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							Recent events have made me think. (Yes, that’s 
							what you smelled burning.) By recent, I mean this 
							particular Christmas season. And as far as events 
							go, well some are close to home, while others, 
							though close to our hearts, are hundreds of miles 
							away.
 Like it or not, I think nearly everyone would agree 
							that Christmas is the most sentimental of holidays. 
							We treasure memories and haul them out of our hearts 
							like ornaments out of the attic. We anticipate that 
							special day, wondering, “Will this Christmas be 
							good?” comparing as we prepare. Does your “list” 
							include good shopping weather? Check! (“So much 
							better than last year, but I hope we get a little 
							snow before Christmas Eve.”) Hearing your favorite 
							Christmas songs on the radio? Check! (“I’ve always 
							loved listening to this station this time of year, 
							but if I hear “The Christmas Shoes” one more time I 
							might scream!”) Putting the finishing touches on 
							that special project, party, or gift? Check! 
							(“Remember that white elephant party a few years ago 
							when you got the Mrs. Butterworth syrup bottle 
							dressed up like Carmen Miranda? Good times, good 
							times.”) Great worship services with your church to 
							center your thoughts on the real point of all of 
							this? Check! (“Well, they’ll never compare with the 
							Advent sermons that Pastor _______ used to preach.”) 
							Place and time to gather with the people you love …, 
							ah …, er …, well, your family (Just joshing!)? 
							Check! (“It won’t be the same without _______. He 
							always loved Christmas.”) Everybody happy and well 
							and have everything they need? (insert the sound of 
							chirping crickets here) Hello? Are you there? That’s 
							a hard one to check off the list, isn’t it?
 
 It seems like everyone I know and love is struggling 
							against something. If it isn’t health it’s money. If 
							it isn’t money it’s a relationship. If it isn’t a 
							relationship it’s grief. If it isn’t grief it’s 
							fear. If it isn’t fear it’s… See? And to make 
							matters worse, this is supposed to be a happy time. 
							Nobody wants a downer around at Christmas! But the 
							fact is that joy – real joy – is rarer than pure 
							gold these days.
 
 Even if you were enjoying a nearly ideal season 
							chances are your hopes for that elusive “perfect 
							Christmas” were dashed last week with news of the 
							lives of innocent children and their caregivers 
							senselessly, tragically, ended by a troubled gunman. 
							Not that there is any good time for such awful news, 
							but shouldn’t “peace on earth” have a chance right 
							about now, at least according to the calendar? Joy 
							evaporated from our nation and we all wept. Indeed, 
							we continue to weep as details about the children 
							and their teachers play out before our eyes with 
							news of funeral after funeral. Knowing that children 
							will be forever scarred from the experience, 
							families have been utterly destroyed and a community 
							is drowning in grief is enough to make us want to 
							undeck the halls and cancel the holiday altogether.
 
 But (aren’t you thankful for that wonderful little 
							3-letter word?) we have moments every now and then 
							when joy breaks into all the tragedy. Like just this 
							morning. Several days ago my 76 year-old mother had 
							surgery. Though not major it did require a hospital 
							stay and general anesthesia. The surgeon reported 
							that the procedure could not have been more routine. 
							Physically she was doing great. Mentally was another 
							story. For more than two days my Dad and I struggled 
							to keep her calm and remind her that she was in the 
							hospital, had just undergone back surgery and try to 
							get her to cooperate with her caregivers. It was 
							exhausting. Even worse, it was frightening. My 
							usually warm and loving mother was panicked, 
							hurtful, and delirious. The doctor warned us before 
							the procedure that it would take a day or so for the 
							anesthesia to wear off, but as the hours went by and 
							she seemed to get more confused and combative 
							instead of compliant and sensible we began to fear 
							that something might have gone terribly wrong, maybe 
							some kind of stroke or other undetected 
							physiological problem that might have been taking 
							away the woman we know and love forever.
 
 
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            With responsibilities awaiting me at home some 3 hours away I 
			reluctantly left the hospital yesterday afternoon, praying as I 
			drove, trying to bolster my failing faith that everything was going 
			to be okay. I awoke rested, but anxious. When I convinced myself to 
			call, my Dad answered on the verge of tears and told me that she had 
			a good night, that the confusion was diminishing and that she was 
			finally acting like herself. I detected something in his voice. I 
			felt it too. Some might write it off as relief, but I’ve felt relief 
			before and I know this was something more. It was a beautiful, 
			priceless moment of pure joy. We thanked God for His mercy as we 
			said goodbye and I rejoiced. It was wonderful!
 That’s when I started thinking about how joy is so fleeting on 
			earth. It always comes to us in degrees relative to our 
			circumstances. Many times it is preceded by some kind of problem or 
			turmoil and it rarely lasts for more than a few moments. Though 
			precious, it is dulled, tarnished by trouble. That’s life – for now.
 
 But (there’s that sweet little conjunction again) not forever! 
			Someday everyone who has chosen to love and trust the One born to us 
			(Jesus!) will know joy without problem, without bounds, without 
			limits and without end. Until then, let’s savor those remarkable 
			moments.
 
 May God grant you joy to remember this Christmas!
 
 Pastor Greg Wooten
 Lincoln Church of the Nazarene
 
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