December Seventh

December 7th

Charleston: I honor you
“I honor you. I honor you for who you are and for what you have done. You did not become the person you are without effort. You have weathered many storms and seen many changes. You have kept going when others might have given up. You have lived your life like an art, creating what you did not have, dreaming what you could not see. And in so doing, you have touched many other lives. You have brought your share of goodness into the world. You have helped more than one person when they needed you. I honor you for walking with integrity, for making hope real, and for being who you have become. I honor you.”

—Bishop Steven Charleston Daily Facebook Page.

 December 7th

 This week, we remembered December 7th, the anniversary of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. It was also the anniversary of the day I stopped smoking 45 years ago. That was the day of my grandfather Whaley’s funeral in 1979. He taught me the most about unconditional love.

I wanted to honor him and knew he disliked my smoking. His mother died when he was seven years old of lung disease (Tuberculosis). My grandfather taught me about love when he was alive, and saved my life when he died. My younger brother and mother died of complications from smoking, and I could so easily have done the same.

Several years ago, I honored my grandfather and his mother when my husband and daughter helped me trek to my great-grandmother’s grave in an isolated graveyard in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. It was not an easy adventure.

First, we entered the Park near Gatlinburg, went over one small bridge on a dirt road, then an even smaller bridge, parked on another unpaved road with a chain across it, and walked a half-mile on an uneven path with roots crisscrossing it until we came to the secret, well-kept cemetery, a cathedral-like open space framed by a canopy of trees.

We later learned this was the Whaley-Plemmons Cemetery in Greenbrier, where there once was a busy mountain community of schools, churches, and homes.

My experience with the grief recovery group, Walking the Mourner’s Path, teaches me that honoring those you love who have died is one of the most significant ways of healing. So, today, I do what others have taught me: celebrate an important person in my life that I loved and honor someone he loved.

You can learn more about my grandfather in my recent book on Amazon, Letters from my Grandfather: A History of Two Decades of Unconditional Love. Proceeds from the sale of the $20 book go to Camp Mitchell.

Joanna           https://www.joannaseibert.com/

 

 

 

Feast Day of St. Nikolas, December 6th

Feast of St. Nicholas December 6th

“Almighty God, in your love, you gave your servant Nicholas of Myra a perpetual name for deeds of kindness both on land and sea: Grant, we pray that your Church may never cease to work for the happiness of children, the safety of sailors, the relief of the poor, and the help of those tossed by tempests of doubt or grief; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, forever and ever. Amen.”— Lesser Feasts and Fasts (Church Publishing, 2006), p. 97. 

If you have been reading this blog for several years, you have heard about St. Nikolas on his feast day on the sixth of December. I apologize right now because you will hear about him again. I am powerless when it comes to St. Nikolas.  He has simply been a significant figure in our lives. You might say we developed an addiction to St. Nikolas in December! 

We know very little of the life of Nicholas, Bishop of Myra, who lived in Asia Minor around 342. He is the patron of seafarers, sailors, and, more significantly, children. As a bearer of gifts to children, Dutch colonists in New York brought him to America, where he soon became known as Santa Claus.

When our grandchildren were young, we celebrated the feast day of St. Nicholas as a significant holiday. First, we had a big family meal together. My husband dressed up as Bishop Nicholas with a beard, a miter, a crozier, and a long red stole and came to visit our grandchildren after dinner. He spoke Greek to the children and the adults. Speaking Greek is my husband’s favorite pastime, and of course, you know Nikolas was Greek. Then our grandchildren went into the bedrooms and left their shoes outside the doors, and Bishop Nicholas left chocolate coins and presents in their shoes. I won’t bore you with our pictures of this family event, but they are stunning.

Why am I sharing with you our family story? I remember so many years on this feast day as I would sit and watch this pageant. I am still filled with tremendous gratitude, as my recovery date is close to the feast day of St. Nicholas. Each year, I know that if someone had not led me to a recovery program, I would never have been alive for these special events.  I would not have witnessed this wonderful blessing of watching our children and grandchildren gleefully giggle as they try to respond to a beautiful older man with a fake beard speaking Greek and secretly giving them candy in their shoes. So, it is a yearly reminder to continue working on a recovery program so that I can remember another feast day of St. Nicholas.

This is a suggestion. Look at the calendar of saints. Find one close to the date a significant change occurred in your life. Learn about that saint. Observe that saint’s day in your home and your life. You may even consider that saint your patron saint. This is one more way to remember how the God of love has transformed our lives. Spend that saint’s day giving thanks for those who loved you before you were born, with a passion that only comes from the love of the God of our understanding.

My hope is that we will all pay this love forward, giving back God’s love to a world so desperately needing it.

A secret. St. Nikolas will make an appearance Sunday night at St. Mark’s Episcopal Church, Little Rock, at the Christingle Service at 4:30 pm on December 22.
Joanna.
https://www.joannaseibert.com/

 

 

 

 

Anders: Awaiting the Child

Isabel Anders: Awaiting the Child

“If the roles between man and woman are more a dance than a drill (ideally, as joyful lovers can attest), the relationship between the soul and God is also more of a flow in which grace and human choice, unmerited favor, and our own will, act together in concert: in coinciding channels rather than separate connections. Gregory of Nyssa writes: ‘When the righteousness of works and the grace of the Spirit come together at the same time in the same soul, together, they can fill it with blessed life.’”— Isabel Anders in Awaiting the Child (Cowley 1987, 2005).

I give Awaiting the Child to every friend I know who is pregnant during Advent, but it is also for the rest of us who are beyond the “awaiting” stage in life. Anders shares a journal she kept for the four weeks of Advent during her first pregnancy. I often put in a book the date I start reading it. In Awaiting the Child, it is 1987, the year it was first published. Mrs. Anders was the managing editor for Synthesis, a monthly sermon preparation magazine based on the revised common lectionary for three decades. She is now the author of Circle Of Days, along with Paula Franck, a three-part series celebrating the Sunday lectionary readings.  

I will always be grateful to Mrs. Anders for her help when I began writing, for encouraging me, and for suggesting places to send my writing. Phyllis Tickle was also a similar mentor. I can never thank them enough for what they did, but I can resolve to “pay it forward” to do the same for other writers who come to me. There are no words to describe how rewarding it is to have a relationship with a good mentor. The same is true for spiritual friends. A spiritual director also mentors, encourages, and cares for the soul of a friend. I suggest that people also find an exemplary mentor. This is someone they admire and has talents and gifts they hope to develop. Jungian psychologists and spiritual gifts leaders would tell us that the characteristics and skills we admire in others are also in us, but we are not as aware of their presence. Simply knowing this is very reassuring. See if this fits you.

Now, we also have an Advent treat to hear from Mrs. Anders, over thirty years after she first wrote Awaiting the Child. Below is her book on the Sunday lectionary, Circles of Days.

https://www.amazon.com/Circle-Days-Church-celebration-Christian/dp/B0B6LNSMV4/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1668450833&sr=1-1

Joanna     joannaseibert.com  https://www.joannaseibert.com/