In my dream of Christmas Yet to Come, I see a loving mother and I see our children. I see us in a church service together on a Christmas Eve.
I see bright and curious faces experiencing the wonder of something transcendent. I see two parents who love each other and are eager for their children to feel the wonder of something bigger than themselves — to feel the joy and love and connection of Christmas with people who know there is some mysterious power bigger than themselves, something which binds a community of people together through some wisp of spirit inside each heart.
I grew up in churches where the brain was more important than the heart. Nobody would have said it that way, but what mattered was doctrine and rational explanations, not experience or any powerful sense of wonder. We were vaguely disdainful of people who felt too much or expressed too much from the heart.
We quietly extinguished the transcendent from the sacred in most respects — and I believe we lost something important as a result.

Liberal NPR, PBS? Why should tax money pay to influence culture?
Little remains in me of the person I was when I married for lifetime
If you cherish the things you love, never take loved ones for granted
Sharing mundane details of life is underrated joy of loving someone
Movie popcorn overpriced? Sue ’em; spoiled children want their way
Childhood programming makes it hard to believe I’m ‘good enough’
The real crime is how CNN is trying to manipulate what you believe
Opinions without fact or reason leave us believing in nonsense
What do you really want in life? Believe actions, not empty goals