Will the Christ Child Come? Halfway through December we were doing
the regular evening things when there was a knock at the door. We opened it to
find a small package with a beautiful ceramic lamb inside. We looked at the
calendar and realized that the 12 days of Christmas were beginning!! We waiting
excitedly for the next night's surprise and only then, with the gift of a
matching shepherd, did we realized that the lamb was part of a nativity set. Author - Gaye
Willis Submitted by Glenna
Herod
Each night we grew more excited to see what piece we would receive. Each was
exquisitely beautiful. The kids kept trying to catch the givers as we slowing
built the scene at the manager and began to focus on Christ's birth.
On Christmas Eve, all the pieces were in place, but the baby Jesus. My 12
year-old son really wanted to catch our benefactors and began to devise all
kinds of ways to trap them. He ate his dinner in the mini-van watching and
waiting, but no one came.
Finally we called him in to go through our family's Christmas Eve traditions.
But before the kids went to bed we checked the front step-No Baby Jesus! We
began to worry that my son had scared them off. My husband suggested that maybe
they dropped the Jesus and there wouldn't be anything coming. Somehow something
was missing that Christmas Eve.
There was a feeling that things weren't complete. The kids went to bed and I put
out Christmas, but before I went to bed I again checked to see if the Jesus had
come-no, the doorstep was empty. In our family the kids can open their stockings
when they want to, but they have to wait to open any presents until Dad wakes
up. So one by one they woke up very early and I also woke up to watch them.
Even before they opened their stockings, each child checked to see if perhaps
during the night the baby Jesus had come. Missing that piece of the set seemed
to have an odd effect. At least it changed my focus. I knew there were presents
under the tree for me and I was excited to watch the children open their gifts,
but first on my mind was the feeling of waiting for the ceramic Christ Child.
We had opened just about all of the presents when one of the children found one
more for me buried deep beneath the limbs of the tree. He handed me a small
package from my former visiting teaching companion. This sister was somewhat
less active in the church. I had learned over time they didn't have much for
Christmas, so that their focus was the children. It sounded like she didn't get
many gifts to open, so I had always given her a small package - new dish towels,
the next year's lesson manual - not much, but something for her to open. I was
touched when at Church on the day before Christmas, she had given me this small
package, saying it was just a token of her love and appreciation.
As I took off the bow, I remembered my friendship with her and was filled with
gratitude for knowing her and for her kindness and sacrifice in this year giving
me a gift. But as the paper fell away, I began to tremble and cry. There in the
small brown box was the baby Jesus. He had come!
I realized on that Christmas Day that Christ will come into our lives in ways
that we don't expect. The spirit of Christ comes into our hearts as we serve one
another. We had waited and watched for him to come, expecting the dramatic
"knock at the door and scurrying of feet" but he came in a small, simple package
that represented service, friendship, gratitude, and love.
This experience taught me that the beginning of the true spirit of Christmas
comes as we open our hearts and actively focus on the Savior. But we will most
likely find him in the small and simple acts of love, friendship and service
that we give to each other. This Christmas I want to feel again the joy of
knowing that Christ is in our home. I want to focus on loving and serving. More
than that I want to open my heart to him all year that I may see him again.
Don't forget the reason for the Season.