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Destiny DeJa Vu DNO's blog: "dragoness"

created on 11/09/2007  |  http://fubar.com/dragoness/b152233

When I asked our newlywed Sunday School class to share a favorite
Christmas story, Carrie Fuller said, "Our family has one we call
the 'brown bag Christmas.'" When she finished, I had to hear
more. Two days later, I called a member of her family for more details.

It was the early 1930s during the Dust Bowl days of Kansas, in the
heart of the Depression. The Canaday family---Mom, Dad, 7
children---were having a tough time existing, so there would be no
luxuries at Christmas that year. Mom told the children to go
outside and find a Christmas tree and decorate it. After a lengthy
search, they returned with a dead branch, the only thing they had
been able to find. They stood it up in a bucket of sand and
decorated it with pieces of paper tied with string. Little Judy,
almost four, did not know how a Christmas tree was supposed to
look, but somehow she knew it was not like that!

As Christmas approached, the Canaday children, like children
everywhere, pestered Mom and Dad about what presents they might
get under their "tree." Dad pointed out that the pantry was
bare, that they did not have enough to live on, and there
certainly would be no money for gifts. But Mom was a woman of
faith and told her children, "Say your prayers. Ask God to send
us what He wants us to have." Dad said, "Now, Mother, don't be
getting the children's hopes up. You're just setting them up for
a disappointment." Mom said, "Pray, children. Tell Jesus."  And pray they
did.

On Christmas Eve, the children watched out the window for
visitors, but no one came. "Blow out the lamp and go to bed",
Dad said. "Nobody is going to come. No one even knows we're out here."

The children turned out the lamp and got in bed, but they were
too excited to sleep. Was this not Christmas? Had they not asked
God to send them the presents He wanted them to have? Did Mom
not say God answers prayer?

Late that night, when one of the children spotted headlights
coming down the dirt road, everyone jumped out of bed and ran to
the window. The commotion woke up Mom and Dad. "Don't get
excited, children," Dad said. "They're probably not coming here.
It's just someone who got lost." The children kept hoping and
the car kept coming. Then, Dad lit a lamp. They all wanted to
rush to the door at the same time, but Mr. Canaday said, "Stay
back. I'll go." Someone got out of the car and called, "I was
wondering if someone here can help me unload these bags." The
children dashed out the door to lend a hand. Mom said to her
youngest, "Stay here, Judy, and help Mom open the bags and put up the gifts."

A deacon from the church in town had gone to bed that Christmas
Eve
, and lay there tossing and turning, unable to get the
Canaday family off his mind. Later, he said, "I didn't know what
kind of shape you folks were in, but I knew you had all those
kids." He had gotten up and dressed and went around town,
rousing people from their sleep to ask for a contribution for
the Canaday family. He filled his car with bags of groceries,
canned goods, toys, and clothing. Little Judy got a rag doll
which remained her favorite for years.

With so much food, Dad wanted to have a Christmas feast, to
spread it all out and eat as they had never eaten before. Mom,
ever the caretaker, said, "No, we need to make this last." And it did
last, for weeks.

The next Sunday, Mrs. Canaday stood in church and told what the
members---and one deacon in particular---had done for her
family. There was not a dry eye in the house.

Years later, the oldest sister Eva wrote up this story about her
family for a school project. Eva said, "We were so thrilled by
all the wonderful things in the bags, for a while ;we lost sight
of the most special gift. The best gift that Christmas was not in
brown bags at all.

It was Mom's faith, as she taught her children to bring their
needs to Jesus and trust Him to meet them. And a Dad's love that
wanted only to protect his children from hurt and disappointment."

When Carrie finished telling her story, she added, "Little Judy
is my wonderful grandmother." Today, Judy Canaday Dryden lives
in Sanger, Texas. As she relived this event from seventy years
ago over the phone, one could hear the tear in her voice and
feel her pride in being the recipient of such a precious
heritage from her mother and father.

At Christmas, we celebrate praying mothers and caring fathers
and believing children. We give thanks for sensitive deacons and
generous friends and sleepless nights. And we praise God for the
hard times that teach unforgettable lessons, stories of
faithfulness that get told and retold through the years
inspiring each new generation to place their faith in a loving Savior.

God's Blessings to You and Yours!

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