My Favorite Christmas – A Daily Rant Tradition
It’s Christmas and as has become a tradition at TDR, I share with you my favorite Christmas, which was first published December 21, 2012. The account of this special Christmas is indelibly etched in my memory. I remember every moment as if it just happened.
I pray you a Christ-centered, blessed Merry Christmas, filled with the warmth of Christmas memories past, with the gayety and love of new ones made on this time of year, this Christmas. Please know I could not be more sincere in thanking you for your support, your prayers and the privilege of being able to call so many of you my friends. Thank you for your inspiration and the care/concern so many of you have shared. — God’s grace and peace to you all!
M
My Favorite Christmas
It’s the Christmas Season, and I’ve been thinking and reminiscing about Christmases past. I guess the older we get the more we do those sorts of things. My special moments are many. I remember my first Christmas as a father; it changed my life. It was then, and remains today, about the great love that I have for my son. It is the closest I can come to tangentially understanding the love our Father in Heaven has for us.
I remember the Christmas Eve church services, holding my little guy in my arms as we sang hymns and listened to the message our pastor was sharing. I remember how it felt as new Christians, sharing in the celebration of the birth of our Lord and Savior during the candle light services. I can still see the wonder in my son’s eyes as he stared wide-eyed at the candles.
My son was always in my arms or on my lap whether at home or at church, but there was something special about holding him at Christmas. Having his fingers play with my chin and/or nose — those moments for me spoke so profoundly of the love of God. I said that if I could have such a great depth of love for my little guy, how much greater love must God have toward us that he would send His Son to die for my sins. Even today I am reminded of the love God has for us, when I consider the love I have for my son.
Of all the Christmas moments, it was our son’s fifth Christmas that was one of the most special.
His mother and I, with his help and input, selected his presents, and my job was to brave the stores and lines while the two of them were busy decorating at home. That particular Christmaswe had discovered Ikea. The idea of “easy to assemble” and “no tools needed” was enticing language in the store circulars and while at the store — but as I was to find out soon enough, nothing could have been further from the truth.
Home I came from Ikea — the station wagon loaded with the “easy to assemble, no tools needed” closet and desk for our little guy. Getting the things from inside the Ikea store to the car was easy with the assistance of their carts and employees to help. Getting the items from the car to the house was much different. Suffice it to say that that should have been a forewarning for what was to come. But I digress.
The weather forecast was calling for an all-out blizzard Christmas Eve and Christmas Day. I had promised our son that when I was done putting his closet and desk together we would go for a ride in the snow before he went to bed.
As I recall the “easy to assemble, no tools needed” project got under way early afternoon. By 10:00PM the snow had pretty much shut things down on our rural road. By 11:30PM it was a white out. And by 12:30AM with my knuckles scraped, fingers pinched, and tongue bleeding from biting it so as not to have shouted out “OH #%&*^#,” who knows how many times, the “easy to assemble, no tools needed” project was completed.
My son had fallen asleep curled up in the recliner, and his mother had put him to bed shortly after 10:00PM. But I had promised him we would go for a ride in the snow, and except when something was beyond my control I kept my word to him.
So, with nerves frazzled, my hands and tongue sore, I told my wife I was going to get him up so we could go for a ride in the snow. I gently awakened him, and his mother bundled him up while I went out to warm up the car and move his seat up front so he could see the action. And so, shortly after 1:00AM my son, two German Shepherds, and Pedro (which I called our almost Labrador, because he was a mix), loaded into the car and drove up the unplowed road, turned the corner and came back down, and turned up our lane where we got stuck midway to our driveway.
His mother was watching us get stuck from his bedroom window. I shut the car off, and we all piled out of the car — three dogs and an armful of son. But, it’s no fun being in the snow if you don’t take at least one roll in it, so as I recall we took a couple rolls.
Then back in the house we went, leaving our snowy clothing and the snowy dogs by our wood burning parlor stove. And as I said good night to my son, his “thank you Dad” once again reminded me of how our Heavenly Father must feel when we accept His Free Gift of Salvation by believing in His Son.
It was a special moment that I will never forget. So many elements reminded me of the goodness of the Lord. Today, as I write this, for the very first time I understand the parallels of a promise kept and the joyful receiving of same by my son who had to awake from his sleep to accept and receive it. In my humanity there are, to my chagrin, times I’ve let my son down, but my love for him has only grown each and every day.
But, God, our Loving and Gracious Heavenly Father, will never let us down or abandon us. No matter how things may look at a particular time in our lives. His grace will always be sufficient.
This memory is preciously etched in the fabric of my being. It is a more precious memory than the afternoon my wife came home to find us with two of the dogs, sitting on the roof of our house blowing soap bubbles. But that’s a memory to be shared at another time.
I wish you all a blessed and Spirit-filled Chanukah and Christmas. May the love and grace of our Father in Heaven, through Christ Jesus His Son, be yours at this time and forever.
ADDENDUM:
This morning as my son’s wife and I chatted back and forth over the many miles, finalizing Christmas plans; I could not help but look forward to the day that, Lord willing, our son experiences his own favorite Christmas as a father.
About the Author
Mychal Massie
Mychal S. Massie is an ordained minister who spent 13 years in full-time Christian Ministry. Today he serves as founder and Chairman of the Racial Policy Center (RPC), a think tank he officially founded in September 2015. RPC advocates for a colorblind society. He was founder and president of the non-profit “In His Name Ministries.” He is the former National Chairman of a conservative Capitol Hill think tank; and a former member of the think tank National Center for Public Policy Research. Read entire bio here