
Here are a few of the columns that I’ve published during previous Christmas seasons. Maybe you’ll find something of value in one of them:
“Christmas after the Protestant Reformation” (22 December 2017, with William J. Hamblin)
“Christmas and Christ’s ‘mortal tabernacle'” (21 December 2017)
“For first time in nearly 40 years, Hanukkah and Christmas Eve are on the same day” (23 December 2016)
“Christmas and the ultimate restoration of all things” (22 December 2016)
“The Book of Mormon at Christmas” (16 December 2016)
“Jesus the shepherd, and the shepherds” (10 December 2016, with William J. Hamblin)
“We needed Christ to become one of us” (24 December 2015)
“The Nativity according to Luke” (11 December 2015, with William J. Hamblin)
“He was the son of God, and ‘one of us'” (25 December 2014)
“A modern witness to the baby born in Bethlehem” (18 December 2014)
“Who were the ‘wise men’?” (13 December 2014, with William J. Hamblin))
“Looking again at one of the greatest of all stories” (19 December 2013)
“Charles Dickens and the invention of Christmas” (15 December 2013, with William J. Hamblin)
“‘Pleased as man with men to dwell'” (5 December 2013)
“The Savior can change dark to light” (20 December 2012)
“Advent refers to Christ’s 2nd Coming” (15 December 2012, with William J. Hamblin)
“Pure love led Christ to descend the courts of glory” (22 December 2011)
“Temple attendance is a Christlike gift” (8 December 2011)
“Christmas in the Holy Land — somber, yet triumphant” (16 December 2010)
“Christmas celebrates part of divine plan” (9 December 2010)

Much as I appreciate its implicit message, I’m not counting “Christmas Eve Can Kill You” as today’s selection of Christmas music. For that, instead, I’ve turned to “Away in a Manger,” to which I invite you to append my 5 December 2013 column, “‘Pleased as man with men to dwell,'” as a commentary.

Last night, on the eve of Christmas Eve, we enjoyed one of our seasonal traditions, courtesy of my beloved Switzerland: We had a dinner of cheese fondue. And then, with a third-generation unit, we watched A Christmas Story — which doesn’t represent any particular holiday tradition for us, but which is really funny. (Probably more so for adults, to be honest, than for really young children — to whom Ralphie’s thinking and actions may well seem entirely reasonable.)
In company with a third-generation unit and a direct descendant, we also visited one of the Giving Machines in Orem’s University Mall. I won’t share with you what we did there except to say that, yes, we did indeed (and to my very great satisfaction) purchase a goat.
I wish all of you a very Merry Christmas!













