The end of another cycle of treatment and it seems to have gone well. At least the ‘bad stuff’ in my blood has been pushed back to some extent and the next cycle, beginning the week after Christmas, will be less demanding. So, a week’s respite - and much appreciated.
One of the side effects is a sense of heightened emotion which can overtake you without much warning. A word, a tune, an image and you are off! So this time of year is a mine-field. I have always tried to play down the sentimental side of Christmas bearing in mind how many people are carrying personal burdens through the festivities. And it has always been a frustration that despite the number of services we may have at this time of year there is not enough meditation on what the Incarnation means for the world. Christmas comes around and minsters are looking for a new angle - I nearly said gimmick - to grab people’s attention. Years ago, when I was a baby minister an old guy said to me: ‘Why not just tell them the story?’
When Dietrich Bonhoeffer was in prison over Christmas 1943 for his opposition to the Nazi regime there was a suggestion that a ‘wind-player’ would come on Christmas Day to play some carols. Many of the prisoners were not happy. They thought it would give them the ‘screaming miseries’ and make the day even harder for them. Bonhoeffer agreed. He wrote to a friend:
‘I think . . . that in view of all the misery that prevails here, anything like a pretty-pretty, sentimental reminder of Christmas is out of place. A good personal message, a sermon, would be better; without something of the kind, music by itself may be positively dangerous.’
The old guy said to me: ‘Tell them the story.’ It is powerful to go deeper than emotion, touching as it does the destiny of individuals and nations. Something that mattered more to Bonhoeffer that what John Betjeman called ‘carolling in frosty air.’
