[Since 1993 I’ve been writing a story for Christmas in
memory of an old priest - a friend, Father John Duffy - who died Christmas Eve,
December 24th, 1993. He wrote a Christmas story every year for his
niece - and I have continued that tradition. I had typed a few of them up for
him. He was a horrible typist - and never got into computers. So here’s my
Christmas story for this year - typed up - nice and neat - for you. It’s based
on a few true stories. It has deep sadness in it, but I decided to go with it,
because of some tough stuff I’ve heard from some people this year - people who
need to hear Happy Endings. So a story
with just that title: “Happy Ending.”]
When a baby is born, when a baby is baptized, when a
little kid slides down the slide in the park - mom, dad, sometimes slide into the future and
wonder what will become of this little
one of ours.
Tom and Gladys didn’t expect what was to happen in their
future when they slid into the stretch limo - that afternoon as they left
church - after their picture perfect wedding ceremony and Mass.
Tom and Gladys - in time - had two kids - a boy and a
girl. Tommy Jr. came first - then came Penny. Gladys didn’t like the name
Gladys - never no how - and growing up said, “If I have a girl. She won’t be a
Gladys. She went by her nickname “Glad” - even enduring - sometimes hearing -
during her high school years, “Here comes Gladbag!” when she walked into class
or onto the soccer field.
Time slid on - as their kids grew up. Tommy and Penny did well in school and sports
- and bringing neat kids - friends - into their house - and into their lives.
Tommy Jr. went to college - but went by the way of R.O.T.C.
and ended up in the army and ended up in Afghanistan. Penny went to college
with a partial scholarship for soccer.
Tom Senior and Gladys adjusted to all of life’s changes
up to then. Most were ups - and the downs were not that down.
Only Gladys or Glad was home when they came to the house
to tell her that Thomas Jr. had been killed in Afghanistan. It was December 23rd,
just two days before Christmas. An I.E.D., an Improvised Explosive Device
killed him and two others in the vehicle - they were in driving - down some dirty dusty
road.
The glad obviously switched to sad. The funeral was a daze - in that same church
where Tom and Gladys were married 27 years earlier.
And then things got worse - much worse….
The Sorrowful Mysteries of the Rosary are 5 and the
Stations of the Cross are 14. Sometimes troubles double and then multiply. Sometimes life can be really tough - really rough. Sometimes
life contains the stuff we don’t want to talk about - or think about - especially
at Christmas time.
And everyone knows Christmas time can very, very merry -
and for some - very, very lonely and sad.
Penny had gotten pregnant - but was on the other side of
the country - and as a single mother struggled - but she was stubborn and trying to make it
on her own - a day at a time.
Her parents invited her back home over and over again -
especially when her brother had been killed.
Penny - like her parents - didn’t take her brother’s
death well - obviously.
Tom and Gladys didn’t know it at the time - but Penny had slipped into heroin
abuse. It started with pain killers after blowing out a second knee. The first
knee went while playing soccer years and years ago. Being a single mother made
things even tougher.
This time Tom - dad - husband - was the one who got the
news that Penny was found dead - from an overdose of heroin. They didn’t see it
coming.
How could she do it? Couldn’t she think, think, about her
baby girl, Judy.
They flew out to where she was living and were able to
start the preliminary paper work to acquire Penny’s little girl and bring her
back home with them. They had a small, small funeral out there - because back
home it would have been too much.
People who had experienced Tom Jr’s death and found it so
difficult - when they heard about Penny’s death - were speechless. Yet close friends
knew that silence, just standing there with either Tom or Gladys helps very
deeply.
Thank God, Tom and Gladys now had a granddaughter, Judy,
to raise.
Thank God, Tom and Gladys were still working - and Gladys
was able to retire - early.
Thank God, Tom and Gladys had a good marriage. They
worked on it.
They held onto each other. They put one foot in front of
the other. They often went out for walks with each other. Now they could take
their granddaughter with them on walks through the neighborhood and to the
local park. They made it through the night
- and then through the days ahead.
In time they loved it when folks in the mall or the
supermarket or outside church or at the park would say, “Wow you have such a
beautiful daughter.”
They would smile and love to say, “Thank you.”
Judy grew more and more beautiful and kept her
grandparents young.
When Judy was in the fifth grade, Tom and Gladys had another surprise.
Judy became “BF” “best friend” with another fifth grader,
Mary, from just up the street.
And these two became best friends for life. In fact, when Judy got married years and
years later, Mary was her maid-of-honor and Judy was her maid- of-honor when
she got married - and Tom proudly walked both of them down the aisle as dad -
when each got married.
What? What
happened? What happened here? Tom going down the aisle as dad for both Judy and
Mary?
Well, as Mary told
me the story years later - here’s what happened.
It too was a very sad story - but it too has a happy
ending.
You never know what’s going on inside that front door of
the other houses on your street.
Mary’s parents were heavy alcoholics and when she would
come down the stairs in the morning to go to school, there would be no
breakfast - and often no parents. Sometimes she would spot them both passed out
on the family room couch.
Mary would get dressed by herself - put on her back pack
with her books and walk up the street
and up the front steps to Judy’s house. The door was always open in the morning
for Mary. Gladys made sure of that.
Then - as Mary told me - with an amazing smile of joy on
her face: “Mrs. Glad would get me breakfast, comb my hair, clean me up, give me
a nice morning kiss on the top of my head - and get me ready for the day.”
Then looking back on all this, Mary told me, that what
Mrs. Glad did for me saved my life. And Mr. Glad did too. My dad disappeared
along the line. He left us. And so Mr. Glad gladly walked me down the aisle
when I got married as well.
She also said the following. It was around Christmas
time. She didn’t know she was giving me my Christmas story. Mary said, “One
door was closed - like the Inn in the Christmas Story - but another door was
open - the house of Mr. and Mrs. Glad - like in the Christmas stable or cave
story. Amen.”
The title of my homily for today, December 22, is, “Magnificent.”
Since we have Mary’s Magnificat as today’s gospel, the word and the
theme of magnificent hit me.
What would it be like to have an ink pad and one of those rubber stamps
with the word, “MAGNIFICENT” on it?
What would it be like to go into Office Depot orStaples and ask to have
such a rubber stamp made up with that word “MAGNIFICENT” on it.
I wonder if the person at the counter would be surprised. They would
have seen and sold standard rubber stamps with words like “FRAGILE,” “SEND,”
“APPROVED,” “REJECTED,” and “FYEO - For Your Eyes Only.”
But the word “MAGNIFICENT,” I don’t know if they would have that.
MARY IN HER
MAGNIFICAT
Mary in her Magnificat stamps as magnificent the goodness of the Lord, the
realization that the Lord spotted her - a lowly servant up there in the tiny
village of Nazareth - that the Almighty has done great things for her, that God
has shown mercy on those who fear him in every generation and on and on and on.
She rubber stamps God’s valuing the poor and God’s frustration with the
rich and powerful who don’t do for the poor and the weak enough.
LOOKING AT OURSELVES
Looking at ourselves, looking at our
neighbors, our parish and our world, what would we stamp as magnificent? Do
this slowly and we might see moments we saw a beautiful sunrise or a forest of
rich red Autumn leaves or the volunteers in the St. Vincent de Paul Society
helping the poor.
We might stamp as a MAGNIFICENT moment seeing
kids coming towards their Christmas presents on Christmas morning.
We might stamp as MAGNIFICENT being at marriages,
baptisms, Thanksgiving dinners with a filled house - and anniversaries.
We might stamp as MAGNIFICENT a kid’s choir
or an adult’s choir singing Christmas carols - or a mighty chorus singing
Handel’s Messiah full blast.
We might stamp as MAGNIFICENT a funeral
that was quiet, simple, sweet for a mom or a dad - or a big funeral like the
one we had for Bernie Bernsten who was always here for this Tuesday morning 8
AM Mass.
I don’t know about stamping a big
chocolate chip cookie in milk as MAGNIFICENT or a juicy pulled pork sandwich at
Adam’s Ribs. I don’t know about a team
winning the National Championship, the World Series or the Super bowl or the
Stanley Cup.
We have the mouth - we have the mind and
the words - the eyes that see - and we could have an imaginary stamp to stamp
anything we see as MAGNIFICENT. So it could be a great play - a great song - a great meal - a great piano recital or
violin solo - or a radical moment with God in prayer.
It could also be in French - MAG NI FIQUE
- spoken with a hand gesture and with a kiss smack of the lips.
CONCLUSION
A test - some homework - a questionnaire:
Looking at our life, imagine yourself stamping
5 top moments from one’s life with the word “MAGNIFICENT” on it - especially
moments that were full of grace - and the Lord was with us.
Looking at our life, with an imaginary
rubber stamp, stamp the word "MAGNIFICENT" on 5 people who have been "MAGNIFICENT" to us and for us.