entering worship.

entering worship

Walmart was crowded. People swirling through, grabbing fresh loaves of bread and Florida oranges and stocking stuffers. My own bag of last minute essentials was tucked beside my purse in the cart.

“Sleighbells ring, are you listening? In the lane, snow is glistening…”

It’s a tradition, started years ago now. The group of us stumbled upon each other in the mini dining area at Walmart and because it was Christmas, and we often joke about living in a musical, someone started a carol. People stopped and stared of course, but that never slowed us down. In fact, it egged a few people on. If someone is watching, then how about a show?

Carols and four-part harmony and a few twirls.

The workers begged us to come back again the next year. So we did. And the year after and the year after…

I haven’t made it every year but I did this Christmas Eve. I stood, beside the display of dinner rolls and joined in, laughing through a slightly misguided attempt at Carol of the Bells. Then we switched to O Come, All Ye Faithful and it happened. 

I might not have noticed except for that just a few nights before we had been talking about it. Meg, with her smile dancing and that glow in her eye, saying that she had found worship again. “It’s been so long,” she twirled her fork through the melting ice cream on her plate and I felt her words down to my bones. 

Worship had become something that I do because I choose to live a lifestyle of worship, which is good. But somewhere along the way, I lost the freedom. I lost the sense of entering in. When she spoke, my heart starting beating wildly. Perhaps it was out there, somewhere, the freedom and depth that I longed to find again.

And I found it on the second chorus of O Come, All Ye Faithful, in the middle of Walmart on Christmas Eve. In the moment between, oh, come let us adore Him, and we’ll give Him all the glory, something broke free. 

I don’t know if other people felt it but I did. And I stood on holy ground, right there beside the three shelves of dinner rolls.

This year, I want to be a year of worship. Yes, I want to live a lifestyle of worship. But I want it to be filled with moments too. Moments that I can carve into words and mark deep into my heart. I was here and He was here. 

For He alone is worthy.

Love Came Down (and we pass it on…)

It started the moment we awoke. Mama would have Christmas music playing as we began rolling out of bed, our bellies still full of turkey and stuffing. She talked quickly and brightly and we soon absorbed her excitement.  As Jingle Bells filled the house, the fall decorations would be carefully picked up and put away while twinkle lights and tinsel arrived.

The tinsel was the important part. Carefully, one piece at a time, she would tape it to the ceiling until the living room sparkled and shimmered and screamed, “Christmas!” If I was lucky, Papa would pick me up and twirl me around so my face swirled into the gleaming silver. It tickled.

It happened the day after Thanksgiving and not a moment before. No Christmas music. No decorations. It was fall leaves and turkeys and talk of giving thanks… until Friday morning. Then it was Christmas.

And the story. Over and over we heard the story. He came. For real. For us. For me.

I would sit and stare at the Christmas tree, the way the lights twinkled and moved, and think about how it happened. God, born man. The lessons on giving thanks for all things morphed into giving thanks for the greatest thing. 

Love come down.

Now I have my own home and my own traditions. I have a string of red mittens, ornaments that carry stories from Christmas’ past, a tree topper that once sat on a Case tractor, and the advent story written in a composition notebook. Pages colored with crayons and words written in quiet moments of reflection.

And it’s the story passed on.

Love came down. 

I have no little ones to wake up early with whispers of Christmas come. But I do have children who come and dance in delight at my tinsel and lights. Children that never leave without hearing the story. The real one. Where Jesus came for me and for you.

And my prayer is that the story will pass on.


I was sent the soup tureen and bowls to review from DaySpring. They are beautiful, tasteful Christmas dishes that tell the greatest story of all: how love came down. They also graciously sent me an Advent tabletop calendar, which I simply adore. (Just 5.99

The greatest part is that there is a sale! If you use the coupon code MERRY20 by December 15th, you will receive 20% off your purchase.

And this week only,  you can receive an additional 10% off! that’s a 30% off savings. Just click through this link and use the coupon code 30SUPER

While I did receive these items for review purposes,
all the opinions expressed (and the stories!) are my own.

[tinsel] of Christmas present and Christmas past

Two tiny girls are standing on the bench, fingers touching ornaments.

“This one, Auntie Tashe,” the oldest holds up an embroidered square, “what’s this one?”

“That one is from Alaska,” I explain, tracing the bright pink fireweed.

“You were in Alaska?” Her voice is incredulous. She spent almost a third of her life in the 49th state but I wasn’t there at the time.

“Yes, ma’am,” I tweak her nose, “I was in Alaska way before you were born.”

Her mouth shapes an “O”.

The littlest one latches onto the ornament of a tractor. “Ice Cream!” she says.

Tractors equal Uncle Ice Cream in her mind. (The uncle who earned his name fair and square with bowls of ice cream.)

The Christmas tree arrives and we’re smelling pine and stringing lights and the house feels warm and full.

the littlest niece holding the Christmas lights

Then the little ones get picked up at they blow kisses from the door.

After chores we sit around the wood stove. A friend stops by for dinner and we joke about bookshelves (should have put “I will build her as many bookshelves as she wants” in our wedding vows) while we play games and laugh around the tree.

It doesn’t have any deep meaning, a Christmas tree—but there is still something lovely about it. The way it sparkles. The memories that are hung on it. The way little ones look at it with wide eyes.

—————————————–

Later, when I finally have time to drop pieces of tinsel on the tree, I laugh at a memory.

It was the year mom had cancer. That year the house stood starkly empty at Christmas time. She had surgery, was doing well, but no energy or ability to decorate. One evening I was gone with my parents and the three boys stayed home alone.

We got back and they had decorated the house for mom.

A tree stood in front of the picture windows, lights twinkled from around the bookshelf. The ornaments were nestled amid the needles. And the tinsel. We laughed for years about the tinsel.

They were boys. The tinsel went on in great wads. All over the tree.

Mama, who always decorated with one strand of tinsel at a time-  thought that tree was the prettiest tree she had ever seen.

That was the year we each got one gift. There wouldn’t have been any except someone I didn’t know from New York had sent a box way up to Alaska.

I got hair ties. I remember that.

And I remember Papa gathering us around and saying, “This year, your Mama is your present.”

She was alive. Well. The surgery worked.

And I got to grow up with a Mama.

None of us minded not getting gifts.

And we always said that was our favorite Christmas ever.

My mother was the leading influence in my life to cause me to turn to Jesus. To surrender my life to him. And I thank my King and Redeemer, again, that he healed her– and in the process, drew me to himself.

And my prayer, again this Christmas, as it is on every Christmas-

is that God will use me in other children’s lives,

to draw them to himself.

For as Simon Peter said centuries ago–

[God] alone has the words of life.

John 6:68

And my prayer for you- my readers?

May you find a new glimpse of Jesus this Christmas.

And may you be instrumental in leading your families, your neighbors, your friends-

to the knowledge of the fullness of Christ.

 

The Christmas Singing [with coupon code]

 

I’m not crazy about Amish fiction. Not really. But of all the authors, Cindy Woodsmall is one of the best. So, I’m going to pass on these sneak peaks and a coupon for 30% off… just in case any of my readers enjoy her books!

Or, of course, for those of you who have someone on your Christmas list that likes reading fiction!

Want to read the first chapter? Go here. 

To get 30% off (and free shipping!) on The Christmas Singing (or any other title) use the promo code CHRISTMAS11 at checkout on WaterBrookMultnomah.com. The coupon code expires on December 20th, 2011.

 

 

[dancing.cards]

I hung them today. They were piling up on the corner cupboard and I finally had a minute to put them in their rightful place. Dancing around my mirror.

Christmas cards are one of my favorite holiday traditions. I’m horrible at sending them (who wants to see a picture of my husband and I anyway? We look the same as we did five years ago. Almost. Just older.) but I am delighted to receive them.

I smile at babies all grown up and parents holding new ones and pregnant Mamas and weddings.

Life goes by so quickly. I want to whisper to them. Send a message through the photos. Rejoice in each day. Be thankful for every moment. Worship God with your whole life. Next year the babies will be toddlers. The toddlers kids. The kids teens. The teens adults. Life keeps moving, no matter what.

But I love the frozen moments. Every Christmas I get a few. Frozen moments to rejoice and remember and dance.

And my promise goes out…

God, whom I serve with my whole heart—

Is my witness how constantly

I remember you in my prayers…

(Romans 1:9)

Prayers whispered over frozen moments on my mirror to a God who was, who is, and who will be. The one who came and who will come again. 

[the.story]

I’ve been scratching out the story again. The most important story of all.

Writing to tell a little boy the true tale of Christmas. Learning, again, the beauty of it as I write.

A picture of Jesus. From the beginning. It makes me want to somehow pull my Bible into myself. Write these words, God, on my heart. Please. Please.

The Jesus that I love so desperately- is splashed through the pages. And I’m falling in love again. 

After day two, when the story slips in the open secret (someday a man will come who will fight the snake- and win) my little boy has been waiting in anticipation. When the book cracks open each afternoon, he says, “is today the day?!”

How beautiful that the day already came. Jesus bled. Poured his body and blood out to pay the atonement. He already fought the snake and won. And I can be free.

Me! I am free!

What a Christmas present.

It was for freedom that Christ has set us free

No longer to be subject to the yoke of slavery.

Galatians 5:1

[blog.news]

To make my blog a bit easier to get around, I changed how the Advent stories and activities can be viewed.

They won’t be posted on the home page (which means that any of you who get e-mail updates won’t receive them automatically) but you can view each day by going to the top of the blog and hovering over “25 days of Christmas” a list will show that gives you each of the stories. Activity ideas are found at the end of that day’s story.

Thanks!