Brueggemann, Benedict: Living in the New Year

Brueggemann, Benedict: Christians living in the new year

“The gift of Christmas contradicts everything we sense about our own life. Our world feels unsavable, and here is the baby named Jesus, ‘Save.’ Be ready to have your sense of the world contradicted by this gift from God.”—Walter Brueggemann, Devotions for Advent, Abundance, p. 67.

ed seward

We listen to the news. We become depressed. Every day, something more terrible happens. We feel helpless and powerless. The gift of love, the gift of Christmas, brings hope. I keep thinking about St. Benedict. The world is crashing all around him. Rome is being destroyed by Germanic invaders who took over his country. He tries to escape and become a hermit. It doesn’t work. He joins a community. He decides the community needs an alternative way to live together in love and consideration for others and develops The Rule of Benedict.

 This is, of course, an oversimplification of this part of history.

 The beginning of the prologue to the rule is, Listen with the ear of your heart. This is the call I hear this Christmas season. I am being called to a more intentional living of the Rule of Benedict in community. I recently reviewed the rule for a presentation for Community of Hope training. This is training for lay people in pastoral care, steeped in Benedictine Spirituality. I thank those friends who made the commitment to learn and live Benedict’s Rule. They may think I was helping them. Maybe so, but in reality, they are and continue to retrain me to live intentionally in love now and in the coming new year.

St. Benedict shared the love that came down at Christmas, learning to live in a community. My Christmas prayer is that we can also share that love with others.

war memorial chapel National Cathedral

Neighborhood Christmas Tradition

Neighborhood Christmas Tradition

 Whenever my family and I turned into our road at Christmas, our first site was the decorated truck with a Christmas tree in the driveway of the first house in our neighborhood. There was something magical about the scene, as we all felt an inner warmth of love that we could not explain.

It re-centered us from stresses to inner love and appreciation of this “Christmas card” our neighbors offered our street. Then, when we stopped seeing it at the holidays, we missed it. We even bought plates and glasses with the lighted Christmas tree in a truck, but it was not the same.

 After several years, we recently received our neighbor’s explanation to our neighborhood

Guest Writer:

 A note to our neighborhood from Kent Mosley
Subject: Laurie Mosley from Kent Mosley

“My wife Laurie passed away on May 6th.  She had been battling an illness for a long time.  Although her pain and worries are over, I miss her. After we had lived here on the corner together for our twenty-five years of marriage, I thought she deserved to be mentioned in the history of our street.

If anyone remembers the old blue truck we decorated in the front yard at Christmas time, it was her idea. I know if you lived here in those days twenty-five years ago or so, you will remember. She went with me to cut down the first fourteen-foot cedar tree. She was in charge of decorating, ensuring the wheel light spun in the right direction and all the lights were on the truck in the right place. She made sure the lights and Christmas balls were hung just right on the tree.

Laurie

So, this is just a note “to say a thank you and prayer for Laurie Mosley” if you ever enjoyed the “ole blue,” all decorated in a Dr. Suess-style Christmas Celebration. Our first year was definitely the best.  After a few more years of setting up, I just got a little old to cut down a fourteen-foot cedar tree on my own, and there were fewer and fewer places to find one nearby. So, I apologize for letting that slip away, like memories do. But let it be known Laurie was the artist, the inspiration, the taskmaster until it was done right.”

Kent & Laurie.    NW corner of our neighborhood.

 

I will never forget how a grieving husband honors his wife and honors our neighborhood by sharing this extraordinary Christmas story with us that we now share with you.

Joanna joannaseibert.com

 

 

 

Boxing Day Again

 Boxing Day  Again

“But the souls of the righteous are in the hand of God, and no torment will ever touch them.” Wisdom 3:1.

my brother in a 1959 Christmas Card we did together

 My experience is that those who have known the death of a loved one around Christmas may find the holidays not always a joyful time in their memory. So today, I remember my brother again and Archbishop Desmond Tutu, who died on Boxing Day at age 90 in 2021.

I have written about my brother, who died in December ten years ago in 2014, on Boxing Day, the second day of Christmas. He died four months after his 70th birthday, almost precisely at the same age as our father died. My brother was born on Labor Day and died on Boxing Day. We will have to work on the significance of all that. Boxing Day is traditionally the day after Christmas when servants in English households receive a gift from their employer in a “box.” Of course, Labor Day honors those working and gives them an extra day of rest. I do know Jim loved Christmas. My brother also died when our church calendar commemorates Stephen, the first deacon and martyr. I don’t know about a martyr, but my brother was a survivor. He had open-heart surgery, three cancers, and at least three strokes.

cousins at Jim’s funeral. His three young men and the 3 Seiberts

I did something I had never done before shortly after my brother died. I prayed to hear what he would like us to know about him. This message immediately came to me that my brother said: ”I tried to be a good man, and I loved my family.”

“I tried to be a good man and loved my family.” So that was my message from my brother. He dearly loved his family and was very proud of his three sons. He loved his community, serving faithfully as a banker, a Boys and Girls Club member, and on the school board. I know he especially loved his church, where he also served faithfully.

Since the Episcopal Church is a love we shared, we discussed it often. However, only once did we have the privilege of serving together at an altar. That was at our mother’s funeral, where we both were Eucharistic ministers serving the chalice. 

My brother was an eight o’clock churchgoer. They are a different breed, a little more private, quieter, and sometimes more reserved. They get the ear of the rector after the service, as so few people are present that early. My brother loved serving on the vestry, another rare breed. If an eight o’clocker is a lector or Eucharistic minister, they serve more often than those at the later service, as my brother did. I tried to talk my brother into becoming a deacon, which I think could have happened if he had more time. The church is in the genes of our family. It comes in many forms, but we cannot escape it.

My brother was a believer, and there is no doubt that he now lives in the resurrection, just as he experienced so many resurrections in this life.

So today, I am sharing some memories of my brother, my only sibling. I miss him daily, especially on the holidays.

When we were children, I remember how we would wake up in the early morning, too excited to sleep and lie together in bed, hoping by some miracle that our parents would wake up early. He so loved Christmas. I honor him by sharing Christmas stories about him and celebrating the holiday as he loved to do. He always brought joy to my life, and I hope to continue sharing that joy, especially at this time of the year. Sometimes, when our family shares stories, I hear his distinctive laugh caught up in others and give thanks for our life together with him in our family.