BACK IN THE BOX ( A Reflection from Bishop Stacy Sauls)
Blogger's Note: The following is a guest blog, a brief reflection from Bishop Stacy Sauls, Chief Operating Officer of the Missionary Society of the Episcopal Church and former Diocesan Bishop of Lexington.
Everyone
has now gone home; Ginger’s brother to South Carolina, and the boys and
daughter-in-law to Kentucky. Now the clean-up begins.
That
was our task for the weekend. The decorations are back in their containers;
well, mostly. The Christmas tree angel, after its 35th Christmas, is
safely stored for another year. The tree, delivered exactly one month ago
today, is bagged and on the street. The furniture is now arranged back in
its original locations. The cards are all gone and the address list
updated. The sheets and towels are getting washed. The inflatable
beds are rolled up and in the closet. I spent most of my weekend sweeping
up evergreen needles, which have a tendency to get everywhere.
Christmas
is back in the box. Where it belongs. After a month of the chaos
and disruption, things are getting back to normal. It’s about time.
I’m not sure I could have stood any more of it.
Every
year, Christmas disrupts our lives and shatters our routines. It breaks
into our normal patterns and turns them upside down. It is not too
different, I suppose, than the first Christmas.
It
certainly disrupted the lives of Joseph and Mary, who traveled from Nazareth to
Bethlehem and then on to Egypt; of the shepherds, who left their flocks and
went to see the child; of the wise men from the East, who left all behind to
follow a star. And it most certainly disrupted the lives of the villagers
of Bethlehem whose infant sons were slaughtered by Herod in a jealous and
murderous rage.
Enough
is enough. There is a limit to how much chaos, how much danger, how much
loss, how much disruption one can take. There came a time for Joseph and
Mary and the baby to go home. There came a time for the shepherds to go
back to work. There came a time for the wise men to return from whence
they came. There even came a time for the days of mourning in Bethlehem
to end.
There
is just so much Christmas anyone can take. I, for one, am happy to have
it back in the box. Except,
of course, I’ll continue to find pine needles in unexpected places when I least
expect them, when I’m not armed with a broom and dust pan. I hope I find
them when I need to remember about what happened at Christmas, that the truth
is life has been changed forever and the world will never quite be the
same. I hope I find them when I need to remember that normalcy, routines,
and patterns are illusory and idolatrous because God is actually in
charge.
I
hope I find them when I need to remember that, try as I might, Christmas is
never really back in box. Neither is God.
Photo: Bishop Stacy with other bishops at the EAM Episcopal Asiamerica Ministry Consultation & 40th anniversary celebration held at Hyatt Regency Airport Hotel last June 2013, where he keynoted on the issues of "domestic poverty." L-R: Bp. Stacy, Bp. Prince Singh of Rochester; Bp. Bob Fitzpatrick of Hawaii; Bp. Barry Beisner of Northern California and Obispo Maximo of the Iglesia Filipina Independiente, the Most Rev. Ephraim Fajutagana.
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