"...the whos down in Whoville standing together in a circle holding hands and singing Christmas songs..."
In “How the Grinch Stole Christmas”, the Grinch removed everything out of Whoville believing that would stop them from celebrating Christmas. However, as the story continues we see, that in spite of this unfortunate setback, the Whos down in Whoville, choose to gather together, in a circle holding hands, and singing Christmas songs.
So, what WOULD the Whos be doing this year?
Wearing masks? Maintaining social distancing? Staying at home?
This question, among many others, is also being asked by faith communities everywhere who struggle with what to do during one of the biggest holy seasons of the year. What do we do about our traditions such as the Christmas Pageant? The Christmas Eve services? What about the Angel Tree we have in the sanctuary, the Christmas fairs? And the list goes on…
We understand the safety reasoning for not gathering, but it is still very sad and the strings of our hearts are pulled.
What are we to do this year?
Here are some thoughts and actions.
Find new ways to connect.
How about an online cookie and coffee social time for folks to talk about their Christmas gifting, plans, and memories. Maybe offer a phone call in option to include as many folks as possible.
See what others are doing during Advent and Christmas
and share it with your faith community. We aren’t in competition to replicate what we read about or experience. Maybe a group could virtually attend a Christmas eve service in another part of the conference or maybe even the nation. What a blessing that would be for the hosting church as well.
St. John’s UMC in Dover, NH had their “fair” online this year, including a silent auction. Among the auction items was enjoying a homemade soup each month throughout 2021 while another person will lay claim to a beautiful wooden bowl.
Struggling to write your Christmas letter?
Visit the
Foundation’s Facebook page, and find a blog by Cesie Delve Scheuermann that offers a template for a Christmas giving letter. It not only acknowledges our struggles but also addresses the need for folks who want to give during this season of joy and hope.
You can find posts about ways to be the church beyond the walls. Take what your faith community has and share it with the world in Christ’s name (as did a church in Iowa), as well as 10 Things to Avoid Doing this Year-End.
What is most important is not HOW or WHERE we gather but WHY.
In all letters, calls, and services, let us rejoice as ambassadors of Christ as we share the Good News that the angels brought to the shepherds as well as the promise of new life and hope as we remember Christ’s birth and anticipate his return.
I don’t know what the Whos would do this year, but I suspect that it would be to “welcome Christmas wherever they stood, heart to heart praying for peace in the land”.
What will our response be?