A Christmas Carol of Hope

Do you every feel as though God is trying to teach you something through events that seem to have a shared core?  That happened to me last week.

Last weekend I went to a suburb of Chicago to help my son, Karsten, look for an apartment close to his work.  On Sunday we went to Willowcreek Community Church in Barrington.  The teaching that week was about carry for those in prison.  Bill Hybels message stressed that no one is beyond hope.  At the end of the service we packed 32,000 bags, between all the services, with books and snacks for the prisoners in Illinois.

Bag
The bag we packed
Bag contents
Some of the bag contents

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Praying for the prisoners who will receive the bags
Praying for the prisoners who will receive the bags

On Monday I flew to Dulles Airport i Washington DC to spend some time with long time friends of Neal’s and mine.  Jim works for Prison Fellowship.  Chuck Colson was founder of Prison Fellowship, Colson Center for Christian Worldvew and “Breakpoint” that aired on the radio.  Colson served as Special Counsel to President Richard Nixon.  Mr. Colson spent seven months in prison after pleading guilty to obstructing justice in the midst of Watergate.  Prior to his inprisonment he gave his life to Christ.  Following prison his radical life change led him to leading Prison Fellowship, the world’s largest outreach to prisoners, ex-prisoners and their families and the Colson Center, a teaching and training center focused on Christian worldview thought and application.

Tuesday night my friends and I went in to DC to see Charles Dicken’s “A Christmas Carol” in the historic Ford Theater where President Lincoln was shot. Scrooge with his Bah! Humbug! attidude encompasses all that dampens Christmas spirit: greed, indifference, selfishness and lack of consideration of other people.  He was a penny-pinching miser who cared nothing for the people around him and mankind only existed for the money he could make of them through explotation and intimidation.  He particularly detested Christmas which he viewed as “a time for finding yourself a year older, and not an hour richer.”

A Christmas Carol
A Christmas Carol

 

Behind me, Jim and Cathy is the box where President Lincoln was shot.
Behind me, Jim and Cathy is the box where President Lincoln was shot.

Scrooge is visited on Christmas Eve by the ghost of his former partner, Jacob Marley, who died seven Christmas Eve’s ago.  Marley, a miser just like Scrooge, is suffering the consequences in the afterlife and hopes to help Scrooge avoid the same fate.  He says, “I wesr the chain I forged in life…I made it link by link, and yard by yard.  I gird it on my own free will, and of my own free will I wore it.” Marley tells Scrooge he will be haunted by three spirits: the ghosts of Christmas past, present and future.

Through these spirits visits, memory serves to remind Scrooge of a time when he still felt emotionally connected to other people, before he alienated himself from society.  Empathy enables Scrooge to sympathize with and understand those less fortunate than himself, people like Tiny Tim and Bob Cratchit.  His fear of death, used by the last spirit, helps the completion of Scrooge’s reformation.  Christmas morning finds Ebenezer doing acts of kindness like sending a Christmas turkey and raising the salary of his long-suffering clerk , Bob Cratchit, spending Christmas day in the company of his nephew, Fred, whom he spurned in years past and helping Bob’s crippled son, Tiny Tim.

We sometimes find ourselves feeling imprisoned or in chains, like Bob Marley, of our own making because of choices we have made.  Or maybe we are a victim of our circumstances beyond our control, like the poor in “A Christmas Carol.”  Either can leave us with feelings of hopelessness.

Author Charles Dickens saw a need with the plight of poor children.  In 1839 it was estimated that nearly half of all funerals in London were for children under the age of 10.  Those who survived grew up with no education and virtually no chance ro escape poverty.  Dickens felt this cycle could only be broken by educating the public, hence the writing of “A Christmas Carol.”  Chuck Colson saw a need in the prisons and for ex-prisoners and their families and founded Prison Fellowship and The Colson Center.  Willowcreek packed bags of supplies for prisoners to offer Christmas cheer.

What does Dickens, Colson and Willowcreek have in common?  They wanted to offer hope to those imprisoned literally or in spirit.  Charles Dickens said, “For it is good to be children sometimes, and never better than at Christmas, when its mighty Founder was a child himself.”  During the Christmas season what a better time to remember the ultimate gift God gave by sending His son as an infant to offer hope to a broken world.  Dickens, Colson and Willowcreek all showed compassion.  Jesus showed compassion through tender sympathy to the poor, the despised, the hurt, and the sinful.  No one was rejected or ignored by him.  Christ payed the price for sin and opened the way to hope and peace with God.

What can I do to offer hope to a broken world?  What can you do?  This is what God did:

8-12 There were sheepherders camping in the neighborhood. They had set night watches over their sheep. Suddenly, God’s angel stood among them and God’s glory blazed around them. They were terrified. The angel said, “Don’t be afraid. I’m here to announce a great and joyful event that is meant for everybody, worldwide: A Savior has just been born in David’s town, a Savior who is Messiah and Master. This is what you’re to look for: a baby wrapped in a blanket and lying in a manger.  13-14 At once the angel was joined by a huge angelic choir singing God’s praises:  Glory to God in the heavenly heights, Peace to all men and women on earth who please him.  LUKE   2:8-14 MSG                                             

Peace and hope to you this Christmas season.

On the journey,

Trish

Thanksgiving Magnet

What happened to the Thanksgiving holiday?  We get the day off work and get together as family to eat turkey, dressing and pumpkin pie.  But have you noticed that many of the stores have had Christmas decorations up since October?  The Hallmark channel started showing Christmas movies October 31. Black Friday sales started Thanksgiving evening.  It seems that Thanksgiving has lost its importance.

Psalm 9:1 says, “I will thank you, Lord, with all my heart.  I will tell of all the marvelous things you have done.”  I have written in my journal “The grateful heart is like a magnet sweeping over the day, collecting reasons for gratitude.  Gratitude gets us through the hard stuff.”  (I’m sorry I don’t know where I found this quote.)  The Thanksgiving holiday is a great time to pause and think about things we are thankful for.  I have found that if I look every day for a blessing or something to be thankful for it helps my attitude and causes me to see how God is working in my life every day.

The weekend before Thanksgiving I got a call during the night Friday from Ty.  Whitney was at the emergency room.  So I left early Saturday morning for Indianapolis.  Tests showed that she had a kidney infection and was sent home with antibiotics.  She had no symptoms except Friday night she asked Ty if it was cold in the house.  She started shaking uncontrollably, couldn’t talk and had a fever.  Once home, Ty and I cared for Banks so Whitney could rest.  She couldn’t  hold anything because her muscles were so sore from shaking.  We were thankful that is was nothing more serious.  Plus this Grammy was thankful to spend more time with Banks.  Who can resist this little guy?

Banks Luther

In a rush to leave my house I was thankful that I had filled up with gas the night before.  I had just finished my laundry and had run the dishwasher and emptied it.  Seems like small things but they were helpful tasks to have done.  My two grandsons, Eli and Caleb, that I had been babysitting for a couple days had left Friday morning to go back to their home.  God was preparing my way. 🙂

Whitney and Ty had just seen the doctor that Friday as follow-up to discuss what happened after Banks’ delivery.  We were praising and thanking God because they learned the special team that did surgery on Whitney is only 4 years old and the only one in the state!  Talk about God’s hand in that process.

Another thing I am especially thankful for are my two “widow friends,” Sherry and Julie, that have become my dear friends.  God brought us together through the death of our husbands after stem cell transplants.  Our stories are very similar and we are a great support for one another.  They have broaden my horizons to try new things!

Sherry, me and Julie

I am thankful for family and the birth of new little ones.  Grandchild number 6 is due Christmas and this one is a girl!  (Grant and Jenni)  Being retired has offered me the ability to be available to help out my kids through babysitting and my abilitiy to leave on a moment’s notice.  I am thankful for this ability.  Some days I think I should be “doing” something outside of the home but so far my family has kept me busy!

Family traditions are another thing I am thankful for.  The Friday after Thaksgiving we always go to the tree farm to cut down our trees.  Family traditions are something that says “we value family” and want to do things to stay together.  This year we had some of the cousins joined us in the festivities.

Grants family at the tree farm
Grants family at the tree farm

 

 

 

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Karsten and cousins cutting down my tree

 

 

 

 

 

 

Britton's family at the tree farm
Britton’s family at the tree farm

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Have you swept over your day collecting reasons to be grateful?  It is good for the soul.

On the journey,

Trish