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The Hopes and Fears

by Philip Yancey

| 44 Comments

I’ve always had mixed feelings about Christmas. As I sifted through memories of the season while writing my memoir, Where the Light Fell, I better understood why.

Philip wears rabbit earsIn my elementary school, Christmas called for a major event in the auditorium, complete with a concert by the school band and chorus. For some reason I volunteered to represent the first grade by singing a solo, rather than playing “Song of the Volga Boatmen” on the piano. I chose “O Little Town of Bethlehem,” and my mother wrote out the words on a card in case I forgot them. Foolishly, I also signed up for the role of Peter Cottontail in our class skit.

My mother fashioned a fine set of rabbit ears around coat hanger frames, fixed them on my head, and pinned a fluffy cotton tail to the seat of my pants. I had the good sense to remove the rabbit ears before attempting my solo, but overlooked my cotton tail. The upper classes laughed out loud as I walked to the microphone, which rattled me so much that I forgot the words to the Christmas carol. I was too ashamed to look at my notes, because then everyone would know I had forgotten them, so I hummed an entire verse, trying to make my mistake seem intentional. No one was fooled. My first public performance—and last solo—was a lesson in humility.

Flash forward seven years. Like most siblings, my older brother, Marshall, and I had an uneasy alliance. We argued, we competed, we sometimes snitched on each other. At Christmas we would agree in advance how much to spend on our gifts to one another, often buying exactly the same present just to make sure. Mother would beam as we each opened, say, a fold-out box of Life Saver candies, with both of us feigning surprise that we had thought of the same gift. This particular Christmas we had agreed to give each other a transistor radio, and Marshall double-crossed me: I gave him a radio while in return I got a cheap rubber baseball.

We stopped exchanging Christmas gifts after that year.

Marshall Yancey Sr.

My real ambivalence about Christmas, however, traces back to an event I have no memory of. My memoir begins with a defining event in my life that occurred on December 15, a month after my first birthday. My father, just 23 years old, died of polio, guaranteeing our little family of three a life of hardship and poverty. My maternal grandparents drove from Philadelphia to Atlanta for his funeral, held a few days after his death. They insisted on taking all three of us north for a few weeks’ respite to give my mother time to grieve and contemplate her future.

Before we departed for Philadelphia, the Yancey grandparents hosted the out-of-town guests for an early Christmas dinner. The Yanceys had a pile of wrapped presents waiting under the tree, and long-faced adults, still dressed in their funeral clothes, sat around watching two young boys tear open packages and play with their new toys.

Christmas might have been my favorite holiday—except for the dark cloud that settled on Mother every December, the month my father died. She valiantly went through the motions of decorating a live tree and stringing up lights, but her heart never seemed in it. She would occasionally burst into tears for no apparent reason, and Marshall and I walked on eggshells.

Even as an adult, I find it hard to enter into the Christmas spirit. Do I really need the presents that family and friends kindly send my way, some of which will be stored on a closet shelf? The glittery paper, the sealed plastic that cuts my hand, the cardboard boxes from Amazon—they end up in overflowing garbage and recycling containers. And is it appropriate to burn yet more fossil fuels in order to illuminate Christmas, especially in the midst of a pandemic that has killed five million people worldwide? My brother spent last Christmas in an overcrowded COVID ward; how many will share that fate this year?

I feel like the curmudgeonly Ebenezer Scrooge from Dickens’s A Christmas Carol. Then I remember the scene of Bob Cratchit’s family scrimping to splurge on a Christmas dinner of goose, potatoes, and pudding. Tiny Tim, the crippled son of Scrooge’s underpaid clerk, offers a heartfelt blessing, “God bless us, every one!” Without help, Tim will likely die for want of treatment the family cannot afford, the Ghost of Christmas Present informs Scrooge. The vision of that deprived yet happy family pricks the conscience of the miserly Scrooge.

In his book of sermons titled The Magnificent Defeat, Frederick Buehner mentions two qualities of childlikeness. First, children have no fixed preconceptions of reality. If someone tells them that the mossy patch under the lilac bush is a magic place, or that opening a certain wardrobe will lead to Narnia, they’ll surely test the theory. Second, children know how to receive a gift, without worrying about whether they deserve it or if it indebts them to the giver. They simply receive it, joyfully tearing into the wrapping paper despite the solemn faces around them.

Somehow, even amid the secularized trappings that drown out the truth of Christmas, we have not lost a sense of celebration. On a dark night in Palestine, the sky itself burst into song and shepherds ran to locate its origin. Before long, astrologers would endure a camel journey from Persia in order to present gifts fit for a king—only to find a baby. That celebration, too, took place against a background of tragedy that left mothers crying for their slaughtered infants and Jesus’ family fleeing as refugees.

Some three decades later, a woman poured very expensive perfume on Jesus’ head (Matthew 26). A “waste” declared Judas—the disciples’ Scrooge—for she could have sold it and given proceeds to the poor. In what has become one of the most misinterpreted passages in the Bible, Jesus responded, “Why are you bothering this woman? She has done a beautiful thing to me. The poor you will always have with you, but you will not always have me. When she poured this perfume on my body, she did it to prepare me for burial.”

No one could accuse Jesus of insensitivity to the poor and marginalized. He spent his life among them, and this very event took place in the home of a social outcast, Simon the leper. Yet Jesus acknowledged that when something extraordinary graces our benighted planet, it calls for celebration.

Hopes of a childMaybe I had it right as a thirteen-month old, grinning with delight while the adults around me grimaced in grief. “Truly I tell you, unless you change and become like little children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven,” said Jesus. He knew better than anyone that his brief sojourn would not solve the injustice, sickness, poverty, and violence of planet earth. It did, however, ignite a flame of hope that has never gone out. For those who believe, his birth, death, and resurrection are darkly glowing signs of what God plans for the entire cosmos.

I wonder what the shepherds and wise men thought when they found the object of their search. In the words that slipped my mind during my first-grade solo, “The hopes and fears of all the years are met in thee tonight.” Really? Could this baby born to Jewish peasants possibly bear that burden?

It takes childlike faith to believe in a reality beyond the grim one we know so well, and to keep celebrating regardless. Sometimes a child’s eye sees best.

 

 

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Discussion

  1. Carol Benson Avatar
    Carol Benson

    Thank you for the reminder that Jesus invites us to celebrate all that is good in our world! I hope you and Janet are having a joyous Christmas as I write this. As I read ‘Where the Light Fell”, often with tears, I was struck by the fact that you have kept any smidge of self-pity, sadness, or moroseness out of your other books and articles. The one we read daily and yearly is “Grace Notes” and wish that someday you would enlarge upon some of the amazing stories in that book. We celebrate you for sharing so many experiences and insights from your God-directed life!

  2. Erik Longenecker Avatar
    Erik Longenecker

    Many thoughts flood my mind and heart as I read your post, Philip.

    From someone who has spent Christmas Eve and now Christmas morning awaiting his darling wife, who is also carrying our first child, to return from the hospital as a nurse serving in the COVID pandemic, I hear both your frustration and hopeful sense of a child we all are celebrating enters into this world of brokenness to redeem and restore it. It is both an everlasting promise that takes more than a lifetime to process, yet it is a journey worth taking going forward.

    As an aside, I have been reading all of your books as I started with What’s So Amazing About Grace?. I am also in a reading group as you mentioned in your book Vanishing Grace. This book group I lead is a collection of men from our church, young and old, daring to share our struggles as we follow Jesus with more and more of our lives. We prayerfully select books that can help us grow closer in our walk with Christ, and we’ve used your books throughout the last few years. From The Jesus I Never Knew to even reading this morning Disappoint with God, I have found great comfort in your reflections and thoughtful knockings from the heart.

    But more to the point, I wanted to let you know how entirely blessed this experience in your books have been providing me. Losing my father at the age of four, quite like the way you described your father’s passing at the end of Disappoint with God, it helps me visually see the Heavenly Father with greater clarity. My father wrote me a small poem, from a collection of three poems, that I have used as a testimony to the love he had for me while he was alive. His final line on the very bottom of his longest poem he wrote me read, “Please son, let your mother teach you about Jesus-…” This is a capitalizing moment for me to live freely in the Heavenly Father’s love and to share it whimsically to others who are thirsty for a love that quenches all.

    We live in a broken world, yet at the same time, this gives me an even stronger hope to hold onto knowing that this isn’t the end. The end has divine victory over death, over every sin, over everything we could ever wrestle with in this fallen state. The Jesus we follow teaches us to live in this mess, help bring justice, love, hope, and mercy to the world as a kingdom ‘foretaste’ giving a glimpse of the beauty that awaits all of us who are ‘in Christ’.

    I say all of this to say thank you, because the books you have taken the space and effort to write have changed my life – for the greater. I know it’s through the Holy Spirit working in and through you, and it’s from the countless hours and connections you have embedded within your heart that have beautifully spilled over into countless millions. Would love to hear from you – but no expectation at all! Simply humbled to have a chance to hopefully ‘hit your ears’ with these words!

    Merriest of Christmases to you, sir!

    In Christ, always,
    Erik Longenecker

  3. Greg Denholm Avatar
    Greg Denholm

    Philip, I’ve been reading your books again and again for decades, and have been formed by them in what I consider to be some important ways. More recently, I’ve devoured your long-awaited memoir – twice in quick succession. A principle that comes through strongly for me in both is the intrinsic connection between grace received and grace given. Those who receive the grace that they so desperately need are much more likely to be able (and willing) to find it for others who are in similar need. Conversely, those who refuse to receive grace have no reserves of grace within themselves upon which to draw when encountering grace-parched neighbors and enemies. Your mother and brother seem to be examples of the latter, while you ultimately became an example of the former.

  4. Berwyn Avatar
    Berwyn

    Philip, I love your books and return to them often for their vivid depictions of grace, especially in the context of suffering. And now, I’m grateful for your memoir, Where the Light Fell, illuminating and inspiring, but also, of course, heartbreaking. Your insights are hard-won. I hope and pray there will be a sequel — or at least an addendum — to the stories of your mother and brother.

  5. Stephanie Avatar

    Thank you Philip.
    This touched me ❤️

    Stephanie,
    Nigeria

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44 thoughts on “The Hopes and Fears”

  1. Thank you for the reminder that Jesus invites us to celebrate all that is good in our world! I hope you and Janet are having a joyous Christmas as I write this. As I read ‘Where the Light Fell”, often with tears, I was struck by the fact that you have kept any smidge of self-pity, sadness, or moroseness out of your other books and articles. The one we read daily and yearly is “Grace Notes” and wish that someday you would enlarge upon some of the amazing stories in that book. We celebrate you for sharing so many experiences and insights from your God-directed life!

    Reply
  2. Many thoughts flood my mind and heart as I read your post, Philip.

    From someone who has spent Christmas Eve and now Christmas morning awaiting his darling wife, who is also carrying our first child, to return from the hospital as a nurse serving in the COVID pandemic, I hear both your frustration and hopeful sense of a child we all are celebrating enters into this world of brokenness to redeem and restore it. It is both an everlasting promise that takes more than a lifetime to process, yet it is a journey worth taking going forward.

    As an aside, I have been reading all of your books as I started with What’s So Amazing About Grace?. I am also in a reading group as you mentioned in your book Vanishing Grace. This book group I lead is a collection of men from our church, young and old, daring to share our struggles as we follow Jesus with more and more of our lives. We prayerfully select books that can help us grow closer in our walk with Christ, and we’ve used your books throughout the last few years. From The Jesus I Never Knew to even reading this morning Disappoint with God, I have found great comfort in your reflections and thoughtful knockings from the heart.

    But more to the point, I wanted to let you know how entirely blessed this experience in your books have been providing me. Losing my father at the age of four, quite like the way you described your father’s passing at the end of Disappoint with God, it helps me visually see the Heavenly Father with greater clarity. My father wrote me a small poem, from a collection of three poems, that I have used as a testimony to the love he had for me while he was alive. His final line on the very bottom of his longest poem he wrote me read, “Please son, let your mother teach you about Jesus-…” This is a capitalizing moment for me to live freely in the Heavenly Father’s love and to share it whimsically to others who are thirsty for a love that quenches all.

    We live in a broken world, yet at the same time, this gives me an even stronger hope to hold onto knowing that this isn’t the end. The end has divine victory over death, over every sin, over everything we could ever wrestle with in this fallen state. The Jesus we follow teaches us to live in this mess, help bring justice, love, hope, and mercy to the world as a kingdom ‘foretaste’ giving a glimpse of the beauty that awaits all of us who are ‘in Christ’.

    I say all of this to say thank you, because the books you have taken the space and effort to write have changed my life – for the greater. I know it’s through the Holy Spirit working in and through you, and it’s from the countless hours and connections you have embedded within your heart that have beautifully spilled over into countless millions. Would love to hear from you – but no expectation at all! Simply humbled to have a chance to hopefully ‘hit your ears’ with these words!

    Merriest of Christmases to you, sir!

    In Christ, always,
    Erik Longenecker

    Reply
  3. Philip, I’ve been reading your books again and again for decades, and have been formed by them in what I consider to be some important ways. More recently, I’ve devoured your long-awaited memoir – twice in quick succession. A principle that comes through strongly for me in both is the intrinsic connection between grace received and grace given. Those who receive the grace that they so desperately need are much more likely to be able (and willing) to find it for others who are in similar need. Conversely, those who refuse to receive grace have no reserves of grace within themselves upon which to draw when encountering grace-parched neighbors and enemies. Your mother and brother seem to be examples of the latter, while you ultimately became an example of the former.

    Reply
  4. Philip, I love your books and return to them often for their vivid depictions of grace, especially in the context of suffering. And now, I’m grateful for your memoir, Where the Light Fell, illuminating and inspiring, but also, of course, heartbreaking. Your insights are hard-won. I hope and pray there will be a sequel — or at least an addendum — to the stories of your mother and brother.

    Reply

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