It’s Good To Be The Gran!

I had a Skype date with my 22-month-old granddaughter, Evie, and her mama this week. When it began, I was all settled in at my desk and ready to ask questions, sing songs, and chat with Emily while watching the little girl demonstrate her crazy-good abilities to whirl in circles and fall down in a giggling little heap on her diaper-padded bottom. But Evie had different ideas.

As soon as she saw the lighted Christmas tree in the background, she wanted to go walkabout in my home and see everything. She remembered some things from having been here to help us decorate the tree and put out few of the decorations, just after Thanksgiving when her family was here visiting. So, we looked at the tree, up close. We looked at the special Evie ornament and the ornaments featuring pictures of her mama and daddy the year that they were married and the brand new one celebrating the recent marriage of Uncle Colton and Aunt Carly. Oh, yes … we also looked carefully at the little baby in a sleigh that commemorates Evie’s mama’s first Christmas back in 1988.

Then Evie suddenly said “button music!” She was remembering the Christmas music box, disguised as a red wrapped present with a big green bow on top. She knew that, if someone would just push the little red button, the top of the gift would slowly rise up, Christmas songs would play, and little ice skaters would be revealed frantically skating in circles to the music. So we watched “button music” several times, before moving on to identify and greet every “Santie Claus” in the room – the one riding on the sleigh built from multiple kinds of candy, the beautiful ceramic St. Nicholas-shaped plate hanging on the wall, and the one on Uncle Colton’s stocking.

We moved on to finding angels and then to naming the people in my odd little toilet paper roll crèche (a creation of Uncle Colton at age 4 or 5). Evie was at first completely confused and mystified by it. But when I finally brought the camera in closely, she could see the primitive little pencil-drawn eyes and mouths and recognized them as faces. That was when she called the blue one “Mary” and the brown one “Jophes.” But there was absolutely no convincing her that half a tongue depressor swaddled in gauze and lying in a split toilet paper roll manger was a baby Jesus. We moved on to the more life-like baby Jesus in the official manger scene.

That finally brought us to the snowmen – one that is constantly changing colors and has glittery water swirling inside its belly, one that’s a mug and was decorated by Evie’s mama, and the fascinating teapot snowman with the removable head. The last one required a trip to the sink to demonstrate that with the head removed, water could then be put in the pot, the head reattached, and the water poured out of the spout and into a teacup. Wow! “More water teacup!”

When we finally landed back at my desk, there was one final request for “ice cream” – which, of course, meant that Evie wanted to see a little stick with shimmery, colorful strands of metallic paper attached to one end. It’s a silly little thing that I saved from an ice cream treat I ate while in Venice. I sent Evie a picture of me enjoying that treat, with its festive decoration stuck in the middle, and now she associates it with ice cream. She loves to simply watch as I twirl the stick between the palms of my hands and the metallic colors sparkle and shimmer and dance before her eyes on the Skype screen.

All this to say, that the wee Evie — with her eyes full of wonder, with delightfully minute memories tucked away in her brain, and with her endless curiosity and drive to learn about every tiny thing – made the familiar speak to me in a new way. She gave me a fresh vision. She caused me to notice more sparkle. And she reminded me that Jesus doesn’t always come to us looking anything like the expected Messiah or in traditional surroundings; that it’s important for us to remember the magic awaiting if we know how to open the gifts just right; that filling ourselves up so we can pour ourselves out again and again is as vital as water is to life; and, that a little shimmer and shine should never be optional.

Oh yes … it’s good to be the Gran!

The Wonderful Messiness of Community

The other day I had to pick something up at another church.  I walked in and couldn’t help but notice how orderly everything was.  And how quiet the building was.  And how clean.  I gathered the items I needed and drove back to the church building where I serve the people of this area.  I walked in and saw the Big Wheels parked in Fellowship Hall, and the plastic toy hammerhead shark on the tables where we gather to share meals and meetings.  I saw the tear in the linoleum floor covered by a rug, and the dated gold velvet curtains across the stage.  Walking into the sanctuary, I noted the cushions that need to be replaced, and the carpet that is getting a bit long in the tooth.  I walked around … and a new problem – a piece broken off of the railing.  And those steps up to the chancel… oh how much we need a ramp.

I moved down to the 2nd row of pewcollageforblogs, sat and fixed my eyes on the cross.  I let the quiet and the peace come to me as I sat in the sanctuary and I breathed in deeply.

I looked at the extra row of chairs now needed for our growing choir.  I looked at the Christmas decorations all around and acknowledged the many hands that have hung them for numerous years, and the helpful hands that hung them this year.   The trees on the chancel, adorned with the Chrismons beautifully made years ago by the young, guided by the stories and teaching of the elders.  I thought of the weddings, the baptisms and the funerals that this building has embraced along with hundreds of gatherings, meals, Sunday services, weekly bible studi
es and welcoming mission activities.

Sitting in that stillness, I could hear the laughter and blessed noisiness of the children in the pre-school classes down the hall, the familiar back and forth of the quilting group breaking to have coffee.  At that moment, I felt the spirits of all of the lives that have been lived and maybe changed in this church building.  Yes, it isn’t orderly or quiet. It is, though, a messy place well and wonderfully used.  It is truly
sacred space.