Skip to main content

Christmas Carol - Day 6

Being a father is not easy.

There's no instruction manual. There's no guidebook. Each child is so very different, so unique. And each experience we pass through is the very first time in all of history that it has ever happened.

So imagine being the father of Christ...

That's the premise of today's Carol. It's from the Forgotten Carols by Michael McLean. I like Michael McLean, and I particularly enjoy these songs at this season. I was first introduced to them by a good friend in college before my mission (thanks, Sara!), and I've enjoyed them ever since.

The lyrics of this Carol are so sweet. Fathers do not have it easy - much is demanded of them, both inside the family and out. And there are times of frustration, misgivings, and temptation that are almost too much to handle. Wrapped around it all is the concern that I am not good enough - that I am not worthy to handle this kind of thing. My own children are two of the most amazing people I've ever known - so talented, beautiful, and impressive.

So the line - Jesus found the tender moments to let him (Joseph) know he'd done just fine - just makes me weep. My children let me know this, too. Maybe not verbally, but by the fact that they want to be near me, want to spend time with me, and emulate what I do (which is mostly not too bad...). Nothing makes me feel more successful, nothing makes me feel more like a man, nothing brings me greater joy, than to see my children growing in righteousness.

Lyrics:

He was working late one evening
With the wood he knew so well
When she thought
she recognized him
Though at first,
She really couldn't tell

As she humbly begged his pardon
A strange sadness swelled inside
When she asked,
"aren't you the father
Of that man they crucified?"
Then the carpenter repeated
What he's said so many times
He said, "I as not His father,
He was mine."

Then he humbly went on working
With those worn
and caloused hands
Though she did not ask
more questions
He knew she didn't understand.

So he asked if she would help him
And he saw her answer
in a glance
She did all the chores
he asked her
She was so grateful for the chance
Then they talked for hours of Jesus
And how he knew He was divine
He said "I was not His father,
He was mine.
For how could one
So foolish and so flawed
Ever hope to raise
the Son of God?"

Then he spoke
of the misgivings
That he had had
a thousand times
And how Jesus found
the tender moments
To let him know
He had done just fine

And then the carpenter recited
The greatest truths
he'd ever learned
And testified
they all came form Jesus
And then her heart
within her burned

They embraced as she departed,
And Joseph told her one more time,
"Tell them I was not His father
Tell them He was mine
No, I was not His father,
He is mine."


Comments

Joy and Dennis said…
I'm sure that I have heard this song before...but I'd never read the lyrics. Just beautiful and very touching. I would never compare myself to someone so noble, but I have often felt a similar feeling. I have always been grateful that Father lent me some of his choice children for me to somehow rear here upon the earth, and I have always prayed that I would do an adequate job and just not mess them up. Afterall they came to me already "perfect" - maybe not perfected, but perfect nevertheless. I hope that I have done what I was supposed to do, and that I still have some additional time to do more.
Bill Cobabe said…
This is exactly what my father has remarked on several occasions - that children come from the presence of God perfect and angelic. The job of a parent is to let them shine without interfering too much... :-)

Dad does a fine job. As do you, Joy!

I hope I do as sufficient a job. That's what I pray for every day, at least...

As the song goes - how could one so foolish and so flawed ever hope to raise (any) son (or daughter) of God... Well, we just do the best we can, don't we? Repent each day and try the next day to do better...

Thanks for the comment, Joy. I was beginning to wonder if there was anyone left out there... :-)

Popular posts from this blog

Is this thing still on?

 Does anyone even blog anymore? I remember when it first got started and everyone was having a blog. I like writing, and I do a lot of it in my professional life, but not everything makes it onto this blog, which is where a lot of my personal thoughts come out. I put more into Facebook lately, too, because it's a little easier. But there's something to be said for this long-form writing exercise, and I think I will continue here periodically. You don't mind, do you? Well, in my last post I wrote about how difficult things were for me at the time. That changed in July when I finally got a job working for the State of Utah. I was the program manager for the moderate income housing database program, and that meant I worked from home a lot but also went in to Salt Lake when needed, mostly on the train. It was a good experience, for the most part, and I'm grateful for the things I learned even in the short time I was there.  In October I started working for Weber County in t...

The Other Art

I'm not sure we appreciate photography as much as we do other art forms. Part of this comes from the reality that surrounds and permeates a photograph - it's very, very real, and the photographer strives for clarity and crispness in the representations. Perhaps this is why black and white images continue to be relevant - they strip away extraneous information (color) and leave us with something that is at once familiar and also non-existent - for nothing exists in black and white. Nothing. I also think that pictures are becoming too common-place... Everyone has a camera in their pocket, and while that's a very democratic thing (everyone can express themselves in a picture easily and readily, and can find an audience for these images, which are casually taken and casually viewed, and perhaps just as casually forgotten) I think that we embrace that casual attitude, and it spills over to all aspects of the media, making it impotent. So I read this article this morning: h...

A Romantic Encounter

Him (tears in his eyes, heartbroken): I want you to know that I love you, that I'm sorry for my weakness and frailties, and that I will try and do better. I think I am doing better than I was before, and I just want to please you and make you happy. I am very grateful for your continued patience as I try to be the kind of man I want to be. Her: You need a haircut. It's getting a little long.