Saturday, December 25, 2021


The Broken Baby Jesus and the Angel

Author Unknown

A few years ago my parents decided to purchase a life size ceramic nativity for their yard. It had a Joseph and a Mary, and an almost life size baby Jesus. This nativity was as fragile as it was beautiful. After we had opened the boxes and each nativity piece had been unpacked, my dad felt that the nativity scene needed a stable. So while my dad went to work building- Mary, Joseph and baby Jesus hung out in the garage. 

One day while working on the stable my dad went to pick up the baby Jesus, thinking it was attached to the manger. As he did so, baby Jesus fell out and broke all over the concrete floor. The sight of Him in pieces made me sad and my mom could not bear the thought of throwing Him away. (Now this is the part in the story where I make a confession. I am a “craft lady”. You know, it’s kind of like a “cat lady” but worse. I have shelves and shelves of fabric, clay, paint etc… some say its teetering on the verge of either madness or genius, let’s leave it at genius.) 

Anyway, after baby Jesus had broken, my mom remembered my “genius” and brought Him and all of His pieces to me. It took hours of piecing, gluing and painting. In the end, baby Jesus made it back to the manger in the garage, waiting for the stable to be finished. A few days later my brother, again moving things around, decided to pick up the manger and move the baby Jesus. As he did it fell out again and shattered. And of course, throwing away baby Jesus was not an option. So again, my mom brought Him and all of His pieces to me. It took longer this time and things seemed more broken than ever, but through patience and perseverance we were able to fix Him and make Him whole.

A friend of mine overheard the baby Jesus story, and had decided if I could fix Him, I would surely be able to fix her broken Christmas angel. She called me in tears because it had been in her family for generations, and it meant so much to her. I told her simply, I will try. When she came to drop it off, I could see that it was a large, golden angel. So large that there was an entire nativity scene at the bottom. To my horror it wasn’t just broken, a section of the wing, part of a hand, and Joseph’s head were completely missing. I wondered how I could ever repair something that wasn’t there, it was discouraging. I looked at this angel and decided to put it in my craft room for a while. I ignored it for several days and even called my friend at one point saying that it just wasn’t possible. But she insisted that if I could fix the baby Jesus, I could fix her angel. 

Unsure of where to begin or how to make something out of nothing, I prayed. I prayed to know what I could possibly do… “Please Heavenly Father I don’t know how to fix this angel, it is broken, there are pieces missing, please help me fix it.”

And as I held that angel, the spirit spoke to me. It was as if I could hear a voice saying “take some clay and lay it here, make an impression of the right wing and place it there, oh and check your molds, see if you can repair Joseph’s head”… sure enough I had a mold of a little man that looked just like Joseph. In the end, through prayer and with the help of the spirit, I was able to fix that angel and make it whole again. 

As I have looked back over the years I have learned a few lessons through this experience. First and foremost, that each of us at least once in our life, if not several times, will feel broken. Broken to the point of feeling irreparable. We will feel like things are shattered in a million pieces on the floor. We might even feel like pieces of us are missing that can never be found. But I want you to know that there is One who can repair us, One who can help us and make us whole...our Savior Jesus Christ. He is there to guide us and send help when we feel alone. He will speak to us and say “pick up that piece of clay, lay it there, or use this paint and put it there.” He doesn’t even care that pieces are missing, He will take all you have to offer and make it better. You just have to simply say “I will try.” When I finished fixing the angel was it perfect? No, of course not. There were still some cracks that could be seen, but she was beautiful and whole. Not whole as in “perfect” but whole as in “parts working together as one” (you and Him)… whole. 

He has promised us that it is through our imperfections that we will find him. It is through our cracks and our trials that He will come to us and his light can shine.

To quote the words of Leonard Cohen:

“Ring the bells that still can ring

Forget your perfect offering

There is a crack in everything

That’s how the light gets in”

May we remember that no matter how broken we feel that there is One, even Jesus Christ, who was willing to descend below it all. It was He who was bruised, broken and made whole again so that He could know how to fix us. He will be there in all of our brokenness, He is the Master Healer. 

Friday, December 24, 2021


The Miracle of Christmas 1938

Author Unknown

Raymond, Alberta, Canada

December 24, 1938, and in Raymond it was a beautiful day, hardly any snow and a warm Chinook wind blowing.

To three bushy tailed starry eyed youngsters from Saskatchewan, Raymond was the biggest city in the world. How exciting it all was. A long train ride from Saskatoon to Lethbridge, a new school, new friends, and it was Christmas Eve.

Not so excited were our parents, however. Like hundreds of families before us, we had left our burned out farm and migrated to Southern Alberta, to what we hoped would be “a land of promise”. However due to circumstances beyond anyone’s control, the fact of the matter was that we, the Petrac family, were penniless and broke.

In her ways of wisdom and love, our mother had already told us that Christmas would be very bare because, having moved so quickly, Santa Claus would likely not find out where we lived.

Well, maybe our mother knew a lot about loving and raising children, and cooking good meals and keeping a neat house, but she didn’t know a thing about Santa Claus. There was no way he was going to overlook us, we three children were certain of that. I made my first trip to Main Street, Raymond, and looked at the exciting displays of toys in the window of Stones Hardware Store and the Mercantile. I spent most of my time watching the electric train go round and round in the Fromm’s Jewelry Store window. I was excited as were, I’m sure, my older brother and sister, Jerry and Agnus. Two youngsters were at home and weren’t really aware of what was happening.

I was just seven and all fall I had this horrible earache. Finally, on the 24th mother marched downtown to the drugstore to pick up something that might help my ear. She explained to Percy Cope, of Cope’s Drug Store, what she needed and her lack of funds to pay for it. Percy listened carefully then gave her the medicine and a bag of candy for us children. That was it, as far as the Petrac Christmas was concerned.

About two o’clock in the afternoon there came a pounding at the door. Out of curiosity, I accompanied my mother to the door. When she opened it, I saw the biggest man I had ever seen in my life. He had a gruff, big voice to match his size.

“I’ve got a load of coal here, where do you want it?” he asked.

My mother assured him that he had made a mistake. We had not ordered coal nor did we have money to pay for it.

“If you are Mrs. Petrac, the coal is for you. Now where do you want it? And a Merry Christmas to you.” he added, more gently.

The Christmas miracle of 1938 had begun.

We learned later that the first caller, the big man, with the coal was Bill Rouse, a man with a heart as big as his stature. After that it was unbelievable, people coming and going from our front door all afternoon, all evening, and well into the night. People came with gifts, with turkeys, with oranges, with candles, nuts and apples. People came by the dozens. Two delivery wagons came with their well known trotting horses from the Merc and Stones, with groceries galore. Later a choral group of young men and women came in and shouted, “Merry Christmas” and proceeded to set up and decorate a tree for us-- our very first Christmas Tree, and it was lighted with real candles. They sang carols while they decorated and during this time, Mother just stood there in shock and disbelief-- taking it all in with gratitude in her eyes such as I had never seen before.

This amazing Christmas Eve continued well into the night and then suddenly, about 11:30 pm there was a merry “HO HO HO” and Santa Claus appeared, right at our front door. I wasn’t surprised nor was I shocked. I knew he would show. By this time the snow had began to gently fall, making everything white, quiet and still. From the northwest of us the Carter family, of Raymond had a loud speaker system set up and was playing Christmas carols. What a beautiful Christmas. What a wonderful miracle it was and yes, I did get a little train. Not an electric one but a wind up one that ran on a circular track.

There never was and will never be another Christmas like it.

Santa Clause and Percy Cope (the mayor at the time) and dozens of citizens, found our home.

Mom and Dad, Jerry and Rose have gone on. There is only Agnus and Ruthy and myself left. But from all of us “Thank you. Raymond,” for teaching us that there really is a Santa Claus. Thank you to the dozens of people who took part in the miracle of Christmas 1938. 

Thursday, December 23, 2021


A House Visit from Santa 

By Lynn Jarman

The chill in the air that Saturday morning in November of 1986 seemed to portend the storm that was about to descend upon our family.

I viewed the world through our living room window and watched the sun’s warmth flow over the top of the Wasatch Mountains and melt away the cold frosty blanket before me. Pleasant memories of holidays past filled my mind — holidays spent with family. I could hear my wife and children playing in a distant room. Joseph would have his 6th birthday in December and Josh was 20 months old. Thanksgiving was a couple of weeks off, but the magical anticipation of Christmas was already stirring in our home.

My father experienced a stroke just before Thanksgiving. After a short stay in the hospital, he was released to a nursing home. As Christmas approached, we were excited by the news that Dad could spend Christmas Day at home. Family began planning ways to ensure this would be a wonderful Christmas for both Mom and Dad, but our anticipated joy was sadly snatched away. Dad passed away on Dec 23.

Dec. 24 was spent making funeral arrangements and calling family. When evening came, I was totally exhausted. I sprawled across the living room sofa and listened to the muffled sounds of my wife and children in the distance.

Sadness swept over me and settled like a heavy blanket on my body and soul. I found myself praying for strength, praying for my mother, my wife and my children. Where was the joy in this Christmas? I thought of the Savior and the joy of his birth, but I also thought of the sadness accompanying the atonement. Solitude engulfed me.

As I felt completely isolated in my sorrow, I heard the jingling of bells, distant, but unmistakable. I focused on the sound. It was coming nearer, louder and louder. The sound was outside my very house. Still, I could not seem to move from my reclined position on the couch.

A knock at the door startled me. The bells were still ringing. They sounded like Santa bells. I forced myself to the door and there, on my front porch, stood a man all dressed in red with black boots, and a red cap with a white fur ball at the pointy end.

“Merry Christmas!” he exclaimed, but I couldn’t respond. I stared in dumb awe at the sight. He winked at me and laughed as he entered my home.

“Let’s see. I’m here to see Joseph and Joshua. Are they home?”

His eyes twinkled. They really did twinkle and his laugh was pure joy.

I hesitated and finally stammered a response, “Yeah … yes, I’ll get them. Please wait, I’ll be right back.”

I was asking Santa Claus to wait while I retrieved my children! If I was dreaming, it was a wonderful, exhilarating dream that I wanted to enjoy completely. I rushed my family to the living room where Santa was waiting to greet Joseph and Josh. His smile and warmth won over my two boys immediately. He spoke in a soft voice filled with love as he looked in their innocent faces and wondering eyes.

Suddenly he rose from the couch, wished my wife and boys a Merry Christmas and headed for the door. As he passed me, he briefly paused, reached back to shake my hand, smiled and whispered, “Merry Christmas.”

Then, as quickly as he had arrived, he was gone.

I looked at the excitement in the faces of my two sons, and in that instant, I felt the true joy of Christmas. I knew its true meaning.

I understood the greatest gift that we give each other is the gift of love. I hugged my family and knew that this would be a Christmas I would forever cherish in my heart. I had prayed for strength and what I received was a miracle of love.

I don’t remember what gifts were exchanged that Christmas, nor do I recall much about gifts exchanged on Christmas days in the following years, but I will always remember the Christmas when my fervent prayer was answered by a visit from Santa, who brought the gift of love to our home. 

Wednesday, December 22, 2021


A Mom’s Generous Heart 

By Jeff Anderson 

It was a great Christmas Day. Snow on the roads and very quiet as I walked the long walk to Mike’s house. It seemed like forever as I was so excited to show Mike my loot.

I finally arrived and Mike’s little sister opened the door. I walked in and the whole family was excited to see me.

As I looked around, the picture still sits in my mind of how different Mike’s house was that morning from mine. There was no big Christmas breakfast. There was no wrapping paper spread around the house. There was the saddest looking Christmas tree I ever did see — maybe 10 ornaments and one strand of tinsel that went around the tree from top to bottom, leaving huge gaps with nothing.

It all did not seem to register until I asked Mike what he got for Christmas. Mike showed me the one forgettable gift he had gotten from Santa. I suddenly felt incredibly silly. I had brought both pockets full of stuff I had received, not to mention all the great stuff I had at home.

We played for an hour or so and I wished them a Merry Christmas and walked home. I could not believe how Santa had forgotten Mike’s family. I got home and my mom asked me how Mike’s Christmas was. I told her what I had seen and thought.

She immediately got out two large grocery sacks and went to her bedroom. She loaded up both bags full to the top with gifts. The only items I remember in the bags were Stompers (a battery-powered small monster truck) for Mike and his little brother.

I remember she ran around the house and out to the garage finding more stuff to send with me in the bags. I do remember the bags were so full, we for sure could not fit one more item in them.

I bundled up and hurried out the door with the bags.

This time the walk to Mike’s house was quick. I stared at the caramel popcorn balls in the top of the bag and had to smell them the whole way there. I had never felt anything like this before. I was so excited to get there. At that time, I had no idea what the contents of the bags would mean to the family.

I knocked on the door and Mike’s mom answered and was surprised to see me back. I handed her the bags and she invited me in. As it became apparent to her what was in the bags, Mike’s mom began sobbing. I handed the gifts out the best I could. My mom and I had not gone through which gifts were for which kid.

It did not matter.

Each one of the kids tore open the gifts and were thrilled to have them as if it was just what they wanted. I don’t remember why, but I only was there for a few minutes and then went home.

Nothing was ever said to me that I can remember, but I believe Mike’s mom and my mom had a conversation later that day. Mike moved away that same year and we did the best we could to keep in touch, but not attending the same school made it difficult to keep up.

Although Mike and his family moved away, I will never forget that Christmas as it has made a great impact on my life. Thank you, Mom and Dad, for your example of giving all through the year and especially during the holidays.

Tuesday, December 21, 2021


Tim Ryan and the Angels

By John W. Walter III

Tim Ryan listened to the wind howling through the empty city streets. Night was rapidly approaching, the night of December 24. In other years the day of the 24th itself and most especially the day to follow would have been joyful days for Tim Ryan. But not this year. No, most definitely anything but joyful. 

Upstairs in the back bedroom on the third floor of the house that he was just leaving, Maggie was dying.

“Only hours,” the young doctor had said. “Your wife has a very short time to live, Mr. Ryan.” 

He seemed to take a smug satisfaction in being able to so casually measure off the time of life remaining to another human being.

That had been this morning. The hours had dragged by slowly since then. The pale sunlight of December had brought little warmth to Timothy Edward Ryan, caught in the middle of his 67th year.

Long ago, and it seemed to be a part of that other world in which he and Maggie had been born, little Tim would have taken comfort from what the priests would have offered him. He had been faithful in his church, and when he married Maggie, the ceremony had been performed by Father Kelly. He hadn’t considered any other alternative.

Forty-eight years had gone by since that day. In those 48 years, Christmastime had been special to the Ryans. Their house had been filled with the laughter of six children and the children’s friends. Twenty years ago, the first grandchild had seen Christmas at the Ryan’s.

Now December 24 or 25, and it didn’t really matter which, was about to become a day etched in pain and sorrow in the mind of Tim Ryan. There was a part of him up there, a part of him that was slowly, painfully slipping away. He wanted to cry, but no tears would come.

As he began to move away from the front steps, moving in some direction, any direction to be away from this place, he took a companion with him. The companion was Bitterness, and he had been with Tim for some time now.

Bitterness laughed at long-held beliefs. “See, Tim? It all must end this way. This is the end of the laughter. That was temporary; this is not.”

At 4:30 he pulled on his scarf and followed with his heavy parka. He told the nurse that he would be back, that he needed to get out and get some air. Really Tim wanted to go and embrace the cold and the coming darkness, for without Maggie, would there be anything left but cold and darkness in his life?

The sunlight had faded rapidly away and become the dark of night. Tim walked aimlessly through the streets of his adopted city, about to be alone for the first time. “I must make a plan,” he thought. “I must see to the future. There is hope—”

The word hope stuck in his throat. His companion, Bitterness, told him that to believe in hope at this point was a cruel joke on himself. Why, it was like believing that angels would come and lift their voices to the heavens! Both hope and angels were things of the past, Bitterness told him.

Bitterness became quiet as Tim turned his mind to thoughts of past years. When he was just a boy, he had left Ireland with his two older brothers and a younger sister to come to America. They landed in New York and then moved to Baltimore to join an uncle.

The streets of Baltimore hadn’t been paved with gold. They had had to work long hours in their uncle’s store. Slowly the hours began to pay off, and the sweat and toil became the mortgage price of prosperity. Ever so slowly, poverty released its strong icy fingers from around the immigrants.

When he was 17, Tim Ryan had let his brother Michael talk him into going to a parish dance. “Come along, Timmy. It’s time that you began to think about the ladies. And what better place to meet them than at the parish house?”

Tim went with Michael, shyly, unwillingly at first. He stood off on the sidelines, watching the others dance and hating them for their social graces and himself for his shyness. Then Maggie appeared and the climate changed.

She was short, no taller than his five foot three inches, with long black hair. She smiled often, and once when he looked enough in her direction, she smiled at him. He could feel the color rising in his cheeks.

He summoned up the courage to go over and introduce himself. She asked him with that ever-present smile if he always blushed so brightly. “No,” he said, “it only happens when I talk with a beautiful young lady. And by the way, may I have the next dance?” She said yes.

Tim Ryan walked Maggie Rourke home that night after the dance. They saw each other often in the next year. Then, one night, on the anniversary of that dance in the parish house, he asked her another question. She answered yes to this one too, and they made arrangements with Father Kelly to perform the ceremony.

The old man that Tim Ryan had become shook himself to break the train of thought. He had walked so far as to arrive in the department store district. The big stores were closed now, their displays of Christmas merchandise garish in the neon sun.

“I will walk a little further,” Tim thought. “Just a few more minutes here in the cold and I will be ready to return and face what I know I cannot avoid.” He headed slowly up the hill into the wind, with its blasts tearing at his face and jacket.

* * * * *

“One more house, Brother Henderson?” That was Jan Andrews’s question.

Gregory Henderson looked at his group. He had come into the city with a dozen of the kids from his Sunday School class to visit some of the older members of the congregation and sing Christmas carols. They had seen all of the families on their list with the exception of the Billings, and it was getting late and the kids were getting cold.

“Face it, Henderson,” he thought, “you’d like to go home too. You have a family to be with on Christmas Eve and a wife who would like some help in decorating the Christmas tree.” Another part of him spoke up quickly, though, and put things into perspective.

“Yes, we’re going to see the Billings. They live on Clayton Avenue. It shouldn’t take too long to get there. I think we’ll sing three songs, like we’ve been doing, and then head for home.”

As the kids piled into his car and Dave Maxfield’s van, he could see on their faces that one last visit would be about enough. He hoped that the project had touched some of them. They needed to start learning a little about service.

His car moved on through the dark Baltimore streets in silence. Inside were the most active kids in the youth group, the doers and movers. Jan Andrews, Tony Morgan, Bob Smith, Carol Miller—his wife called them the angels. They had been the biggest helps to him so far.

After several minutes’ ride, Greg saw the turn-off for Clayton Avenue. He swung the big Dodge into the narrow street and continued down the two blocks to the Billings’ house. The young people piled out again, ready to conclude the project, thinking thoughts of home and the next morning.

Jan called the group together outside the house: “Let’s start off with ‘I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day,’ then go to ‘Joy to the World,’ and close with ‘Silent Night.’ The Billings are both pretty sick and haven’t been able to get out to church for a long time. They’ll appreciate this a lot.”

* * * * *

Tim Ryan turned the corner onto Clayton Avenue. He was only a few blocks from home, but he might as well have been a thousand miles away. His thoughts had led him downward into a valley of despair. His normal energetic step had become the shuffle of a man worn down by age.

Then he heard the voices. Like the clear, pure sound of a tinkling chandelier, the voices cut through the cold night air, reaching his ear with cheerfulness. They brought his mind back to what day would fall tomorrow.

Tim stopped to listen more closely, despite the still-insistent voice of Bitterness inside. He wanted to hear what they were singing and find out who they were. How could they be happy on a night like this when he was about to lose the most important thing in his life? Didn’t they have any feelings?

The words, carried to him on the back of the wind, began to enter his mind. Subtly at first, and then more quickly, a light that had been burning low within Tim Ryan began to flare up once again. The flame began to thaw the ice that had been forming inside and outside.

Once upon a time, when Michael had asked him what about Maggie had first attracted him, he had said that she had the laughter of an angel. Laughter fell clear and pure from her lips. Hearing her laugh made him feel that he had been able to set a foot into heaven.

Now, this group of young people, singing to an unseen audience in the house across the street, were touching him in that same way. They were like angels with their clear voices, simple and pure in the message which they presented.

“Oh, Lord,” he thought, “I cannot turn the tide of what must come. But I can learn to hear the bells again and look past tragedies. I must go home quickly, quickly.” Tim had intended to stay and talk with them when they finished. Instead, the urgency of the moment directed him homeward.

In the back of his mind, Greg Henderson wondered if the old man standing across the street was enjoying the singing. The thought faded just as rapidly as it had come, and Greg turned his mind back to the music.

* * * * *

It was late, almost midnight. Tim sat by the bed, holding Maggie’s hand. It was an act that he had performed often in 48 years. Tonight it took on special meaning

“My dear, you would have loved it. They were like angels with their clear voices. I doubt that I have ever heard the songs of Christmas sung so beautifully or received such enjoyment out of the sacred music.”

She said nothing for a long time. Then she looked up at him with a smile, one like the smile that he had first seen so many years ago.

“Tim, you’re happier tonight than I’ve seen you at any time since I … since I’ve been ill. That makes me happy.”

Maggie lapsed into silence again.

The clock stretched forth both its hands to 12. Christmas would have already dawned over the desert where it had first been celebrated so many years ago.

“Tim.”

“Yes, dear. What is it?”

“Tim, I think I’ll sleep now. I feel so in need of rest. Will you hold my hand while I sleep?” She closed her eyes. Some of the worry and pain that had written itself across her face in the last year began to fade.

The little man with the shock of wind-blown white hair looked down at his Maggie. Great soft tears, tears like the drops of a gentle spring rain awakening the earth, began to well up in his eyes. The tears were sweet, though. He had heard the angels sing, and he was beginning to understand.

* * * * *

Somewhere out in the suburbs, Greg Henderson rolled over in bed. He had just finished assembling the last toys, and he was tired and wanted to rest before the children would patter in asking mommy and daddy if they knew that it was Christmas Day.

Just before the last trace of consciousness fled, Greg thought about the old man who had listened to them sing on Clayton Avenue. Greg wondered if the man had liked the kids’ singing. 

Monday, December 20, 2021


Seven Dresses 

By Randy Skeen

I was born into a family of Christmas people. Our family Christmas preparation usually began in early November and culminated in a Christmas celebration lasting until Dec. 26.

Around Nov. 15, my dad would drag the Christmas lights out of the garage, stumbling, tripping and calling for help. In those days, the lights consisted of large bulbs that required each bulb to fire up before the entire chain of lights would illuminate. Once the lights were hung, dad moved to the yard decorations.

As a carpenter, my dad built a nearly full sized plywood and painted Santa train. The wind elves would frequently appear and blow the Santa train over, requiring numerous repairs and strong language.

As with all other years, this is how Christmas in 1962 began for me. As a 9-year old boy, Christmas was a mixture of unmitigated joy, greed, hope and confusion. I wanted to be in the Christmas spirit of giving, but somehow always fell back into the dark side of Christmas receiving. I guess I was old enough to understand the Christmas season, but young enough to focus on the presents I wanted.

My mother was a seamstress of some renown. She specialized in making heirloom-type handmade dresses with elaborate embroidery. Her dresses were acquired by such varied individuals and entities as The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, President Gerald Ford and rocker Alice Cooper. The dresses were highly prized and sought after and each dress represented an extension of my mother’s love.

As Christmas rapidly approached, my younger sister and I discussed the probability of receiving every item on our respective Christmas lists and the fun we would have playing with new toys. I was fairly certain that my sister would wind up getting a dress or two while I would receive the equivalent number of toys. All looked good for us this year.

On Dec. 20, we noticed our mother barricading herself in her sewing room. For four long days, we saw little of our mother as she worked away feverishly in her locked sewing room. Except for meals, she was in her sewing room from before we got out of bed until long after we had retired for the evening.

In the early evening of Dec. 24, our parents asked my sister and me to accompany them for a ride in the car.

“Oh no”, I thought. “Not a sub for Santa run.” While I appreciate sub for Santa runs, they had a way of diverting our attention from the real meaning of Christmas — presents, gifts and fun. As we loaded the car, I noticed that my mom packed seven girls’ dresses which she had wrapped in Christmas paper.

I remember looking at all the Christmas lights and the fresh snow and thinking, “Why can’t we just go home and have Christmas dinner?”

We soon arrived at a home located in Salt Lake City. My father, my mother, my sister and I carried the seven dresses to the front door. The door was answered by a girl approximately my age who quickly summoned her mother to the door. We passed the dresses to a shocked woman, said, “Merry Christmas” and quickly left.

Why had we only delivered dresses to this home and not a sub for Santa family? Did we know these people? An unspoken message was exchanged between the two mothers, accompanied by tears.

On the way home, my mother answered the questions.

On Dec. 19, 1962, a young father was killed in an automobile accident while traveling home from work. In those days, the newspaper would print the name of the decedent, his family’s address and the names and ages of his wife and children.

My mother saw the newspaper article and decided to help. She made the dresses, delivered the dresses, and hopefully helped raise the spirits of this poor family.

Why was this Christmas so memorable to a 9-year old boy? I learned first and foremost that Christmas is not about me. Christmas is about everyone else and, particularly, about the baby who brought peace to our world.

My best Christmases have been the ones where I have given the most and received the least. I think that’s the way it is supposed to be.

Sunday, December 19, 2021


Secret Ingredient

By Scott Hinrichs 

My siblings and I bounded out of bed at exactly 6 a.m., the earliest my parents would allow us to arise on Christmas morning. It took interminably long, maybe even 90 seconds, for the whole family to gather.

Our semi-chaotic tradition of opening the beautifully wrapped gifts that had appeared under the Christmas tree overnight began as soon as my parents gave the official nod. We were all spooked just a few minutes later when the front doorbell rang in the midst of our revelry.

Who could be at the door at that time on Christmas morning?

It must have been quite a sight to our visitors to see my normally refined mom standing bleary-eyed at the door in her robe with several sparkly-eyed pajama-clad youngsters peering from behind.

There stood the Rasmussens, a retired couple who lived around the corner. They presented a plate of hot scones with honey butter, bid us a Merry Christmas, and quickly disappeared into the darkness.

We couldn’t help taking a brief break from ripping wrapping paper to enjoy freshly fried bread slathered in deliciously sweet gooeyness.

When Mom asked us the next year what we wanted on Christmas morning, several of us chimed, “Hot scones!” in unison. We tried deep frying scones on Christmas morning for several years, but somehow our concoctions never approached the yumminess of the Rasmussens’ scones that one Christmas.

We seemed to be missing some secret ingredient.

Years later I found out from another neighbor that the Rasmussens had no family nearby that Christmas. When they realized that all of their close family members would be out of town visiting other relatives, they decided that they needed to do more than just sit around alone on Christmas.

So that Christmas morning, the Rasmussens arose at 2 a.m. to make a large batch of dough and form it into bite-sized balls. Then they kept watch on the neighborhood. As soon as they saw lights turn on at a house, they would fry enough scones for that family and deliver the piping hot treats to their surprised neighbors.

Each time I think about the Rasmussens, I remember that plate of hot scones that they delivered to us that Christmas morning and I get a little better understanding of their special ingredient: the true spirit of Christmas.

Generosity, selflessness, and love don’t appear on a recipe card, but I swear you can taste them. 

Saturday, December 18, 2021

Small Gifts and Gigantic Joy

By Robert H.M. Killpack

Berlin, December 1949. The great and terrible war had ended in May 1945. The once-magnificent city of Berlin still lay in ruins. Homes were wherever they could be improvised...in boarded-up ruins, dug-out basements, on farms in barns and sheds. Food could be obtained, but poverty's grasp made the necessities the main concern. Christmas with all of its trimmings would have to wait at least another year.

Every family had lost loved ones. Some families were separated by the patrolled borders of their divided land. The maimed were everywhere to be seen; many people were still missing. The orphanages were full, the children's faces were blank, their eyes expressionless and without hope. Few people lived in the same houses they had lived in before the war...or even the same city. Elders Wilson, Gregory and I, young missionaries, visited three orphanages to give them quilts that had been sent from Utah. One orphanage was sponsored by the Catholic Church, one by the Lutheran Church and one was run by the government. There were tears in the eyes of the sisters as they gratefully accepted the quilts. The workers at the government-run orphanage asked if we would like to see the children. We accepted the invitation, completely unaware that a scene of human sadness and tragedy would be branded upon our memories for the rest of our lives.

The door opened on a dimly lit room with nine or 10 children seated around a table. They were mending their stockings. The stockings were covered so completely with patches that you could not distinguish the color of the original wool. Bunk beds lined the walls; they had been made from rough lumber salvaged from the ruins. There was a straw pallet covering the rough boards and, looking more like a neatly folded bundle of rags, a blanket at the foot of each bed.

Conversation failed us as we drove home that December night. A scripture came to mind: "But who so shall offend one of these little ones, it were better for him that a millstone were hanged about his neck, and that he were drowned in the depths of the sea." Surely, severe punishment awaits those who wage war.

It was decided that the children who came to our Sunday School must have a happy Christmas this year. Toys were made, some for girls and some for boys. A box of oranges was obtained, as were the ingredients for cookies, thanks to the U.S. military. Each child was to receive a sack of cookies, an orange, and a toy.

Christmas Day fell on a Sunday, so during Sunday School the children were all assembled in a large auditorium in a bombed-out school. There was no heat, of course, so they all sat there in their coats. Sitting next to me on the front row was a dark-haired, dark-eyed little beauty. I cannot remember her name, but her face is etched in my memory to this day. She wore a blue snow suit obviously sent over from America. Over and over I heard her recite to herself the little poem children are expected to say to Father Christmas. "Lieber guter Weihnactsman shau mich nicht so boese an. Stecke deine Rute ein. Ich will immer artig sein." In Germany, Father Christmas is strict and ill-tempered. He carries a bundle of willows with which to punish the children who misbehave. The children's poems are meant to soften him. A literal translation of her poem is "Dear, kind Father Christmas, do not look so displeased with me. Put away your switches. I will always be good."

A child's name would be called, and he would receive his presents. The first child, after saying his poem, received a sack of cookies, turned and started for his seat. He was stopped and given an orange, and he again started for his seat. Once more, he was stopped and was given a toy. He could not believe that he would be so fortunate as to get three presents.

My little friend became more and more anxious as she waited for her turn. I began to wonder if her name had been missed. I decided that if for some reason she did not get her presents, I would take her shopping as soon as the stores opened. I would buy her a real doll, Swiss chocolate and a whole box of cookies. Finally, last of all, her name was called. She jumped down, ran up on the stage, and recited her poem, received her sack of cookies and started for her seat. She was called back and given an orange, and again she started for her seat. Again she was called back and given a doll. With an expression of pure joy she returned and cuddled her doll. These children, the real victims of the war, had been conditioned to believe that they could not expect to be as fortunate as other children, even though they had seen every other child receive three presents.

At 20 years of age, I had not thought much about the adage, "It is better to give than to receive," until that December of 1949. Not once did I think about what I might receive for Christmas that year but rather how I could make this Christmas memorable for someone else. My Christmases would never be the same after this one. This was a Christmas I would never forget. This was a Christmas I must never forget. This priceless experience was 49 years ago, and not one Christmas has passed that I have not mentally peered into that angelic, anxious little girl's face.

 

Friday, December 17, 2021


"Silver Bells" Face Plant

By Koko Head

“Please! We really need your voice. Besides, Stephanie will be there.” Sister O’Barr enticed.

Having worked with the youth at church for ages, she knew just which buttons to push to draft “volunteers” for a small group of youth to sing at an annual company Christmas dinner. Since many of the kids in the church youth group sang in the various choirs at Mesa High School — including yours truly — it was an easy peasy task.

So, my crush on Stephanie tipped the scale and I reluctantly agreed. “If Stephanie’s going, then count me in.”

The evening of the Christmas program arrived and I orchestrated a ride in the same car as Stephanie and her best friend LeAnn. I quickly learned that my thus-far-unsuccessful crush on Stephanie required that I gain favor with her skeptical best friend. As we were setting up, Sister O’Barr handed me a copy of the program with the evening’s entertainment. My heart stopped as I read: “Solo by Koko Head – ‘Silver Bells.’”

“Wait, what? I’m not doing a solo!” I protested.

“Look, we need another solo. I know you know it.” she continued.

“You don’t get it,” I whined, “I don’t do solos — ever!”

Sister O’Barr was unmoved and said flatly, “Well I guess tonight will be your first.”

Stephanie and LeAnn were standing nearby listening to the exchange. In unison they sarcastically echoed her sentiment. “It’s just ‘Silver Bells.’” With my pride on the line and a dose of peer pressure strategically administered, I gave in. I was (gulp) singing a solo.

We sang each Christmas number to the delight of the dinner crowd. Then it was my turn. As I stepped to the mic, I could feel my kettle drum heartbeat thumping in my chest. I looked at my accompanist, LeAnn, at the piano with Stephanie seated beside her to turn pages. I nodded at LeAnn and then I launched!

“City sidewalks, busy sidewalks dressed in holiday style. In the air there’s a feeling of Christmas,” I crooned in my best 15-year-old voice. By the end of the first verse my heart rate had slowed as the crowd smiled. “Whew!” I thought. Then it happened. I opened my mouth to start the second verse and ... nothing!

For a full five seconds I stood with my mouth open before nearly 100 guests. My mind was blank. No lyrics. Nothing. Time stood still — except for LeAnn, who continued to play, no doubt hoping I would pick up mid-verse. My face flushed red as hot tears began to course down my checks.

Just as I was about to abandon hope and the mic, there came an unexpected rescue. LeAnn started over and she and Stephanie began singing the second verse as loud as they could. Our mini-choir and the dinner crowd, seeing my distress, instinctively began to chime in as well. As my performance fog lifted, I followed their lead (and lyrics) between intermittent sobs as our joint singalong continued.

The applause was extra loud and long as if to say, “It will be OK.” The rest of the program was a blur as I positioned myself at the back for the remaining songs, not wanting to make eye contact with anyone. Even tough-as-nails Sister O’Barr felt sorry for me. I’m not sure why she didn’t offer me any sheet music or why I didn’t think to at least write the lyrics on a napkin!

On the ride home I was inconsolable. I had embarrassed myself, spoiled the Christmas program and surely set the stage for loads of future teasing. What I received instead was love and encouragement from my friends — yes, friends.

Rather than the expected, “Way to go butthead,” Stephanie and LeAnn were determined to make me laugh and smile. They began singing, “If you chance to meet a frown, do not let it stay. Quickly turn it upside down and smile that frown away!”

Try as I might, I couldn’t stop the smile that slowly began to spread from ear to ear and finally exploded into a wide grin. The car was filled with laughter, most embarrassing moment stories and silent reenactments of my memorable solo. Their unexpected rescue and gift of friendship made this the Christmas I Remember Best.

It has been 46 years since that musical, Christmas face plant. However, when I hear “Silver Bells” playing, I don’t think of my silent solo and those hot tears. I instead think of true friendship offered by two unlikely heroes who came to my rescue and lifted my spirits when I needed it most.

You see, embarrassment fades, tears dry, but true friendship endures. As do the lyrics to “Silver Bells” tucked safely in my wallet!

Thursday, December 16, 2021


Follow a Spirit Whisper
Reed Cowan
December 16, 2019
Facebook Post

Powerful human experiences often follow a spirit whisper.

Don't you forget it.

I'm out from work, sick with the flu that has beaten me up all weekend. But I had an interview for The Homeless Project for KSNV News 3, Las Vegas that I had fought for and couldn't let myself reschedule, so I forced myself to go downtown, unshaven with messy hair, to honor the commitment to interview with a City Code Enforcement official.

Interview done, I bid farewell to my photographer and began the drive home where a warm bed and a refrigerator full of food awaits. That's when, in my periphery, I saw a 4'x3' framework covered in blankets on the sidewalk, next to a parking meter.

I felt a whisper.

"Pull over," it urged.

I answered: "No. I'm sick. I'm going home."

Again, "pull over."

I pulled over and pulled out my cell phone to call my photographer.

"Hey, can you get a little B-roll of the homeless encampment I found around the corner?" He obliged. I hung up. I put the car in drive.

Again, the whisper:

"Put the car in park. Get out. Go talk to the people inside."

This is when all the "buts" started.

"BUT I don't feel good. BUT it's not safe. BUT maybe they don't want to be bothered."

Here's the catch: Spirit doesn't heed the counsel of a "BUT."

So, I picked up my phone again.

"Justin, grab your microphone. We're going to talk to them."

We approached this humble, temporary shelter from temperatures that were in the 40's on this December day, to find a black and white cat, on a leash attached to a hand that belonged to someone just behind the dirty blankets that made a roof for someone.

"Talk to them," the voice whispered.

I spoke loud enough so as to be heard behind the cloth that separated my face from the face inside the encampment.

"Hello, my name is Reed, and I'm wondering if you would talk to me today. I'm with Channel 3."

The hand with the leash, attached to the cat, slowly revealed an arm and then a body and then a face attached to a head wearing a hat that revealed this is a US Veteran I would be talking to.

He answered: "Sure, I'll talk to you."

We exchanged pleasantries and introductions as I explained to him what News 3's THE HOMELESS PROJECT is all about.

He told me about finding the cat as a baby, abandoned and needing to be bottle-fed to survive. He told me the cat's life mattered to him, even though it was skin and bones with eyes that had not opened to the world yet.

"I fed him, because he was like me, abandoned and alone and hungry, but important, nonetheless."

We began the interview about what it's like to live on a sidewalk in a structure made of frayed tarps and blankets. He would answer, and then a female voice from behind the blankets would chime in with answers of her own. No face...just a voice.

Then again, the whisper: "Ask to come in."

I looked down at the glint of light reflecting off a large and protective knife next to the man and turned away the whisper, citing my safety and the safety of my photographer.

He could stab us once inside.

Again, the whisper. "Ask to come in."

No "but" would suffice. I asked:

"I want to ask you something that may seem bold and intrusive, and I'm sorry in advance. May I come in? May I show people where you sleep? May I show people...your home?"

The man disappeared behind the blankets and tarps to ask the woman who I only knew from her voice.

"Yes. Come in. We can make room."

Something about the words "WE CAN MAKE ROOM" struck me and I had to put my emotions in check.

I parted the blankets and got on hands and knees and followed the light that made its way through the opening of blankets, feeling the cold sidewalk underneath me and seeing the face of the woman who had spoken to me from behind the veil of worn-out fabric.

There was enough room for her, seated, him, seated and me, crouched in a corner.

She began to cry.

"I'm sorry there's no more room for you. But as you can see, it's clean. I'm clean. I promise I'm clean."

She produced a large container of water and held it up.

"I use this to bathe every day so people won't think I smell."

Again, the whisper: "Hold her hand."

This was easy. I felt love well up in me and it moved my hand on cold air to cradle and coax hers in to mine.

I held her hand and looked at her and thanked her for letting me come into her home.

"I want you to know I see you. I want you to know your home is just as important to me as my own home today and I'm honored you invited me in."

If they had had food to offer me, I'm confident they would have offered it. The did not have any to offer.

But they had their stories and offered them freely. He, an Iraqi war vet. She, a former working professional who had a back injury that led to unemployment and finally, homelessness.

She wiped tears as she shared her story.

"Christmas is really hard. I have kids, you know. And not having anywhere to host them makes me cry."

She took a moment, putting her face in her hands to compose herself.

"I have gotten so I treat Christmas like any other day because it hurts to look around at the four walls of this lean-to and know at any moment someone will complain and make us move and know this is what it has come to. But even though I try to tell myself it's just any other day, I know it's not. I know it's Christmas. I know I have to have hope."

I asked her if hoping was difficult...if hope led to more hurt.

"Yes. Hoping at times does hurt. But I keep doing it because I just want to live inside somewhere like I used to. I want people to see that I can be pretty when I'm clean and have had a shower and a place to do my hair. I'm a somebody. I have a story. I don't want to be homeless. Nobody thinks it can happen to them, but it can. I'm not a thief. I'm not dangerous. I tell people who park their cars next to the sidewalk where we camp that their car is the safest next to me because I'll protect it. I will. I'm a good person. I just want other people to see that I am. I'm a person, I have feelings."

I asked all the questions from all the angles to these people who welcomed me into their home.

I found them reasonable and intelligent and kind and understanding to the point that property owners have a right to have people respect their property, absent of squatters.

They get it. They really get it.

What they don't get, is a way out of the cycle. What escapes them, is a way out of the cold.

Letting go of her hand, I promised her I'd take their stories to my viewers and I'd devote all I have to tell Las Vegas' homeless story from all angles.

She bid me farewell asking that I ask something of all of you.

I'll put her words in all caps, hoping you read them and consider sharing this post with others.

"DON'T BE AFRAID TO KNOCK AT OUR DOOR. DON'T BE AFRAID TO SAY HELLO TO US. WE NEED PEOPLE TO SEE US AND TO NOT BE AFRAID TO COME INTO OUR LIVES AND TO SEE OUR LIVES. THAT'S MAYBE WHEN WE WILL ALL FIND A SOLUTION."

I bid them farewell and went to my car thankful for the whisper of the still, small voice that persisted to stop...to pull over...to get out of my car...to ask to talk...to ask to come in, even when everything seemed inconvenient and unsafe.

Powerful human experiences often follow a spirit whisper.

Driving away, a kind of affirmation came to me, confirming that listening to the whisper was right and accomplished the calling of the day.

Maybe the people behind the frayed and tattered boundaries, represent the essence of what existed at the heart of the Christmas Manger, when, hundreds of years ago, others followed a whisper to come kneeling.

Merry Christmas, everyone.

Wednesday, December 15, 2021


A Family Saved
Reported by Jennifer Haupt

Lt. Bobby Qualls was shopping when he received a text message: Fire on Beechmont, one-story house, child trapped inside. “I was picking out gifts for the family our engine house adopted for Christmas,” remembers Qualls, who has been fighting fires in Memphis for 24 years. “I had this sinking feeling as I got in my car and headed over.”

The last time Qualls had been on Beechmont Street was to install smoke detectors at the Bateman-Tubbs home. He’d been on a secret mission to see if they needed an extra boost during the holidays. There he discovered that the four Bateman-Tubbs children were sleeping on bare mattresses, and he found two of the boys playing outside in 30-degree weather with no shoes or coats.

Qualls learned that Leonard Tubbs was doing his best to make ends meet laying floors while Kimberly Bateman stayed home with the kids.

“When Bobby told me his team wanted to be Secret Santas and buy my kids toys, at first I thought we didn’t need any help,” Bateman recalls. “It really touched me. I told him what the kids really needed was warm clothes.”

That’s exactly what Qualls was shopping for on December 9, 2008: winter jackets for Christopher, seven; JoJo, four; Madison, one; and two-month-old Charles. While driving over to Beechmont Street, he dialed Bateman’s cell phone. She answered on the first ring, screaming, “The house is on fire—JoJo’s trapped inside!”

By the time Qualls reached the house, the family had gotten out, but their home was severely damaged. His coworkers had found JoJo hiding under a pile of clothes in a back bedroom. He had stopped breathing and had been given CPR and rushed to the hospital. Qualls learned that JoJo was now on life support and might not make it through the night. He rushed to the hospital with Lt. Mark Eskew, who placed a stuffed teddy bear in a firefighter’s suit on JoJo’s bed.

“I just kept praying my little boy would open his eyes,” Bateman recalls. “There was nothing else I could do. They were pumping soot as black and thick as tar out of his lungs and stomach for days.”

After a few days, though, JoJo regained consciousness, and the tubes were taken out of his throat. While he began to slowly recover, the local newspaper and TV stations got hold of the story, and the Secret Santa mission of Qualls and his fellow firefighters snowballed. Before long, the fire station was overflowing with boxes of toys, food, toiletries, towels, and clothes. People called, wanting to donate furniture and appliances too. By December 23, Bateman and Tubbs had moved their kids into a new rental home. By Christmas Eve, JoJo was ready to leave the hospital, and the firefighters were ready to deliver the family their very own Christmas miracle.

“These guys aren’t just firefighters,” says Bateman, “they’re our guardian angels. If they hadn’t installed a smoke detector that first day they came to our house, we wouldn’t have known when the fire started. Then they went the extra ten miles to give us a Christmas.”

Tuesday, December 14, 2021


Gifts for the Poor

By Shirley G. Finlinson


Sister Melbourne was mean and grouchy. There was no other way to describe her. Just the other day I heard her telling the bishop that children took too much time in testimony meeting. She even said that most of us didn’t understand what we were saying; we just wanted attention. I walked out of the chapel feeling very angry.

My anger didn’t last, however. It was December and Christmas was in the air. Excitement filled me right up to the top of my head. I had to smile and laugh, or I think I would have burst. We began singing “Jingle Bells” as we rode home from church, just to let some of the excitement out.

After dinner, Mom and Dad called us into the family room. We all knew what we were going to discuss. Every year for as long as I could remember, we had chosen a family in our congregation who needed some extra help at Christmastime, and we had secretly taken gifts and food to their house. It was one of our family’s favorite traditions.

When we were all together, Dad said, “It’s time we decide which family to help this year. Do any of you children have a suggestion?”

Some years it had been really easy to decide because of a particular family’s needs, but this year we couldn’t think of anyone. When none of us said anything, Dad looked at Mom. “Maybe Mom has a suggestion. Sometimes she notices things the rest of us miss.”

Mom smiled. “As a matter of fact, I do know of someone who needs our help. Before, we have always chosen a family with children, but this year I think we should help Sister Melbourne.”

I couldn’t believe what I was hearing! “But, Mom,” I protested, “she’s not poor or sick, and she’s really grouchy. She doesn’t even like kids. I think we should choose someone else.”

“I agree with April,” said my older sister, Beth. “She really is grouchy. It wouldn’t be any fun doing something for her. She might even kick our gifts off her porch. Besides, she seems to have plenty of money. She dresses in nice clothes.”

I looked at Beth gratefully. It was comforting to have someone older agree with me. Peter spoke up. “She’s always telling me to shush, even when I’m quiet.”

Lynn and Josh didn’t say anything. They were too small to know who Sister Melbourne was.

“I know that Sister Melbourne has enough money to take care of herself,” Mom said. “And I know that she isn’t very pleasant to be around. But that’s exactly why I think she needs our help.”

I wasn’t convinced, but I listened as Mom continued: “Sister Melbourne has had an unhappy life. She was divorced before she moved here. She has three children who are married. They have children of their own but never come to see her or let her get to know her grandchildren. Perhaps she has done something to make them want to stay away. I don’t know about that, but I do know that she is very lonely and unhappy. I think she needs someone to let her know that she is loved. You see, April, you weren’t quite right when you said that she wasn’t poor.”

“You mean she’s poor in love?” I asked.

“Yes, and sometimes it’s much more painful to be poor in love than it is to be poor in money.”

We were all quiet for a few minutes. Then Dad said, “Let’s take a vote. How many of you would like Sister Melbourne to be our special family this year?”

Slowly Beth’s hand went up. Lynn and Josh raised theirs. Then Peter raised his. Looking around at everyone, I reluctantly raised mine.

Mom said that instead of buying all our gifts for Sister Melbourne from the store, we should make most of them. All the next week we cut out snowflakes, strung popcorn and cranberries, pasted together red and green chains from paper strips, and made cookies and candy. We bought apples and oranges to go with all the things we had made.

It was Dad’s job to get a box just the right size for our gifts and to decorate it. We carefully arranged everything inside the box and put on the lid. Dad added a huge red and green plaid bow on the top.

We gathered around the dining room table to have a prayer and make our final plans before we delivered the box. In the prayer, Dad asked Heavenly Father to please soften Sister Melbourne’s heart and help her to receive our gift in the spirit of love with which we were giving it. I was comforted by those words, because I remembered what Beth had said about Sister Melbourne kicking our gift off the porch, and I had visions of cookies, candy, paper snowflakes, apples, oranges, strings of popcorn and cranberries, and red and green chains strewn all over the ground.

We all put on our coats and piled into the car. Since the box was pretty big, we decided Dad would carry it to the porch. After he returned to the car, it would be my job to ring the doorbell and run back to them before Sister Melbourne opened her door.

I could feel my heart pounding with excitement as Dad parked far down the street from her house. “April and I will walk to Sister Melbourne’s house,” he said. “The rest of you must be very quiet so that you don’t attract attention.” He lifted the box out of the car and motioned for me to follow him.

“Dad,” I said, “I’m afraid Sister Melbourne will catch me and get mad.”

“She’ll never catch you!” He grinned at me. “You’re the fastest runner in our family. But if you’re really worried, I’ll wait for you behind those bushes over there on the far side of her yard. When she’s inside again, we’ll go back to the car together.”

“I’d like that,” I said, smiling gratefully up at him.

Dad carefully set the box on the porch. I waited until he was hidden behind the bushes, and then I ran up the steps, rang the doorbell, and flew down the steps and across the yard to the bushes, where I crouched down next to Dad. “Good work,” Dad whispered, putting his arm around me.

The door opened, sending a ray of light out across the snow. Sister Melbourne didn’t see the box at first, but as she was about to close the door, she saw it and stopped. She just stood there for a second. Then she bent down and read her name on the top. She lifted the lid, and once again she was very still. Finally, she picked the box up and looked around the yard. She was smiling, but there were tears running down her cheeks. “Thank you,” she called out. “Thank you, whoever you are.”

Dad and I were both quiet for a few moments after she went inside and closed the door. I whispered, “I think she really liked our present, don’t you?”

“Yes, I think she really did.”

The next Sunday as we were driving home from Church, we looked at everyone’s Christmas decorations and we began singing “Jingle Bells” again. When we passed Sister Melbourne’s house, I saw our snowflakes in her big front window, and the popcorn and cranberry strings and red and green chains on a Christmas tree that hadn’t been there the week before. “I think Sister Melbourne’s getting richer,” I said.

Mom stopped singing long enough to give me a hug. “So are we.”

Monday, December 13, 2021


 The Healing Power of Peace

By Julie Awerkamp

“Are you OK? Because you kind of look like a deer in the headlights.”

I stared blankly at the well-meaning, but not-so-well-spoken doctor who had just informed me that I most likely had breast cancer.

This was supposed to have been a quick stop at her office to pick up antibiotics for what I thought was a simple infection before heading out to dinner with my husband to celebrate his birthday. I was a 33-year-old busy mother of six children between the ages of 1 and 11, and cancer was the furthest thing from my mind.

The next few days were a blur as I waited for an official diagnosis that came Dec. 13, 2011. In a seemingly cruel twist of fate, the dreaded phone call came on a day when most of my family, my husband included, were hit by one of the worst stomach bugs we’ve ever had. It was a day that will forever live in infamy in our family history.

Life had changed in an instant. I had what would turn out to be stage 3 breast cancer and was scheduled for surgery a few days after Christmas.

Immediately we were showered with care by wonderful family and friends. My children had a 12 days of Christmas surprise to look forward to every night, friends dropped off food, Christmas books, flowers and letters filled with kind words. I was so grateful for the distraction that the Christmas season, with all of its wonder, could provide for my children.

I had good days where I could almost forget that this Christmas was different, but then in the middle of whatever mundane task I was doing, I would be hit with waves of fear that would nearly knock me over. In those moments, all I could do was find a place to be alone (not easy in a house full of small children), listen to calming music, and breathe deeply until my heart stopped pounding and I could cope again.

In the season of peace and joy, I was feeling anything but peace and joy.

On Christmas Eve, we gathered with my extended family for our traditional family party. As part of our annual “program,” we would usually have a family talent show. I had expected the same thing this year, but my sister Holly had slyly orchestrated something completely different. She passed out battery-powered tea lights to everyone and then turned out the ceiling lights.

She said that since Christmas felt different, it didn’t seem right to proceed as usual with the silly part of the program. Instead, my family had decided to give me the gift of Christ for Christmas.

Each family took a turn to tell a story from the scriptures about Christ that had been meaningful to them during hard times in their lives, and then we sang a hymn that went along with that story. As they shared, they turned on their little tea lights.

After everyone was done, Holly told me that the lights represented the faith and prayers of each member of the family joining with mine to help see me through this trial. The tender and sacred feelings in that room were palpable and I felt the first stirrings of peace.

Christmas Day itself was on a Sunday. We went to church and I headed up on the stand to sing with the ward choir. The program was beautifully written. One of the numbers we were singing was the Mack Wilberg arrangement of “The First Noel.”

As the soprano notes soared in the middle of that beautiful song, I suddenly felt the power of its message to my very core. “It is all true.” That thought struck me with such force that I couldn’t continue singing. “It’s all true, and because of that, what I am going through is OK.”

I felt it with certainty and stood through the rest of the song with tears streaming down my face, listening to the choir of angels around me, and knowing that no matter what happened, it would be OK.

The following year was difficult; we passed through surgery, chemotherapy, radiation and recovery. However, the feeling that came on Christmas Day stayed with me and helped me get through it all with gratitude in my heart for the babe born in Bethlehem who has the power to make all things right.

Sunday, December 12, 2021


The Silent Treatment

By Heidi Hachtman

It was Christmas 2000 and I was a senior in high school. As I think back on that time in my life, I recall being a very happy, healthy and confident teenager. My worries were few and my future hopes were high.

I had been carefully planning my Christmas list and was looking forward to Christmas Day. One busy Saturday in December my mother took my sister and I shopping to our favorite stores. She had us pick out everything we wanted, and never questioned the price. I can still remember each item purchased that day.

My sister and I were beaming with excitement, we couldn’t believe how generous Santa was going to be this year.

Christmas Eve arrived and my parents eagerly pulled out the shopping bags and let us wrap each gift beautifully. New paper, tags, and shiny ribbons. We were sure this was going to be the best Christmas yet!

When finished wrapping, my parents asked us to load the presents in the car. My heart froze, and I immediately felt sick. My sister and I looked at my parents in shock and asked, “Is this a joke?”

Anger soon replaced my disbelief and while fighting back tears, I said, “How could you do this? You are the meanest parents in the world.”

My sister and I begrudgingly loaded them in the car and sat in a painful silence while our parents quietly delivered the gifts to a family in need. My heart was as cold as the ice on the driveway.

When they came back in the car I asked, “Why did you make us think the gifts were for us?” My mother replied with, “I knew you wouldn’t pick out the best gifts if they weren’t for you.”

I wish I could say Christmas morning brought us something bigger and better, but it didn’t. Besides a bitter spirit, I honestly do not recall what awaited me that Christmas morning.

Years later, as I think back on all of the comfortable and happy Christmas days in my life, the one that sticks out to me most is that dreary Christmas of 2000.

Looking back on that night, I now understand that the family who received our gifts had a very uncomfortable life. Illness, abandonment, poverty, and addiction were some of the things this family was struggling with. I still get a lump in my throat when I replay this night in my mind, and I now wish I would have done more.

I am thankful for this particular Christmas that I remember best. It taught me to cherish the many gifts that I so easily took for granted years ago. A warm home, caring family, my health, a hopeful future, and parents who taught me that the best gifts in this life are not found under a tree, but rather in our hearts.

Thank you, Mom and Dad. I’m sorry for the silent treatment I gave you that whole Christmas break of 2000.

Saturday, December 11, 2021


 "Silent Night" at a Care Center

By Margaret Hyde Jenkins

Snow was falling heavily on that December night in 1975 as a group of us senior girls spilled out of a small car.

Laughing, having barely made it through the storm to the nursing home on Highland Drive, it was the final singing engagement of our Christmas season. We were late and realized that our strict high school music director would be furious, but hey, we were more concerned about the snow ruining our perfect hair and outfits than we were in being late.

After all, what was the big deal anyway? Just another old folks’ home and we’d already sung at so many; surely doing them a favor brightening their day even if they couldn’t hear well enough to appreciate our fine efforts.

Brushing the snow off us as best we could, we pushed through the door into a dimly lit room where we were met with the expected stern look from our frustrated director Mr. Miller, instantly silencing our laughter. As a group of 24 Madrigal singers, we’d worked hard to learn the collection of carols and songs for the Christmas season with all the carefully memorized harmonies and words; so that finding our places in the group mid-song without missing a beat wasn’t hard.

Soon Mr. Miller’s anger softened, and the music flowed as we fell into the rhythm of our familiar musical program; some carols upbeat and cheery, others ancient and mysterious. Song followed song until it seemed in no time we came to our final number, always our last one: “Silent Night,” a dissonant favorite.

In the dark room, lit only by Christmas lights, there was a quiet, reflective mood. As we started to sing "Silent Night, Holy Night,” I looked around for someone to sing personally to, something I enjoyed doing on this song.

People smiled and swayed to our music throughout our program; but I found when singing “Silent Night,” people’s eyes often glazed over and became dreamy, lost in their own nostalgia. Tonight was no exception and as I picked a little old woman sitting nearby in her wheelchair for my "special person," I noticed her eyes weren’t looking at us but instead gazed into the window beside her, causing me to sing only to her reflection.

Then, somehow with twinkly tree lights mirrored in her eyes by way of the window glass and perhaps a little magic from the spirit of Christmases past, anyway, an unexpected thing happened to me. Even as we crooned, “All is calm, all is bright,’ a sweet scene arose before me in the glass as I indirectly gazed into this woman’s eyes.

To my mind’s eye there came pictures not of a shriveled elderly woman, but of a young, vibrant one. It’s as if I entered into a brief journey along with her for a lifetime of her Christmas memories, both joyous and sad, heartfelt and heartbreaking; a lifetime of Christmas dinners and celebrations.

Perhaps I even thought I saw reflections of a son lost in wartime during years of deep hardship, sorrow and sacrifice, as I seemed to see and feel some of what she had experienced.

“Round yon virgin mother and child. Holy infant so tender and mild. … Heavenly hosts sing Alleluia …”

Tears formed in my eyes as I sang deeply for someone I didn’t know, but for whom I now felt love for with all my heart. What an epiphany! I realized, old people hadn’t always been old. Amazingly they had been young once, full of life just as I was.

Through this experience, I realized that even in their twilight years their lives mattered very much to God. He knew them and loved them just as he always had.

“Sleep in heavenly peace.” The song quickly ended, but through my Christmas miracle, time was stretched and sweet lessons learned. No longer could I be the center of my own universe with the world revolving only around me, as I realized that God truly loves and cares for all of his children; even the old and shriveled ones.

During the remainder of that magical night, our group continued to be profoundly touched as we gathered to sing in private rooms for those too feeble to get out of bed. Humble souls, they gazed at us with a childlike appreciation, grateful for Christmas messages that brought images of a loving Heavenly Father and his newborn son, sent to save a sinful and dying world — a world they were not long for.

That night I found that God can perform Christmas miracles for those who will let him, because what is Christmas for if not to soften and change people's hearts? May the true spirit of Christmas continually change us and help us to always rest in his "heavenly peace."

Friday, December 10, 2021


 

Christmas in Captivity: A Story of Survival

By Amanda Lindhout

Contemplating Christmas when you are isolated and far from home brings its own unique pain. Five years ago, late in 2008, I was a hostage in Somalia, confined to a room in a dirty concrete house somewhere outside of Mogadishu, the country’s capital city. Accompanied by an Australian photographer named Nigel Brennan, I’d gone to Somalia to work as a freelance journalist, on a trip that was meant to last only ten days. On our fourth morning, traveling along a dusty road, we’d been ambushed by a group of armed men and taken prisoner.

Our captors were Islamist extremists who were demanding a ransom of $3 million from our families—an amount we both knew was impossible. Weeks passed with no progress.

Nigel and I had been separated, put into side-by-side rooms in the house, but we’d figured out that by standing at the windows in our respective rooms, we could still talk to each other. Sometimes we managed to talk for hours at a time, as our captors dozed on a porch at the front of the house, too lazy to check on us. Each day was a mix of loneliness, boredom, and fear. We had pens and notebooks and some very basic supplies. We were given bottled water and two small meals a day, usually consisting of a can of tuna and a couple of bananas. It was enough to keep us alive, but still, we were always hungry.

In early December, three and a half months after we’d been kidnapped, our captors celebrated the Muslim holiday of Eid and as a special treat gave us each a few toffees wrapped in foil. Standing at our respective windowsills, Nigel and I made a decision—something small and also big—which was to ignore our gnawing hunger and save the toffees for later, for Christmas.

Was it pessimism or pragmatism that told us we weren’t going home before then? I don’t know, but the thought of it was so stark, so totally miserable, I figured we should at least prepare. Even weeks ahead of time, I couldn’t bear the idea that I’d be apart from my family for the holiday, stuck in a hot room with nothing but a mattress, a mosquito net, a few toiletries, and two changes of clothes – and our escalating fear.

Christmas was the one time of year when my brothers surfaced at home, when my parents and grandparents congregated to eat my mother’s roast turkey. As the day came closer, as it seemed certain that there was to be no change in the stalemate between our captors and our families, Nigel and I started to plan. We agreed to exchange gifts and write stories for each other—the stories of the best Christmases we’d ever spent, recorded in exacting, drawn-out detail, especially the parts about food.

I worked hard on my story, pulling up long-past memories and writing them down. For Nigel’s gift, I took an hourglass-shaped white plastic bottle of cough syrup that I’d been given by our captors and painstakingly converted it into a little doll. I drew a smiling face on the top part of it and then took one of the black socks I’d been wearing and fashioned it into a tiny, tailored sweater, complete with sleeves, using Nigel’s beard trimmers—which he’d left at my request on the window ledge in the bathroom we shared—to do the cutting. I sliced up a Q-tip stick to serve as my needle and unwound strands of dental floss for thread. I embroidered three words—”My Little Buddy”—on the front of the doll’s sweater.

I then made Nigel a Christmas card, containing a pumped-up sort of advertisement for his new toy. “Never feel alone again: Little Buddy is Here!” Finally, I took out a blank sheet of paper and drew striped candy canes all over it, tucking Nigel’s gift inside like it was wrapping paper, securing the whole thing with more dental floss. I then made him a stocking, using more paper, stitched together with more floss, and stuck the three toffees inside.

On Christmas morning, I snuck down the hallway to the bathroom and left everything on the ledge there—the gift, the stocking, and even the full notebook containing my story. Then I knocked on the wall to tell Nigel to go get it. A while later, he knocked again, instructing me to go retrieve some things he’d left for me, a wrapped gift and a decorated paper stocking with his toffees in it.

We spent the morning singing carols— “Hark the Herald Angels Sing” and “Joy to the World.” We sucked our toffees down slowly, one after the other, until each became like a grain of salt on the tongue.

We read each other’s Christmas stories in a sweet kind of silence. My story came from the year I was nine years old, when my mother woke me up with surprise airline tickets and a pass to Disney World, leaving just two days after the holiday. Nigel’s story was about the Christmas when he and his siblings bought airplane tickets for their parents to go to Ireland.

At our windows, we asked each other follow-up questions, to drag the stories out. I loved Nigel in that moment, on that day, more than I’d ever loved anyone. We sang “Little Drummer Boy,” and each of us throaty with emotion, we sang “Silent Night.” Finally, standing at his sill, Nigel opened his little buddy with an amused gasp, and then I was allowed to open my stocking. He’d used red ballpoint ink to color two full notebook pages. He’d torn them into matching sock-shaped sides, and then sewn them together with dental floss, adding a strip of a Wet One to the top, as a stand in for white fur trim.

Inside the stocking was a delicate-looking bracelet, made from a chain of saved-up pop-tops from his old tuna cans, carefully and intricately strung together with threads and accessorized by colorful little tassels he’d pulled from the edges of a cloth, tying one to each link in the chain. It was clear he’d spent days putting it all together, using his fingertips to make knots the size of poppy seeds. It was done with care, made with exactly what he had. It looked almost like something you’d find beneath glass at an art gallery. It was pretty and hopeful. It was, in that moment, more beautiful than anything I’d ever received.

-- Amanda Lindhout and Nigel Brennan remained prisoners in Somalia for another 11 months, released on November 25, 2009, after 460 days as hostages. This essay is adapted from Lindhout’s memoir, cowritten with Sara Corbett, A House in the Sky. 

Thursday, December 9, 2021


 

The Christmas Doll

By Larry Wayne Tippetts

 

It was late fall of 1961. We were sitting around the dinner table when Dad announced he wanted to move back West. We had been living in three Midwestern cities for five years but had moved to Minneapolis only four months earlier.

 

I was acquiring a new group of friends and had just made the basketball team at my high school, but we missed the mountains and our large extended family in the West. Although we had never lived there, Boise, Idaho, sounded appealing to him.

 

Dad never did believe in hiring someone to do something he could do himself, so we started building a trailer to haul the accumulated possessions of a large family. Our plan was to drive to my uncle’s ranch in Montana for Christmas, then travel to Boise to establish our new home.

 

Dad and Mom talked to the older children, asking if we could forego Christmas gifts in light of our financial circumstances. We agreed, but felt our youngest sister, Debbie, should still be remembered. Consequently, the last item packed was a doll that was protectively wrapped and placed at the top of the precariously high load.

 

On an overcast day with a light snow falling, we loaded our family of eight into the old station wagon and headed west with all of our earthly possessions trailing precariously behind. Not far into North Dakota we hit icy roads and blowing snow. Traveling along an isolated wind-swept section of the countryside, we heard a loud “clunk,” and the trailer swerved out of control. Dad managed to stop the car along the side of the two-lane highway. An inspection confirmed his suspicion that the axle on the trailer had broken. We left the trailer beside the road, praying no one would steal our belongings, and drove into the nearest town to find an inexpensive motel.

 

Unable to find a replacement part, we spent several days living in very discouraging circumstances. It was only later, as an adult, that I fully appreciated the disheartening situation we were in and realized what courage my parents demonstrated at that time.

 

Eventually, Dad, my brother Danny, and I drove to another town to pick up a needed part. Dad was in a creative mood, composing some of his original silly songs and poetry, and kept us constantly laughing. Was he really that lighthearted, or was that a father’s attempt to shield his sons from a gloomy situation?

 

Returning to our trailer we were relieved to find it undisturbed. We repaired the axle and continued on our journey. By this time, Christmas was two days away. Debbie started to express concern that Santa would not be able to find us, and we were all depressed about the thoughts of spending Christmas Day driving cross-country.

 

Christmas Eve found us several hundred miles from Uncle Blake’s ranch. We were road weary and fatigued, but during that night, a sort of magic seemed to settle over our journey. The sky was clear with a full moon reflecting off the snow-covered fields. Only an occasional farm home or small town detracted from the complete stillness. We started to look for Santa in the clear night sky, assuring Debbie that Santa knew where to leave her Christmas gift.

 

We love to sing, so we began to harmonize on some favorite Christmas carols. “Oh little town of Bethlehem, how still we see thee lie ...” Never in my short life had I felt such unity with the babe of Bethlehem. “Silent Night, Holy Night!” Truly it was, as we traveled through the stillness, the younger children asleep with heads on the lap of an older brother or sister.

 

It is difficult to put into words what happened that night, but I shall never forget the feelings of security and peace despite our road weariness and cramped muscles. As I write nearly 60 years later, I feel deep gratitude for my family and a profound sense of unity for that shared experience.

 

We finally arrived at Uncle Blake’s ranch about 8 a.m. Christmas morning. While cousins rushed out of the house to greet us with happy hugs and hellos, Danny and I climbed to the top of the load and removed the precious gift. The doll had become a symbol of not letting our obstacles get us down, and we were determined to accomplish that one traditional Christmas act of giving. We went through a back door and quickly placed the doll under the Christmas tree just before the rest of the family came in the front door.


Words are inadequate to express our feelings as we watched the eyes of our little sister light up with joy at the realization that Santa had not forgotten her.