Crossing the Line - part 8
Celebrating Christmas with a young family is a bit of a
challenge for most clergy. Christmas is one of the busiest times of the
year. Multiple carol services,
Christingles and school assemblies all take their toll and that’s before the
real festival begins. Add to that a
couple of crib services on Christmas Eve, a midnight Mass, a Christmas morning
dash around the benefice and the pastoral work which doesn’t diminish just
because its Christmas and most clergy are knackered by lunch-time on Christmas
Day – which is the earliest they get to spend any time with their own family. After lunch all they want to do it sleep.
My dad only had two places of worship to look after when I
was a child. Even so, from 5pm on
Christmas Eve, it was almost non-stop until 1pm on Christmas day. It would start with a Crib Service and move
on to Midnight Mass which was always packed.
After getting to bed at about 2am, he would be up before 6am to be ready
to lead services at 7:30, 8:30, 9:30 and 11am.
It was worse if someone died just before Christmas. You can’t say ‘I’ll come and see you in a few
days’ when it is probably the most tragic time of the year to lose a loved one.
Today, clergy often have a lot more churches to look
after. In towns and especially in villages, vicars can easily have 4, 5, 6, or
7 churches to look after. The pressure
and the demands are huge.
So where does family fit?
Where do your own family figure in this pumped up programme of frenetic
activity?
When I was a child my parents decided on our own family
solution. We celebrated Christmas on
Christmas Eve.
After lunch, for every Christmas I can remember, my dad
would go up to the parish church to set things up for the services later
on. He would take me with him to
help. I would put out Christian Aid
envelopes in the pews and tidy the kneelers, while he made sure everything else
was ready.
I did this happily because I knew what came next. When everything was done, we would stand
together at the altar step and he would say a Christmas prayer with me. Then we would go home and when we walked into
the living room, all the Christmas presents would have magically appeared under
the tree (thanks mum) ready to be opened. Mum and dad would pour each other a small
glass of wine and our Christmas began!
During the two hours that followed, they wouldn’t answer the phone or
the doorbell. It was our little oasis of
family Christmas and I got to open my presents a day early! I also had two hours with my mum and dad, to
set up and play with whatever toys I got – very important for an only child –
before dad’s demanding Christmas timetable kicked back into life again.
There were some issues to face of course. I have to say that I can never remember
believing in Father Christmas. That
didn’t stop mum and dad taking me to see Father Christmas in the lead-up to
Christmas, whether at the village Christmas Fair or at one of the big
department stores in Manchester but I always knew that all the stuff about
chimneys, flying sleighs and reindeer were just stories. They were fun but not true. I also knew that other children thought they
were true and that it would be cruel to put doubt in their minds, so I didn’t!
One Christmas however, when I was 7 or 8, this all went
very wrong! At an end of term school
assembly my dad was talking about Christmas as a time for being grateful, and
he put in a line saying “Some of us know who to be grateful to for our presents
at Christmas”. He thought that would be
sufficiently obtuse for the younger children, while also being capable of being
understood by the older ones. He was
wrong.
A young girl went home in tears to mum saying,
“The vicar said there’s no Father Christmas!”
She was heartbroken and unfortunately, her parents were among those who
had objected to PCC meetings being at the Vicarage because they should be held on neutral ground. Things moved rather
quickly – amazingly quickly in an age before social media and tweets going
viral.
The photograph taken for the Daily Mail. |
Her parents phoned the Bolton Evening News who must have
been having a slack news day. By that
evening it was in the paper – Vicar spoils Christmas! By later that evening the phone was ringing
almost non-stop, as other local press and then the national newspapers jumped
on the bandwagon. The next day the Daily
Mail sent a photographer to get a photo of dad with me and some of my Christmas
presents from the previous year. The
Bishop of Manchester was contacted and asked to comment on his wayward
priest. Apparently he replied that he
was not aware that belief in Father Christmas was an integral part of the
Christian faith. In his defence, dad said only that he had talked about being grateful, not wanting to give the
press anything which would add fuel to the fire.
In a couple of days it was all over. Normality returned.
In a couple of days it was all over. Normality returned.
But the very best Christmas I can remember, didn’t occur
until I was 19 years old.
It was my first year away from home. I had joined Scargill House in the Yorkshire
Dales – a community of mainly young people who welcomed up to 90 guests at a
time for parish weekends, retreats, creative breaks and holiday house-parties. Christmas was one such holiday time and 2 or
3 days before Christmas the house was full with a variety of people from older
people who lived alone to young families getting away from it all. The whole community had been rehearsing a
Christmas play for weeks, telling the Christmas story in a more contemporary
style to present to the guests. The whole house was decorated for the
season. As Christmas approached the
temperature dropped, and by Christmas Eve there was a couple of inches of snow
on the ground. It was going to be my
first white Christmas!
On the evening of Christmas Eve, everyone went to the
Midnight Mass in Kettlewell Parish Church.
A beautiful candlelit service in a picture-perfect Christmas card
scene. The sky had mostly cleared with
just a few clouds providing intermittent snow flurries. The moon was almost full and moonlight
reflected off the snow covered hillsides making the whole valley shine with a
silvery glow.
To get to the service, my roommate (Simon) and I got a
lift into Kettlewell in the community Land Rover along with four of our older
guests who didn’t drive. They were all
in their 70’s and 80’s and we crammed into this Land Rover in close fellowship
to get there.
At the end of the service however, we had a problem. With the largely clear skies, the temperature
had dropped to around -5oC and as we all got back into the Land
Rover, the driver put the key into the ignition and tried to turn it. It wouldn’t move. Not being one to give up, he applied a bit of
brute force… and the key broke off in the ignition. We were stranded.
Everyone else had already gone by the time this happened, so the only solution seemed to be for the driver to walk the mile or so
back to Scargill, wake a couple of people up who had cars, and ask them to come
and pick us up.
After he set off it soon became apparent that staying and
waiting for him was not a good plan either.
The Land Rover was freezing cold, even with us all huddled together in it.
Simon and I would have been ok but the elderly guests began feel the cold even
more than we did. Then one of them piped
up “I’m not going to sit here and freeze.
I’m going to walk!” The others
agreed and Simon and I were left with the dilemma of what to do. We couldn’t stop them but we were worried
that walking over a mile along snow covered roads was also a risky business for
the four older people in their 70’s and 80’s.
As they all got out, we knew we needed to go with them. In the starlit peace of the early hours of
Christmas morning, the six of us walked back along the snowy lanes in crisp
moonlight with the occasional snow flurry to make the winter scene complete.
The guests were absolutely amazing. With Simon and I linking arms with the less
mobile to steady them, a kind of Dunkirk spirit kicked in and we walked slowly
through the snow singing Christmas carols.
We got almost all the way back to Scargill before the headlights of cars
appeared to take us back the rest of the way.
We all went up to the main house and made Hot Chocolate
and Horlicks to warm everyone up. Far
from complaining, they were elated by their Christmas adventure and their victory
over the elements.
When Simon and I finally went back to our room in
Community House at the bottom of the drive, it was about 2:30am. When we trudged up the stairs to the room we
shared at the top of the house, we found two Christmas stockings of presents
hanging from our door handle. It was a
complete and lovely surprize and we sat on our beds unwrapping chocolates,
novelties and two miniature bottles of scotch whisky. We chinked the bottles together and drunk the
lot. Some of my friends know my love of
Single Malt Whisky but will not know that it began on that night.
We finally settled down sometime after 3am for a few hours
sleep, before getting up to help prepare for breakfast and wake the guests by
going around the house singing Christmas carols at 8am.
No Christmas has ever come close to that. The beauty of the moonlit night; the snow on
the ground; the spirit and determination of those four elderly guests and the
camaraderie they found together in adversity; the unexpected presents hanging
from our door handle; they all came
together to make that the best Christmas ever!
What a lovely story and what a good story teller you are, I could see and feel that snow!
ReplyDeleteThank you. The memory is so vivid and joyful. I'm glad it came across.
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