THE GATE OF THE YEAR
'God Knows'
THE GATE OF THE YEAR
'God Knows'
The seventeenth century phrase for these days between
Christmas and New Year was Daft Days. I rather like
that. It’s much more descriptive than the newer word, Twixtmas
My Daft Days
have been even quieter than usual as I am still very tired after being ill
before Christmas. I took a service on
Christmas Day, came home and locked the door.
My decorations have been limited to the tree, the door wreath, and the
nativity stable. I opened my presents on
Boxing Day. I visited a friend for coffee
on Friday. I couldn’t face Christmas
lunch until Saturday
Early in
December I offered to take a post-Christmas service so an over-worked vicar could have a
day off. I make this offer to someone somewhere
every year so yesterday I went to Kirkby and had a lovely congregation of about twenty, several of whom I hadn't seen for years.
And today I am out for lunch with a dear cousin whose husband has dementia and life is becoming more complicated for them.
Tomorrow I shall tidy the house (but not take down the tree) ready for the new year. My suspicion is that my personal daft days may last a little longer.
The stable looks a little crowded now. The baby sleeps. The woman and her husband watch him with pride. Those very important chaps are not as important as they thought.
No matter how hard I try, I cannot improve on the original
"She brought forth her firstborn son, and wrapped him in swaddling clothes, and laid him in a manger."
Peace be to you this Christmas tide.
The magi have finished their car journey. I'm happy to report that they were very well behaved in the car and they haven't left any sweet wrappers but they didn't leave any gold, frankincense or myrrh either, which is a bit of a disappointment. (The camels didn't leave anything either, thank goodness!)
Anyway, they've noticed the bright lights in my house so they've come in to investigate. They are very good and are wiping their feet for which I am very grateful. Their mums would be proud of them.
There is some sort of kerfuffle going on in the stable. I'm keeping my distance but once I know what is happening, I'll let you know.
Meanwhile back at the stable, a woman has arrived. She looks a bit weary and is on her knees. She's shooed out most of the chaps. Good luck to her. Not sure what she's done to that sheep. Maybe I need to intervene when I get back from my journey with the magi.
As always I am enjoying my Jaquie Lawson Advent Calendar but I can't find the Santa for 18th December. The "clue" suggests somewhere near the Eiffel Tower but despite my repeated searches, I can't find him. Can anyone help?
Those magi are always on the move! Where can they have gone?
Oh, there they are, in the garden. They've found a good spot by the remaining carrots and other vegetables so their animals can feed. They've also decided to have a camp fire while they are in a safe place. I shall do a head count of animals, just in case they fancied a barbecue while I wasn't around!
Stables are for shepherds, herdsmen and animals, right? So why is there an angel on top of mine? And a star, for heaven's sake. What is the world coming to?!
I've got severe problems with moving anywhere at the moment, even around the house so where the magi get to is anyone's guess. However, yesterday I found them in the wetroom on my shower stool. Obviously they have mountaineering abilities which I had never suspected. Perhaps they are desperate for a shower - I don't know.
Next visit Monday!
When I was a child carol singers were around every night after about 12th December. It would be groups of about four children who would sing two or three carols, always ending with "We wish you a merry Christmas" and ringing the doorbell in the hope that they would get a few coppers.
There was also the carol singing with the school choir when fifty or sixty of us would sing unaccompanied but with great harmonies, and we would get rather larger donations for a local children's home.
I feel a bit sad that the only "carol singing" that I have heard this year was our local Lions who come around with Santa on a "sleigh" and very loud recorded music.
I would hate to see the groups of three or four children going around without adults these days, but somehow I feel sad that the old tradition of carol singing has disappeared. Is it the same where you live?
(Sorry, distinctly unwell so finding it hard to create a post.)
What can be happening? Come back on Friday for the next thrilling installment.
The centre piece of Christmas eating was always a turkey. It was the only time of the year that we ate turkey and after a few days of turkey sandwiches, casserole, curry, soup we were glad it was the only time of the year we had turkey. A huge bird would arrive from the butchers ready plucked but Mother preferred to draw it herself and then make stock from the giblets for the gravy. A piece of ham would be the gift of my grandparents who would come from their farm to join us for lunch.
Vegetables were from the garden. Brussels sprouts, carrots, red cabbage and runner beans which would have been salted in the summer. The pickles and chutneys would also be largely made from garden veg and would have been maturing a while.
Mother would have made the pudding, the cake and mincemeat well in advance. She made her own pastry, puff and shortcrust, but at Christmas she often bought bread.
I too will have turkey, but just a turkey thigh which I will stuff with sausagemeat and wrap with bacon. The vegetables will come from Sainsbury and will include carrots, sprouts and cabbage but also frozen peas rather than salted beans. I've made my own pudding and cake but will buy either mincemeat and ready-rolled pastry and ready-made mince pies. There will be treats too like smoked salmon, fresh orange juice, and some charcuterie meats.
And I shall be very grateful that I have a freezer so I don't have to waste any of those delicious leftovers!
I don’t know whether I’m on my head or my heels but I do
know that I am very tired. I’m so tired that I don’t know what to do with
myself.
We’ve been on the road for three days now and it will be
another four days at least until we reach Bethlehem. We’ve got to go to
Bethlehem because the emperor wants to count us. Crazy!
These last nine months have been frightening. I'd always thought it would be fantastic to be special to God but sometimes I’ve
felt as though I was living through a nightmare. It was OK all those
months ago when that angel came. In fact, it was more than OK, it was
brilliant! I suppose I was swept along by the moment but you know, even
after everything that’s been happening, I’m still glad I said yes. I was
a bit scared but you can’t say no to God, can you? But when the angel had
gone reality set in.
The mornings were worst. That’s when I was being
sick. At first I didn’t know why but before long I realised that the
angel had been no dream. I was expecting a baby.
I’ll never forget the day I told my mum about the
baby. It was awful. She wept and she shouted at me and she pleaded
with me to name the father but when I named The Father she wouldn’t believe
me. She hadn’t seen the angel so why should she? She thought some
man had been with me.
Then she told my dad and that was even worse. I
think I’ve always been special to him and he was stunned. He couldn’t
speak to me or even look at me. He was just so ashamed of me.
Then he had to tell Joseph. I think he hoped that
Joseph was the father but no-one knew better than Joe that he wasn’t. My
lovely Joe. How could I hurt him so much? He was distraught but he
loves me so much that although he wouldn’t marry me he wouldn’t make a song and
dance about it.
Then he had his dream and that changed everything.
At last someone believed me. I wasn’t alone any longer. Someone
else was in on God’s plan.
He went to see my mum and dad again and told them he had
changed his mind again and he wanted to marry me and he thought it would be a
good idea if we were wed as soon as possible before people started to notice me
so that’s what we did. Then we went to see Elizabeth so I could help her
while she had her baby. Aunt Lizzie has always been a bit snooty and I
knew she wouldn’t pass by on the opportunity to lord it over me. Her baby
was a special gift from God too as quite honestly she was past it.
Anyway, Joe came with me to hold my hand and help me face the music.
You could have knocked me down with a feather when she
came rushing out of the house shouting, “Who am I that the mother of my Lord
should come and visit me?”
And that changed me too. When my angel had told me
what was going to happen all I could say was, “OK, whatever God wants is fine
by me”. But went Aunt Lizzie was like that it suddenly seemed like it
would be all right and I started shouting too, “My soul glorifies the
Lord and my spirit rejoices in God my Saviour”.
I stayed with Aunt Lizzie for quite a few weeks. We
got really close and maybe when my baby is born he’ll be able to spend time
with her boy. Joe went home but came and fetched me back and we started
our married life together. My mum and dad don’t know what to make of it
all but we’re happy, they’re happy. Sort of.
But now we’ve got to go on this journey to Bethlehem and
that’s where my baby will be born. I’d hoped I could have been at home
with my mum to help me but it will have to be with strangers. Nothing
seems to be easy when you are part of God’s plan but maybe he’s got it all
worked out.
(This is something I posted originally in 2015)
And they have a raffle included in the cost of the evening. I had my second win of the week: a lovely flower arrangement!
Come back Monday for another thrilling installment!
Baileys condensed milk fruit cake
1kg
mixed dried fruit
400g
tin condensed milk
3/4
cup Baileys Irish cream
2
cups self-raising flour
Method
In
a large bowl, combine dried fruit, condensed milk, Baileys and 1/2 cup water.
Mix well, cover and refrigerate overnight.
Remove
from the fridge and stir well, allowing it to come to room temperature. Preheat
oven to 150C. Grease and line an 18cm square cake tin.
Fold
flour through soaked fruit. Pour into prepared tin and smooth the top. Bake for
2 hours until a skewer inserted into the centre comes out clean.
(For dried fruit I used dried strawberries, cranberries, sultanas, raisins, blueberries, glace cherries, figs, dates, apricots)
The overdressed gent in front of the stable can keep his greedy hands off it too. He's now got a camel and a packhorse but the pack horse is having a rest. No-one is going anywhere or doing anything anytime soon.
The service, which is midweek and mid afternoon, is very well attended. Many of the people who go will be with their families on Christmas Day and will rejoice and laugh with children but they will be very aware that someone special won't be there with them.
As we get older Christmas can become more poignant. There may have been bereavements during the year, we may have been bereaved at Christmas. There can be separations because someone we love is somewhere else, maybe because they have moved away, or there has been a family rift. There are so many reasons that we have to celebrate Christmas without the person we would most like to share with.
If this is you, you are in my prayers. May you receive the blessings of Christmas
Not by Jack - his weren't as neat as this, |
Anyway, Jack likes to buy each person several things. This all fine and dandy but Jack is not the best present wrapper around. I'm certain there was a whole roll of sellotape on the things I got last year. I felt that he might appreciate a little help in the gift wrapping department so I invited him to come for help and a little tuition.
I think it may have been a revelation to him. I suggested gift bags for awkwardly shaped presents. We talked about the best sort of paper and how some paper is difficult to use and some are not eco friendly. He discovered how to use a minimal amount of sellotape and how to attach a gift label. We explored how to decide how much paper is needed for each present.
He didn't bring his presents for me but he has gone home knowing that their appearance will be his biggest test yet. I'll let you know.
(He reads this blog regularly so now he knows he's got to do his best! Tee hee!)
We started with a cow and she was alone in the stable for a couple of days.
Far, far away there was a fancy chap with a camel but we could ignore them.
Along came a sheep and then another cow.
And now the overdressed bloke has his own camel and he's moved.
Not much movement from the equine who's resting his hooves in front of the stable.
What on earth will happen next?
Come back Monday for the next thrilling installment!
I suppose the most ubiquitous Christmas tradition is eating! There's Christmas lunch with poultry, stuffing, pigs in blankets, roasties and wonderful veggies followed by pud. Christmas cake, mince pies, yule log - all the wonderful sweet things. Nuts, sausage rolls, pickled onions and the savoury selection. Wonderful!
If it were just Christmas day, there wouldn't really be a problem, other than consuming the leftovers. That's not how it is though. Yesterday I was out for a turkey dinner followed by Christmas pud. I've got more meals on similar lines over the next couple of weeks. This continues right up to Christmas and beyond. And I can rarely resist.
How big will I be come January?!
It was a dark and lonely field. At one end there stood an empty stable
(OK. It's the top of the chest of drawers in my sitting room with a small Advent stable on top of it.)
Yesterday a sheep came and joined her bovine friend and today said bovine has got reinforcements in case of an ovine takeover. All seems calm and happy.
And I've now had three chocolates (there wasn't one for day 1) so I'm calm and happy too.
What is it about Christmas and Brussels sprouts? For many households it wouldn't be a proper Christmas lunch if those tight, green mini-cabbages didn't appear. They are the stuff of legend - think "Vicar of Dibley's Christmas" and the sprout eating contest springs to mind. Brits eat more of them than any other nation in Europe. The equivalent of 3240 football pitches are covered with sprout plants here.
So many Christmas games are sprout-themed. A quick check found pass the sprout, racing sprouts, sprout escape room.
Who am I to ignore tradition? Yesterday I passed a wayside stall selling sprout trees. Isn't the arrangement of sprouts on the stem lovely! I shall have them stir fried, sauteed and steamed.
But it's entirely possible that I may have very few friends in the next few weeks.
Life is rarely simple. I decided I would try to post each day through Advent but this morning I couldn't upload photographs from my iPad to my laptop but I persevered!
I've had this stable for at least twenty years. Each year I get it out and it brings a smile to my face. Each year I put it away and usually I put the figures away in some sort of order. It would appear that last year I had some sort of brainstorm and I cupboarded them in random fashion.
Yesterday looked normal. A cow took up residence in the stable. Today however, we have a fancy chap bustling around with a camel and palm tree in the background.
And if you were wondering why the white blob is in front of it I will tell you. It's a chocolate. I was given a box last week and rather than risk downing the lot in one go, I've put one for each day. I have become a Big Kid once again. Today's choccie is no more.
It was tea break in the archangels’ rest room and it’s no use you telling me that archangels don’t have tea breaks and they don’t have rest rooms. This is my story and I’m telling you that it was tea break in the archangels’ rest room.