The Present of Presence: All is Gift
The Present of Presence: All Is Gift
(Here's an article I wrote for Christmas time years ago... Enjoy)
BustedHalo.com an online magazine for spiritual seekers in
their 20s and 30s
All
is Gift: Some thoughts on Christmas presence
by Richard G. Malloy, S.J.
December 1958
When I was little, I was small. At
the age of four, my brother Timmy is a year older and can reach things I can’t. One
morning, he climbs up on a chair he’s put in the closet we’re not supposed to
open, and sees toys on the shelf, new toys, still in their packages.
Fun! He yanks down a set of blocks and a bunch of other stuff. Soon
I’m busy playing with a new set of beautiful, blond, wooden blocks, putting
them one on top of another, and then immediately knocking them down.
Fun! All of a sudden, our Mom, seeing that we’ve discovered the Christmas
stash early, pulls us into the kitchen. “Time for breakfast, boys.
I’m making chocolate chip pancakes and Maypo.” I love chocolate chip
pancakes and Maypo. Forget the blocks.
A few days later, it’s Christmas morning. I rip the bright,
colored paper off a new set of beautiful, blond, wooden blocks.
Fun! I start stacking them and knocking them down. Fun! My
mother looks to see if I recognize the blocks. I’m clueless. The
blocks also come in pretty handy as objects to throw at my brother.
Fun! Mom stops that action. Not fun! Pretty soon, I’m
sleepy. Time for a nap. As I drift off, I hear my brother asking,
“Hey, aren’t these the toys we were playing with before?” “I don’t think
so, Timmy,” answers Mom. “Santa brought these in his sleigh last
night.” “Wow,” my brother replies.
PHILADELPHIA, PA
December 2005
When we are young, all is accepted as gift. We rarely
question why and how all the good things of life appear. We believe
whatever we are told. Santa comes down the chimney. Reindeer
fly. At the North Pole, elves make the toys. The magic of Christmas
is carried in the glow of the Christmas tree lights and the strong scent of
pine in the living room. Brightly wrapped packages appear during the
night. It’s all so miraculous when seen through the eyes of a little
child.
Sing Christmas Carols
and drink hot chocolate with
marshmallows... Sled...Sit late in the quiet glow of the tree's lights and let God be with you... Most of all, pray. |
As we mature, we come to realize that God gives even greater gifts
at Christmas. We discern and celebrate the reality and meaning of
Christ’s birth. His present to us is presence. In a stable is born
a baby, the savior of the world. God lies in a manger, is warmed by the
breath of oxen and ass, and makes his home among us. This Christmas, once
again, the miracle occurs. We are reminded that the life of grace--the
reality that God is present in the depths of our hearts and all that we
love--is the center of our lives. God becomes one of us, and we are God’s
family. God makes his home among us.
Christ’s birth reveals God’s love for us and promises that we will
“come to share in the divine nature” (II Peter 1:4). In the third
century, St. Athanasius proclaimed, “The Son of God became man, so that we might
become God.” We become human-unto-God, as was Jesus, and participate in
the mystery of creation’s transformation, “so that God may be all in all” (I
Cor 15:28).
To Do…
This Christmas, be present to the reality and meanings of God’s
gifts to us. Eat hearty. Party wisely and well. Don't work
too hard. Read Charles Dickens' A Christmas Carol and Oscar
Hijuelos' Mr. Ives' Christmas, a short, remarkable novel of faith and
reconciliation. Watch It’s a Wonderful Life and “A Charlie Brown
Christmas.” Laugh and cry watching While You Were Sleeping, the story of
an achingly lonely young woman without family, who falls in love with a goofy
Irish clan in the week between Christmas and New Years. Listen to
"Christmas in the Trenches" by John McCutcheon, an amazing ballad
that poetically retells the historically true event when, for a few fleeting
hours, peace broke out in the frozen trenches of France, Christmas Eve
1914. The singing of Christmas carols on both sides of the lines gave the
men the inspiration and courage to lay down their guns.
Click Here Christmas in the Trenches
Take a child to see Santa. Give generously to the
poor. Sing Christmas Carols and drink hot chocolate with
marshmallows. Sled. Sit late in the quiet glow of the tree’s lights
and let God be with you.
Most of all, pray. Walk outside at 2:00 AM on a freezing
cold, stunningly starlit night, and experience the awesomeness of the
universe. Go to Midnight Mass. Read the first chapters of Matthew
and Luke. Engage the beautiful rhythms of the Liturgy of the Hours.
Sit in still silence, breath and realize life is a miracle and mystery.
Know that Christmas is the time of year when we remember and
ponder the birth of our God who loves us so much that he becomes one of
us. Vulnerable and wrapped in swaddling clothes, appears the one who
saves the world. Realize that Jesus is real and wants to be reborn again
in our hearts. The Lord has a mission for us. Worship him these
days and listen to that inner voice of your imagination where God
communicates. The presence of God confirms for us that St. Ignatius was
right: All is gift. Jesus again gifts us with his presence this
Christmas. O come, let us adore.
Rev. Richard G. Malloy, S.J., Ph.D., was an Assistant
Professor of Anthropology and Sociology at Saint Joseph’s University in
Philadelphia, PA. From 2010-2019 he served as Vice President for Mission and University Chaplain at the University of Scranton. Since 2019 he has served as Director of Mission Integration at Cristo Rey Jesuit High School in Baltimore, MD.
©2005
Bustedhalo.com. All rights reserved.
Labels: catholic, Christmas, christmas in the trenches, Emmanual, faith, Havertown, hope, jesuits, Jesus, John McCutcheon, love
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