back on home, I turned on the news channel on the TV. I heard the same stories time after time. It didn't matter. It was just nice to hear a pleasant human voice. Around dark, I warmed up a TV dinner in the microwave. It didn't matter that it had no taste. After that I sat down beside my little Christ-mas tree and decided that now was as good a time as ever to open my presents, both of them. There was a package of nice socks from Mom and a gift certificate for Ice Cream from my kid. "Great." I chuckled to myself. "Now I can be warm and cold at the same time.

I slouched down in my chair and drifted off to sleep. That slumber was the nicest thing that happened to me all day. In fact, I overslept a little. That's why I was late to church. I really didn't understand it all. How could I ever expect Becka to?

"I'm sorry, I didn't mean to be like this, not tonight." I told the concerned young lady. "It's just that my family is away and all my friends seem to be out of town. I don't mind being by myself most of the time, this is different. It's Christ-mas. This is no time to be alone."

Becka stared at me for several seconds. I could tell that she was trying as hard as she could to understand what I was saying. It all seemed clear to me, but somehow something about it just didn't make sense to her. Then she reached out and ever so gently took hold of my hand. In an effort to explain her confusion and bewilderment, she spoke just seven words: "You're never alone when you have Jesus."

What a fool I had been! How in the world had I forgotten the whole reason for this wonderful holiday? Suddenly, I lost all interest in everything else that was going on around me and anything else that was being said. Up until that point I didn't think the Wise Men could have given me the guidance to bring me out of my depression, yet this charming young miss had said just the right thing at just the right time to wake me up and set me free.

I reached out and put my arms around my incredibly wonderful friend and held her just as close as I could. I'm sure everyone around us must have thought that I was as crazy as a loon, but I didn't give a hoot what they thought. I was laughing, crying, hugging, loving, thanking, hoping, rejoicing and praying all at the same time. I came to church that Christ-mas Eve dreaming that I would find some sort of peace, and suddenly, without a moments warning, my dreams all came true.

Since that cold, winter night, I've heard preachers, priests, and rabbis of all denominations and persuasions speak. I've listened to the evangelists, great and small. I've seen the famous and I've seen the best, but the sermon that has always meant the most to me was a seven word lessen in life and love, delivered with a smile that could -- and did -- warm the coldest Christ-mas eve, by a sweet little gal named Becka. "You're never alone when you have Jesus."

Re-printed with Permission

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Dear Santa Claus
Author Unknown


You're probably surprised to receive this letter from an adult. You may be even more surprised as you read it to find that the writer is neither a maiden aunt, nor a disgruntled bachelor. I'm a young mother. It isn't my intention Santa to hurt your feelings, you see, my family has paid tribute to you for many past Christ-mases. My husband and I, when we were in our childhood, and now our children, who are six, four and two still care for you. How much they care has really proven a problem in recent years, and it's threatening to happen again. Our children worship you, they speak of you constantly. They watch diligently for your December 25th appearance.

Can you tell us, Santa, what have you done to deserve this faithfulness from two generations? Can you promise any future consideration in exchange for past loyalties? During a family crisis, have you ever told us: "Lo, I am with you always."? Were you ever with us during sorrow to comfort us with these words: "Your sorrow will be turned into joy"? And Santa, there have been some doubtful times. Where were you? We didn't hear from you the calming message, "I will never leave or forsake you." We've come to the conclusion you have been even less than a friend should be. And we've been shortchanged. My three children have stood on a windy, cold Main Street just to get a glimpse of your jolly face. They have written heartfelt yearly letters. They have gone to the department stores to whisper in your ear. They have worked hard at being good in anticipation of your Christ-mas Eve visit.

Yes, they've done all this, as their father and I did before them. But, there's gonna be a change this Christ-mas, Santa. There isn't gonna be any Santa Claus worship in our home. We decided to focus our attention and adoration on another being. One who has stood by 365 days of the year, day and night. One who has comforted us during the sorrowful and doubtful times. And, yes, the times of crisis also.

It's true that your name will probably be mentioned around our house, Santa, old habits are hard to break abruptly. But someone else's name will be mentioned much, much more often. The children will probably work just as hard at being good, but I hope they will do it for another inducement. One that will last the whole year long. To bring glory to another's name. And that is the One that has given us so much more, and not just on Christ-mas Eve. You may call our family fickle, Santa, but we don't mind. On this December 25th and all throughout the year, we want a Comforter, a Healer, a Strengthening King. We don't want a myth any longer.

We've talked it over. This year we've decided to give tribute, honor and worship to someone who really deserves them. To the true Giver, our God and Savior Jesus Christ.

Signed,
A Young Mother

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A Different Kind of Christ-mas
by Lael J. Littke


Martha had tried to ignore the approach of Christ-mas. It was fairly easy, what with all the work to do around the cabin the meals to prepare, the rugs to braid to cover the earthen floors, the lye soap to make, the snow to keep cleared away from the door, and the myriad of other things necessary to sustain life in the bleak valley. She would have kept it almost entirely out of her thoughts if Jed had not come eagerly into the cabin one day, stomping the snow from his cold feet as he said in an excited voice, "Martha, we're going to have a Christ-mas tree this year anyway. I spotted a cedar on that rise out south of the wheat field, over near the Norton's place. It's a scrubby thing, but it will do, since we can't get a pine. Maybe Christ-mas will be a little different here, but it will still be the kind of Christ-mas we used to have."

It was a two day journey from their home on the floor of the wide valley to the mountains where there were pine trees, and none of the settlers felt they could spare the time that busy first year to go after trees. Besides, the snow was too high to do any unnecessary travel.

As she shook her head, Martha noticed that Daniel glanced quickly up from the corner where he was playing, patiently tying together some sticks with bits of string left over from the quilt she had tied a few days earlier. She drew Jed as far away from the boy as possible.

"I don't want a tree," she said. "We won't be celebrating Christ-mas. Even a tree couldn't make it the kind of Christ-mas we used to have."

Jed's face set in lines that were becoming familiar.

"Martha, we've got to do something. For the boy, at least. Children set such a store by Christ-mas."

"Don't you think I know? All those years of fixing things for Maybelle and Stellie. I know all about kids and Christ-mas." She stopped and drew a deep breath, glancing over to see that Daniel was occupied and not listening. "But I can't do those things for him. It would be like a knife in my heart, fixing a tree and baking cookies and making things for another woman's child when my own girls are back there on that prairie."

"Martha, Martha," Jed said softly. "It's been almost a year and a half. That's all over, and Danny needs you. He needs a Christ-mas like he remembers."

She turned her back to his pleading face. "I can't," she said. "Besides, what could he remember? He was only a little more than five when his own mother died, and I don't think his pa did much last Christ-mas."

Jed touched her shoulder gently. "I know how hard it is for you, Martha. But think of the boy." He turned and went back out into the snowy weather.

Think of the boy. Why should she think of him when her own children, her two blue eyed, golden curled daughters, had been left beside the trail back there on that endless, empty prairie? The boy came to her not because she wanted him but because she couldn't say no to the bishop back in Salt Lake City last April before they came to settle in this valley. Bishop Clay had brought Daniel to her and Jed one day and said, "I want you to care for this lad. His mother died on the trek last summer and his pa passed away last week. He needs a good home."

Jed had gripped the bishop's hand and with tears in his eyes thanked him, but Martha had turned away from the sight of the thin, ragged, six year old boy who stood before them, not fast enough, however, to miss the sudden brief smile he flashed at her, a smile that should have caught her heart and opened it wide. Her heart was closed, though, locked tightly around the memory of her two gentle little girls. She didn't want a noisy, rowdy boy banging around, disturbing those memories, filling the cabin with a boy's loud games.

Yet she had taken him, because she felt she had no choice. Faced with the bishop's request more of an order, really, and Jed's obvious joy, she couldn't refuse.

He came with them out to this new valley west of the Salt lake settlement and had proved himself a great help to Jed, despite his young age. Sometimes Martha felt pity for him, but she didn't love him.

With Jed it was different. He had accepted Daniel immediately as his own son and enjoyed having the boy with him. They had a special relationship, a secret sharing that sometimes shut Martha out and made her wonder once, when she could bear to think of it, how Jed had felt about somehow seeming to be just outside the charmed circle she and her daughters had formed. Not that she really resented Jed and Daniel's relationship she was glad Jed gave the boy some attention since she so often ignored him but sometimes she felt that Jed had grown to love the boy more than he did her. She told him as much one evening after the man and boy had come laughing together into the cabin only to sober up when they saw her, but not before one of those quick smiles from Daniel, the smile she was never sure had actually been there, it was gone so fast.

When Daniel went back outside for a bucket of water, Martha spoke to Jed.

"Seems as if you enjoy the boy's company more than you do mine these days."

Jed didn't look her quite squarely in the eye. "That's not so, Martha."

"The two of you laughing together all the time. You never laugh with me anymore."

His voice was quiet. "You don't seem to find much to laugh about lately, Martha."

It was true, of course. When the girls were with them they had been a happy family, laughing at humor and hardship alike. It just seemed as if all her laughter had also been buried on that grim morning back on the desolate prairie.

"I'm sorry, Jed," Martha said. "I just can't seem to forget my girls. I can't feel that close to that boy. He's always so serious around me. Almost like he's afraid. Calls me 'Aunt Martha.' I notice he calls you 'Pa.' Did you tell him to call you that?"

"No. He just started doing it. He's just a little fellow, Martha, but he knows how people feel about him. He needs more than just a full stomach and a place to sleep."

"I know," she said. "I know." She was ashamed that she could deny love to a child. Any child. She tried harder after that, but she found she was always comparing him with her daughters. They had been soft and yielding, a pleasure to hold close. Daniel was bony and wiry, and his small body was hard muscled from the work he did with Jed. The girls had been golden curled and had taken pride in keeping their little pinafores neat and clean. Daniel was always grimy; he seemed to attract dirt, and his shirt always hung out from his overalls. The girls had liked to play quietly in the house with their rag dolls. Daniel preferred the outdoors, where he had full scale, one man battles, playing the parts of both settlers and Indians and making enough noise for any real fight.

It seemed as if he was always doing something to plague her. Not intentionally, to be sure. At least Jed said not. Just the high spirits and imagination of a boy, Jed said. There was the time he took her best tied quilt outside to build a teepee by the creek bank. By the time she found it, it was muddy and bedraggled and had to be laboriously washed.

Another day he got into the trunk she had brought across the plains and was playing with the carved wooden animals Grandpa Elliot had made for Maybelle and Stellie. She couldn't bear to see them in his hands and had scolded him soundly for opening the trunk. Another day he pulled up most of the flowers she had grown from the precious seeds brought from Nauvoo. He said he wanted to surprise her by pulling the weeds, but he couldn't tell which were weeds and which were flowers. He broke precious dishes and tore clothes that could not easily be replaced. And so Martha told Jed that she wanted him to take Daniel back to Salt Lake on his next trip for supplies and to give him back to Bishop Clay.

Jed looked at her for a long time before he answered, "Yes, maybe that would be best. For the boy's sake. I'll take him when I go in January."

Daniel seemed to sense something, because he tried to please her after that and was careful not to annoy her. When winter came and he had to be indoors much of the time, he tried to play quietly, although occasionally the natural inclinations of a boy took over and he had to be reprimanded. Martha wished that Sister Norton had been able to establish the school for the children of the settlers, but she had been unable to get any slates or copy books and had decided to wait until the next fall.

Daniel mentioned Christ-mas only once. One day it was too cold and snowy to play outside, and he had been humming softly to himself as he played in his corner. Suddenly he looked up at Martha and asked, "Can you sing, Aunt Martha?"

Martha paused and straightened up from the table where she was kneading bread. She used to sing for her girls all the time.

"No, I can't, Daniel," she said. "Not any more."

"My mother used to sing a pretty song at Christ-mas," he said. "I wish I could remember it."

He said nothing more, and she did not question him. She didn't want to stir up any further memories of Christ-mas, since she didn't intend to observe the day. Perhaps he did recall snatches of past Christ-mases, but certainly he wouldn't remember enough that it would make any difference to him.

Martha couldn't help thinking of Christ-mases past as the day approached. Three years ago had been the best one, before the persecution of the Saints in Nauvoo got so bad. Maybelle had been seven then, and Stellie five. She had made rag dolls for them with pretty, flouncy dresses and cunning little bonnets. That was the year Grandpa Elliot had given them the carved animals and had also carved a beautiful little toy horse and carriage for Maybelle, promising Stellie he'd make her one when she was seven.

Dwelling as she did in her past memories, Martha paid very little attention to Daniel those last few days before Christ-mas. He went in and out with Jed and she didn't attempt to keep track of him. On the day before Christ-mas Jed went through the deep snow to do some chores for Brother Norton, who was ill. Daniel was alone outside most of the day, although he made several rather furtive trips in and out of the cabin. On one trip he took the sticks he had been tying together.

Toward evening Martha went out to the stable to milk Rosie, since Jed had not yet returned. As she approached, she saw there was a light inside. Opening the door softly, she peered within. Daniel had lit the barn lantern, and within its glow he knelt in the straw by Rosie's stall. In front of him were the sticks he had tied together, which Martha recognized now as a crude cradle. It held Stellie's rag doll, all wrapped up in the white shawl Martha kept in her trunk, the shawl she had used to wrap her babies. Her impulse was to rush in and snatch it, but she stopped, because the scene was strangely beautiful in the soft light from the lantern. Rosie and the two sheep stood close by, watching Daniel. He seemed to be addressing them when he spoke.

"The shepherds came following the star," he was saying. "And they found the baby Jesus who had been born in a stable." He paused for a moment, then went on. "And his mother loved him."

Martha felt suddenly that she couldn't breathe. Another mother, another day, had loved her little boy and had told him the beautiful story of the Christ Child with such love that he hadn't forgotten it, young as he was. And she, Martha, had failed that mother.

In the silence she began to sing. "Silent night," she sang. "Holy night."

Daniel didn't move until the song was finished. Then he turned with that quick, heart melting smile.

"That's the one," he whispered. "That's the song that my mother used to sing to me."

Martha ran forward and gathered the boy into her arms. He responded immediately, clasping his arms tightly around her.

"Danny," Martha said, "it's beautiful. Your cradle and little scene here."

"You never called me Danny before," he murmured, his head against her neck.

"I didn't do a lot of things," she said. As she held him close, the bands around her heart seemed to loosen and break.

"Danny," she said, sitting on the edge of Rosie's manger, "let's go in and get the cabin ready for Christ-mas. Maybe it isn't too late for Jed for Pa to get that tree. It might be a little different kind of Christ-mas, but it will still be a little like the Christ-mases we used to know. We'll set up your cradle with the Christ Child in it under the tree, because that's what Christ-mas is all about."

"Do you mind it being different?" Danny asked. "I mean with a boy instead of your girls?"

Martha wondered how long it would take her to make up to him for the hurts she had inflicted these many months. "No," she said. "After all, the Baby Jesus was a boy."

"That's right," he said wonderingly.

"I'll open my trunk," said Martha. "We'll get out those carved animals to put around your manger scene. We'll string some dried berries to put on the tree, and when it's all done the three of us will sing 'Silent Night' and Pa will tell us the story of the Christ Child."

She thought about the lovely little carved horse and carriage Maybelle had loved so much, and knew it would be the perfect gift to put under the tree for Danny's Christ-mas morning.

She set him down on the floor and put her arm around his shoulders.

"Merry Christ-mas," she said. "Merry Christ-mas, Danny."

He looked up at her with a smile that did not fade quickly away this time, a sweet smile full of the love he had been waiting to give her.

"Merry Christ-mas," he said, and then added softly, "Mother."

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A Doll and a White Rose
by V. A. Bailey


I hurried into the local department store to grab some last minute Christ-mas gifts. I looked at all the people and grumbled to myself. I would be in here forever and I just had so much to do. Christ-mas was beginning to become such a drag. I kinda wished that I could just sleep through Christ-mas. But I hurried the best I could, through all the people to the toy department. Once again I kind of mumbled to myself at the prices of all these toys. And wondered if the grand kids would even play with them.

I found myself in the doll aisle. Out of the corner of my eye I saw a little boy about 5 holding a lovely doll. He kept touching her hair and he held her so gently. I could not seem to help myself. I just kept looking over at the little boy and wondered who the doll was for. I watched him turn to a woman and he called his aunt by name and said, "Are you sure I don't have enough money?" She replied a bit impatiently, "You know that you don't have enough money for it." The aunt told the little boy not to go anywhere that she had to go get some other things and would be back in a few minutes. And then she left the aisle.

The boy continued to hold the doll. After a bit I ask the boy who the doll was for. He said, "It's the doll my sister wanted so badly for Christ-mas. She just knew that Santa would bring it." I told him that maybe Santa was going to bring it. He said "No, Santa can't go where my sister is, I have to give the doll to my Momma to take to her. I asked him where his sister was. He looked at me with the saddest eyes and said "She has gone to be with Jesus. My Daddy says that Momma is going to have to go to be with her." My heart nearly stopped beating.

Then the boy looked at me again and said, "I told my Daddy to tell Momma not to go yet. I told him to tell her to wait till I got back from the store." Then he ask me if I wanted to see his picture. I told him I would love to. He pulled out some pictures he'd had taken at the front of the store. He said "I want my Momma to take this with her so she don't ever forget me. I love my Momma so very much and I wish she did not have to leave me. But Daddy says she needs to be with my sister." I saw that the little boy had lowered his head and had grown so very quiet.

While he was not looking I reached into my purse and pulled out a hand full of bills. I ask the little boy, "Shall we count that money one more time?" He grew excited and said , "Yes, I just know it has to be enough" So I slipped my money in with his and we began to count it. And of course it was plenty for the doll. He softly said, "Thank you Jesus, for giving me enough money." Then the boy said "I just asked Jesus to give me enough money to buy this doll so Momma can take it with her to give to my sister. And he heard my prayer. I wanted to ask him for enough to buy my Momma a white rose, but I didn't, but he gave me enough to buy the doll and a rose for my Momma. She loves white roses so very, very much" In a few minutes the aunt came back and I wheeled my cart away.

I could not keep from thinking about the little boy as I finished my shopping in a totally different spirit than when I had started. And I kept remembering a story I had seen in the newspaper several days earlier about a drunk driver hitting a car and killing a little girl and the Mother was in serious condition. The family was deciding on rather to remove the life support. Now surely this little boy did not belong with that story. Two days later I read in the paper where the family had disconnected the life support and the young woman had died. I could not forget the little boy and just kept wondering if the two were somehow connected. Later that day, I could not help myself. I went out and bought some white roses and took them to the funeral home where the young woman was.

And there she was holding a lovely white rose, the beautiful doll, and the picture of the little boy in the store. I left there in tears, my life changed forever. The love that little boy had for his little sister and his mother was overwhelming. And in a split second a drunk driver had ripped the life of that little boy to pieces.

This holiday season and through out the coming year, please, Don't Drink and Drive!

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The Envelope
Author Unknown


It's just a small, white envelope stuck among the branches of our Christ-mas tree. No name, no identification, no inscription. It has peeked through the branches of our tree for the past 10 years or so.

It all began because my husband Mike hated Christ-mas -- oh, not the true meaning of Christ-mas, but the commercial aspects of it -- overspending, the frantic running around at the last minute to get a tie for Uncle Harry and the dusting powder for Grandma - the gifts given in desperation because you couldn't think of anything else. Knowing he felt this way, I decided one year to bypass the usual shirts, sweaters, ties and so forth. I reached for something special just for Mike. The inspiration came in an unusual way.

Our son Kevin, who was 12 that year, was wrestling at the junior level at the school he attended; and shortly before Christ-mas, there was a non league match against a team sponsored by an inner city church, mostly black. These youngsters, dressed in sneakers so ragged that shoestrings seemed to be the only thing holding them together, presented a sharp contrast to our boys in their spiffy blue and gold uniforms and sparkling new wrestling shoes.

As the match began, I was alarmed to see that the other team was wrestling without headgear, a kind of light helmet designed to protect a wrestler's ears. it was a luxury the ragtag team obviously could not afford. Well, we ended up walloping them. We took every weight class. And as each of their boys got up from the mat, he swaggered around in his tatters with false bravado, a kind of street pride that couldn't acknowledge defeat. Mike, seated beside me, shook his head sadly, "I wish just one of them could have won," he said. "They have a lot of potential, but losing like this could take the heart right out of them."

Mike loved kids -- all kids -- and he knew them, having coached little league football, baseball and lacrosse. That's when the idea for his present came. That afternoon, I went to a local sporting goods store and bought an assortment of wrestling headgear and shoes and sent them anonymously to the inner city church. On Christ-mas Eve, I placed the envelope on the tree, the note inside telling Mike what I had done and that this was his gift from me. His smile was the brightest thing about Christ-mas that year and in succeeding years.

For each Christ-mas, I followed the tradition -- one year sending a group of mentally handicapped youngsters to a hockey game, another year a check to a pair of elderly brothers whose home had burned to the ground the week before Christ-mas, and on and on. The envelope became the highlight of our Christ-mas. It was always the last thing opened on Christ-mas morning and our children, ignoring their new toys, would stand with wide eyed anticipation as their dad lifted the envelope from the tree to reveal its contents. As the children grew, the toys gave way to more practical presents, but the envelope never lost its allure.

The story doesn't end there. You see, we lost Mike last year due to dreaded cancer. When Christ-mas rolled around, I was still so wrapped in grief that I barely got the tree up. But Christ-mas Eve found me placing an envelope on the tree, and in the morning, it was joined by three more. Each of our children, unbeknownst to the others, had placed an envelope on the tree or their dad. The tradition has grown and someday will expand even further with our grandchildren standing around the tree with wide eyed anticipation watching as their fathers take down the envelope... Mike's spirit, like the Christ-mas spirit, will always be with us.

May we all remember the Christ-mas spirit this year and always.

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A Gift of Dreams
Author Unknown


Christ-mas Eve, 1944. I was a sailor in the US Navy, on a one day leave in San Francisco. I had won $300 at poker that ordinarily would have burned a hole in my pocket, but I couldn't shake an over whelming sadness.

Scuttlebutt had it we'd be pulling out before the New Year for the South Pacific. I'd just received word that another friend had been killed in Europe. And here I was, an 18-year-old alone in a strange city. Nothing seemed to make any kind of sense. What was I going to be fighting for, anyway?

I spent most of the day in a mental fog, wandering aimlessly through crowds of laughing, happy people. Then, late in the afternoon, my vision suddenly focused, and for the first time a scene registered.

There in a department store window were two electric trains chugging through a miniature, snow covered town. In front of the window a skinny boy around nine years old, his nose pressed against the glass. He just stood there, fixed on those trains.

Suddenly the boy was me nine short years before, and the store was Macy's in New York City, my hometown. I could see, could feel the same longing, the same desperate hoping. I could hear the sigh of resignation - the frail attempt to hide the disappointment that Dad could not afford those trains. And I saw the reluctant turning away and then the one last look.

Not this time! I don't know what came over me, but I grabbed the boy by the arm, scaring him half to death.

"My name is George," I told him.

"Jeffery Hollis Jr.," he managed to reply.

"Well, Jeff Hollis Jr.," I said in my best grown up voice, "we are going to get us those trains."

His eyes grew wide, and he let me lead him into the store. I knew it was crazy, but I didn't care. Suddenly I wanted to be nine again and have a kid's dream come true. The sales clerk looked at us suspiciously, a scruffy black boy and a black sailor in ill fitting dress blues.

"Those trains in the window," I blurted before he could speak. "The whole setup. How much is it?"

His snorting response was interrupted by the arrival of a much older man wearing a warm Christ-mas smile. "One hundred and sixty five dollars and sixty three cents," the elder man replied, "delivery included."

"We'll take it," I said. "Right now, if we can."

"Sailor," he said, "we can! What about the rest of the family?"

I leaned down, and Jeff Jr. whispered that he had two little sisters as well as his mom and pop. I gave him $50.

"I'll have someone help him out," the elder man told me. And he called over a cheerful woman who took Jeff Jr. by the hand.

While the trains and other purchases were being wrapped, the man told me he had two sons of his own in the service. After a lot of "Merry Christ-mases," a delivery truck was assigned to take us to the boy's home.

Jeff Hollis Sr.'s reaction reminded me of what my own father's would have been if I had shown up with a stranger and a whole lot of gifts. I could see he was a hard working man, breaking his back to make ends meet and knowing he couldn't give his family all he wanted.

"I'm just a sailor a long way from home, Mr. Hollis," I said respectfully, explaining how I had seen myself in his son's longing gaze at the store display.

"You couldn't have spent the money any other way?" he asked gruffly.

"No sir," I replied.

His face softened, and he welcomed me to share their table. After supper, I read to Jeff Jr. and his sisters until they went off to bed.

"I guess you know we've got a lot to do before morning," Jeff Sr. said. His words startled me for a moment. Then I understood. I was no longer a child; I was a man now, with adult responsibilities. So I joined him at what turned out to be nearly an all night job of getting the trains put together and set up. His wife, Marge, made sandwiches and coffee and kept me talking about growing up in New York. At midnight we paused to wish each other a Merry Christ-mas, then went back to the task of making a boy's dream come true.

When we finished, I was bone tired. Jeff Hollis Sr. looked for a long time at what we had done, then sighed and sat back in a worn easy chair.

"Mine was a bike," he said quietly. "A big two wheeler with shiny spokes and bright yellow handlebars. The seat was real leather. I loved that bike. I dreamed about it and wished for it."

"Mine was a Christ-mas dress I'd seen in a dressmaker's window," Marge said. "I wanted everyone to say, "What a pretty little girl in that fine dress.'"

Dreams, I thought sleepily. Kid dreams. I guess I dozed because the next thing I knew it was five o'clock, and Jeff Jr. was shaking me. He had remembered I had to be back by eight.

"Is it time yet?" one of the little girls inquired.

"It's time," Jeff Sr. said. "Merry Christ-mas."

"Wow!" Joy mixed with disbelief. We hadn't done as spectacular a job as the window dressers, but we got the trains laid out all right.

"Dad?" Jeff Jr. asked. "George?"

I exchanged glances with his father and nodded my agreement. This was the honored, official first outing. With Jeff Sr. at one control and me at the other, we set the trains on their way. On the second circuit I eased Jeff Jr. into my place. For about five minutes he ran his train. Then abruptly, he stopped and, without a word, left the room. He returned with the presents he had bought, a look of pride on his face. He'd had some help, but he'd made the choices himself.

I thought he was finished when he turned to me with a package in his hand. "Merry Christ-mas, George" he said quietly.

I was totally surprised. The gift was a comb and brush set, along with a case for other toilet articles. He held out his hand, then changed his mind and hugged me warmly. The moment of parting was bittersweet, for I knew I would probably never see the Hollises again. Jeff Sr. and Marge thanked me, but I was the grateful one.

As I made my way to the station to catch the bus back to the base, I realized I had no more nagging doubts. I had found more in this experience than I had received from all the pep talks and patriotic speeches I had ever heard.

For me, it was a revelation. I knew now what this war and the fighting was about. It was something at once wonderful and simple. This country, my country, was a place of dreams.... and of dreamers who had the faith and the will to make dreams come true.

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Glorious Gift from Christ-mas Past
Stille Nacht, heilige Nacht
by Ola and Emily D'Aulaire


Snow fell softly onto the wooden and stone houses of Oberndorf, an Austrian village near Salzburg. Inside, villagers decorated freshly hewn spruce trees with candles, fruit and nuts as they prepared for the holiest of nights. Soon bells would peal from Oberndorf's modest church to announce midnight Mass, and the faithful would celebrate the birth of Christ with prayer and song.

Within the Church of St. Nicholas, however, the mood was hardly one of joy that Christ-mas Eve afternoon in 1818. Curate Joseph Mohr, 26, had just discovered that the organ was badly damaged. No matter how hard the pedals were pumped, he could coax only a scratchy wheeze from the ancient instrument. Mohr was desperate. By the time a repairman could reach the parish, Christ-mas would be long over. To the young curate, a Christ-mas without music was unthinkable.

Words from Heaven. Mohr had a natural instinct for music. As a boy, the illegitimate son of a seamstress and a soldier, he had earned money singing and playing the violin and guitar in public. At school, and then at the university, he lived on money he earned as a performer. His hard work and talent caught the attention of a clergyman who persuaded Mohr to enter the seminary. Ordained a priest in 1815, Mohr was posted to Oberndorf in 1817. There, he not only preached the Psalms, but surprised some of his congregation by strumming a guitar, switching easily from folk music to hymns.

Now, faced with a Christ-mas crisis, the young cleric withdrew to the quiet of his study. Realizing that the traditional Christ-mas carols would not sound right on a guitar, he decided to produce a new song. Bending over a sheet of blank paper, his quill pen poised, he thought about a parish family he had recently visited to bless their newborn child. The memory of that mother holding her infant wrapped snugly against the winter cold took Mohr's thoughts to another modest birth almost two thousand years earlier.

Tentatively, he began writing. His pen moved as if guided by an invisible hand. A haunting refrain, "Stille Nacht, heilige Nacht!" appeared on the paper: "Silent night, holy night." In phrases as simple as a children's poem, the young curate told of the Christ-mas miracle in six stanzas. It was as if the words flowed directly from heaven.

Time was growing short when he finished. The verses still had to be set to music in time for midnight Mass. Mohr decided to seek out his good friend Franz Xaver Gruber, 31, the schoolmaster at nearby Arnsdorf, and a more skilled composer than he was.

Unlike Mohr, Gruber had had to hide his passion for music. To his strict father, a weaver, music was not a suitable profession for putting bread on the table. So in the evening, Franz would creep out of the house to take music lessons from the local schoolmaster. He did so well that when his father heard him playing the organ one day, the elder Gruber relented and let his son study music.

Franz decided to become a teacher as well. In those days a schoolmaster was expected to serve as organist and choirmaster at a local church. Sent to Arnsdorf to teach, Gruber had been welcomed at neighboring St. Nicholas.

Beauty and Innocence. That Christ-mas Eve, according to historians who pieced together the story, Mohr visited Gruber and his large family at their modest living quarters above the school. Mohr told his friend of his dilemma. Handing over his newly written words, Mohr asked Gruber whether he could compose a tune to fit them, suitable for two voices, chorus and guitar, and in time for midnight Mass.

As Gruber read Father Mohr's words, he was surely struck by their beauty and innocence. He went to his piano to begin work while Mohr returned to his church.

Drawing on three of the most basic harmonies in the musical repertoire, the organist wove a plain, hauntingly evocative melody. Then he took it to Father Mohr late that evening. With barely time for a rehearsal, the two men agreed that Mohr would play his guitar and sing tenor while Gruber sang bass. Following each stanza, the church chorus would chime in on the refrain.

At midnight, parishioners filed in, probably expecting the organ to fill the church with the resounding notes of Christ-mas hymns. Instead, the building was silent as they crowded into the narrow wooden pews.

Father Mohr stepped into the nave and beckoned the schoolmaster to stand by his side. Holding his guitar, the curate must have explained to the assembled flock that, although the organ was broken, the midnight Mass would include music nonetheless: he and Gruber had prepared a special Christ-mas song for the congregation.

With Mohr strumming the guitar, two mellow voices soon filled the church. The choir joined in four part harmony at each refrain. The parishioners listened in awe to a carol that was as pure and fresh as an Alpine stream. Then Mohr proceeded with the celebration of the Mass, and the congregation knelt in prayer. Christ-mas Eve at St. Nicholas had been a success.

A Tyrolean Song. The story almost ended there. Mohr and Gruber had created their carol as a stopgap for a temporary problem and probably had no thoughts of performing the song again. The following spring, a repairman patched up the organ. Soon Mohr was transferred to a different parish. For a few years, the carol fell as silent as the night it had glorified in 1818.

But luckily for the world, the organ at St. Nicholas remained cantankerous. In 1824 or '25, the parish hired a master organ builder by the name of Carl Mauracher to reconstruct it. During his time in the loft, Mauracher happened upon the song that Mohr and Gruber had composed. Its universal simplicity must have appealed to the old organ master. Overseeing work on the St. Nicholas organ, Gruber gladly gave his consent when Mauracher requested a copy of "Silent Night."

On leaving Oberndorf, Mauracher carried the song with him. People who heard it through him were enchanted with the words and melody. Soon troupes of Tyrolean folk singers, who regularly fanned out over Europe, added "Silent Night" to their repertoires.

Among those who did were the Strasser Family. These four brothers and sisters with angelic voices performed at trade fairs while peddling gloves made by the family. In 1831 or '32, the Strassers sang "Silent Night" at a fair in Leipzig, Germany. Audiences loved it. Not long after, a local publisher printed it for the first time, identifying it only as Tirolerlied, or a Tyrolean song. There was no mention of Joseph Mohr or Franz Gruber.

The words and tune now spread rapidly. Soon "Silent Night" crossed the Atlantic with the Rainers, a family of folk singers performing and traveling in the United States. In New York City in 1839 or '40, the Rainers introduced the English speaking world to the song.

Audiences everywhere began to believe that "Silent Night" was more than a simple folk song. Some listeners attributed it to one of the Haydns. But in their villages, Gruber and Mohr remained unaware of the stir their song was creating. Father Mohr died of pneumonia, penniless, in 1848 at the age of 55. He never learned that his song had reached some of Earth's farthest corners. Gruber heard of the song's success only in 1854, when the concertmaster for King Frederick William IV of Prussia began searching for its source. When word reached Gruber, then 67, he sent a letter to Berlin telling the origins of the song.

At first, few scholars believed that two humble men could have dreamed up such a popular Christ-mas carol. When Gruber died in 1863, his authorship was still challenged. That same year, the Rev. John Freeman Young, who later became Episcopal Bishop of Florida, translated three stanzas of the carol into the English verses we still sing today.

Symbol of Christ-mas. There is no longer any controversy over the authorship of the original song. Memorials in Austria pay tribute to Mohr and Gruber, and their legacy has become an essential part of Christ-mas everywhere. Says William E. Studwell of Northern Illinois University, an expert on Christ-mas carols, " `Silent Night' is the musical symbol of Christ-mas."

Indeed, the carol is now sung on every continent in the world in scores of languages, from the original German to Welsh, from Swahili to Afrikaans, from Japanese to Russian -- all expressing the same deep feelings of peace and joy. It has been recorded by singers from Bing Crosby to Elvis Presley.

Over the years, the simple carol has shown a profound power to create heavenly peace. During the Christ-mas truce of 1914, for example, German soldiers in the trenches along the Western Front began singing "Silent Night." From the other side of no man's land, British soldiers joined in.

During the same war, at a Siberian prison camp, German, Austrian and Hungarian prisoners broke into a chorus of "Silent Night." With tears in his eyes, the Russian commandant told his prisoners in broken German, "Tonight is the first time in more than a year of war that I have been able to forget you and I are supposed to be enemies."

In Nazi occupied Czechoslovakia in 1944, a German officer visiting an orphanage asked if any of the children knew "Silent Night" in German. A boy and a girl walked hesitatingly forward, then began to sing "Stille Nacht, heilige Nacht." The officer smiled, but then the children stopped singing, as if suddenly remembering something, and looked terrified. In that part of the country, it was primarily Jews who knew German. Seeing their fear, the officer comforted them. "Don't be afraid," he said. He, too, had been touched by the magic of the song.

Seven years later, on a Christ-mas Eve during the Korean War, a young American soldier named John Thorsness was on guard duty when he thought he heard the enemy approach. Finger on the trigger, he watched a crowd of Koreans emerge from the darkness. They were smiling. As the young soldier stood in amazement, the group sang "Silent Night" - in Korean -- just for him. Then they melted back into the darkness.

We have our own "Silent Night" memory, dating back to the first Christ-mas Eve we celebrated in our Congregational church in Redding, Conn. When we entered, a deacon handed us each a small white candle.

At the end of an hour of carols and Bible readings, the church lights were dimmed. The minister lit a taper from an altar candle, and walked to two people in the front pew. They, in turn, lit the candles next to them.

Seated in the rear, we watched as a wave of flickering light spread from pew to pew. Then the organ began to play, and the congregation joined in the song born Christ-mas Eve so many miles and so many years ago: "Silent night, holy night, All is calm, all is bright...."

When the last verse had ended, everyone stood absolutely still in the glow of candlelight. The haunting words and simple melody lingered in our hearts, just as they have lingered in the hearts of people throughout the world since a young priest and his schoolmaster friend first sang it 175 years ago.

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Golden Shoes for Jesus
by Helga Schmidt

Somehow not only for Christ-mas
But all the long year through
The joy that you give to others
Is the joy that comes back to you.

~John Greenleaf Whittier~


It was only four days before Christ-mas. The spirit of the season had not yet caught up with me, even though cars packed the parking lot of our local discount store. Inside the store, it was worse. Shopping carts and last minute shoppers jammed the aisles.

Why did I come to town today. I wondered. My feet ached almost as much as my head. My list contained names of several people who claimed they wanted nothing, but I knew their feelings would be hurt if I didn't buy them something.

Buying for someone who had everything and deploring the high cost of items, I considered gift buying anything but fun. Hurriedly, I filled my shopping cart with last minute items and proceeded to the long checkout lines. I picked the shortest, but it looked as if it would mean at least a 20 minute wait.

In front of me were two small children, a boy of about five and a slightly younger girl. The boy wore a ragged coat. Enormously large, tattered tennis shoes jutted far out in front of his much to short jeans. He clutched several crumpled dollar bills in his grimy hands.

The girl's clothing resembled her brother's. Her head was a matted mass of curly hair. Reminders of an evening meal showed on her small face. She carried a beautiful pair of shiny, gold house slippers. As the Christ-mas music sounded in the store's stereo system, the small girl hummed along, off key, but happily.

When we finally approached the checkout register, the girl carefully placed the shoes on the counter. She treated them as though they were a treasure.

The clerk rang up the bill. "That'll be $6.09," she said.

The boy laid his crumpled bills atop the stand while he searched his pockets. He finally came up with $3.12. "I guess we'll have to put them back," he bravely announced.

"We'll come back some other time, maybe tomorrow."

With that statement, a soft sob broke from the little girl.

"But Jesus would have loved these shoes," she cried.

"Well, we'll go home and work some more. Don't cry. We'll come back," the boy assured her.

Quickly I handed $3.00 to the clerk. These children had waited in line for a long time. And, after all, it was Christ-mas.

Suddenly a pair of arms came around me and a small voice said, "Thank you, lady."

"What did you mean when you said Jesus would like the shoes?" I asked.

The boy answered, "Our mommy is sick and going to heaven. Daddy said she might go before Christ-mas to be with Jesus."

The girl spoke. "My Sunday school teacher said the streets up in heaven are shiny gold, just like these shoes. Won't my mommy be beautiful walking on those streets to match these shoes?"

My eyes flooded as I looked into her tear streaked face. "Yes," I answered, "I'm sure she will."

Silently, I thanked God for using these children to remind me of the true spirit of giving.

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Happy Birthday Jesus
by Pippin Stanley


During Christ-mas seasons past, as I was growing up, I knew that this was a celebration of the birth of Christ. I knew that this tiny baby was born in the town of Bethlehem and that his earthly parents were Joseph and Mary. I heard the stories of the three wise men that came from afar, following the baby's star. And they brought gifts of gold, incense and myrrh. And somewhere deep inside me I knew that this was the son of God". But all of these fascinating and wonderful stories were just that. Stories.

I heard, when I was young, that the Easter celebrations were because of the resurrection (of course, I didn't know that word) of Christ. I was told that he died on the cross so that we could be forgiven for our wrongdoings. They said that he went back to heaven to live with God and to intercede for us. Isn't this the same person that was born a long time ago in Bethlehem? That's what I heard, but I knew it was just a really neat rumor.....Wasn't it?

This is what I believed as I skipped through life without very many cares. Life was great!

Then, through a series of events, everything fell apart. Life became hell on earth. In the midst of this hell I started wondering if God was real. Could these stories about that little baby be true? If so, could he help me put my life back in order? How could I find out? Maybe if I pray.

So I did, and the response was, "I have been here all the time." So I got my bible, dusted it off, and read about that little baby born in Bethlehem. But that wasn't the end of the story. I learned that he left a perfect place in heaven because he loved us and knew that the only way he could save us was to come to earth and be punished for all the sins of every person that lived on earth and all those who came after them. Now what really amazed me was that in all of his 33 years on earth, he never committed one single sin! He was the only perfect person that ever lived on earth! Yet he allowed his self to be taken into the custody of corrupt men. They beat him, stripped his clothes from him, and put a robe and a crown of thorns on him and danced around him mocking him, spiting on him, and kicking and hitting him. Then he was displayed before all the city of Jerusalem and all of the people, even those that he healed and loved, and their response was, "crucify him." So they nailed him to a cross.

This man who loved these people, healed these people, and never even committed a sin, voluntarily allowed himself to be hung on a cross to die so that these very people could be saved. And while he was hanging there dying, do you know what his response was? "Father, please forgive them for they know not what they do." And can you imagine how God, His Father, felt seeing his perfect son paying for everyone else's sin?

So, now when the Christ-mas season rolls around and we read the stories of that little baby's birth, I see with new eyes because I know the future of that tiny baby boy. So if you ever have any doubts whether or not God loves you, just remember what he allowed his son to go through for you and me. That's why it's called "The Greatest Story Ever Told". Thank you Jesus; I love you.

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