All I Really Want: Readings for a Modern Christmas
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Sometimes the happiest and holiest time of the year is also the hardest for people to enjoy. These daily readings offer the skeptic, the over-committed the opportunity to make room-perhaps just enough room-for God to show up.
The weeks leading up to Christmas can spark a strong spiritual longing for more. Although it may never be articulated, we sense beneath those longings is a yearning for an experience of God. These brief writings address the challenges and realities of the season and include a simple action, ritual or meditation designed to gently steer the reader toward the deeper meaning that underlies the season. Smart, witty, edgy—and always hopeful—readings by Quinn Caldwell include a brief prayer for each morning and evening during the entire Christmas season. This book takes seriously the modern person’s hunger for meaning and import in a season that feels increasingly frivolous. Includes a calendar with one easy task to do each day.
Quinn G. Caldwell
Quinn Caldwell is minister at Plymouth Congregational Church, United Church of Christ, Syracuse, NY. Caldwell is well-known in the wider United Church of Christ (UCC) as a member of the UCC Stillspeaking Writers Group and an author for the Stillspeaking Daily Devotionals. He is a former associate minister at Old South Church in Boston and since January has led the Under-40 Writers Group for the UCC website s Feed Your Spirit section on the denomination s global reach. Caldwell graduated from Cornell with a BS in natural resources in 1999, and received his master s in divinity from Union Theological Seminary in New York City in 2003.
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All I Really Want - Quinn G. Caldwell
Title Page
86803.pngCopyright Page
All I Really Want
Readings for a Modern Christmas
Copyright © 2014 by Quinn G. Caldwell
All rights reserved.
No part of this work may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying and recording, or by any information storage or retrieval system, except as may be expressly permitted by the 1976 Copyright Act or in writing from the publisher. Requests for permission can be addressed to Permissions, The United Methodist Publishing House, P.O. Box 801, 201 Eighth Avenue South, Nashville, TN 37202-0801, or e-mailed to permissions@umpublishing.org.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Caldwell, Quinn, 1977-
All I really want : readings for a modern Christmas / Quinn G. Caldwell.
1 online resource.
Description based on print version record and CIP data provided by publisher; resource not viewed.
ISBN 978-1-4267-9603-6 (epub)—ISBN 978-1-4267-9017-1 (binding: adhesive-perfect binding : alk. paper) 1. Advent—Prayers and devotions. I. Title.
BV40
242'.33—dc23
2014035255
Scripture quotations unless otherwise noted are taken from the Common English Bible. Copyright © 2011 by the Common English Bible. All rights reserved. Used by permission. www.CommonEnglishBible.com.
Scripture quotations noted NRSV are taken from the New Revised Standard Version of the Bible, copyright 1989, Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
Dedication Page
For Mom,
my first publisher
Introduction
Introduction
Let’s just get one thing straight: this book is not going to help you simplify the season.
It’s not going to help you with the Christmas time-crunch.
It’s not going to help you organize your holidays, throw a stress-free Christmas party, or create the Best Christmas Ever in five easy steps. If that’s what you’re looking for, I’m sure there’s a Special Double Holiday Bonus Issue ! of some trendy home magazine at the grocery store you can drop fifteen bucks on. (And if you do, will you grab me one? I love those things.)
I’m not here to simplify anything for you. Neither is God. If you have too many cookie exchanges or whatever, you’re just going to have to find a way to deal with that yourself.
This book is actually designed to complicate the season. It’s here to invite you to think and pray a little more deeply about it, not organize it all until it’s easy. Here’s how it works: for each day in December (roughly equivalent to the church season of Advent) and for the twelve days following Christmas (the church season of Christmastide), there’s one reading for the morning and one for the evening. Each one consists of a Bible passage, a short reflection, and a prayer. Because action usually precedes belief, not the other way around, the reading will more often than not include a task for you to do, or at least a question to think about. There’s also a calendar of small daily actions you can take, should you choose—small actions that all aim to help you make a little holy breathing space. Like everything else in the world, what you get out of these assignments will depend on what you put into them. So do it right.
The Christmas season is a time when churchgoers and non-churchgoers alike tend to experience strong spiritual longings. Whatever the longing looks like on the outside, for most of us, deep down it’s a longing for an experience of something holy, something beautiful. Something like God. So although this book is here to add things to your to-do list, not to take them away, I hope that the doing of them will create room—maybe just enough room—for God to show up.
I don’t know about you, but this year, that’s all I really want.
half-title page
86900.pngChristmas Calendar: Week One
Christmas Calendar
Week One
1Go get your Advent calendar. Start opening!
2Open the next door on your calendar. Stare at the others with longing. Don’t cheat.
3Put a star in your room that you can see in the dark. Fall asleep staring at it.
4Call somebody fun and make plans for a favorite Christmas tradition: to bake a cookie, to sing a carol, or to trim a tree.
5Call somebody and say something rare and important to them.
6Find a recording of Prepare Ye
from Godspell (check out iTunes and YouTube). Crank it up to 11 and dance around the house while singing it at the top of your lungs and throwing tinsel around.
7Turn out all the lights and relish the dark for a while tonight. Pray for gestation.
December 1
December 1
Morning
Lead me in your truth—teach it to me—because you are the God who saves me. I put my hope in you all day long. (Psalm 25:5)
Some days it seems like waiting is all you do. For the train. For a reply to your e-mail. For your lunch order. For somebody at the customer service center, which is experiencing higher-than-normal call volume,
to pick up the freaking phone. For the other shoe to drop. Some days it feels like everybody but you is in control of your time, and all you can do—even if they have Highlights magazine in the waiting room—is sit around hoping they’ll get to you soon.
Apparently, the malls and stores feel pretty much the same way; these days, they put up their Christmas decorations before Halloween. I hate delayed gratification as much as the next guy, but the fact that all the big retailers seem to be against waiting is pretty much a guarantee that there must be some virtue in it.
So today, since you’ll be doing so much of it anyway, see if you can discover the virtue in waiting. Try to pay attention whenever you find yourself sitting around. Don’t stick your earphones in or take your book out as soon as you get to the bus stop. Don’t go for Angry Birds as soon as you get to the grocery line. Instead, notice: who’s making you wait? Why? What are you waiting for? How impor-tant is it? Who’s waiting with you? Why are you so impatient; is the next thing you have to do really so important? Why?
And most important of all: what are you really waiting for?
OK, God. You know I’m no good at this waiting thing. But I know you are. So enter into my wait and liven things up. Amen.
December 1
Evening
There will be signs in the sun, moon, and stars. On the earth, there will be dismay among nations in their confusion over the roaring of the sea and surging waves. The planets and other heavenly bodies will be shaken, causing people to faint from fear and foreboding of what is coming upon the world. Then they will see the Human One coming on a cloud with power and great splendor. Now when these things begin to happen, stand up straight and raise your heads because your redemption is near.
(Luke 21:25-28)
There’s waiting, and then there’s waiting.
Sometimes it’s the oh-God-when-will-this-pain-end kind of waiting. Sometimes it’s just annoying, like waiting for your turn at the restroom. Sometimes it’s worse, like waiting out the period after a gnarly divorce.
But there’s another kind of waiting, too, a delicious, shivery kind: There’s smelling the almost-done pie in the oven. There’s sitting in the theater listening to the opening theme of a movie you’ve been waiting a year to see. There’s feeling the baby kick you in the bladder a week before due date. There’s lying in bed listening to your lover coming up the stairs.
Advent—those weeks leading up to Christmas—is about both kinds of waiting. On the one hand, it’s about looking around at the state of the world, at the wars and the climate and the corporations and the seasonal allergies, and longing for God to end the wait and show up already. It’s about choosing to see God’s absence.
On the other, it’s about choosing to see God’s almost-presence. It’s about looking around at the state of the world, at the struggling schoolteachers and rich philanthropists