Archive for December, 2006

Merry Christmas

Tuesday, December 12th, 2006

I’ll be taking a break from now until after the New Year.  This time of year, there are things more important on which to focus than politics and politicians.  Take some time off from the Internet and news.  Focus on your blessings and your family.  Light a candle for the members of the United States Armed Forces who courageously serve us around the world. Merry Christmas to you all.  See you back here in the New Year.  - JD


 

And there were shepherds living out in the fields nearby, keeping watch over their flocks at night.  An angel of the Lord appeared to them, and the glory of the Lord shone around them, and they were terrified.  But the angel said to them, “Do not be afraid.  I bring you good news of great joy that will be for all the people.  Today in the town of David a Savior has been born to you; he is Christ the Lord.  This will be a sign to you:  You will find a baby wrapped in cloths and lying in a manger.”   Luke 2: 8-12 NIV

Sometimes, I pull my wool hat down over my ears and go for a walk.  Moving out of the neighborhood, I get the courtesy bark from the neighbor’s dog, a curious examination from a couple of squirrels and am nearly trampled by a rampaging buck in rut.  He smells a doe somewhere, he just ain’t too sure about where.  He disappeared into the tree line at a full gallop, so excited he probably ran into a tree and knocked himself out.  The leaves are gone from the trees.  The air is a little crisp, but for a few flurries, we’ve seen no snow.  Houses and lawns are decorated for the season, some a bit overdone.  Christmas cards are going out and coming in.  The new Christmas movies are out.  I’ve seen none destined to be classics like It’s A Wonderful Life, which we’ll watch for the bazillionth time.  For the next few months, we’ll wonder if the angel got his wings whenever we hear a bell.  We worry some about presents.  What we might get, what we’ll give.  The thought that used to go into them doesn’t always now.  Getting something homemade is practically unheard of.  Now, we savor the warmth of the plastic gift card we receive and worry if we spent enough money on the gifts we gave.

I can see smoke drifting up lazily from chimneys in the distance and smell the oak wood fires burning in fireplaces and wood stoves.  It isn’t there, but my mind tricks me into smelling the spice cake my mother used to bake this time of year.  I think about getting a big hunk of it fresh from the oven while it’s still steaming.  Nothing tasted quite like that, especially chased with fresh milk or hot chocolate.  I walk a little deeper into the woods.  Nothing smells quite like the woods this time of year.  The dead leaves I kick up while walking have a unique, earthy aroma.  A squirrel skitters up the side of a tree right in front of me.  He stops, safely out of my reach and watches.  I come upon a wild holly bush and stick myself plucking a leaf from it.  I make a pinwheel from the stiff holly leaf by putting the sharp points between my thumb and finger and blowing on it just hard enough to make it spin.  I think of walking through the hills in the snow with my brother many years ago searching for a Christmas tree.  I think about a wild sled run.  I find a sturdy oak to lean against, pick a twig from a nearby branch and pluck it between my teeth.  I survey the rolling hillside.  The houses in the distance are visible only because the trees are naked of leaves.  I ponder what might be happening in each.  In one, Christmas cookies might be baking.  In another, maybe they’re trimming the tree.

In my mind, the house is dark.  Daylight’s not yet broken.  My heart is beating slightly faster than normal.  It’s Christmas morning.  I slowly move the blankets away and begin to tiptoe toward the living room where the Christmas tree is.  I step on a creaky floorboard and freeze, eyes wide.  I listen, afraid that I might encounter an old elf gentleman and frighten him away.  I peek into the kitchen and see that the cookies dutifully left on the table are gone.  Then, in the dark, eyes still wide, heart still racing, I approach the tree….

I’m walking along the street in Chicago.  A country kid in the city.  I’ve never seen so many stores and all of them decked out for the holiday.  Some have signs that say Xmas.  I wonder why they’d do that.  The sky is gray.  The city is gray.  The wind blows some newspaper down a slush-covered sidewalk.  A panhandler begs for money.  It doesn’t seem like Christmas.  Something is missing, replaced by an X.

The air has chilled some so I flip the collar up on my down vest and I’m on the other side of the world walking a Christmas Eve post.  I’m barely 19 years old.  Sure, I have plenty of buddies around, but I’d trade it all for five minutes in that kitchen eating Mom’s spice cake.  Then I think, because a few of us are willing to be here, many can be there at home.  That thought perks me up some as I look into a glistening star filled sky and snug up the GI wool scarf around my neck.  The clear night makes it colder.  I wish it would cloud up and snow.  Silent Night plays in my head.

It’s Christmas Eve.  It’s nearing the end of the Church service and we light candles, each of us receiving the flame from the last Advent candle.  As the sanctuary lights dim, we raise our candles and sing Silent Night.  There’s an incredible feeling of peace and hope.

Lying in bed, I realize it’s early.  I hear something moving around in the other room.  Slowly and cautiously at first it seems.  Then I hear a rush of pattering feet and a curdling yell – Mom!  Dad!  Get up!  Look what Santa brought!  With huge grins and through sleepy eyes I share the joy and amazement.

From Su and I to you and yours.  Have a blessed Christmas.
Copyright © 2004, J. D. Pendry

Losing Hope

Sunday, December 10th, 2006

J. D. Pendry

Are you old enough to remember the annual Bob Hope Christmas shows for the Troops?  He and his entertainers traveled the globe at Christmas time into and out of combat zones.  Not only were they big events for Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen and Marines, but for national television audiences here in America too.  Millions of American families gathered around the television set to watch Bob Hope entertain the troops eager to catch a glimpse of a familiar face in the audience.  After years of watching those shows on television as a kid, I saw one in person at Osan Air Base, Korea in 1972.  I stood atop the spare tire on the back of my jeep in order to see the show over top of the crowd.  We’ve lost Mr. Hope.  Are we also losing the spirit of hope he and his generation gave to us when they stood united with our Serving Men and Women against powerful enemies?

I’m grateful that we still have some entertainers willing to perform for those stationed in remote and often dangerous places.  Unless I’ve missed it, however, - I don’t watch much television anymore - none of the shows seem to have made the prime time television lineups.  Why do you reckon that is?  I suspect that it’s just another indicator of the ever-widening separation between the average American and the Soldier that protects him.  Putting human faces on Soldiers might draw too much of a contrast to the murderous, Nazi-like depictions of them provided to us by politicians, the media and others.  Don’t you think that a Christmas show for the troops would garner a sizeable television audience - if one could find a major broadcast network willing to air it?  No.  It’s more likely that I’m just trapped in another time or in some strange alternate reality where family entertainment and troop morale at Christmas deserves and gets much more attention than does Britney’s crotch.

Recently, I watched some World War II newsreels.  Not combat footage, but news about things happening here at home to support the Troops.  I watched an Air Corps recruiting film starring Jimmy Stewart.  Don’t recall him?  He was an actor in the days when actors actually had to act.  This time of year, he’s quite popular in It’s a Wonderful Life

Nearly a year before the December 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor, Stewart attempted to join the United States Army Air Corps, though his enlistment was initially denied due to a weight problem…. To get up to 148 pounds, he enlisted the help of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer’s muscle man, Don Loomis… Stewart successfully enlisted in the Army in March 1941. He became the first major movie star to wear a uniform. - Wikipedia

I saw a much different country in those reels.  It was mobilized, focused and in action.  There was a clip of Walt Disney using the Disney studios to produce military training films.  There was the Hollywood War Bond Drive with major stars of the time supporting the effort and encouraging Americans to support it by purchasing bonds.  Imagine that happening today.  There was the Hollywood Canteen founded by Bette Davis and John Garfield, a place where grateful stars invited Servicemen on their way to combat in to rub elbows.

 

At the onset of World War II, Garfield immediately attempted to enlist in the armed forces, but was turned down due to heart damage. Frustrated, he turned his energies to supporting the war effort. - Wikipedia

Would today’s self-indulged Hollywood set be inclined to hangout with and show their support for Soldiers?  A few might.

I preferred the country I saw in those newsreels, but I am losing hope for its return.  We were one America then instead of a conglomeration of squabbling, politicized and politically correct Hyphenated-Americas.  On December 7, 1941, an enemy attacked the United States and the entire nation mobilized to confront and defeat him.  On September 11, 2001, an enemy attacked the United States again.  We held a commission to fix blame, watched many grandstanding politicians and then we went shopping for I-pods and X-boxes.  Now, instead of mobilizing for victory we organized a group of stuffed shirts, not a military representative among them, to tell us how best to give up.  Just as I’m losing hope for the return of the America in those World War II newsreels, I’m losing hope for an America that can unite as one and defeat an enemy bent on our destruction and on world domination.

We’ve become just a place.  We’re no longer owners of a strong national will and character.  That’s been replaced by too much politics and too many hyphenated agendas.  Our enemies know and they have told us that we lack national will and have traded in our national character for self-centered frivolity and moral relativism.  Doesn’t losing hope logically follow?  In this season of hope, pray for our Troops and their families.  Merry Christmas.

Copyright © 2006 J.D. Pendry

All is Calm, All is Bright!

Monday, December 4th, 2006

J. D. Pendry

I was sitting at work on Saturday morning at 0600.  That’s 6 O’clock AM if you’re not accustomed to the 24-hour clock.  An email rang in from my Daughter-in-law, currently in Korea along with my Son and Grandbaby.  She sent me this Associated Press news article along with some questions.  Kathy is the Granddaughter of a Baptist Minister with strong conservative values.  She believes that Christ belongs in CHRISTmas.

My town of Saint Albans is small even by small town standards.  The City’s web site lists 10 churches.  I assure you that it’s closer to 50 than it is to 10.  There are probably more than 10 within a one-mile radius of where I now sit typing.  Rush hour traffic here is between 10 and 11 on Sundays and again at 1230 when there’s a mad dash for Mayberry’s Restaurant and other local eateries.  Baptists like to eat, but so do Presbyterians, Methodists, Catholics….  You’d think that with such a Church presence, organizations like the ACLU would take their anti-religious freedom and anti freedom of expression wars elsewhere.  Old Soldiers are reading this (I hope) and thinking that the ACLU is violating a basic principal of war, which is to attack your enemy at his weakest point not his strongest.  Unfortunately, that’d be a wrong assumption.  This is why.  When all of those churches fill on Sundays (and they do fill) there are still more people who don’t attend than do.  Secondly, small towns don’t generally have sufficient cash in their coffers to fight protracted legal battles with the well-funded anti-Christian organizations like the ACLU.  Fortunately, there are organizations willing to confront them on behalf of these communities.We are a little hard headed here in a small town named for a Saint martyred for his conversion to Christianity.  In 2002, a Saint Albans High School senior of the spiked hair, body-piercing religion, filed a lawsuit to prevent a student led prayer at graduation.  David Limbaugh recounts the story in his book, Persecution.  A judge issued an order forbidding the student led prayer.  At the point in the graduation ceremony where the prayer would have been, many of the graduating seniors defied the judge by standing and reciting the Lord’s Prayer.  In typical fashion, Spike the atheist didn’t attend graduation and the judge didn’t order anyone arrested for exercising his or her right of free expression.I haven’t figured out what is so offensive or threatening about Christianity.  Yet, each year at Christmas time, people claim the sight of a baby and what it represents offends them.  Convert or die theology or the religious symbols of homicide bombers and be-headers don’t offend them, but they cannot tolerate the image of a baby.  A baby sent as a gift to save them from themselves.Mayor Dick Callaway has been our mayor for only few months.  Dick is also my Sunday School Teacher and a friend.  At our Church Christmas program on Saturday night, I asked him about our missing Jesus.  I also added, jokingly, that my Daughter-in-law told me that if Saint Albans couldn’t find Jesus for Christmas we were welcome in her home, because he’d be there.  I learned from Dick that our park superintendent was acting on bad advice and bad information.  If the Nativity was the lone display on city owned property, it might be an issue.  Problem is, communities nowadays so fear attacks by the ACLU and others, it’s assumed that any display of the Nativity on city owned property would bring unwanted challenges.  The ACLU is frightening people away from Christianity.  Maybe that’s their goal.Our Festival of Lights in the city’s park consists of more than 150 light displays.  The Nativity display is just one of them therefore not challengeable as a Church state issue.On Saturday afternoon, the Mayor put Baby Jesus, the reason for the season, back in the Nativity.

Silent Night, Holy Night,
All is calm, all is bright
‘Round yon virgin mother and child!
Holy infant so tender and mild,
Sleep in heavenly peace,
Sleep in heavenly peace.

From my family to yours, Have a safe, Merry and Blessed Christmas.

Copyright © J.D. Pendry 2006