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							Preparing for Christmas was always an exciting time 
							growing up.
 From hopping into our Chevy Astro van and heading to 
							pick out a tree to hanging the stockings by the 
							front door with care, and with all of the lights and 
							presents and smells of the holy-day season made the 
							house warm and magical.
 
 I know of people who are biting at the bit when the 
							Advent season comes around so they can finally 
							create all those Pintrest projects they’ve been 
							preparing to make. There are houses around town that 
							prepare to welcome the holiday season by 
							straightening and checking the thousands of lights 
							that’ll illuminate their house on the outside.
 
 Y’all get the point. Preparing for Christmas takes 
							on a variety of shapes…
 
 
 Over the last two days the chapel has been preparing 
							for the Christmas season as well. We have hung up 
							the blue paraments and décor in our chapel in 
							preparation for our Blue Christmas/Longest Night 
							worship service.
 
 Most of you know by now what this is. But for those 
							of you who don’t, here is quick synopsis: Blue? Yes, 
							blue as in the blues. As in "I am feeling blue." Not 
							everyone is up and cheery for the Christmas 
							holidays. Dealing with the death of a loved one, 
							facing life after divorce or separation, coping with 
							the loss of a job, living with cancer or some other 
							dis-ease that puts a question mark over the future, 
							and a number of other human situations make parties 
							and joviality painful for many people in our 
							congregations and communities.
 
 This time of year is hard for many. While most 
							families are preparing for wonderful reunions around 
							long dining room tables or catching up with old 
							friends on the beach, some are quietly sinking into 
							sadness as they face some hard realities:
 
 This is the first year they won’t need to prepare a 
							meal because, the children have chosen to visit the 
							in-laws or there's nobody to prepare for.
 
 Some on Christmas Eve instead of reading “Twas the 
							night before Christmas…” will be driving home for 
							the first time since college…
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							Some during the holiday season are preparing 
							responses to that relative who insists their 
							political and ideological perspectives are right and 
							that the reason for the season is NOT about LOVE but 
							instead is about fear, hatred, and building walls or 
							excluding others in the name of the One we are 
							waiting for… 
							Some will wake up on Christmas day for the first 
							time not surrounded by their own walls and own 
							decorations but to the stale smell of processed food 
							and sterilized living facilities… 
							Some will not be alone for the holidays because 
							their family or church or whoever has rejected them 
							because of they no longer choose to live as someone 
							else…
 The holidays can be hard.
 
 Be gentle this holiday season, friends. Those folks 
							you encounter who may not be as jolly as you are and 
							deemed as Scrooges, might be dealing with something 
							that …
 
 So, those of you who are dreading the holidays or 
							think you’re alone in feeling blue, you’re not. Many 
							of us sit with you in this season—whether that is 
							blissful or sorrowful—we sit, we pray, and we love 
							you.
 
 One last note as to why we need a Blue Christmas 
							service. But instead of me using my words, I’ll let 
							an image from the newspaper do the talking:
 
 [Pastor Adam Quine of First Presbyterian Church 
							in Lincoln]
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