Last night we were part of a large festive party with friends and family old and new from church. The food was wonderful, the conversation warm, the laughter abundant, the warmth of Christmas filled the house with joy. After an early dinner, we walked the neighborhood randomly caroling the neighbors, to their delight, in spite of our less than perfect attempts at Christmas carols.
A grey sky looms this afternoon outside; with showers predicted for tonight. There is a momentary calm, as the raucous teenage girls that will live with us for a few short years longer, have friends over, and are quietly conferring in their rooms.
I sit, laptop in hand in the family room, reflecting on this Christmas 2006, listening to Mozart's Laudate Dominum (see below), perhaps one of the most hauntingly beautiful Adagios ever composed. And ironically, it was written at a point in Mozart's life that was not perfect.
LAUDATE DOMINUM
Psalm 117 (Vulgate)
Laudate Dominum omnes gentes: laudate eum omnes populi.
Quoniam confirmata est super
nos misericordia ejus: et veritas Domini manet in aeternum.
Gloria Patri.
O praise the Lord, all ye
nations: praise Him, all ye people.
For His mercy is confirmed upon us: and the truth of the Lord remaineth for ever.
Glory be to the Father
So much in our world is not indeed far less than perfect this Christmas. Is it not always so? And so, this is my Christmas prayer:
Lord, on this day after Christmas, I am filled with ambiguity.
You came with a cry, nearly alone, the scream of a helpless, messy, completely fragile baby.
Your first attendants were ordinary shepards,
And our world, your world, is so much less than holy or perfect,
I think about our happy Christmas celebration,
I think about the happy parts of my own life,
and then the sadness that also fill the corners of my heart,
And I wonder, how can my life
I bring both the broken pieces of my life, and the broken parts of the world to you,
May I be haunted by the life and love of the child who became a King.