The Gift of the Magi for Christmas
Laura DeMaria
O. Henry’s short story, “The Gift of the Magi,” is one of my favorites, any time of year. A few years ago I recorded a version, which I share again here in honor of the Christmas season.
And yes, that is a reminder, that although Christmas was yesterday - December 25 - it actually lasts much longer than that! And, thankfully, we are still in the Christmas season. Let it last as long as God wills! Which will be January 5, if you want to get technical about it. So, I hope your Christmas is off to a joyous start.
Another thing: I look at the visitors to my website. I can see country, and in the case of the US, state, where everyone comes from.
For many years I have had many Nigerian visitors. I attribute this to the abundance of Legion of Mary-related articles from the early years of this blog. The Legion is highly active in Nigeria. I see people searching for information on certain chapters of the handbook, and finding my allocutios. So, first, welcome Nigerian visitors, fellow Legionaries.
And for everyone else: if you have not been following it, Nigeria is in rough shape these days, and especially the Church. The Pillar has been providing excellent analysis about the martyrs and persecution of Christians happening there at the hand of the state. Read it. And, my request this Christmas season: please pray for Nigeria, Nigerians, Christians in Nigeria, and the Church in Nigeria. Chances are pretty good anyway that, as the west loses vocations and Africa abounds in vocations, you will soon, if not already, have yourself a Nigerian priest. That is not the only reason, of course, but if that is helpful to drive the point home: fellow Catholics are in crisis there, who are one or two administrative decisions away from being your own leaders. But the Church there is the Church here, not just because of administrative decisions, but because the Church is one body. Pray for the brave Christian Nigerians facing very real persecution. Pray for the intercession of the baby Jesus and the Holy Family.
And, on this December 26: pray for us, St. Stephen, the very first martyr of the Church! As Bishop Barron wrote in today’s Gospel reflection:
“Indeed, the martyrs have come from all corners of the world, and they have spoken Greek, Latin, French, German, English, Japanese, Polish, and many other languages besides. Friends, this, strangely, is the army that undermines the foundations of the fallen world through the centuries. This is the great fighting force that Jesus has unleashed and continues to unleash.”
Odd to discuss death at Christmas? Well, just wait until this Wednesday and the feast of the Holy Innocents! All the children King Herod put to death at the announement of Christ’s birth.
And that is how it is, isn’t it? Birth and death together, one and the same. Accept the light with the darkness, that is how it must be. God himself was put to death. But, he rose again. That is how it is.
Anyway - sincerely, Merry Christmas! May yours be less weird than perhaps it was the last two years; perhaps there was room for new traditions or a simpler celebration learned during the pandemic. Whatever the case, know I am praying for you, and please pray for me.