A Christmas Parable
Posted on December 18, 2011 with 3 commentsI found this Christmas Parable in my file. It’s probably been there for years. It’s so worth sharing now…
Once upon a time, there was a man who looked upon Christmas as a lot of humbug.
He wasn’t a Scrooge. He was a very kind and decent person, generous to his family, upright in all his dealings with others.
But he didn’t believe all the stuff about an incarnation which churches proclaim at Christmas, and he was too honest to pretend that he did.
When his wife asked if he would go to church with her and the kids to the midnight Christmas Eve service, he told her, “I’d feel like a hypocrite. I simply can’t understand this claim that God became a man. But I’ll wait up for you.”
Shortly after his family left, snow began to fall. He went to the window and watched the flurries getting heavier and heavier.
“If we must have Christmas,” he reflected, “it’s nice to have a white one.”
He went back to his chair by the fireside and began to read his newspaper.
A few minutes later, he was startled by a thudding sound. It was quickly followed by another, then another. He thought that someone must be throwing snowballs at his living-room window.
When he went to the front door to investigate, he found a flock of birds huddled miserably in the snow. They had been caught in the storm, and in a desperate search for shelter had tried to fly through his window.
“I can’t let these poor creatures lie there and freeze to death,” he thought. “But how can I help them?”
Then he remembered the barn where the children’s pony was stabled. It would provide warm shelter.
He quickly put on his coat and his boots and tramped through the deepening snow to the barn. He opened the doors wide and turned on the light.
But the birds didn’t come in. “Food will bring them in,” he thought. So he hurried back to the house to get bread crumbs which he sprinkled on the snow to make a trail into the barn.
To his dismay, the birds ignored the crumbs and continued to flop around helplessly in the snow.
He tried shooing them into the barn by walking around and waving his arms. They scattered in every direction-except into the warm barn.
“They find me a strange and terrifying creature,” he said to himself, “and I can’t seem to think of any way to let them know they can trust me.”
“If only I could be a bird for a few minutes, perhaps I could lead them to safety.”
Just at that moment, the church bells began to ring.
He stood silently for a while listening to the bells pealing the glad tidings of Christmas. Then he sank to his knees in the snow.
“Now I understand,” he prayed. “Now I see why You had to do it.”