No other Christmas song brings on bittersweet nostalgia
and longing like “I’ll Be Home for Christmas.”
It is often sung as a romantic ballad; but in my opinion only Josh Groban's recording has captured the reality of the 1943 song, as written from the
perspective of a soldier serving overseas during World War II.
My Pandora station can’t decide whether to thumbs up or
thumbs down this song. It feels like
pure Christmas but, depending on my mood, it can pull me down to the
depths. And I realized, listening to it
today, how very many groups of people it affects in so many different
ways. Listen and consider…
- The small children who think it’s a nice-enough
song but don’t quite understand why it seems to make everyone so sad.
-
The high school student who is just happy to be
among family and friends and thinks the song is a fine song.
-
The college student or young person away from
home for the first time and either eagerly waiting for that flight home or
yearning to be there. They will find on
arriving the beginning of that phenomenon that will follow them for the rest of
their lives, especially if they are believers.
Everything may be exactly the same, but the feeling is not what they are
anticipating. It feels somehow homey and
alien all at the same time. They will
realize that “home” is something they can no longer grasp.
-
The young parents who listen with a strange
mixture of contentment that, at last he’s singing about my own home; longing
for a parent they cannot be with; or guilt for not making the trek to be there.
-
The middle-aged parents with kids who are older
and parents who come to their home instead.
This is the best one and you parents who are at this stage, relax and
enjoy! These are the good old days and
things do not have to be perfect.
- The empty nest parents whose kids are experiencing that strange feeling upon coming home that things are not as they remembered. The parents who, for the first time, cannot for one reason or another be with their children. (This group should probably just avoid the song altogether.)
- Those members of our armed forces serving who cannot be with their families. For them, the longing is very real.
-
Those who are 66. I can speak concerning this group. Because we can begin to imagine being at the
throne of King Jesus on His birthday.
Suddenly all the other groups and concerns fade into the background and
we begin to grasp perspective.
- Those who have lost loved ones who are believers during the past year. May I encourage you with how God blessed me the Christmas after I lost my mom in October? Instead of my “wishing her back here” with me, He encouraged me to picture her there. I realized that she would be there in time for rehearsals for the Messiah. Then it dawned on me that Handel might be directing it and that King Jesus Himself might be in the congregation!
2 Corinthians 5:5-8
Now it is God who has made us for this very purpose and has given us the Spirit as a deposit, guaranteeing what is to come. Therefore we are always confident and know that as long as we are at home in the body we are away from the Lord. We live by faith, not by sight. We are confident, I say, and would prefer to be away from the body and at home with the Lord.
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