Wednesday, December 18, 2013

The First Christmas Song I Heard This Year


The weekend before Thanksgiving, I went to a home tour organized by my sweet friend, Jill;  a fundraiser for her daughter's choir. In one of the homes we were treated to a performance by the high school's chamber choir. The bright, attractive group was the usual suburban-Dallas mix of mostly European-American and Asian-American faces.

The first song they sang was one you don't hear much, "Some Children See Him."  Here are excerpts of the words by Wihla Hudson and Alfred S. Burt:

"Some children see Him lily white,
the baby Jesus born this night.
Some children see Him lily white,
with tresses soft and fair......
Some children see Him bronzed and brown.....
Him dark as they,
sweet Mary's Son to whom we pray.
Some children see him dark as they,
and, ah! they love Him, too! "

It's said this song, written in 1951, was intended to spread peace and brotherly Christian unity in the aftermath of WWII.

I couldn't help but wonder if the director knew how he would pull heart-strings by assigning the group's sole African-American student to sing the lead solo.  I am sure it was mostly the young gentleman's beautiful voice, but still!  A beautiful and evocative moment.

I was put in mind of the hundreds of different representations of Jesus I've seen in art around the world and created in times from the Middle Ages to the present. I love visiting art museums and for many years I've pondered pale Jesus and Mary dressed in 17th-century Italian robes, Asian Jesus, and yes, black Jesus and blonde Jesus. It bothered me for a long while! Don't people know Jesus was a Jew from the Middle East? I wondered.

I came to realize two things.... In many cases such as 17th-century Europe, the artists probably didn't have much knowledge about ethnicity or dress in Jesus' time and place.  Second and  what's truly important, the art is an expression of the beautiful concept of Advent. Emmanuel is coming. God With Us. The God who is like us.

Seeing these different portraits is one of my favorite things about an art museum. And the words from 1951 are so beautiful and so worth pondering today.....

"The children in each different place
will see the baby Jesus' face
like theirs, but bright with heavenly grace,
and filled with holy light.
O lay aside each earthly thing
and with thy heart as offering,
come worship now the infant King.
'Tis love that's born tonight!"

Thursday, July 11, 2013

Cucumber Vines Climbing to the Light

Cucumber Vines on  20130710
I am so very excited about the progress of my cucumber vines, and what better subject for the first post of a blog entitled, "Leafy Living?" I hadn't grown cucumbers for years, and seeds were planted late due to the unusual, but wonderful, cool weather well into May. Until just 10 days or so ago, the plants had only 2-3 leaves, but something must've been happening below the soil. I returned from a trip to find them clambering up their supports. I love to see each morning how the latest tendril has flung itself up and out. They seem to be climbing to the light.

What a great metaphor for the Christ life! In Colossians 3, Paul reminds us to "set your minds on things above, where Christ is." My friend Adam Wood had a great image for this in his sermon, "Easter Mindset."http://www.providencecommunity.com/sermon/easter-mindset/
He referred to the line from Le Miserables; "In the valley of the night, let us be people who are climbing to the light!" Lord, You are the one true light! Let me ever be climbing to You!