A dramatic act of universal love

Christmas is about the unique drama of a miraculous birth intended to save all mankind. It does not mark some gentle, festive, reassuring and comfortable everyday event. It involves an occurrence that shook the world and shakes ian on sundayit to this day. This is why I have a special liking for Ted Hughes’s Christmas poem ‘Minstrel’s Song’ which gives some feeling and sense of the tremendous drama, strangeness and searing impact of this birth that re-started history.

 

Minstrel’s Song

I’ve just had an astounding dream as I lay in the straw.

I dreamed a star fell on to the straw beside me

And lay blazing. Then when I looked up

I saw a bull come flying through a sky of fire

And on its shoulders a huge silver woman

Holding the moon. And afterwards there came

A donkey flying through that same burning heaven

And on its shoulders a colossal man

Holding the sun. Suddenly I awoke

And saw a bull and a donkey kneeling in the straw,

And the great moving shadows of a man and a woman –

I say they were a man and a woman but

I dare not say what I think they were. I did not dare to look.

I ran out here into the freezing world

Because I dared not look. Inside that shed.

 

A star is coming this way along the road.

If I were not standing upright, this would be a dream.

A star the shape of a sword of fire, point-downward,

Is floating along the road. And now it rises.

It is shaking fire on to the roofs and the gardens.

And now it rises above the animal shed

Where I slept till the dream woke me. And now

The star is standing over the animal shed.

 

Above all, at the beginning and in the end, Christmas is about love. We are to believe, and it is no bad belief to have, that it is God’s infinite love for mankind which caused Christ’s coming. An overwhelming gift of love came upon mankind and still and forever gives us hope that evil will be withstood. Through the centuries Christmas has come to stand for many things beyond its original meaning – not least, in recent times, a wonderful opportunity to make money. But still Christmas has never lost what is at its heart – God’s gift of love and mankind’s reciprocal love for Christ and his mother. At Christmas all gifts should be gifts renewing love.

It is why I read the great love poems at Christmas time especially – the poems of love of God and the poems also in which love is shown in this world in never-ending images of passion and loyalty and beauty. Every year there are some different poems to add from the year’s harvest but always one is there which I do not forget as the years go by and end and begin again. It is George Mackay Brown’s marvellous song translated from an old troubadour’s sheet:

 

Song: Rogenvald to Ermengarde

The winds embrace you, my lover

And the quiet stars bless,

Noons touch you with ardour

And dawns with tenderness.

 

All these are my brothers,

They abide: I fare on.

I shall not see your like again

Beneath the enduring sun.

 

O mould with me a timeless love:

That we, the time-accursed,

May mock the sad and fleeting hours

And bid death do his worst.

 

                                But the hours embrace you, my lover

                                And the grave seasons bless,

                                The years touch you with wisdom

                                And death with gentleness.

 

Bless this great land of ours. Bless its people. Bless the children especially. Bless their future.