DECEMBERING: SILENT KNIGHT

This Holiday Season Night as I sit in the shadows with the foreboding, silent ghost of Christmas Future,
it occurs to me that each of us is a Silent Knight ...
A Silent Knight for whatever creed shapes our thoughts andsteps.
No matter our words, it is our actions that speak for us.

Have we spoken love and forgiveness
only to retort sharply atthe harried store clerk who did not respond fast enough for us?

Have we scoured the stores for just the right present, theperfect gift wrap
only to snap at the very ones for whom we bought it out ofirritation and weariness?

Have we slaved over a king's spread of assorted recipes,
onlyto have no appetite or warmth or patience for those for whom we prepared thedelicious dishes?

If we were to glance up and see the flag of the True Creedwhich our actions proclaim we live by,
would we cringe in disbelief?
Today books, films and Internet sites are filled with fancifultales purporting to tell the history of "Silent Night."
Some tell of mice eating the bellows of the organ creating thenecessity for a hymn to be accompanied by a guitar.
Others claim thatJoseph Mohr was forced to write the words to a new carol in haste since theorgan would not play.

The German words for the original six stanzas of the carol weknow as "Silent Night" were written by Joseph Mohr in 1816,
when he was a young priest assigned to a pilgrimage church inMariapfarr, Austria.

The fact is, we have no idea if any particular event inspiredJoseph Mohr
to pen his poetic version of the birth of the Christ-child.
The world is fortunate, however, that he didn't leave itbehind
when he was transferred to Oberndorf the following year (1817).
On December 24, 1818 Joseph Mohr journeyed to the home ofmusician-schoolteacher Franz Gruber
who lived in an apartment over the schoolhouse in nearbyArnsdorf.
He showed his friend the poem and asked him
to add a melodyand guitar accompaniment so that it could be sung at Midnight Mass.
His reason for wanting the new carol is unknown.
Later that evening, as the two men, backed by the choir, stoodin front of the main altar in St. Nicholas Church
and sang "Stille Nacht!Heilige Nacht!"
for the first time, they could hardly imagine the impact theircomposition would have on the world.
And so,
they were Silent Knights for their God.

As we, too, are Silent Knights for our gods:
Esteem in the eyes of others,
Wealth,
Social Status,
World Acclaim,
Control over Others,
Control over Ourselves,
or
He who sang the universe into being.

We can hardly imagine the impact our actions, positive orcaustic,
will have on the network of fragile souls
in our world.

That fact should make us careful and compassionate in the daysto come.
May your Christmas Season be magical and healing.
As we listen to Mannheim Steamroller's Silent Night, the ghost of Christmas Future and I tip our egg nogs to you,
while I try to ignore the fingers holding his glass are skeletal.

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