Angels
Unaware
“The
sky has a special power to turn our minds in a certain direction, and there we
find angels.”
Thomas
Moore (The Soul of Christmas, p. 84; Franciscan Media, 2016)
Angels,
Thomas Moore says, live in another world, “not another planet, but another
order altogether.” He reports that Thomas Aquinas, in medieval times,
referred to them as “separate beings.” And on this night, just outside
Bethlehem, one of them showed up in a meadow where sheep were grazing, and
shepherds were gathered around a fire watching over them. The angel was
enormous, and glowing and the shepherds fell on their faces in fear. But this
angel had good news of a birth that happened nearby—a baby had been born to a poor
couple, Mary and Joseph. This child would grow up to be their savior, their Messiah,
and they must go at once and see him. Suddenly, there were many angels singing
around them, praising God and blessing them and everyone on earth with good
will and peace.
Have
you ever lain in the grass on a moonless night and watched the stars begin to
twinkle? As the sky darkens and your eyes adjust, you see more and more stars.
Stars heaped upon stars, depths of stars and holding them all together, the white
whisp of the Milky Way. It’s a sight like none other. One that makes you think
lofty, deep, and magical thoughts. One that reminds you how small you are in
the great scheme of things. Questions come into your mind that are vast in
their expanse and as deep as the stars above you. Cosmic questions, of life and
death, of other worlds and other possibilities. You know that angels could, and
probably do reside in such beauty. In fact, you wouldn’t be surprised to see
one.
There
are also angels here on earth, but they look much like us. They come out of
nowhere to be a savior to one person or to many. I love to tell the story of the
man who pulled my car out of a ditch—with his bare hands. He didn’t glow; he had
no wings nor heavenly robe. In fact, he wore overalls and a big beard, and
weighed well over two hundred pounds. He simply lifted the front of my car, and
told me to back up slowly, which I did. His message to me was not momentous,
but I still remember it fifty years later. He said, “Mam, it don’t never pay
to get in a hurry.” He was right, if not eloquent. I never saw this man
again, nor did I think to ask his name. He came, he saved—mission accomplished.
The only
book I can remember my mother reading to me and Jerrie, was Angel Unaware by
Dale Evans Rogers. It was a story about her baby girl who was born with an
affliction and died very young. She wrote about the gifts this little girl
brought to Dale and Roy in her short life. Mother read this book to us on the
occasion of Missy’s birth, and subsequent cerebral hemorrhage. She wanted us to
know that Missy would not be like us—she would be a “separate being,” but even
so, she would be one of us. For Mother, Missy was always an angel unaware.
It’s Christmas
Eve. If you don’t believe in angels, I’m sorry. I’ll keep on believing in them
and the blessing they bring for no good reason. They’re just there when you
need them to save you. Jesus was like that. He came, he saved, and he returned
to the stars, mission accomplished. And for that gift, I am grateful. Happy Christmas to each of you.
In
the Spirit,
Jane
2 comments:
I need to check that book out!
Yes, it's beautiful.
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