Echoes From the Campfire

He didn’t quicken his pace. He had found long ago that good news would keep, and bad news didn’t get any better for rushing it.”

                         –Elmer Kelton  (Shotgun)

       “And she will bring forth a Son, and you shall call His name Jesus, for He will save His people from their sins.”
                         –Matthew 1:21(NKJV)
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I came across this little bit of history many years ago.  I’m not sure where I found it, possibly Guideposts.  The author of the article is Elizabeth Sherrill.  It’s a little different from my normal devotion, but the information is inspiring.  The title is, “Christmas, 1818.”

       My husband and I were staying in the little village of Oberndorf, Austria, when the letter reached us last December.
       “You picked the right Christmas to be away!” our friend began.  Our church back home–St. Mark’s in Mt. Kisco, New York–he went on, was having the asbestos insulation removed from the heating pipes in the basement.  Since the air intake for the organ was also in the basement, this meant that so long as asbestos dust was being created, the in-strument could not be played.  If the job wasn’t finished by Christmas Eve, our friend continued, he and his wife would go to church elsewhere:  “Can you imagine the midnight service without the organ?”
       I put the letter on the windowsill and looked across the swirling gray water of the Salzach River to the distant Alps.  The Salzach takes a horseshoe loop at Oberndorf, and where the river curves, a church used to stand.  High water had eaten away its foundations, and eventually the building was torn down.  But I wanted to tell our friend about the vanished church.  Because there too, one Christmas Eve, the organ was silent…
       Damp from the river had corroded the pipes until by Christmas Eve, 1818, the organ in Oberndorf was emitting only a wheezy whisper–and the itinerant organ mender was not due in the village till the following week.
       The bad news especially affected two young men.  One was the 31-year-old church organist, Franz Gruber.  As a boy, Franz had often been beaten for sneaking away from his linen loom to take music lessons.  Now he had worked hard rehearsing the village choir for the midnight service.  But to ask them to sing the elaborate Christmas chorales unaccompanied was out of the question, and Franz Gruber was in despair.
       Equally distressed was the 25-year-old pastor, Joseph Mohr.  An illegitimate child educated for the priesthood on the charity of the church, Joseph had only recently been ordained.  He’d dreamed of making this Christmas celebration an especially glorious one, but here it was December 24, and no organ!
       Joseph did own a guitar.  But a guitar could hardly substitute for the organ on a night like this, with its tradition of elaborate fugues and cantatas.  If only there were some melody simple enough for a guitar to carry alone, with homely words to capture the holiness of this night.
       Even as the wish formed itself, the words began to come.  The young priest seized a scrap of paper and began to write, his quill pen racing across the page.
       It was afternoon of Christmas Eve when Joseph showed the little poem to the organist.  Could Franz set the words to a melody for the guitar?  Franz Gruber said he would try.
       The choir was assembling by the time he finished.  It was too late to teach them the whole piece, so Joseph and Franz decided to sing the song as a duet, with the choir repeating just the last line of each verse.
       And so it was that the disgruntled congregation, muttering over their mute and useless organ, heard instead the new pastor’s tenor voice and the bass voice of their organist, sing a song to the plucking of a guitar, with the choir echoing the final words.
       The words stuck in the worshipers’ minds, and so did the tune; many were humming it as they left the church.
       They were still humming it when the organ mender arrived in Oberndorf a few days later.  He liked the song so well he committed both the words and music to memory and played it as he journeyed from town to town.  In the Tirol a group of traveling singers added it to their repertoire.
       Joseph Mohr and Franz Gruber never knew the end of the story.  Neither man guessed that the song they had created the night the organ failed was to become the world’s most popular Christmas carol.
       But it was about that original organless service back in 1818 that I wanted to write our friend.  There must have been many in that congregation who’d been tempted to go somewhere else that night.  And that would have been too bad.  They would have missed the chance to see what God can do with bad news.  They would not have been in Oberndorf to hear the very first singing of “Silent Night, Holy Night.”

     Amazing how God can work through man.  It is important to remember, not just at Christmas, that we can worship the Lord any time, any place.  Worship comes from the heart; it is a lifestyle.  I don’t know who said it, but there’s truth to the following–“You can’t always have a good day.  But you can always face a bad day with a good attitude.”

 

Echoes From the Campfire

It was a mighty fine thing setting there getting the feel of the night, a kind of stillness like you never felt anywhere else but in the far-off wilderness. There was no vanity here, nor greed, there was only a kind of quietness.”

                    –Louis L’Amour  (Treasure Mountain)

       “Now there were in the same country shepherds living out in the fields, keeping watch over their flock by night.”
                    –Luke 2:8 (NKJV)
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Words–it’s the main way in which we communicate.  They can change or they can mean different things in different places.  I remember when we first moved to Florida years ago people talked about “gopher races.”  Now, to me, I had in mind those pesky little rascals that run around and live in holes in the ground.  Oh, but I was wrong.  A gopher was a turtle and they would place them on hot payment and watch them race against each other.  Where I lived, something you used to put goods in was a sack, but back East it was a bag, yet my Grandma called it a poke.  Sometimes, especially in our postmodern world, words have purposely been deconstructed to mean something altogether different than originally intended.  The carol I want to share with you this morning has some words with meanings that have changed over the years.
       It is one of the earliest carols written and is over five hundred years old.  It was written in the fifteenth-century for and by the common people.  It was sung for hundreds of years before it was actually published in the nineteenth-century due to Queen Victoria.  Before we look at the carol, I want to draw your attention to a verse of Scripture, “And the Angel of the LORD appeared to him [Gideon], and said to him, ‘The LORD is with you, you mighty man of valor!'” (Judges 6:12, NKJV)

            God rest ye merry gentlemen,
            Let nothing you dismay.
            Remember Christ our Savior
            Was born on Christmas day,
            To save us all from Satan’s pow’r
            When we were gone astray
                       O tidings of comfort and joy,
                       Comfort and joy,
                       O tidings of comfort and joy.

       This was the plight of man–we had gone astray and Satan was destroying mankind.  Yet the Lord appeared to give comfort and joy.  Now, let’s look at that very first line.  We cannot possibly understand what it is saying with the meaning of the words in today’s vernacular.  “Merry” had a very different meaning than just being “happy” and “carefree.”  It actually meant men of “great” or “mighty valor.  A mighty ruler was a merry ruler, thus “Old King Cole was a merry old soul…”  A gentleman was a person who was “gentle” meaning he was a person who took “appropriate action.”  Now look at the word, “rest.”  It means to “keep” or “make” and the punctuation should be slightly changed.  That first line in today’s English would read:  “God make you mighty, gentlemen.”

            From God our heavenly Father
            A blessed angel came.
            And unto certain shepherds
            Brought tidings of the same,
            How that in Bethlehem was born
            The Son of God by name:

            “Fear not,” then said the angel,
            “Let nothing you affright,
            This day is born a Savior,
            Of virtue, power, and might;
            So frequently to vanquish all
            The friends of Satan quite;”

       Contemplate those words.  The composer, unknown to us, had a good grasp of the Christmas story.  Instead of a helpless babe in a manger, look how he describes the Lord–“a Savior, of virtue, power, and might,” then he tells of His purpose in coming to earth.  The shepherd, at first terrified, then in awe, listened to the words of the angels and hastened to Bethlehem.

            The shepherds at those tidings
            Rejoiced much in mind,
            And left their flocks a-feeding,
            In tempest, storm, and wind,
            And went to Bethlehem straight-way
            This blessed babe to find:

            But when to Bethlehem they came,
            Whereat this infant lay
            They found him in a manger,
            Where oxen feed on hay;
            His mother Mary kneeling,
            Unto the Lord did pray:

       Mary knew a little of the story because of the angel Gabriel.  All through her life she would add tidbits of truth to what she had been told and what happened to her on that blessed night.  She knew, I believe, that this child was to be the Savior of the world (whatever that meant at the time), and she was comforted.  There had to be an inner peace within her heart that night as the shepherds came to visit.
       
            Now to the Lord sings praises,
            All you within this place,
            And with true love and brotherhood
            Each other now embrace;
            This holy tide of Christmas
            All others doth deface…

       The world scoffs at the meaning of Christmas.  They demean the words of the prophets, the songs, and the message of Christmas.  It was the same when this carol was written, but has become much worse.  The world would seek to sully Christmas; dirty it up, make a mockery of it and change it to mean something entirely different.  Therefore, o man of God, o woman of God–God keep and make you mighty…  Go through the season with faith and joy and comfort in your hearts and minds.  Say–“Mighty Christmas!”
            
(reference, Ace Collins, “Stories Behind the Best-Loved Songs of Christmas, Zondervan, 2001)

 

Echoes From the Campfire

If a person knows they are being directed by the good Lord, they can handle whatever comes their way. Call it faith, call it courage, call it stubbornness.”

                         –D.C. Adkisson  (Winter of the Wolves)

       “Then the angel said to her, ‘Do not be afraid, Mary, for you have found favor with God.'”
                         –Luke 1:30 (NJV)
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Does God play favorites?  Not in the sense that we would use that term, but if we read the words of the Prophet Jeremiah, “Before I formed you in the womb I knew you…” (1:5) we might conclude that He has put in place individuals for special purposes.  So, I ask the next question:  “Why Mary?”  What made her so special?  Why was she chosen by God to be the mother of Jesus?  Questions that we really cannot answer, but there are some things we know or can conclude about Mary.
       She was not the choice of random selection.  She came from a small town, and did not stray from her humble beginnings.  When one reads the wonderful “song of Mary” we see her humility shine throughout.  We know she was a virgin to fulfill the prophecy of the birth of Christ.  She was a young girl and at first was troubled when then the angel Gabriel appeared.  He said she was “highly favored,” that the “Lord is with you” and that she was blessed. (Luke 1:28-29)  Gabriel further reinforced his saying, “you have found favor with God.” (1:30)  For some reason, she was chosen above all the others to bear the Son of God.  “God sent the ultimate Christmas gift, not just to Mary but to all of us.” (David Jeremiah).
       I would encourage you to read and contemplate Luke 1:46-55.  We have insight into this young woman.  She is visiting Elizabeth who is also pregnant with John and when John leaps in the womb of Elizabeth recognizing through the Spirit  that Mary was pregnant with the Son of God, she breaks forth into song.  We see that she is knowledgeable of the Scriptures.  We see that she believes in the God of her ancestors and must have come from a devout Jewish family (Ashley Hooker).  Her faith is seen, not only here in these verses but also in her response to Gabriel, “Behold the maidservant of the Lord!  Let it be to me according to your word.” (Luke 1:38)
       Her voice rises in praise, “My soul magnifies the Lord, and my spirit has rejoiced in God my Savior.” (Luke 1:46-47)  She speaks of His mercy, His strength, His faithfulness.  Mary is ready to obey, and accepts the responsibility placed upon her; she knows that God has it all under control.  At first she questioned the possibility of such a miracle, but when convinced by the angel and in her heart she firmly follows God’s direction for her life.
       We hear Mary displaying an attitude of thankfulness.  “Mary could have focused on the situation and felt nothing but fear.  Instead, she focuses on the blessing within the turmoil.” (Hooker)  In the midst of this “confusing” situation she is full of trust.  As a young girl (possibly sixteen) engaged (betrothed) to Joseph, who has also to hear from the Lord, she has accepted this as part of her life–being chosen for such a time as this.  We don’t know all her thoughts, her fears, her questions, but we do know that she was obedient, faithful, and trusting with confidence in the Word of the Lord.  I like what David Jeremiah says, “She honored and obeyed the will of her Father, providing His only son a home from which he would emerge to launch the work that would define all of human history.  The child toddled behind her in his infancy.  Then, in time, she followed behind Him–all the way to the cross and the tomb.”  And I might include, beyond to the upper room on the Day of Pentecost.

 

Echoes From the Campfire

This wilderness fear is an oppressive and terrible thing when you are alone at night.”
                         –James Oliver Curwood  (Back to God’s Country)

       “And at midnight a cry was heard: ‘Behold, the bridegroom is coming; go out to meet him!’”
                         –Matthew 25:6 (NKJV)
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       The nation was in the woes of poverty and turmoil.  The rich were getting richer and the poor was just hanging on.  The year was 1849 and while the nation was at peace internationally following a victorious war with Mexico, there was internal strife reaching the boiling point.  Gold had been discovered in California which lured people in the false hope of striking it rich while actually bringing on a different kind of poverty.  There was an apathetic mood in the country and the tension was building in regard to slavery.  It was in the midst of seeing the social problems of the time that the Reverend Edmund Sears penned his wonderful carol, “It Came Upon the Midnight Clear.”

               It came upon the midnight clear,
               That glorious song of old.
               From angels bending near the earth,
               To touch their harps of gold:
               “Peace on the earth, good will to men,
               From heav’n’s all gracious King!”
               The world in solemn stillness lay
               To hear the angels sing.

       Men do not often hear the bright sounds of Christmas for one reason or another.  It may be the bitterness of the heart, or anger, or hurt, or despair.  They hope in material things and that hope is false, therefore driving them deeper into despondency.  Others simply continue on just getting by; they want to make it through another day.  Then there are the scoffers not caring or believing even though the light and the sounds are there for them to hear and see.

               Yet with the woes of sing and strife
               The world hath suffered long;
               Beneath the angel-strain have rolled
               Two thousand years of wrong;
               And man, at war with man, hears not
               The love song which they bring;
               O hush the noise, ye men of strife,
               And hear the angels sing!

       However, even in the midst of men hardening their hearts or uncaring about the plight of others the song of Christmas still rings forth.  The world may be in despair and men’s hearts evil, the news of the birth of Christ is still there.  The bells, the organ playing, the carols being sung, the lights upon the square all show forth that there is hope because of the Babe being born in that dark night in Bethlehem.

               Still through the cloven skies they come
               With peaceful wings unfurled,
               And still their heav’nly music floats
               O’er all the weary world:
               Above its sad and lowly plains
               They bend on hov’ring wing,
               And ever o’er its Babel sounds
               The blessed angels sing.

       Life can be tough.  Life is often not fair.  Then stop–stop the fretting, the crying, and the moaning.  Stop the frantic pace to make just one more dollar or to make ends meet.  The struggle may be wearing you out so “rest beside the weary road.”

               And ye, beneath life’s crushing load
               Whose forms are bending low,
               Who toil along the climbing way
               With painful steps and slow,
               Look now!  for glad and golden hours
               Come swiftly on the wing:
               O rest beside the weary road
               And hear the angels sing.

       Time does not stop.  Christ came to a weary and sinful world to bring hope and salvation.  The years go on and on, yet for a short season each year we are given the opportunity to pause, to stop and think of the birth of Jesus and what this means for mankind.
                 
                For lo, the days are hast’ning on,
               By prophets seen of old,
               When with the ever circling years
               Shall come the time foretold;
               When the new heaven and earth shall own
               The prince of peace their King,
               And the whole world send back the song
               Which now the angels sing.

       The world today is in the midst of confusion.  It is in a sorry state.  There is apathy, complacency, hatred, and anger.  Ears do not hear the sound of Christmas.  Ah, but hearken–listen, there is a new song in the air.  It is not the song of the angels when the birth of Jesus was announced.  It is a different song.  Can you hear the angels begin to hum?  Listen, they are ready to sing in, not the Baby, but the triumphant King.  Listen!  He is coming!