Saturday, December 7, 2019

My Christmas Blog Post

In recent years I've been struggling with celebrating Christmas. I love so many things and there's so much Christmas linked sentimentally or faithfully constructed into my very core.

Over time, by learning and searching, I discovered some building materials and I think it’s time to reconstruct.
1) I have outgrown the Baby-Jesus-in-a-manger warm fuzzy. I treasure the beauty, but there’s more there, there.
2) I have a track record of downplaying the Santa/commercial element having decided it was way, way, overblown in our culture to the point of replacing Jesus, ironically without Whom there would be no Christmas.
3) I cringe at the dearth of Christmas faith factors in our culture’s “Christmas Season” and shake my head at how instead it’s an excuse sometimes to do things that are—how can I say this—sinful.
4) Some things I always loved - trees and other heirloom traditions - have had roots in paganism. My strategy thus far has been to infuse them with meaning from the real Christmas.
5) I’ve learned about some neglected Biblical holidays I never learned to celebrate and now wonder if more emphasis needs to go there instead. More learning is needed. Potential exists for a big overhaul.

So, I've been trying to assemble and reassemble my approach and I feel like I'm forever falling short. How can I embrace all that I grew up on for Christmas and say it still has meaning? Jesus Christ, the Namesake of the Holiday, came to bring salvation, not by His arrival into the world of itself, but through an event many years after His birth. That event's mention is mysteriously lacking inclusion in Christmas traditions and weighted with emotional polarity to the Joy of Christmas: Jesus’ death on the cross.
But here I am again. I happen to be getting another Christmas newsletter (and this post) together thereby striking up my internal Christmas orchestra. In the back of my mind is a compulsory list of Holiday To-Dos starting with “Get the Christmas boxes out of storage”. And hovering in my mind is the memory my family who loved Christmas dearly, and passed all their love of the season on to me. It almost feels “wrong” to reinvent my approach to celebrating.

So I'm questioning.  Why do people celebrate? Sentimental reasons, it’s fun, (but also work), it brightens up gloomy colorless winter, and it unites us together with all the other celebrators whether or not they even acknowledge Jesus as Lord, in some kind of brotherhood-of-man feel-good way that may be just an illusion. Still, doesn’t it warm us to drive by strangers’ houses and see those colorful lights? To hear carolers at the mall? To be at once, overwhelmed and still impressed with all the massive, endless hustle-bustle big-deal being made and know it started when my Savior was born? Do you wonder, as I do, and silently hope there is a glimmer there, just a tiny one that maybe, maybe, everyone knows deep down there is a Greater One Who is the at the foundation of this cavalcade of stuff we do to celebrate Christmas?


Thursday, September 5, 2019

Today I'm celebrating a normal post Hurricane Dorian day!

Celebrate no Dorian storm damage

My Celebration Action will be:

  • spending 10 minutes on my porch watching the birds and enjoying the view. (I put the porch furniture back out this morning, along with the bird feeders, flags, and little decorative stuff.)
  • Donating to Bahamas relief

Wednesday, September 4, 2019

What Are You Going To Celebrate Today?


A little over a week ago I was inspired. I put a reminder on my phone calendar that says, “What are you going to celebrate today?” I set it to repeat daily. I’m calling it Celebrate Something. I got this idea one morning thinking about my birthday approaching, and how when we're young we look forward to celebrating birthdays. Even when we're older we look forward to dinner out or special plans. I thought, ‘Why can't we celebrate something every day and make something fun out of it?’  It seemed like a capital idea! This could be a way to spark encouragement and infuse meaning into every day!
Some of the things I have chosen to celebrate include:  positive character attributes, long-distance  planning/co-planning of four parties, learning to use a zero-turn lawn mower, progress on a home improvement project, good news from a doctor, dog and cat pets feeling better without going to the vet, my last day of being fifty-something, my actual birthday of course, having home church when our church’s services were cancelled due to weather, and Hurricane Dorians’s downgrades.
Once I pick Something to Celebrate, I decide on a Celebration Action. I made a rule to avoid things that cost money or edible treats for obvious reasons. My Celebration Actions have included: scrapbooking (of course!), making plans for a future fun event, doing techy/geeky stuff that doesn’t sound like fun to most people, and allowing myself some comp time when my day runs amok. I had one food treat, (other than my birthday) which was a bacon, egg and cheese croissant!
This has all the attributes of a God thing, does it not? I am giving Him the glory for this super great idea.
Try it! There is cause for rejoicing! #RejoiceClub
PS - Ideas for celebrating in free, creative ways that do not involve eating can be found online in articles like this, "23 Ways to Treat Yo'Self Without Buying or Eating Anything" on YesAndYes.org:
You're welcome.😁