If memory serves, I was eighteen, my sister was sixteen, my brother was fourteen, and my mother
was thirty-eight. We were in Indianapolis for a weekend getaway while my father was working
somewhere. So, we four headed to Indy for some fun. It was a great weekend and
filled with all the highs and lows that being with your siblings often exposes.
For example, my brother couldn’t swim, and I…unwisely…tried
to help him get his head out of the water by swimming below him, grabbing his feet, and pushing him
upward. Now, in my mind he was going to automatically stiffen his legs and
would then get the air he needed, but in his mind I was trying to drown
him. In fact, to this day, he still
believes I was out to kill him, and I’ve given up trying to convince him
otherwise. The upshot – he learned to swim.
It was also on this trip that my mother let me drive around
I-465 as we traveled to the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus being
held in old Market Square Arena. We were in my dad’s 1986 white Ford
F-150 and I guess I thought that since I was in Indianapolis traveling a circular
course (I-465) that this meant I could also drive like I was at the
Indianapolis Motor Speedway. So, I did.
To this day, I smile and sometimes even laugh out loud when
I remember hearing my mother yell out, “Slow this buggy down!” It was funny
then, and it’s funny now, but there’s a lesson to be had here.
It’s during the Christmas season when people become so busy
that they forget to slow down and think about what it’s really all about,
and we all just need to slow our collective buggies down and ponder, remember, reminisce,
and give thanks for the Wonderful child who is the good news of this season.
Martin Luther referred to this kind of deliberate reflecting
centuries ago when he wrote about the Christmas Gospel:
The
Christmas Gospel is so clear that there is little need of learned
interpretation. It is only necessary to ponder it well, to contemplate it, and
to take it completely into your heart. None will derive more benefit from it
than they whose hearts hold still and who divest themselves of material
considerations and concentrate diligently on it. This lesson is just like [the
reflection of] the sun: in a quiet and still pond it can be seen clearly and
warms the water powerfully, but in a rushing current it cannot be seen as well
nor can it warm up the water as much. So if you wish to be illumined and warmed
here, to see God's mercy and wondrous deeds, so that your heart is filled with
fire and light and becomes reverent and joyous, then go to where you may be still
and impress the picture deep into your heart. You will find no end of wondrous
deeds.
It’s during this time of year when Christmas Carols and
holiday songs are sung and played all over the place. In fact, we sometimes get tired of hearing
them. There’s a beautiful song sung by Tony Bennett and played by the late Bill
Evans that I like to listen around Christmas time. It would not really be
identified as a Christmas carol or a holiday song, but the words, when thought
of in the context of the Christmas season really drive home the beauty of the
Christmas Gospel.
So, with all we’re doing and all we’re trying to accomplish
with just ten more shopping days left until Christmas take time to go somewhere quiet to think
about Jesus Christ and what His birth really means to you, or to quote my
mother, “Slow This Buggy Down!”
Thank you, son. I sought out that quiet place tonight...needing/seeking a fresh dose of His sweet peace. Love you...see you soon.
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