Sunday, May 15, 2011

December 13 (part 1)


Small White Bag of Cookies

Floating from speakers, hidden by hanging plastic poinsettias, “Deck the Halls” did nothing but irritate me. I was missing the Spirit of Christmas Eve completely.

I pushed my way around insistent, faceless, last minute shoppers and strollers carrying crying babies and toddlers. People!!! Every muscle ached, I’d skipped lunch and now I was starving. I readjusted my bundles and stopped at the cookie counter to bay a little bag of fresh chocolate chip cookies. Then, I would locate my care and make one last stop before calling it a day – a Season!

I tossed my motley gifts – not even what I’d come out for – beside me on the seat and bit into a cookie before pulling into traffic. The late hour found me talking to myself, mentally checking off my list. One more stop: slow down on the cookies…I’d buy some cocoa to go with them at the next mall, sit down and collect myself and try to regain some good will toward my fellow man. Then I’d get my last gift and head for home.

Holiday reminders swung in a wet wind above the still crowded streets, as I changed lanes back and forth, back again, glaring at a lady who cut me off.

“Cocoa…cookies…home…bed…cocoa…cookies…home…bed” the windshield wipers seemed to promise as they scraped against the crystals forming on the windshield.

At the mall, I bought a hot cup of cocoa and dropped onto a bench, cursing the lid the harried clerk had put on, despite my request not to.

“Darn!” Milky bilge dribbled down the front of my dress coat. An old woman sharing my bench gave me a sympathetic smile. “Sorry” I said, organizing myself better, and swabbing at the cocoa trail, grabbing my white bag lying there between us. Eagerly, I pulled out a cookie.

A rustle beside me, and I turned just in time to see my bench mate lift out a cookie for herself too. Then she smiled at me.

What did this crazy old woman think she was doing, and smiling like that? Wonderful, I thought. With a mall full of Santa’s helpers I pick a alooney! The woman’s clothes were unmatched, and her coat folded next to my bag of cookies, looked frayed and out of style. Alright I dared…just try taking my cookies again.

Slowly and deliberately I lifted out another cookies. Not moving her eyes from mine and still smiling the old woman did the same. She chewed looking entirely pleased to be sharing my cookies. As I looked at her in disbelief, she peered into my bag and brought out the last morsel. Then…she offered it to me!!

“How decent of you” I thought, grabbing my cookie But her smile, it wasn’t crazy. Worse than crazy, it was almost soft and rather sweet. The nerve of her! This was definitely the last straw, this woman had destroyed any Christmas Spirit I could muster.

Jumping up, I left the bag for her to dispose of and rushed out. Too angry to see very well in the dark, I struggled with my car lock, mumbling things I wished I had shouted.

As I slid into the driver’s seat confusion filled my mind…there on the front seat I began to focus on a bag…white…strangely too familiar. I lifted it into the light as if it were fragile. Instantly, certainly…I gazed on it in disbelief, here, safe in my car was my own Christmas cookies.

Christmas has never been quite the same since that fateful year. Somehow it has enabled me to focus on the “Spirit” of the holidays and less on the mechanics we all seem to get caught up in. I will always be thankful for one ragged, worn wonderful Christmas stranger, that so graciously shared her meager sustenance on Christmas Eve, and I will strive to be more patient, more thoughtful of others and more Christlike.

December 13 (part 2)

The Little Match Girl

By Hans Christian Andersen

It was bitterly cold, snow was falling and darkness was gathering, for it was the last evening of the old year – it was New Year’s Eve.

In the cold and gloom a poor little girl walked, bareheaded and barefoot, through the streets. She had been wearing slippers, it is true, when she left home, but what good were they? They had been her mother’s, so you can imagine how big they were. The little girl had lost them as she ran across the street to escape from two carriages that were being driven terribly fast. One slipper could not be found, and a boy had run off with the other, saying that it would come in handy as a cradle some day when he had children of his own.

So the little girl walked about the streets on her naked feet, which were read and blue with the cold. In her apron she carried a great many matches, and she had a packet of them in her hand as well. Nobody had bought any from her, and no one had given her a single penny all day. She crept along, shivering and hungry, the picture of misery, poor little thing!

The snowflakes fell on her long golden hair which curled so prettily about her neck, but she did not think of her appearance now. Lights were shining in every window, and there was a glorious smell of roast goose in the street, for this was New Year’s Eve, and she could not think of anything else.

She huddled down in a heap in a corner formed by two houses, one of which projected further out into the street than the other, but though she tucked her little legs up under her, she felt colder and colder. She did not dare go home, for she had sold no matches and earned not a single penny. Her father would be sure to beat her, and besides it was so cold at home, for they had nothing but the roof above them and the wind whirled through that, even though the largest cracks were stuffed with straw and rags. Her thin hands were almost numb with cold. If only she dared pull just one small match from the packet, strike it on the wall and warm her fingers!

She pulled one out – scr-ratch! – how it spluttered and burnt! It had a warm, bright flame like a tiny candle when she held her hand over it – but what a strange light! It seemed to the little girl as if she were sitting in front of a great iron stove with polished brass knobs and brass ornaments. The fire burnt so beautifully and gave out such a lovely warmth. Oh, how wonderful that was! The child had already stretched her feet to warm them, too, when – out went the flame, the stove vanished and there she sat with the burnt match in her hand.

She struck another – it burnt clearly and, where the light fell upon the wall, the bricks became transparent, like gauze. She could see right into the room, where a shining white cloth was spread on the table. It was covered with beautiful china and in the center of it stood a roast goose, stuffed with prunes and apples, steaming deliciously. And what was even more wonderful was that the goose hopped down from the dish, waddled across the floor with carving knife and fork in its back, waddled straight up to the poor child! Then – out went the match, and nothing could be seen but the thick, cold wall.

She struck another match, and suddenly she was sitting under the most beautiful Christmas tree. It was much larger and much lovelier than the one she had seen last year through the glass doors of the rich merchant’s house. A thousand candles lit up the green branches, and gaily colored balls like those in the shop windows looked down upon her. The little girl reached forward with both hands – then, out went the match. The many candles on the Christmas tree rose higher and higher through the air, and she saw that they had now turned into bright stars. One of them fell, streaking the sky with light.

“Now someone is dying,” said the little girl, for her old grandmother, the only one who had ever been good to her but who was now dead, had said, “Whenever a star falls, a soul goes up to God.”

She struck another match on the wall. Once more there was light, and in the glow stood her old grandmother, oh, so bright and shining, and looking so gentle, kind and loving. “Granny!” cried the little girl. “Oh, take me with you! I know you will disappear when the match is burnt out; you will vanish like the warm stove, the lovely roast goose and the great glorious Christmas tree!”

Then she quickly struck all the rest of the matches she had in the packet, for she did so want to keep her grandmother with her.

The matches flared up with such a blaze that it was brighter than broad daylight, and her old grandmother had never seemed so beautiful before, so stately before. She took the little girl in her arms and flew with her high up, oh, so high, towards glory and joy! Now they knew neither cold nor hunger nor fear, for they were both with God.

But in the cold dawn, in the corner formed by the two houses, sat the little girl with rosy cheeks and smiling lips, dead – frozen to death on the last evening of the old year. The dawn of the New Year rose on the huddled figure of the girl. She was still holding the matches, and half a packet had been burnt.

“She was evidently trying to warm herself,” people said. But no one knew what beautiful visions she had seen and in what a blaze of glory she had entered with her dear old grandmother into the heavenly joy and gladness of a new year.

December 14 (part 1)


A Brother Like That

Especially for Mormons, Vol. 2

A friend of mine named Paul received a new car from his brother as a pre-Christmas present. On Christmas Eve, when Paul came out of his office, a street urchin was walking around the shiny new car, admiring it.

“Is this your car, mister?” he asked.

Paul nodded, “My brother gave it to me for Christmas.”

The boy looked astounded. “You mean your brother gave it to you, and it didn’t cost you anything? Gosh, I wish…”

He hesitated, and Paul knew what he was going to wish. He was going to wish he had a brother like that. But what the lad said jarred Paul all the way down to his heals.

“I wish,” the boy went on, “That I could be a brother like that.”

Paul looked at the boy in astonishment, then impulsively added, “Would you like a ride in my new car?”

“Oh, yes, I’d love that!”

After a short ride the urchin turned, and with his eyes aglow said, “Mister, would y9ou mind driving in front of my house?”

Paul smiled a little. He though he knew what the lad wanted. He wanted to show his neighbors that he could ride home in a big automobile. But Paul was wrong again.

“Will you stop right where those steps are?” the boy asked. He ran up the steps. Then in a little while, Paul heard him coming back, but he was not coming fast. He was carrying his little polio-crippled brother. He sat down on the bottom step, then sort of squeezed up right against him and pointed to the car.

“There she is, Buddy, just like I told you upstairs. His brother gave it to him for Christmas, and it didn’t cost him a cent, and someday I’m gonna give you one just like it; then you can see for yourself all the pretty things in the Christmas windows that I’ve been trying to tell you about.”

Paul got out and lifted the little lad into the front seat of his car. The shining-eyed older brother climbed in beside him and the three of them began a memorable holiday ride.

That Christmas Eve, Paul learned what Jesus meant when He said, “It is more blessed to give…”

December 14 (part 2)

On life’s busy thoroughfares

We meet with ANGELS unawares –

But we are too busy to listen or hear,

Too busy to sense that God is near,

Too busy to stop and recognize

The grief that lies in another’s eyes,

Too busy to offer to help or share,

Too busy to sympathize or care,

Too busy to do the GOOD THINGS we should,

Telling ourselves we would if we could…

But life is too swift and the pace is too great

And we dare not pause for we might be late

For our next appointment which means so much,

We are willing to brush off the Savior’s touch

And we tell ourselves there will come a day

We will have more time to pause on our way…

But before we know it “life’s sun has set”

And we’ve passed the Savior but never met,

For hurrying along life’s thoroughfare

We passed Him by and remained unaware

That within the VERY SIGHT OF OUR EYE,

UNNOTICED, THE SON OF GOD PASSED BY.

December 14 (part 3)

The Story of the Christmas Guest

Retold by Helen Steiner Rice

When I was a child, I loved to hear this story my Grandma told each year.

She told it in her native tongue, and I was very, very young…

But yet this story seemed to be filled with wonderment for me.

For in my childish heart there grew the dream that I might see Him, too.

For he might call on me this way so I must watch for him each day…

And that is why “The Christmas Guest” is still the story I love the best –

And I retell it to you now, for I can’t help but feel somehow

That children everywhere should hear the story Grandma told each year…

For Christmas Day is doubly blessed when Jesus is our Christmas Guest!

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 gree, 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 am coming your guest to be”…So I’ve been busy with feet astir, stewing 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 steps as He nears my humble place and I open the door to 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 the Lord as his Christmas guest this Christmas would be the dearest and the 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 your warmer, too”…So with grateful heart the man went away, but as Conrad noticed the time of day he wondered what made the dear Lord so late and how much longer he’d have to wait, when he heard a knock and ran to the door, but it was only a stranger once more, a bent old crone with a shawl of black, a bundle of kindling 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 a while 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…When out of the stillness he heard a cry, “Please help me and tell me where am I.” So again he opened his friendly door and 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 child 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 own 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 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…Three times I knocked and three times I came in and each time I found the warmth of a friend…Of all the gifts, love is the best…And I was honored to be your Christmas Guest.”

December 14 (part 4)

The Tale of Three Trees

Once upon a mountaintop, three trees stood and dreamed of what they wanted to become when they grew up.

The first little tree looked up at the stars twinkling like diamonds above him. “I want to hold treasure,” he said. “I want to be covered with gold and filled with precious stones. I will be the most beautiful treasure chest in the world.”

The second little tree looked out at the small stream trickling by on its way to the ocean. “I want to be a strong sailing ship,” he said. “I want to travel mighty waters and carry powerful kings. I will be the strongest ship in the world!”

The third little tree looked down into the valley below where busy men and busy women worked in a busy town. “I don’t want to leave this mountaintop at all,” she said. “I want to grow so tall that when people stop to look at me they will raise their eyes to heaven and think of God. I will be the tallest tree in the world!”

Years passed. The rains came, the sun shone, and the little trees grew tall. One day three woodcutters climbed the mountain.

The first woodcutter looked at the first tree and said, “This tree is beautiful. It is perfect for me.” With a swoop of his shining ax, the first tree fell.

“Now I shall be made into a beautiful chest,” thought the first tree. “I shall hold wonderful treasure.”

The second woodcutter looked at the second tree and said, “This tree is strong. It is perfect for me.” With a swoop of his shining ax, the second tree fell.

“Now I shall sail the mighty waters,” thought the second tree. “I shall be a strong ship fit for kings!”

The third tree felt her heart sink when the last woodcutter looked her way. She stood straight and tall and pointed bravely to heaven.

But the woodcutter never even looked. “Any king of tree will do for me,” he muttered. With a swoop of his shining ax, the third tree fell.

The first tree rejoiced when the woodcutter brought him to a carpenter’s shop, but the busy carpenter was not thinking about treasure chests. Instead, his work worn hands fashioned the tree into a feed box for animals.

The second tree smiled when the woodcutter took him to a shipyard, but no mighty sailing ships were being made that day. Instead, the once-strong tree was hammered and sawed into a simple fishing boat. Too small and too weak to sail an ocean or even a river, he was taken to a little lake. Every day he brought in loads of dead, smelly fish.

The third tree was confused when the woodcutter cut her into strong beams and left her in a lumberyard.

“What happened?” the once-tall tree wondered. “All I ever wanted to do was stay on the mountain top and point to God.”

Many, many days and nights passed. The three trees dearly forgot their dreams.

But one night golden starlight poured over the first tree as a young woman placed her newborn baby in the feed box.

“I wish I could make a cradle for Him,” her husband whispered.

The mother squeezed his hand and smiled as the starlight shone on the smooth and sturdy wood. “This manger is beautiful,” she said.

And suddenly the first tree knew he was holding the greatest treasure in the world.

One evening a tired traveler and his friends crowded into the old fishing boat. The traveler fell asleep as the second tree quietly sailed out into the lade.

Soon a thundering and thrashing storm arose. The little tree shuddered. He knew he did not have the strength to carry so many passengers safely through the wind and rain.

The tired man awakened. He stood up, stretched out his hand, and said, “Peace.” The storm stopped as quickly as it had begun.

And suddenly the second tree knew he was carrying the King of heaven and earth.

One Friday morning, the third tree was startled when her beams were yanked from the forgotten woodpile. She flinched as she as carried through an angry, jeering crowd. She shuddered when soldiers nailed a man’s hands to her.

She felt ugly and harsh and cruel.

But on Sunday morning, when the sun rose and the earth trembled with joy beneath her, the third tree knew that God’s love had changed everything.

It had made the first tree beautiful.

It had made the second tree strong.

And every time people thought of the third tree, they would think of God. That was better than being the tallest tree in the world.

December 15 (part 1)


Christmas Eve 1935

By Done Schaubert

The twilight deepened, and smoke struggled to rise through the softly falling snow that spiraled slowly from dark chimneys almost hidden by the white, cottony fluff covering the rooftops. Light, escaping through the stained glass windows of St. Francis Church on the corner of Whitney and Orange Streets, cast colored bands across the snow-covered streets.

Strains of “Silent Night” drifted through the neighborhood from the final rehearsal before Midnight Mass, a Mass that would usher in Christmas 1935 in my hometown of Rochester, New York.

I can still hear that beautiful melody, and fifty-four years later, I can still imagine colored band of light stretching across the snow-blanketed streets, the snowflakes falling through the light turning all the colors of the rainbow.

I remembered how my boots made crunchy sounding footprints in the new snow. My newspaper deliveries were now almost finished – one more stop, then home for Christmas Eve! How I had looked forward to this day! How different this delivery would be; besides newspapers, I had sixty calendars to present to sixty customers. I hoped they would remember my faithful services and tip generously. It was the depression, and times were tough; any extra money would be needed at home.

My dad, like millions of other unemployed, took those bleak times in stride. Each morning he was up and gone before we five kids came down for breakfast. He might find work for a day or, if lucky, two, maybe three days. Such luck, however, was hard to come by. Still, with Dad’s persistence, my three or four dollars a week from the paper route, and Mom’s scrimping, we survived. And some generous tips would make our Christmas a little merrier, maybe even put a few more gifts under the tree and a turkey on the table!

The snowfall covered my sled’s tracks quickly; the few passers-by looked out of white darkness like huge wound-up toy snowmen. One more delivery!

My mackinaw pockets were heavy with silver coins; there were even two one dollar bills buried among the change. The box one my sled was loaded with presents given to me by customers glad of the service.

In the thirties, it was the custom to give gifts at Christmas to the mailman, the milkman, the garbage man, and of course, the paper boy. These gifts were usually something handmade, something simple – a scarf, a hat, home-baked cookies, nuts, or oranges. I looked forward to sharing these goodies with my brothers and sisters.

Before I was aware of the time passing, I found myself in front of a large gray building. Over a set of massive doors, hung a large, black sign with gold lettering, partially obscured by the accumulated snow. But I knew the sign well: Jacob Straussner Dry Goods. Inside the glass windows that loomed on each side of the doors appeared a veritable treasure-trove of gifts; a feast for the eyes of a young boy intent upon shopping for Christmas.

In the dim light supplied by weak bulbs overhead, I gazed at all the possible gifts for mom and dad, my brothers and sisters. In the left window, I peered at men’s dress shirts and ties, sweaters, and gloves, shoes and socks. There were women’s dresses and aprons and hats. In the right window, a serious-looking teddy bear, sitting next to a child’s play set of enameled tin dishes, stared at me. Checker boards, paint sets, tops harmonicas, and a jack knife, competed for my attention; I stared long at the jack knife, for purely selfish reasons.

Pulling myself away from the windows, I lifted the box cover piled high with snow, and from among my gifts, took out the last paper and calendar. My last delivery; this was the one I had waited for all day.

Now, for some serious shopping! I opened the door and the tell-tale bell rang overhead. Mr. Straussner appeared quickly, popping up like one of his jack-in-the-box men. He was small and gnome-like, with large eyes peering out through glasses that sat on unusually large ears. When he smiled, a lone gold tooth shone like a beacon through the gloom of his dimly-lit store. I wished him a Merry Christmas as I handed him his paper and calendar; seconds later, one more dollar bill joined the other two in the depths of my mackinaw.

Excitedly, I prowled the store looking for gifts, Mr. Straussner followed close behind. Call it remarkable coincidence, but every gift I purchased seemed to be on sale that afternoon.

With my business completed and another “Merry Christmas” to Mr. Straussner, I opened the massive door and stepped out into the storm. Five more blocks and I would be home. Behind me, in the snow-covered box, were gifts for the entire family, and in my weighted pockets was a special gift for mom and dad, a gift that would ease their worries for a few days.

It was with more than a little pride that I walked into our home on Campbell Street that Christmas Eve, many years ago.

December 15 (part 2)

Henry Lucius Stout

By William Wallace

“I don’t believe in Santa Claus,

There ain’t no such a man!

It’s all a fairy tale, because

I know from cousin Dan.”

It was thus spoke by Henry Lucius Stout,

A boy aged eight I know.

His mother said, “You’d best watch out

You’re standin’ near the flu.”

Now Santa happened just to be

Upon the roof, right pat

A peekin’ down if he could see

Where Lucius Stout was at.

He heard those angry words

Stood up and shook his head,

And took his book and wrote ‘em down

Exactly what he said.

When Christmas morning came

And Lucius ran to see

What he had got, Alas, he found

His stocking quite empty.

Except a note that he pulled out

Instead of some fine toy.

“I don’t believe in Lucius

There ain’t no such a boy.”

December 15 (part 3)

The Gift of Love

By Thomas S. Monson

When I was a very young bishop, in 1950, there was a tap at my door and a good German brother from Ogden, Utah, announced himself as Karl Guertler.

He said, “Are you Bishop Monson?”

I answered in the affirmative.

He said, “My brother and his wife and their family are coming from Germany. They are going to live in your ward. Will you come with me to see the apartment we have rented for them?” On the way to that apartment, he told me he had not seen his brother for something like 30 years. Yet all through the holocaust of World War II, his brother, Hans Guertler, had been faithful to the Church – an officer in the Hamburg branch.

I looked at that apartment. It was cold; it was dreary; the paint was peeling from the walls; the cupboards were bare. What an uninviting home for the Christmas season of the year! I worried about it and I prayed about it, and then in our ward welfare committee meeting, we did something about it.

The group leader of the high priests said, “I am an electrician. Let’s put good appliances in that apartment.”

The group leader of the seventies said, “I am in the floor covering business. Let’s install new floor coverings.”

The elders quorum president said, “I am a painter. Let’s paint that apartment.”

The Relief Society representative spoke up, “Did you say those cupboards were bare?” (They were not bare very long, with the Relief Society in action.)

Then the young people, represented through the Aaronic Priesthood general secretary said, “Let’s put a Christmas tree in the home and let’s go among our young people and gather gifts to place under the tree.”

You should have seen that Christmas scene, when the Guertler family arrived from Germany in clothing which was tattered and with faces which were drawn by the rigors of war and deprivation! As they went into their apartment they saw what had been in actual fact a transformation – a beautiful home. We spontaneously began singing “Silent Night! Holy Night! All is calm; all is bright.” We sang in English; they sang in German. At the conclusion of that hymn, Hans Gurtler threw his arms around my neck buried his face in my shoulder, and repeated over and over again those words which I shall never forget: “Mein brudder, mein brudder, mein brudder.”

As we walked down the stairs that night, all of us who had participated in making Christmas come alive in the lives of this German family, we reflected upon the words of the Master:

Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren, ye have done it unto me. (Matthew 25:40)

December 15 (part 4)

The Last Straw

By Paula McDonald

Everyone, unfortunately, was cooped up in the house that typical gray winter afternoon. And, as usual, the four little McNeals were at it again, teasing each other, squabbling, bickering, and always fighting over their toys.

At times like this, Ellen was almost ready to believe that her children didn’t love each other, even though she knew that wasn’t true. All brothers and sisters fight sometimes, of course, but lately her lively little bunch had been particularly horrid to each other, especially Eric and Kelly, who were only a year apart. The two of them seemed determined to spend the whole long winter making each other miserable.

“Give me that. It’s mine!” Kelly screamed, her voice shrill.

“It is not! I had it first,” Eric answered stubbornly.

Ellen sighed as she listened to the latest argument. With Christmas only a month away, the house seemed sadly lacking in Christmas Spirit. This was supposed to be the season of sharing and love, of warm feelings and happy hearts. A home needed more than just pretty packages and twinkling lights on a tree to fill the holidays with joy.

Ellen had only one idea. Years ago, her grandmother had told her about an old custom that helped people discover the true meaning of Christmas. Perhaps it would work for her family this year. It certainly was worth a try.

She gathered the children together and lined them up on the couch, tallest to smallest – Eric, Kelly, Lisa and Mike.

“How would you kids like to start a new Christmas tradition this year?” she asked. “It’s like a game, but it can only be played by people who can keep a secret. Can everyone here do that?”

“I can!” shouted Eric.

“I can keep a secret better than him,” yelled Kelly.

“I can do it!” chimed in Lisa.

“Me too. Me too,” squealed little Mike. “I’m big enough.”

“Well then, this is how the game works,” Ellen explained. This year we’re going to surprise Baby Jesus when He comes on Christmas Eve by making Him the softest bed in the world. We’re going to fill a little crib with straw to make it comfortable. But here’s the secret part. The straw we put in will measure the good-deeds we’ve done, but we won’t tell anyone who we’re doing them for.”

The children looked confused. “But how will Jesus know it’s His bed?” Kelly asked

“He’ll know,” said Ellen. “He’ll recognize it by the love we put in to make it soft.”

“But who will we do the good deeds for?” asked Eric, still a little confused.

“We’ll do them for each other. Once a week we’ll put all of our names in a hat, mine and Daddy’s too. Then we’ll pick out a different name. Whoever’s name we draw, we’ll do kind things for that person for a whole week. Bt you can’t tell anyone else whose name you’ve chosen. We’ll each try to do as many favors for our special person as we can without getting caught. And for every good deed we do, we’ll put another straw in the crib.”

“Like being a spy?” squealed Lisa.

“But what if I pick someone’s name I don’t like?” Kelly frowned.

Ellen thought about that for a minute. “Maybe you could use an extra fat piece of straw. And think how much faster the fat straws will fill up our crib. We’ll use the cradle in the attic,” she said. “And we can all go to the field behind the school for the straw.”

Without a single argument, the children bundled unto their wool hats and mittens, laughing and tumbling out of the house. The field had been covered with tall grass in summer, but now, dead and dried, the golden stalks looked just like real straw. They carefully selected handfuls and placed them in the large box they had carried with them.

“That’s enough,” Ellen laughed when the box was almost overflowing. “Remember, it’s only a small cradle.”

“We’ll pick names as soon as Daddy comes home for dinner,” Ellen said, unable to hide a smile at the thought of Mark’s pleased reaction to the children’s transformed faces and their voices, filled now with excited anticipation rather than annoyance.

At the supper table that night, six pieces of paper were folded, shuffled and shaken around in Mark’s furry winter hat, and the drawing began. Kelly picked a name first and immediately started to giggle. Lisa reached into the hat next, trying hard to look like a serious spy. Mike couldn’t read yet, so Mark whispered the name in his ear. Then mike quickly ate his little wad of paper so no one would ever learn the identity of his secret person. Eric was the next to choose, and as he unfolded his scrap of paper a frown creased his forehead. But he stuffed the name quickly into his pocket and said nothing. Ellen and Mark selected names and the family was ready to begin.

The week that followed was filled with surprises, it seemed an army of invisible elves had suddenly invaded the McNeal house. Kelly would walk into her room at bedtime to find her nightgown neatly laid out and her bed turned down. Someone cleaned up the sawdust under the workbench without being asked. The jelly blobs magically disappeared from the kitchen counter after lunch one day while Ellen was out getting the mail. And every morning, when Eric was brushing his teeth, someone crept quietly into his room and made the bed. It wasn’t made perfectly, but it was made. That particular little elf must have had short arms because he couldn’t seem to reach the middle.

“Where are my shoes?” Mark asked one morning. No one seemed to know, but suddenly, before he left for work, they were back in the closet again, freshly shined.

Ellen noticed other changes during that week too. The children weren’t teasing or fighting as much. An argument would start, and then suddenly stop right in the middle for no apparent reason. Even Eric and Kelly seemed to be getting along better and bickering less. In fact, there were times when all the children could be seen smiling secret smiles and giggling to themselves. And slowly, one by one, the first straws began to appear in the little crib. Just a few, then a few more each day. By the end of the first week, a little pile had accumulated.

Everyone was anxious to pick new names and this time there was more laughter and merriment than there had been the first time. Except for Eric. Once again, he unfolded his scrap of paper, glanced at it, and stuffed it in his pocket without a word.

The second week brought more astonishing events, and the little pile of straw in the manger grew higher and softer. There was more laughter, less teasing, and hardly any arguments could be heard around the house. Only Eric had been unusually quiet, and sometimes Ellen would catch him looking a little sad. But the straws in the manger continued to pile up.

At last, it was almost Christmas. They chose names for the final time on the night before Christmas Eve. As they sat around the table waiting for the last set of names to be shaken in the hat, the children smiled as they looked at their hefty pile of straw. They all knew it was comfortable and soft, but there was one day left and they could still make it a little deeper, a little softer, and they were going to try.

For the last time the hat was passed around the table. Mike picked out a name, and again quickly ate the paper as he had done each week. Lisa unfolded hers carefully under the table, peeked at it and then hunched up her little shoulders, smiling. Kelly reached into the hat and grinned from ear to ear when she saw the same. Ellen and Mark each took their turn and handed the hat with the last name to Eric. As he unfolded the scrap of paper and glanced at it, his face crumpled and he seemed about to cry. Without a word he turned and ran from the room.

Everyone immediately jumped up from the table, but Ellen stopped them. “No! Stay where you are,” she said firmly. “I’ll go.”

In his room, Eric was trying to pull on his coat with one hand while he picked up a small cardboard suitcase with the other.

“I’ll have to leave,” he said quietly through tears. “If I don’t, I’ll spoil Christmas.”

“But why? And where are you going?”

“I can sleep in my snow fort for a couple of days. I’ll come home right after Christmas. I promise.”

Ellen started to say something about freezing and snow and no mittens or boots, but Mark, who had come up behind her, gently laid his hand on her arm and shook his head. The front door closed, and together they watched from the window as the little figure with the sadly slumped shoulders trudged across the street and sat down on a snow bank near the corner. It was dark outside, and cold, and a few flurries drifted down on the small boy and his suitcase.

“Give him a few minutes alone,” Mark quietly said. “I think he needs that. Then you can talk to him.”

The huddled figure was already dusted with white when Ellen walked across the street and sat down beside him on the snow bank.

“What is it, Eric? You’ve been so good these last weeks, but I know something’s been bothering you since we first started the crib. Can you tell me, Honey?”

“Ah Mom…don’t you see?” He sniffed. “I tried so hard, but I can’t do it anymore, and now I’m going to wreck Christmas for everybody.” With that, he burst into sobs and threw himself into his mother’s arms.

“Mom,” the little boy choked, “you just don’t know. I got Kelly’s name every time! And I hate Kelly! I tried, Mom. I really did. I snuck into her room every night and fixed her bed. I even laid out her crummy nightgown. I let her use my racecar one day, but she smashed it right into the wall like always! Every week, when we picked new names, I thought it would be over. Tonight, when I got her name again, I knew I couldn’t do it anymore. If I try, I’ll probably punch her instead. If I stay home and beat Kelly up, I’ll spoil Christmas for everyone.”

The two of them sat there together quietly for a few minutes and then Ellen spoke softly. “Eric, I’m so proud of you. Every good deed you did should count double because it was hard for you to be nice to Kelly for so long. But you did those good deeds anyway, one straw at a time. You gave your love when it wasn’t easy to give. And maybe that’s what the Spirit of Christmas is really all about. And maybe it’s the hard good deeds and the difficult straw that make that little crib special. You’re the one who’s probably added the most important straw.” Ellen paused, stroking the head pressed tightly against her shoulder. “Now, how would you like a chance to earn a few easy straws like the rest of us? I still have the name I picked in my pocket, and I haven’t looked at it yet. Why don’t we switch for the last day? And it will be our secret.”

Eric lifted his head and looked into her face, his eyes wide. “That’s not cheating?”

“It’s not cheating.” And together they dried the tears, brushed off the snow, and walked back to the house.

The next day, the whole family was busy cooking and straightening up the house for Christmas Day, wrapping last minute presents and trying hard to keep from bursting with excitement. But even with all the activity and eagerness, a flurry of new straws piled up in the crib, and by night fall the little manger was almost overflowing. At different times while passing by, each member of the family, big and small, would pause and look at the wondrous pile for a moment, then smile before going on. But…who could really know? One more straw still might make a difference.

For that reason, just before bedtime, Ellen tiptoed quietly to Kelly’s room to lay out the little blue nightgown and turn the bed. But she stopped in the doorway surprised. Someone had already been there. The nightgown was laid across the bed and a small red racecar had been placed next to it on the pillow.

The Last straw was Eric’s after all.

December 15 (part 5)

The Little Star

Once upon a time, a very long time ago, there was a little star named Shine. She was so small she could hardly be seen. All the other stars were much bigger and brighter than Shine.

A night when people looked up at the sky, they saw all he big bright stars. But no one ever saw Shine.

One night Shine asked the other stars if there was some way she could twinkle and sparkle like them. But the stars just laughed.

“Oh, no, Shine. You are far too small.”

Shine felt very sad, and she began to cry. “No one ever sees me,” she said. “I wish I were bigger.”

Later that night the wise old moon saw Shine.

“Why are you so sad?” He asked.

“Because,” said Shine, “I try to twinkle and sparkle, but I am the littlest star in this whole big sky, and no one ever sees me.”

“Don’t be sad,” said the old moon. “How big or small you are is not important. Someday, somewhere, someone will notice you.”

“But when?” asked Shine.

The moon smiled and said, “Someday, somewhere.” And he went on his way across the sky.

Many years passed. Night after night, Shine shone, but no one ever saw her. Then one night something very strange happened. Shine began to fall from the sky! Down, down, down she fell.

Shine landed gently on the roof of a little stable. Everything was dark and quiet. The only sounds she heard were those of the animals. Shine felt very tired. She started to fall asleep and just as she began to doze, she heard a baby crying.

Shine looked inside the stable and saw a tiny baby lying in a manger.

“Oh!” she cried. “This stable is so cold and dark. Perhaps I can shine enough to brighten it up.” So Shine moved closer to the baby.

When the baby saw Shine and felt the warmth of her gentle rays, he began to smile. The more the baby smiled, the brighter Shine Shone! The whole stable glowed. It was a miracle.

As Shine grew brighter she began to rise. Up, up, up into the sky higher and higher, brighter and brighter. Everyone saw the magnificent star. Shine was now the brightest star in the sky. All the other stars looked happily at her. This was the moment she had always wished for!

And on that special night, shining over the little stable in Bethlehem, Shine was the most beautiful star the world has ever seen. Shine was THE SHINING STAR OF BEHLEHEM.

December 15 (part 6)

True Christmas Joy

By Kemmett Morrell

Twas the day before Christmas, a long time ago

And the beautiful earth was all covered with snow:

Down the street with their sleighs came two manly boys,

Who paused at the window to look at the toys.

Already two others were there looking in:

But their faces were sad, and their clothes old and thin.

And the little one said, “Is it because we’re so poor

That Santa doesn’t come to our home anymore?”

The older one patted his wee brother’s head,

And hugged him closely, as softly he said,

“Oh, maybe he will come tonight, little Tim.

If we ask n our prayers for the Lord to send him!”

The little face smiled, but the boys saw a tear

In the eye of the one who quelled little Tim’s fear.

Then slowly and sadly the waifs went their way

To the place they called home, where that night they would pray.

The boys, with their sleighs, followed closely behind,

And neither one spoke, but in each childish mind

A beautiful thought said as plain as could be;

“I’ll share with those poor boys what Santa brings me.”

When the two reached home, to their father they ran,

And eagerly told him their unselfish plan.

He was proud of his boys, who now felt that same love,

That sent our dear Savior from his home above.

Next morning came still thrilled with their beautiful thought,

They scampered downstairs to see what Santa brought,

And they, with the help of their father and mother,

Selected the presents for Tim and his brother.

And as the first light of dawn came into view

The two went their way with their toys bright and new

And crept very quietly up to the door

Where they’d seen the boys enter the evening before.

As they hurried back home toward their own Christmas joys,

They could not even dram how the other two boys,

On finding that Santa had really been there.

Sent their joy to the One who had answered their prayer.

That night, when the “Santas” were ready for bed,

With a hand of their father on each curly head,

They knew, a they thought of the two poor happy boys,

What is the truest and choicest of all Christmas joy.

December 16 (part 1)


The Lady on the Street

One cold winter day, a ragged little urchin stood on a street corner of a large city selling newspapers. His feet were bare and he had no coat. As he stood there shivering, a woman walking past noticed the child. She approached him and said, “Come with me, dear, I want to buy you a coat and some shoes.”

A smile lighted his cold little face as he took her hand. She led him to a large, warm department store, where she had him completely outfitted from head to toe with sturdy winter clothing.

The boy was putting the last of his new clothing on as the woman paid the bill and slipped quietly out the door. When he finished dressing, he looked for the lady to tell her thank you, but he was told by the clerk that she had gone.

He ran from the store, frantically looking up and down the street. He must thank the lady. There she was, walking down the street! He ran quickly to her, took her hand and said, “Lady, why did you go? I wanted to thank you!”

“You’re most welcome, my dear,” she smiled.

The little boy then looked up into her face and said solemnly, “Lady, who are you? Are you God’s wife?”

“No,” she softly replied, “I’m just one of His children.”

“Oh, I knew it! I knew it!” he shouted. “I just knew you were some relation.”

December 16 (part 2)

Why Christmas Trees Aren’t Perfect

They say that if you creep into an evergreen forest late at night you can hear the trees talking. If you listen very carefully to the whisper of the wind, you can hear the older pines telling the younger ones why they will never be perfect. They will always have a bent branch here, a gap there…

But long, long ago, all the evergreen trees were perfect. Each one took special pride in branches that sloped smoothly down from pointed top to evenly shaped skirt.

This was especially true in a small kingdom far beyond the Carpathian Mountains in Europe. Here the evergreen trees were the most beautiful of all. For here the sun shone just right, not too hot, not too dim. Here the rain fell just enough to keep the ground moist and soft so no tree went thirsty. And here the snow fell gently day after day to keep every branch fresh and green.

Each year as Christmas approached, the Queen’s woodsmen would search the royal evergreen forest for the most perfect, most beautiful tree. The one fortunate enough to be chose would be cut on the first Saturday of Advent. It would then be carefully carried to the castle and set up in the center of the great hall. There it reigned in honor for all the Christmas celebrations.

Out in the hushed forest every evergreen hoped for this honor. Each tree tried to grow its branches and needles to perfection. All of them strained to have the best form and appearance.

One tree, Small Pine, grew near the edge of the forest and promised to be the most beautiful of all. As a seedling it had listened carefully to the older trees who knew what was best for young saplings. And it had tried so very hard to grow just right. As a result, everything about Small Pine from its deep sea-green color to the curling tip of its evenly spaced branches, was perfect.

It had, in fact, already overheard jealous whispers from the other trees. But it paid them no mind. Small Pine knew that if one did one’s very best, what anyone else said didn’t matter.

One cold night, when a bright full moon glittered on the crusty snow, a little gray rabbit came hopping as fast as he could into the grove of evergreens. The rabbit’s furry sides heaved in panic. From beyond the hill came the howling of wild dogs in the thrill of the hunt. The bunny, his eyes wide with fright, frantically searched for cover. But the dark, cold trees lifted their branches artfully from the snow and frowned. They did not like this interruption of their quiet evening when growing was as its best.

Faster and faster the rabbit circled as the excited howling of the dogs sounded louder and louder.

And then Small Pine’s heart shuddered. When the terrified rabbit ran near, Small Pine dipped its lower branches down, down, down to the snow. And in that instant before the wild dogs broke into the grove, the rabbit slipped under Small Pine’s evergreen screen. He huddled safely among the comforting branches while the dogs galloped by and disappeared into the forest.

In the morning the rabbit went home to his burrow, the Small Pine tried to lift its lower branches back up to their proper height. It strained and struggled, but the branches had been pressed down too long through the night. “Oh well,” Small Pine though, “no matter.” Perhaps the woodsmen wouldn’t notice a few uneven branches near the ground in a tree so beautiful.

Several days later a terrible blizzard lashed the land. No one remembered ever having so much wind and snow. Villagers slammed their shutters tight while birds and animals huddled in their nests and dens.

A brown mother wren had become lost in the storm. With feathers so wet she could barely fly, she went from large evergreen to another looking for a shelter. But each tree she approached feared the wren would ruin it’s perfect shape and clenched its branches tight, like a fist.

Finally the exhausted wren fluttered toward Small Pine. Once more Small Pine’s heart opened and so did its branches. The mother wren nestled on a branch near the top, secure at last. But when the storm ended and the bird had flown away, Small Pine could not move its top branches back into their perfect shape.

In them would be a gap evermore.

Days passed and winter deepened. The packed snow had frozen so hard that the deer in the forest could not reach the tender ground moss which they ate to survive. Only the older, stronger deer could dig through the icy snow with their hooves.

One little fawn had wandered away from his mother. Now he was starving. He inched into the pine grove and noticed the soft, tender evergreen tips. He tried to nibble on them, but every tree quickly withdrew its needles so they tiny deer teeth couldn’t chew them.

Thin and weak, he staggered against Small Pine. Pity filled the tree’s heart and it stretched out its soft needles for the starving fawn to eat. But alas, when the deer was strong enough to scamper away, Small Pine’s branches looked very ragged.

Small Pine wilted in sorrow. It could hear what the larger, still perfect trees were saying about how bad it looked. A tear of pine gum oozed from the tip of a branch. Small Pine knew it could never hope for the honor of being the Queen’s Christmas tree.

Lost in despair, Small Pine did not see the good Queen come with the woodsmen into the forest. It was Saturday of Advent, and she had come to choose the finest tree herslf because this was a special celebration year in the history of her kingdom.

As the royal sleigh, drawn by two white horses, slowly passed through the forest, her careful eye scanned the evergreens. Each one was hoping to be the royal choice.

When the Queen saw Small Pine, a flush of anger filled her. How could such an ugly tree with so many drooping branches and gaps be allowed in the royal forest? She decided to have a woodsman cut it to throw away and nodded for the sleigh to drive on.

But then…she raised her hand for the sleigh to stop and glanced back at the forlorn little pine.

She noticed the tracks of the small animals under it’s uneven needles. She saw a wren’s feather caught in its branches. And, as she studied the gaping hole in its side and its ragged shape, understanding filled her heart.

“This is the one,” she said, and pointed to Small Pine. The woodsmen gasped, but they did as the Queen directed.

To the astonishment of all the evergreens in the forest, Small Pine was carried away to the great hall in the castle. There it was decorated with shimmering, silver stars and golden angels, which sparkled and flashed in the light of thousands of glowing candles.

On Christmas Day a huge Yule log blazed in the fireplace at the end of the great hall. While orange flames chuckled and crackled, the Queen’s family and all the villagers danced and sag together around Small Pine. And everyone who danced and sang around it said that Small Pine was the finest Christmas tree yet. For in looking at its drooping, nibbled branches, they saw the protecting arm of their father or the comforting lap of a mother. And some, like the wise Queen, saw the love of Christ expressed on earth.

So if you walk among evergreens today, you will find, along with rabbits, birds, and other happy living things, many trees like Small Pine. You will see a drooping limb, which gives cover, a gap offering a warm resting place, or branches ragged from feeding hungry animals.

For, as have many of us, the trees have learned that living for the sake of others makes us most beautiful in the eyes of God.