Burn a candle brightly to welcome the new-born king

Burn a candle brightly to welcome the new-born king
The Notebook

 

Fr Vincent Sherlock

One of my favourite childhood memories is going to Sligo with my parents on Christmas Eve. We’d go in the afternoon, spend a few hours in Sligo and call to Cloonamahon (then a Passionist Monastery near Collooney) or maybe to the Friary or Cathedral in Sligo and go to Confessions. We’d have a bite to eat as well and I remember these days as being very special.

On our way home, my mother (God rest her) would comment on the candles in the windows of houses. They weren’t electric or ‘bridges’ but single candles burning in the windows of homes along the way.

The darkness of the night brought them to life and my mother would tell us these candles were put there to pave the way for the welcoming of Jesus.

Children

As children, Santa Claus was everything to us but the candles weren’t for him – they were for the Holy Family and meant to guide their way to the Bethlehem stable. She’d talk about candles in her own childhood home and the memories she had of them.

The candles burned through the night twice during Christmas – Christmas Eve and the ‘Twelfth Night’. On both occasions, people on a journey it seems, needed help to trace their path. People were more than willing to help them. It’s a good memory.

Nowadays candles burn in the windows throughout Christmas and maybe even longer. The wick and wax are replaced by electric candle arches or LED tee lights.

The idea is there but it’s not the same. There’s something about the candle – burning itself away to give light where otherwise there would only be darkness. There’s something too, about just lighting on Christmas Eve and the Twelfth Night – linking journey with our homes and our homes with people on journey.

We’re approaching the Twelfth Night now – on January 6, Christmas comes to an end. Somehow, we seem to miss this point year after year that, though the Season ends, its purpose remains.

AND ON THAT POINT …

Liked this New Year’s Resolution from Jonathan Edwards: “Resolution One: I will live for God. Resolution Two: If no one else does, I still will.”

The birth of a child marks the end of a pregnancy and months of waiting and hoping that all will be well. It’s not an end though; for the life of the child becomes the focus, and the child becoming a boy or girl and in time, man or woman, is the full story. We’d never imagine leaving the baby a baby – even if we wanted to, we couldn’t for life brings with it growth.

Our spiritual life brings growth. We move away from the crib, take down the Christmas Tree and pack away the candle arches but we journey into the Ministry of Jesus and find again, hear again, his call to be better people because He lives.

Happy new year.

*****

Resolutions? They can be a bit of a disaster. If I stuck to them, I’d weigh a lot less than I do, get up much earlier, pray more, do more, be better, want less, need less…and still there’s something in them. Reaching for the stars maybe? We will never reach them but at least we’re looking in the right direction and it’s a ‘heavenly’ view.

So, go ahead and jot down a few resolutions. You never know, this just might be the year! If not, it’s not the end of the world – it’s the beginning of a year. Enjoy it and God bless you all.