If you ask a thousand people you will get a varied response about what Christmas means. Most of them will miss the most basic truth. The life of Jesus Christ was about sacrifice. Being born for the purpose of dying. Not dying to get away, not to end pain, for other people who would lie, kill and steal in the name of that sacrifice. A god became flesh to die for people who would spit on his image, place him in a jar of urine. This is what he was born for. And so I wonder if I ever have given anything to my fellow man.
In the non-biblical sense, I know others that have given of themselves. My grandfather, a marine corp drill instructor, served in the late 1940's and ran cargo planes to Japan. My brother's best friend joined the Corp and never left it. My best friend joined the Navy and tracked the sounds made by waves slapping against the sides of abandoned rubber ducks. (Sorry, Jones, I can't compliment you.) My fiancee's mother met her husband in the Air Force working inside of mountains so that they could withstand nuclear blasts and the occasional Shwarzenegger film. Jay Dudley lost his brother to the service.
I've never served. When I was in high school I wanted to go to the Air Force Academy, but I was too lazy to try for a sponsorship. I've had opportunities since then, and I've never jumped to do them. I saw a poem lately about the Arlington cemetery and I was struck by the line:
Have I held the line? No. And I have not given myself to a cause. Christopher Jones never stepped foot on a boat, and he faced death every time he went up in a plane. Cecil Girard never had to fight in World War II but he knew any time he flew he could die and any man he trained would face the same fate. Jean-Paul Courville has faced bullets and bombs. Jay's brother died in service. I face a pen and ink as my enemy. I'm too old to give what they have.
At this time of year I try to remember how much those who serve have given us. It's part of what God gave us. A child who would die for our sins, give us the chance to be reborn. A kid who died in a training accident. A man who risked every day to be the best marine. A tracker who hunted threats to our coasts. A father who raised a wonderful mother and trained men of honor.
If I believe in a thing, how can I be quiet when the only cost I face is words, not death? I thank each man and woman for their service and even if they weren't thinking of the sacrifice, the essential fact that they made it. I am humbled by them and hope that any part of my life or my actions might make them proud of what they have done.