I find these words of Howard Thurman to be a place of centering and a reminder all that troubles me today will pass away. Good will prevail over evil and love is stronger than hate. Thurman’s meditation “The Mood of Christmas” calls me back to the essence and promise of Christmas.
“Christmas is a mood, a quality, a symbol. It is never merely a fact. As a fact it is a date on the calendar — to the believer it is the anniversary of an event in human history. An individual may relate (themselves) meaningfully to the fact or the event, but that would not be Christmas.
“The mood of Christmas — what is it? It is a quickening of the presence of other human beings into whose lives a precious part of one’s own has been released. It is a memory of other days when into one’s path an angel appeared spreading a halo over an ordinary moment or a commonplace event. It is an iridescence of sheer delight that bathes one’s whole being with something more wonderful than words can ever tell. Of such is the mood of Christmas.
“The quality of Christmas — what is it? It is the fullness with which fruit ripens, blossoms unfold into flowers, and live coals glow in the darkness. It is the richness of vibrant colors — the calm purple of grapes, the exciting redness of tomatoes, the shimmering light on the noiseless stirring of a lake or sunset. It is the sense of plateau with a large rock behind which one may take temporary respite from winds that chill. Of such is the quality of Christmas.
“The symbol of Christmas — what is it? It is the rainbow arched over the roof of the sky when the clouds are heavy with foreboding. It is the cry of life in the newborn babe when, forced from its mother’s nest, it claims its right to live. It is the brooding Presence of the Eternal Spirit making crooked paths straight, rough places smooth, tired hearts refreshed, dead hopes stir with newness of life. It is the promise of tomorrow at the close of every day, the movement of life in defiance of death, and the assurance that love is sturdier than hate, that right is more confident than wrong, that good is more permanent than evil.” (Taken from Howard Thurman’s book, “The Growing Edge” 1956)
“I will go before you
And make the crooked places straight.” Isaiah 45:2 NKJV
I loved this, Shirley.
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I have been reading his book “Deep River” about Negro Spirituals… the Moods of Christmas is on my table for when we get back from vacation
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Enjoy! One of my last seminary classes was on the theology of Howard Thurman. It was a good way to end my years there and such a gift ever since.
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Wasn’t it?! I loved the class that Ed Martin taught about Thurman and Zora Neale Hurston, and Alice Walker!
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I still have all the books from that class while many others have found their way to Goodwill. Ed was such a nurturing person so the class was both a gift to have him teaching it and a gift to be introduced to the writings.
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He was indeed an amazing mentor and nurturing person!
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This is wonderful and a piece I had never read from a writer I admire with my heart not my head. Thank you.
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He is one of my favorite theologian/writers too. I love his deeply centered spirituality.
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