Saturday, November 21, 2015

THINKING ABOUT CHRISTMAS



When we moved to Florida one of the things I asked myself is, “How would we enjoy the anticipation of Christmas when it just doesn’t look or feel like the Christmas I’ve celebrated in New Jersey for 67 of my 68 years?”  

 The gloomy days I love that feel like snow is in the air are absent.  No snow at all is predicted in the Florida forecast, not a flake!  Christmas decorations are turning up on businesses and at the mall but my brain just can’t handle it.  It’s sunny and warm and everything is still so green!  Instead of sweaters, socks and closed shoes, I’m still wearing sandals and capris and short sleeve shirts, and using the AC in my car.  It can’t be nearly December!

My daughter Becky and I have talked about this quite a bit because we just love the weeks leading up to Christmas and the weather – it’s chilliness, it’s gloom, the threat of snow – all of it contributes to the sense of excitement and anticipation.  There’s a feeling in the air in December that generates joy.  She and I are happy in our baking and shopping and wrapping and thinking of what to give neighbors and friends and family for Christmas.  But here in Florida it doesn’t FEEL like Christmas at all!

I had determined that when we came here I was going to take this change in traditional Christmas weather in stride.  I decided that I was going to remember that first Christmas.  We celebrate Christmas in December but many say that Jesus was probably born in the spring.  Why do they say that?  In that part of the world in winter, it would be unlikely that shepherds would be out in the field keeping watch over their flocks.  It’s too cold.  

And of course, Jesus wasn’t born in a climate like that of New Jersey.  It was desert like, dry, and warm.  I picture green shrubs and trees, maybe some palm trees too.  Kind of like Florida (only it rains a lot more here).  

But then the reality of the incarnation of Jesus gripped me as I listened to Christmas carols on my Christian radio station.  Christmas isn’t about the anticipation of snow.  It isn’t about a chill in the air.  It isn’t about presents, or baking cookies, or Christmas trees, or wreaths.  It doesn’t matter if chestnuts are roasting on an open fire.  Christmas is about the coming of Jesus!  

There is nothing more wonderful, nothing more highly anticipated than the celebration of the coming of my Savior.  

If it never snows another flake.  If I never get another present.  If I never bake another cookie.  Whether it’s cold or hot, gloomy or sunny, nothing changes this awesome FACT:  Jesus came on that night more than 2000 years ago and nothing will ever be the same.  EVER.

1 comment:

  1. Dot, I just loved reading this post! Your words speak to my heart and it is true that nothing has ever been the same since Jesus’ birth! In California, where I grew up in the San Joaquin Valley, winters at best were mild. At 50 degrees, we had a fire in the fireplace and sat close to absorb the warmth. After marrying, my husband and I moved to Los Angeles. It was there that I can relate to your Christmas in Florida! In West Los Angeles my husband had shorts on, his favortie tee shirt and tennis shows...or people were going surfing at Santa Monica Beach! At Christmas it could be 80 degrees! Or so! However, all through my childhood I grabbed at every Christmas Card that arrived with a Currier and Ives cover. Or, the cards with the snow covered church in the woods. Or, the cards that showed a ice skating rink with old fashioned skaters. Basically, a Northeast Christmas! And, now, here I am living in NJ and shoveling snow and trekking out in the woods to get pictures of evergreen trees covered in a blanket of snow. But, as you so eloquently wrote, nothing compares to the joy and celebration of the birth of the savior of the world! And, the hope and light He brings to our lives through His birth! I look forward to reading your next blog!

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