The Christmas Wish

It was Christmas Eve and the lord looked down from above at all His children. 
It had been nearly two thousand years since the birth of His son and turning to 
His youngest angel the Lord said: "Go down to the earth and bring back to me 
the one thing that best represents everything good that has been done in the 
name of this day." The angel bowed to the Lord and spreading his wings, 
descended from heaven to the world of man, all the while contemplating his 
mission. So much had been done in the name of honoring the birth of the Christ 
Child. For this day, wars had temporarily ceased, cathedrals had been built and 
great novels had been written. With so little time, what could he possibly find 
to represent all this?

As he soared above the earth, he suddenly heard the sound of church bells below.

Their tone was so beautiful that it reminded him of the voice of God. Looking 
down, he saw a small church whose bells were ringing out the carol, Silent 
Night. As the final note died away, it was replaced by one lone voice singing 
inside the church.

It was shortly joined by a second voice that embraced the first in perfect 
harmony, and then another until a choir of voices rose through the night. 
Enchanted by the magic of what he was hearing, the angel found himself 
listening until the song was finished. As he resumed his flight through the 
night, he was delighted to hear these sounds everywhere, from the largest 
cities to the smallest villages. He heard melodies from massive orchestras and 
in the voices of single soldiers alone at their post.

And any place where he heard these songs, he found hope in the hearts of men.

Grasping a song out of the air, he held it in his hand, angels are able to do 
this, and thought that maybe, these songs could be the one thing that best 
represented Christmas. They seemed to give voice to man's greatest joys as well 
as hope to those deepest in despair. But, though at first glance it appeared to 
be the answer he sought, his heart told him that this music alone was not 
enough. There had to be something more. So, he continued his flight through the 
night until he suddenly felt the touch of a father's prayer on its way to 
heaven. Once again looking downward, he saw a man who was praying for his child 
whom he had not heard from in a long time and who would not be home that 
Christmas. Seizing upon the prayer, the angel followed it until it reached the 
lost child.

She was standing on a corner, in a quiet snowfall, looking very small in a very 
large city. Across from her was an old city bar, the kind that only the lost 
seemed to know how to find. The patrons of this establishment rarely looked up 
from their drinks and so seemed not to notice the young woman. Now, the 
bartender in this bar had been working in there longer than anyone could 
remember. He believed in nothing except his bar and his cash register. He had 
never married, never took a vacation and as matter of fact, had never been seen 
out from behind his counter by most of his patrons.

He was there when they arrived and he was still there when they left. He gave 
no credit and for seventy-five cents, served shots of un-watered whiskey to 
people who used their drinks like a moat around their lives. For them, he 
provided a safe, unchanging world.

Suddenly, the door opened wide and into this world walked a small child. The 
bartender could not remember the last time that a child had been in this place, 
but before he could ask the child what he was doing there, the child asked him 
if he knew that there was a girl outside their door who could not get home. 
Glancing out the window, he saw the girl standing across the street. Turning 
back to the child, the bartender asked him how he knew this. The child replied 
"That on this night of all nights, if one could be home, they'd be already 
there."

The bartender looked back toward the young woman as he reflected on what the 
child had said. After several seconds of thought, he slowly went over to the 
cash register and removing most of the money, came out from behind the bar and 
followed the child across the street. Everyone in the bar watched as he spoke 
with the girl. After a few moments, he called over a cab, put the girl inside 
and told the driver: "J.F.K. 

Airport." As the cab pulled away, he looked around for the child, but the child 
was

gone. And what was stranger still, even though his own tracks leading from the 
bar

were still clearly marked in the snow, the child's were nowhere to be found. 
Returning

back inside, he asked if anyone had seen where the child had gone, but like 
himself,

no one had, for they also had been watching the departing cab. And then, some 
would

later say that the most miraculous thing of all happened, when for the rest of 
the

night, no one paid for a drink.

Later that night, the angel returned back to heaven and placed in the Lord's 
hand

the wish of a soul for the happiness of another. And as the heavenly host looked

on, the Lord smiled.

-- 
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