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December 24th, 2000 , Merry Christmas Everyone!

December 24th, 2000

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Christmas Eve Mt. 1/18-25 by Andrew Greeley and
4th Sunday in Advent Luke 1/39-45
by Dr. Mary Durkin

Merry Christmas Everyone!

Christmas Eve Mt. 1/18-25 by A.M.G.

Background:
The big celebration begins, a festival of light and love, of joy and laughter, of family and community and world. Light is mentioned almost twenty times in the course of today's liturgy. On one of the darkest days of the year, light explodes all around us. The sun is sneaking back, just as Jesus kind of sneaked into the world in the quiet of Bethlehem. For us in the Northern Hemisphere, Christmas is a midwinter feast, a time when the days grow a little longer and light and warmth return slowly. For those who live in the Southern Hemisphere, however, it is the beginning of summer. School is over. It is a time for vacation (or as they would call it "holidays"), for rest and relaxation. It marks not the shortest day of the year but the longest, the day of the most light and on the average the most warmth. Christmas fits in everywhere.

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00spc.gif (820 bytes) Story:
Once upon a time there were two kids who were fed up with Christmas. They began an anti-Christmas campaign among their friends. Look, they said, everyone is tense and worn out, moms are tired from cooking, dads from putting up trees and decorations, kids from wrapping presents, neighbors from all the noise and bustle. We open the presents and they're not really what we wanted, though we thought we did. The house is littered with torn wrapping paper, expensive ornaments get knocked off the trees, the little kids go out of control, big kids sulk, mass is too long, the sermons are boring, the music is yucky. We eat too much . . .Who needs it all. So what should we do asked their friends. Strike! Said the two trouble-makers who were, if truth be told, Anarchists of a sort. Refuse to participate. Don't buy any Christmas presents, don't ask for any, refuse those that are given to you, don't decorate the tree, don't eat the pumpkin pie, don't drink the eggnog, don't say merry Christmas to anyone. A few of their friends thought they were crazy. The others thought it was a great idea. But what should we do? The strike leaders went to the priest and asked him what they should do. Well, he said, if you want to welcome the Christ Child without all the fuss and bother, come to church and pray. They thought that was a great idea. How could parents and other grown ups object to their praying on Christmas Day. Well, they prayed for a solid hour, which maybe doubled all their prayer for the whole year. Then one of them rushed out of church and flagged down the priest who was about to drive off to his family's party. We prayed for an
hour, Father, the kid said. Can we go home now? An hour? That's a long time to pray! Yeah it kind of is. Well, said the priest I don't think that Jesus would mind one bit if you went home and celebrated with your families. The kids poured out of church with a whoop and a holler just like it was the last day of school.

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Eventually this little girl became a member of her country’s parliament.
4th Sunday in Advent Luke 1/39-45
by Dr. Mary Durkin

Background:
Luke’s presentation of Jesus’ eschatological discourse alludes to his realization that there is a delay in the arriving of the parousia (end time). He still anticipates an end time. However, while awaiting the return of the Son of Man, his followers are urged to be on guard and to pray. The end time still has not arrived and the conditions that indicate an approaching end time have been present from Luke’s time up until our present day. His exhortation for correct behavior holds true for us as we face the individual and community trials of our lives in this age.

Story:
Once upon a time, not so very long ago, Tom was the star athlete of his grammar school and of his high school. The two sports he excelled at were football and basketball. In his junior year of high school, he shot the winning basket a second before the final buzzer making his school the city champs. In senior year he was the top scorer in the city’s football championship game, leading his team to victory. Tom was one of those natural-born athletes and, although he liked sports, his first love was anthropology and especially archeology. As a very young boy he watched a program on a famous dig site and told his parents that’s what he wanted to do. So every summer while his friends went to football and basketball camp, he would be at some museum program. Still each year he was the best player on the teams. Parents of his classmates kept telling Tom’s Mom & Dad that he should be at a sports camp. How else would he win a scholarship to a good college? In senior year of high school as his team mates anxiously awaited word about possible sports scholarships, Tom was being recruited by schools with some of the best teams in the country. Imagine the surprise of his teammates and their parents when he turned down all offers. He was a National Merit Scholar and had applied to several of the Universities that had excellent anthropology programs and was awarded scholarships at each school. Now that Tom is a Dad and a famous archeologist, he shoots hoops with his sons and daughters and plays in his wife’s family’s Thanksgiving Day touch football game.

 

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