There are more well-known Christmas carols
and songs than you can list. There are
purely sacred pieces, like "O Come All Ye Faithful", and purely
secular ones like “Jingle Bells” and “White Christmas.” And then there are a few that fall somewhere
in-between. One of those is “Christmas
in Killarney.” Perhaps you know it:
The
holly green, the ivy green
The
prettiest picture you’ve ever seen
Is
Christmas in Killarney . . . .
Several years ago I had the pleasure of
attending a wonderful concert sung by the Moscow
Boys Choir. Like so many concerts it was
a blend of both sacred and secular seasonal selections. And to my surprise, one of the featured
numbers was “Christmas in Killarney. You
couldn’t help but chuckle as boys and men with sturdy Russian accents sang
lyrics like, “I’m handing you no blarney.”
It was really a wonder, while at the same time, rather absurd! Yet in the end, it was a magnificent reminder that the Love we celebrate at Christmas crosses all boundaries.
If truth be told, the Christmas story itself,
with its baby born in a stable, and heavenly angels singing to sleepy shepherds
is much the same. It is quite wondrous,
while at the same time a bit absurd.
Think about it, for a moment. The same God who is said to have created the
universe, the same God who is said to be all-knowing, all-powerful and ever
present, chooses to come to us as a baby—and not even a very special baby. This is no crown prince born in a royal
palace. No, this is a baby born to a
peasant girl in a no-account country. So
unimportant that he and his parents don’t even rate a room at the local inn,
and so he’s born in a barn. And his
first visitors? The local
dignitaries? The mayor of the town? No, the lowliest of men in the
neighborhood—shepherds claiming to have seen angels.
But despite all the seeming absurdity, it is a
story that we have hung on to for centuries.
It is a story that has been told, and retold, and retold again, because
it speaks so eloquently of Love.
In these days when we find it hard to
separate fact from fiction, when fake news gets enough traction to cause a
shooting in a pizza parlor, knowing that Love is real is more important than
ever. And this simple story of a long
ago birth gives us hope. Hope that Love
can be found in even the lowliest of places.
And that's no blarney!
Love can be found wherever you plant it
ReplyDelete