It's that time of year again. the fictional "War on Christmas" begins..

I personally love Christmas and I've happily celebrated the season as I see fit as long as I can remember. Nobody has to celebrate or embrace Christmas in the USA but those who do shouldn't worry if others choose not to. This Starbucks issue to me is just ridiculous. I don't care about their choice of cups. If you want a Christmas cup...stick a bow on it...but above all keep your sense of humor. I love saying Merry Christmas and if someone wished me a Merry Super Bowl Weekend I wouldn't stop and give them a lecture on how nobody in my family watches it and the whole sport is too commercialized anyway (untrue..but you get the gist..lol).. I respect everyone's right to celebrate and be merry about whatever.
 

It would be better to give out random acts of kindness and joy to the old and lonely :)
And to the poor and downtrodden, the homeless, the addicted and the diseased. And not just in December. I believe that Christ taught that every time and season is the right time for peace, love and justice.
 

And to the poor and downtrodden, the homeless, the addicted and the diseased. And not just in December. I believe that Christ taught that every time and season is the right time for peace, love and justice.

I agree. The best thing is to keep Christmas in our hearts all year. I also feel people in need are not always homeless or addicted...everyone in the world is in need...one way or another.
 
You are so right Karen.

Right now people from Sinjar in northern Iraq are absolutely homeless. Their city was taken last year by ISIS forces after a siege that had the people bottled up and unable to escape. The world looked on in horror because we all knew what would happen to them if, or rather, when ISIS eventually broke through the defenses and took the city which has strategic value for their supply lines into Syria.

The Kurdish Peshmerga fighters were their only defence and they were able to get a number of people out of the city and lead them over the mountains to safety in Turkey but then they were overwhelmed and had to abandon the rest of the people in the city.

ISIS slaughtered the men and made slaves of the women. These people are Yashidis, a minority religion of that area and ISIS has no respect for any minorities.

The Kurds and Yashidi menfolk in Turkey vowed to return and drive ISIS from Sinjar. Allied air forces forces that had provided some protection from ISIS for the Yashidis as they crossed the mountains then turned their attention to the ISIS forces in the city. Steadily they reduced the city to rubble. There is hardly a building that isn't either destroyed or very badly damaged. Now the Peshmerga have finally re-entered the city and have killed any and all of the ISIS fighters that remained behind after the others had left.

Sinjar, at least for the moment, is free again but it is a devastated cityscape.

Some Yashidi fighters are now planning to being their families out of the refugee camps in Turkey and they plan to rebuild their former homes. Others has looked around and have decided that there is nothing to come back to and they are resolved to leave the camps and with their families they will risk the Mediterranean crossing hoping to find a new home in Europe.

Refugees are the ultimate homeless. Mary and Joseph were refugees, force to flee with the infant Jesus to a place of safety in Egypt. At Christmas time we ought not to be frothing (no pun intended) about the decorations on coffee cups or whether there or not is a big Christmas tree at the mall. This year we should think about people who are forced to cross mountains in the snow to escape barbaric slaughter or sexual servitude, of people who are languishing in appallingly overcrowded camps where the children have no future and remember the birth of Jesus by opening our hearts and wallets to support the UNHCR, charities like Medicins Sans Frontiers and the Red Cross and by welcoming the strangers that our governments have agreed to take in from Syria. When they arrive they will be a traumatised people and will need to be treated with kindness. They will need to be healed with loving inclusion into our respective societies but it is likely that they will get a hostile reception from many.

Let those who value Christmas and the values embedded in this celebration look with compassion on the homeless of the world, especially the people languishing in refugee camps. They aren't there by choice. They want to build a real home for their families just as we would if we were in their shoes. Christmas charity is something that they need every day that they manage to cling to life.

Coffee cups are not a Christmas issue. People in need are.
 
The the addicted and the diseased need more then I and give. They need real good health care,

We can only do what we do.

We can support governments that are prepared to promote good universal health care plans.
We can resist the lure of politicians that appeal to our selfishness.

Christmas isn't all about money. It is about values and how we are prepared to express them every day.
It is about mind set and heart set.
 
(story)

It
was Christmas Eve 1881. I was fifteen years old and feeling like the world had caved in on me because there just hadn't been enough money to buy me the rifle that I'd wanted for Christmas.

We did the chores early that night for some reason. I just figured Pa wanted a little extra time so we could read in the Bible. After supper was over I took my boots off and stretched out in front of the fireplace and waited for Pa to get down the old Bible.

I was still feeling sorry for myself and, to be honest, I wasn't in much of a mood to read Scriptures. But Pa didn't get the Bible instead he bundled up again and went outside. I couldn't figure it out because we had already done all the chores. I didn't worry about it long though I was too busy wallowing in self-pity.

Soon Pa came back in. It was a cold clear night out and there was ice in his beard. "Come on, Matt," he said. "Bundle up good, it's cold out tonight." I was really upset then. Not only wasn't I getting the rifle for Christmas, now Pa was dragging me out in the cold, and for no earthly reason that I could see. We'd already done all the chores, and I couldn't think of anything else that needed doing, especially not on a night like this. But I knew Pa was not very patient at one dragging one's feet when he'd told them
to do something, so I got up and put my boots back on and got my cap, coat, and mittens. Ma gave me a mysterious smile as I opened the door to leave the house. Something was up, but I didn't know what..

Outside, I became even more dismayed. There in front of the house was the work team, already hitched to the big sled. Whatever it was we were going to do wasn't going to be a short, quick, little job. I could tell. We never hitched up this sled unless we were going to haul a big load. Pa was already up on the seat, reins in hand. I reluctantly climbed up beside him. The cold was already biting at me. I wasn't happy. When I was on, Pa pulled the sled around the house and stopped in front of the woodshed. He got off and I followed.

"I think we'll put on the high sideboards," he said. "Here, help me." The high sideboards! It had been a bigger job than I wanted to do with just the low sideboards on, but whatever it was we were going to do would be a lot bigger with the high side boards on.

After we had exchanged the sideboards, Pa went into the woodshed and came out with an armload of wood - the wood I'd spent all summer hauling down from the mountain, and then all Fall sawing into blocks and splitting. What was he doing? Finally I said something. "Pa," I asked, "what are you doing?" You been by the Widow
Jensen's lately?" he asked. The Widow Jensen lived about two miles down the road. Her husband had died a year or so before and left her with three children, the oldest being eight. Sure, I'd been by, but so what?

Yeah," I said, "Why?"

"I rode by just today," Pa said. "Little Jakey was out digging around in the woodpile trying to find a few chips. They're out of wood, Matt." That was all he said and then he turned and went back into the woodshed for another armload of wood. I followed him. We loaded the sled so high that I began to wonder if the horses would be able to pull it. Finally, Pa called a halt to our loading then we went to the smoke house and Pa took down a big ham and a side of bacon. He handed them to me and told me to put them in the sled and wait. When he returned he was carrying a sack of flour over his right shoulder and a smaller sack of something in his left hand.

"What's in the little sack?" I asked. Shoes, they're out of shoes. Little Jakey just had gunny sacks wrapped around his feet when he was out in the woodpile this morning. I got the children a little candy too. It just wouldn't be Christmas without a little candy."

We rode the two miles to Widow Jensen's pretty much in silence. I tried to think through what Pa was doing. We didn't have much by worldly standards. Of course, we did have a big woodpile, though most of what was left now was still in the form of logs that I would have to saw into blocks and split before we could use it. We also had meat and flour, so we could spare that, but I knew we didn't have any money, so why was Pa buying them shoes and candy? Really, why was he doing any of this? Widow Jensen had closer neighbors than us; it shouldn't have been our concern.

We came in from the blind side of the Jensen house and unloaded the wood as quietly as possible then we took the meat and flour and shoes to the door. We knocked. The door opened a crack and a timid voice said, "Who is it?" "Lucas Miles, Ma'am, and my son, Matt, could we come in for a bit?"

Widow Jensen opened the door and let us in. She had a blanket wrapped around her shoulders. The children were wrapped in another and were sitting in front of the fireplace by a very small fire that hardly gave off any heat at all. Widow Jensen fumbled with a match and finally lit the lamp.

"We brought you a few things, Ma'am," Pa said and set down the sack of flour. I put the meat on the table. Then Pa handed her the sack that had the shoes in it. She opened it hesitantly and took the shoes out one pair at a time. There was a pair for her and one for each of the children - sturdy shoes, the best, shoes that would last. I watched her carefully. She bit her lower lip to keep it from trembling and then tears filled her eyes and started running down her cheeks. She looked up at Pa like she wanted to say something, but it wouldn't come out.

"We brought a load of wood too, Ma'am," Pa said. He turned to me and said, "Matt, go bring in enough to last awhile. Let's get that fire up to size and heat this place up." I wasn't the same person when I went back out to bring in the wood. I had a big lump in my throat and as much as I hate to admit it, there were tears in my eyes too. In my mind I kept seeing those three kids huddled around the fireplace and their mother standing there with tears running down her cheeks with so much gratitude in her heart that she couldn't speak.

My heart swelled within me and a joy that I'd never known before filled my soul. I had given at Christmas many times before, but never when it had made so much difference. I could see we were literally saving the lives of these people.

I soon had the fire blazing and everyone's spirits soared. The kids started giggling when Pa handed them each a piece of candy and Widow Jensen looked on with a smile that probably hadn't crossed her face for a long time. She finally turned to us. "God bless you," she said. "I know the Lord has sent you. The children and I have been praying that he would send one of his angels to spare us."

In spite of myself, the lump returned to my throat and the tears welled up in my eyes again. I'd never thought of Pa in those exact terms before, but after Widow Jensen mentioned it I could see that it was probably true. I was sure that a better man than Pa had never walked the earth. I started remembering all the times he had gone out of his way for Ma and me, and many others. The list seemed endless as I thought on it.

Pa insisted that everyone try on the shoes before we left. I was amazed when they all fit and I wondered how he had known what sizes to get. Then I guessed that if he was on an errand for the Lord that the Lord would make sure he got the right sizes.

Tears were running down Widow Jensen's face again when we stood up to leave. Pa took each of the kids in his big arms and gave them a hug. They clung to him and didn't want us to go. I could see that they missed their Pa and I was glad that I still had mine.

At the door Pa turned to Widow Jensen and said, "The Mrs. wanted me to invite you and the children over for Christmas dinner tomorrow. The turkey will be more than the three of us can eat, and a man can get cantankerous if he has to eat turkey for too many meals. We'll be by to get you about eleven. It'll be nice to have some little ones
around again. Matt, here, hasn't been little for quite a spell." I was the youngest. My two brothers and two sisters had all married and had moved away.

Widow Jensen nodded and said, "Thank you, Brother Miles. I don't have to say, May the Lord bless you, I know for certain that He will."

Out on the sled I felt a warmth that came from deep within and I didn't even notice the cold. When we had gone a ways, Pa turned to me and said, "Matt, I want you to know something. Your ma and me have been tucking a little money away here and there all year so we could buy that rifle for you, but we didn't have quite enough.
Then yesterday a man who owed me a little money from years back came by to make things square. Your ma and me were real excited, thinking that now we could get you that rifle, and I started into town this morning to do just that, but on the way I saw little Jakey out scratching in the woodpile with his feet wrapped in those gunny
sacks and I knew what I had to do. Son, I spent the money for shoes and a little candy for those children. I hope you understand."

I understood, and my eyes became wet with tears again. I understood very well, and I was so glad Pa had done it. Now the rifle seemed very low on my list of priorities. Pa had given me a lot more. He had given me the look on Widow Jensen's face and the radiant smiles of her three children. For the rest of my life, Whenever I saw any of the
Jensens, or split a block of wood, I remembered, and remembering brought back that same joy I felt riding home beside Pa that night. Pa had given me much more than a rifle that night, he had given me the best Christmas of my life.
 
What a wonderful story, not just for Christmas but year round.
Something I'm going to do this year. In the week of Christmas I'm going to call the shelter where we got Callie. It's a small facility, probably high kill due to lack of space. But I do know that for certain dogs and cats they'll go the extra mile in contacting rescue groups to come in. When we adopted Callie we were lucky he was there.
An intact, adult, male pit bull...some shelters would have put him down immediately. But to share the love I'm going to call and find out how many dogs and cats are going to be there that week. Then I'll go to the thrift store for blankets and towels, you can get a bag of them for maybe three bucks. Then the dollar store for dog chewies and catnip mice. A happy holiday for some homeless creatures, wish I could bring them all home instead.
 


Back
Top