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December 26, 2010

The Language of Christmas

Language is very interesting to me.  I am fascinated by the sound of language, the emotions generated by words, the hidden meanings, the way meanings change over the years, etc…  Basically I am a little obsessed with language.  Words carry a lot of weight and emotions.  Words often provoke memories and even generate pictures in our minds.  A well-placed word can even conjure up scents.  Words can cause your palms to sweat, your heart to race and images to run across your brain.  Think about what happens when you read these words:  family, children, chocolate, Jesus, beach.  Most of these produce varying thoughts, images and emotions.

Christmas is one of those emotion-packed words.  It is a word packed with sights, smells, vivid images.  “Christmas” brings to life Christmases past and dreams of the Christmases of tomorrow.  Sometimes I think that the word “Christmas” has more life and meaning in my heart and in my mind than almost any other word.  Christmas has always seemed magical to me.  When I say magical I mean that state of awe and wonder that brings joy and happiness.  I do not believe in “magic” but I do think there are things that are magical – like the feelings you get when your child walks toward you for the first time or says “mommy” for the first time.

Christmas brings almost a suspension in time in my mind.    Growing up, Mom would work with Heather and me to make everything from homemade candles to gingerbread sleighs, to hundreds of cookies decorated to the hilt.  It was the most magical time of year in the McIntosh home.  The sounds of Christmas are very distinct and leave lingering feelings of warmth and delight – the Lennon Sisters Christmas, Johnny Mathis Christmas, and the bouncing ball of Ray Conniff Singers Christmas.  The scent of hundreds of cookies baking, the smell of candles burning, the greenery and the pop and crackle of the fireplace burning bring deep feelings of good tidings of great joy. 

Christmas kicked off by putting the Christmas tree up on Thanksgiving Day.  We waited, not so patiently, for Dad to get everything down.  Then we waited for him the light the tree and then we went to work hanging ornaments.  From then on, the next month was full of activities.    

My memories are surrounded by magic.  Dad, who had worked in furniture sales at Carson Perie Scott & Company, had often helped the gift wrappers during the holiday season and his gift wrapping was a thing a beauty and wonder.  He taught me all the tricks to a perfectly wrapped gift – tight corners, crisp edges, etc…  So perfect you could marvel at the beauty of the gift.  He also taught me a whole series of tricks with ribbons to create beautiful, delightful gifts.  One of the highlights of my Christmas was to wrap gifts that won his express approval as a work of art! 

Mom filled tins full of cookies for neighbors and co-workers and teachers and everyone else.  Our cookie jar was always full to the brim.  Heather and I enjoyed icing and decorating the cookies.  In my mind they were also works of art, but the reality may have been otherwise.  Mom made the most delicious, light homemade icing with orange juice and powdered sugar that was a confectioners delight.  She made sugar cookies, twisted vanilla and chocolate candy canes, snickerdoodles, pinwheels, you name it.  She was a cookie expert and I believe that everyone waited expectantly for those tins each year.  We made strawberry jelly and homemade bread to go along with the cookies.  If you’ve ever had her strawberry jelly, you know that you have to brush the angels away just to get a bite!  (Thanks, Eddie, for that amazing saying)

Some mothers want things to be perfect and just right, so they allow their children to look on or watch or help sparingly.  Mom allowed us to get our hands in there and create, decorate, cook, stir, you name it.  All the while, the Lennon Sisters were singing in the background and we were serenading the neighbors, we were singing so loud.

I remember when we made the long Christmas trip from our home in Pennsylvania to visit all of our family in Illinois.  I was filled with anxiety that whole trip.  How will Santa know where I am?  Should I be leaving a trail of crumbs?  Will Heather and I be the only children in the world Santa can’t find?  Imagine my absolute SHOCK that Santa found us!

I remember when I decided that I was going to stay up all night and catch Santa.  It was somewhere around 1971.  I had one of those GIGANTIC tape recorders.  You know, it was gold tone and had a handle that slid out for me to carry.  It had a microphone attached to it.  So, I sat in my bed and acted like I was a reporter on special mission.  I laid in bed and recorded my “documentary.”  I remember some of these kinds of things… “Good evening.  Robin McIntosh here coming to you from Pontiac, Michigan.  You’ll see Santa here, live.  Each and every year Santa comes around.  We’re waiting here for him to land.  While we wait let’s talk a little about him.  They say he knows when we’re naughty and when we’re nice.  We’re going to find out about that…  yes, you’ll be the first to know here live…”  And so on.

I remember the Christmas when Santa left Heather and me a gigantic chalk board.  It was the kind that could flip to another side that was magnetized.  Santa left us a message on the chalkboard saying we had been very good.  I remember it being very difficult to erase his message and actually use the chalkboard.

I vowed to make Christmas as wondrous for my children.  Amber and I always dig out the Christmas china November 1 and use it until January.  We love it.  We typically get our Christmas tree out around November 10 and then I’m ready for it to be down by December 28 or so.  We decorate the tree while watching Seven Brides for Seven Brothers.  We sing loudly and badly at all the musical pieces.  We get out all the Christmas books, videos, movies, decorations, wall hangings, lights, candles, door hangings, you name it!

Even now, we have our traditions.  I have some decorations that look a little “tacky” to me after all these years, but as Amber and I were putting out this year’s decorations I tried to slip them to the side and she just about died!  One, in particular, a wooden Santa holding things over his head – she insisted that he be put out and she cleared the same spot he has sat in for years to sit him down once again.  It made me realize that Christmas has a special place in her heart – the way it does in mine.

Even though I’ve shared only fun memories and traditions, we have never forgotten that Christmas would not be celebrated at all if it were not for the birth of Jesus.  And, Christmas is full of wonder.  God loved us so much that He sent His son to be born in a stable.  Born to peasant people in a lowly setting because He came for every person.  The God of the Universe stepped out of heaven to dwell among us.  That is covered in wonder and awe.  Start traditions of your own.  Tell the story of Jesus in your words, your actions and your deeds. 

Spend Christmas loving deeply, worshipping our God who loved us enough to send Jesus, praying passionately that all would know, and thanking God for His gift.  Create memories that stir in your children’s hearts the joy of the season and a lifetime of warm, delightful memories!

What does Christmas mean to you?

Posted By: Robin Payne @ 2:44 pm
Filed under: Children,Christmas,Family — Tags: , , ,

Our guest blogger today is Zach Taylor.  Zach is in our Young Marrieds Sunday School Class.  Zach is a quiet, but strong force in our class.  He is a man of great character and equal integrity.  Have you ever known someone that doesn’t say a whole lot, but when they do you need to listen?  That is Zach!  He is so knowledgeable and he really knows his Bible too!  Being a big history fan, myself, I am always glad when Zach adds his insight into whatever we are discussing, because I know I will be the better for it!  I am honored to call Zach friend.

As I throw down my history teacher card, the celebration of the birth of Christ was staged next to several pagan holidays to attract new believers to this so-called “Christianity.” As I later delved in, I found out that the Greek Orthodox church does not even celebrate Christmas in the month of December, but instead in January because they use the Julian calendar instead of the current Gregorian calendar(the one we use). So its safe to say I really dont get into the “Happy Birthday for Jesus” stuff. However, one tradition that I have loved as a child was Christmas Eve services. Growing up in the church, I loved walking into the sanctuary and it was lit only by candlelight. the shadows of the church flickering in the light and the smell of the fresh greenery hanging from the edifices of the church. I had always wondered if this was how the ancient Christians celebrated the birth of Christ. Partaking in the elements of bread and wine remembering the birth and yet the sacrifice of Christ. What is interesting is that the signs of the birth and death of Christ were predicted well before he came. The three Magi brought gifts of Gold, Frankincense, and Myrrh. Gold for the King of Kings, Frankincense for the Lord of Lords, and Myrrh for the Sacrifice he would give to us. If you look at these elements Gold symbolizes earthly wealth that a king recieves as a part of his mandate to rule his people. Frankincense symbolized an old methodology of communicating to heaven. Priests would use this in their daily prayers. Myrrh was used as an embalming agent to preserve deceased persons. The act of bringing these elements to his birth is a predictor of what is yet to come.

I am very old school when it comes to Christmas traditions. I am not a big fan of the modern Christmas Music, but one song I love to hear is Silent Night but not in English. Instead I prefer to hear it in its original Germanic tongue. Theres something about hearing “Stille Nacht, heilige Nacht” that really stays with me.

On a much more personal level, growing up I always had a skewed viewpoint of Christmas. I can give the “Sunday School” answer of it being about the birth of Christ and sharing good times with family and friends, but to be frank, I never really had the vision of sugar plums dancing in my head and spending time roasting chestnuts on the open fire stylized Christmas. In my house Christmas was always subdued. Yeah it was cool to get the original Nintendo and play Mario Bros. until I was blue in the face, but after my parents divorce in the fourth grade, Christmas took on a whole different meaning. It meant watching mom struggle to buy Christmas presents with what little money we had, and traveling reluctantly back and forth between our parents house.  A rather disappointing tradition by accident growing up in my mothers house was my mother always cried on Christmas Day. Sometimes it was because both of her sons were so consumed with “getting” stuff as opposed to sharing the holidays with our mom. Other times I believe it was because I think that my mom was sad because she had no family of her own to rely on.

However, there were good times. My mom being the utilitarian person she is gives me and my brother new pairs of underwear for Christmas. She always has and continues to do so. I laugh at it because hey a fresh pair of undies is always in style. She also gets me one of my childhood toys. Mine being legos, I can always expect a new lego set under the tree to build even in my 26th year of this experiment called life.

As I aged, I felt this pull away from the Christmas season. I continued to believe Christmas was nothing more than just a feeble attempt to propel the conspicuous consumerism of people. I prefer people not to ask me what I “want” for Christmas. To me, I think of it as what do I “need.” As a high school teacher, I see students who are caught up in the latest everything and the gotta have it now because I want it attitude. I find myself thinking that this was how I was when I was in high school. And I remember I was that way once. But as a college student visiting my grandfather’s house he told me how excited he was to get a bag of fruit and a pair of shoes as a little boy. Times were tough during the depression in lower Alabama or (L.A) as the locals like to call it, but he was excited to get a pair of shoes. That really stuck with me to remember that wants are temporary, but needs are enduring.

When I got married and started paying my own bills and getting married, I realized that the things I wanted are necessarily the things we needed. I think the latest gift that was a “want” I think was a Nintendo Wii. I played it a lot during Christmas, but after that its doing a great job at holding the TV console down. In our house we like to get each other and our loved ones things they can use as opposed to stuff they will discard in about a month. I can always rely on getting a nice canvas bag for my wife because while most women are obsessed with shoes, she is obsessed with bags. She likes to get her book nerd of a husband a gift card to my favorite book store.  I think after my first Christmas being married that I dont have to have the “cool” cell phone or the trendiest electronic device. Sometimes your mom giving your pair of underwear and your wife giving you a gift card are still some of the best things that I could receive.

Posted By: Robin Payne @ 10:49 am
Filed under: Church,Faith,Family,Hope,Life — Tags: , ,

August 28, 2009

I Am A Believer

I believe in God the Father Almighty, maker of heaven and of earth

And in Jesus Christ, His only Son, our Lord

Who was conceived by the Holy Spirit,

Born of the Virgin Mary, suffered under Pontius Pilate,

Was crucified, dead and buried

On the third day He arose from the dead.

He ascended into Heaven and sitteth at the right hand of God the Father, Almighty

From thence He shall judge the quick and the dead

I believe in the Holy Spirit,

The holy catholic church, the communion of Saints

The forgiveness of sins, the resurrection of the Body

And the life everlasting

These are the words of the Apostles Creed.  It was named such because of a legend that each of the original disciples wrote a single line of the Creed.  It began to be used in Rome in the second century.  I believe all of these things.

In the New Testament, the word ‘Christian’ is only used 3 times and it is never used by Jesus to identify His followers.  The followers of Jesus were called believers, children of God, Saints, Followers of the Way, Body of Christ, disciples, brothers, sisters, servants, beloved. 

The word ‘Christian’ is now being used by many who no longer understand its true meaning.  Many profess to be Christian, but have no relationship with Jesus, do not attend worship regularly, and feel that it is only one name that fits them. 

I choose today to be called a Believer.  ‘Christian’ is a noun.  Believer is a verb.  I choose today to bear the name that is a testimony to my life.  The verbs in my life should line up with Believer.  Those verbs, today, that I choose are abide, pray, love, seek, encourage, believe, become, serve, and so on.  And the verbs that shouldn’t show in my life are anger, revenge, jealous, malice, disbelief, and so on.

My prayer today is that the verbs in my life would line up with who Christ calls me to be.  I pray that your verbs are in line as well.

Posted By: Robin Payne @ 9:21 am
Filed under: Faith — Tags:
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