Many years ago when I was still in my
old parishes I took a Christingle service.
We always had Christingle on Christmas Eve and it was always very
popular. Parents wanted their children
to hear the real meaning of Christmas and they wanted them to hear it from the
vicar in church. If the vicar was
prepared to entertain their kids on Christmas Eve when they were as high as
kites, most parents thought that was a brilliant idea. And everybody wanted to join in singing “Away
in a manger” by candlelight. It was a
high spot of Christmas for quite a few people.
All those of you who have been to a
Christingle will know that although it’s a service which everybody enjoys, it’s
really a service for children. So I was
a little concerned when a rather dishevelled man came in about three minute
before the start, took off his shoes and socks and started to warm his feet in
front of the gas fire. These days
strange men wandering in to children’s services are inevitably regarded with a
certain amount of suspicion. I went
across to talk to him but he wasn’t in a mood for a chat so I started the
service anyway.
He sat there throughout the service with
his feet to the fire and his back to me.
Even when the children came forward to receive their Christingles and
they were all standing in the aisles he didn’t want to move. He sat there as families left and he sat
there as people all around him chatted.
It was obvious that he would have stayed there all night so I had a word
with a big strapping soldier on leave and asked if he would mind coming with me
if I offered to take the chap to the shelter in Lincoln. It was OK by him so I thought I’d solved the
problem.
Except that the man didn’t want to go.
By this time all the children had gone
but there were a lot of adults left in church, bless their hearts, because they
didn’t want to leave me on my own with the man but I really hadn’t got a clue
what to do next. I’m a single woman
living alone and I didn’t want to take him home with me. I knew the churchwardens wouldn’t agree to
leaving the man in church and nobody seemed to have any ideas at all. Stalemate.
Then one of the men stepped forward and
I was a bit surprised that he was in his shirt sleeves. He’d taken off his jacket and he put it
around the stranger’s shoulders saying, “That’ll keep you warm and there’s some
cash in the pocket too.” Then the
floodgates opened and the pockets were filled with rather crackly gifts but
after a few gifts the chap stopped us giving him more saying he’d got enough
now. He’d probably been given about £70
to £80 which is hardly a fortune.
Somehow, though, the atmosphere
relaxed. One or two more people left the
church and a woman prison officer had a word with the man and then took him
home with her to have some hot soup.
Another man had a word and discovered that the man didn’t want to go to
Lincoln but he’d got friends in Scunthorpe so he arranged to take him. I breathed a sigh of relief, bade farewell to
the stragglers and went home.
But the memory of that night will never
leave me for that night I think I met a prophet. Prophets aren’t fortune tellers. They’re not really into predicting the
future. What prophets do is to make us
look at the present and see it for what it really is and more important make us
see ourselves for what we really are.
We’d all gone to church that night to
celebrate the birth of Christ. We were
all good Christian folk and I’m pretty sure that all of us had made our
charitable donations in the run up to Christmas. We’d
all heard the bidding prayer which reminded us that because this of all things would rejoice
his heart, we should remember, in his name, the poor and helpless, the cold,
the hungry, and the oppressed; the sick and them that mourn, the lonely and the
unloved.
We’d all heard that and we thought we
were all good Christian people. We’d
done our bit and there are systems and charities in place to care for everybody. It took a stranger to remind us that Christ
did not come to bring systems but to bring love. The stranger reminded us whilst Christ loves
all humanity he also loves each human and asks us to love and care in his
name. He was pretty low down in the
social heap but he had friends and he had preferences even if it was just to go
to Scunthorpe not Lincoln and no, I didn’t know what was best for him
John the Baptist was a prophet in the
wilderness of Judaea. May we recognise
God’s prophets wherever we find them.
That is such a touching story.
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing this story. I loved it. Merry Christmas!
ReplyDeleteThank you for this wonderful TRUE story. So much to challenge us (and what a caring congregation)
ReplyDeleteWhat a wonderful story! Thank you for sharing it.
ReplyDeleteThis is a beautiful story, sad as well. I now will keep that man in my thoughts this season-though is should be at all times, and make sure I am seeing the prophets reflected in my days.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful, and quite appropriate for the season we are all in.
ReplyDeleteGod bless.
Beautiful. Thank you for sharing.
ReplyDeleteHappy Christmas
God Bless x
Oh what a wonderful story! It's so hard to know what to do to be kind and loving and caring and at the same time, be safe but you all this so well!
ReplyDeleteI love, love, love this post. Yes, that is three loves. Sometimes we entertain an angel (or prophet) unawares.
ReplyDeleteJust had a chance to read this. DOn't know how I missed it earlier. A very touching story and you were so right about what everyone learned that night.
ReplyDelete