Candles for the Heart

The Christmas and holiday season is now upon us in earnest. Will this season only add to the busyness and swirl of our lives, or will it also provide a time for us to pause and attend to the qualities of our hearts?

Attending to the qualities of the human heart is what Christmas and this holiday season is about for me – or at least that’s what I want it to be about. Long ago I stopped fretting about the literalness of both Santa Claus and the Child of Bethlehem. To me, they are equally mythological in content: the Child of Bethlehem is as little related to the historical reality of Rabbi Yeshua bar-Yusef (Jesus, son of Joseph) as Santa Claus is to St. Nicholas.

Rather, these figures are symbols of the human heart, images filled with the deepest and most tender longings, dreams, and hopes for human life. Santa Claus embodies for children the qualities of warmth, goodness, and generosity; and the Child of Bethlehem embodies for adults the freshness, potentiality, and divinity of new-born life.

Whether or not these symbols are still valued by you or important for you, they may set a tone for the season. They call to us saying, “Take a little time now for your interior side, your imaginative side, your tender side; take some time with your very human heart.”

In our Sunday services, we attend to this season of celebration by lighting candles that both anticipate the coming of Christmas and announce its arrival. On the four Sundays preceding Christmas we light candles representing bedrock qualities of our humanity – faith, hope, love, and joy – and then on Christmas Eve we each light our own candle, symbol of all that is holy in our hearts and lives.

The lighting of these candles in our services is also a reminder and an invitation to us to take the time to light candles in our homes. These candles we light in our homes are for Christmases past, touching memories of joy and sorrow. And they are for Christmases future, speaking of possibility. But, most of all, these candles are for Christmas present, to slow us down so the sound of our own beating human hearts can be heard and honored.

Rev. Bruce Bode