By Max Lucado
It’s
Christmas night. The house is quiet. Even the crackle is gone from the
fireplace. Warm coals issue a lighthouse glow in the darkened den. Stockings
hang empty on the mantle. The tree stands naked in the corner. Christmas cards,
tinsel, and memories remind Christmas night of Christmas day.
It’s
Christmas night. What a day it has been! Spiced tea. Santa Claus. Cranberry
sauce. “Thank you, so much.” “You shouldn’t have!” “Grandma is on the phone.”
Knee-deep wrapping paper. “It just fits.” Flashing cameras. It’s Christmas
night. The girls are in bed. Jenna dreams of her talking Big Bird and clutches
her new purse. Andrea sleeps in her new Santa pajamas. It’s Christmas night.
The tree that only yesterday grew from soil made of gifts, again grows from the
Christmas tree stand. Presents are now possessions. Wrapping paper is bagged
and in the dumpsite. The dishes are washed and leftover turkey awaits next
week’s sandwiches.
It’s
Christmas night. The last of the carolers appeared on the ten o’clock news. The
last of the apple pie was eaten by my brother-in-law. And the last of the
Christmas albums have been stored away having dutifully performed their annual
rendition of chestnuts, white Christmases, and red-nosed reindeer.
It’s
Christmas night.
The
midnight hour has chimed and I should be asleep, but I’m awake. I’m kept awake
by one stunning thought. The world was different this week. It was temporarily
transformed. The magical dust of Christmas glittered on the cheeks of humanity
ever so briefly, reminding us of what is worth having and what we were intended
to be. We forgot our compulsion with winning, wooing, and warring. We put away
our ladders and ledgers, we hung up our stop watches and weapons. We stepped off
our racetracks and roller coasters and looked outward toward the star of
Bethlehem.
It’s
the season to be jolly because, more than at any other time, we think of him.
More than in any other season, his name is on our lips. And the result? For a
few precious hours our heavenly yearnings intermesh and we become a chorus. A
ragtag chorus of longshoremen, Boston lawyers, illegal immigrants, housewives,
and a thousand other peculiar persons who are banking that Bethlehem’s mystery
is in reality, a reality. “Come and behold him” we sing, stirring even the
sleepiest of shepherds and pointing them toward the Christ-child.
For
a few precious hours, he is beheld. Christ the Lord. Those who pass the year
without seeing him, suddenly see him. People who have been accustomed to using
his name in vain, pause to use it in praise. Eyes, now free of the blinders of
self, marvel at his majesty. All of a sudden he’s everywhere. In the grin of
the policeman as he drives his paddy wagon full of presents to the orphanage.
In
the twinkle in the eyes of the Taiwanese waiter as he tells of his upcoming
Christmas trip to see his children. In the emotion of the father who is too
thankful to finish the dinner table prayer. He’s in the tears of the mother as
she welcomes home her son from overseas. He’s in the heart of the man who spent
Christmas morning on skid row giving away cold baloney sandwiches and warm
wishes. And he’s in the solemn silence of the crowd of shopping mall shoppers
as the elementary school chorus sings “Away in a Manger.” Emmanuel. He is with
us. God came near.
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