Yule Shoppers Clash
Stories
Lectionary Tales For The Pulpit
Series IV, Cycle A
He shall judge between the nations, and shall arbitrate for many peoples; they shall beat their swords into plowshares, and their spears into pruning hooks; nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war any more. (v. 4)
It was Thanksgiving weekend - the beginning of the official Christmas shopping season. Television networks had started showing the "Peace on earth, good will toward men" movies like It's a Wonderful Life and A Christmas Carol. However, the Saturday newspaper reported on the real events of the Friday following Thanksgiving. The headline read "Yule Shoppers Clash."
The first line of the article read, " 'Keep the Peace' replaced 'Peace on Earth' as the holiday season's official greeting Friday when spirited arguments broke out at two Tulsa stores on perhaps the most--frenzied shopping day of the year."
The Tulsa police had to stop two separate fights - one at a Target and one at a Best Buy. What caused the mini riots? Arguments over a place in line to enter the stores. Shoppers arrived early to claim the place to be one of the first to enter the stores. The stores were offering special promotions to a specific number of first customers. These shoppers were facing assault and battery charges over free Beanie Babies and Hot Wheels.
With a poetic promise of peace from Isaiah, we wonder when it will be realized. During the season in which we find ourselves with a wonderful giving spirit, we still see people picking up swords and spears. One must remember that the Hebrew word for peace is shalom, and it means wholeness or well--being. In Wishful Thinking: A Seeker's ABC, Frederick Buechner defines shalom as "having everything you need to be wholly and happily yourself."
To experience peace as we prepare for the Prince of Peace is to love one another. We have peace when we realize we have love. It is then that we lay down swords and spears and Beanie Babies and Hot Wheels. Isaiah invites us to participate in this peace.
(Details taken from an 11/28/98 story from the Tulsa World.)
It was Thanksgiving weekend - the beginning of the official Christmas shopping season. Television networks had started showing the "Peace on earth, good will toward men" movies like It's a Wonderful Life and A Christmas Carol. However, the Saturday newspaper reported on the real events of the Friday following Thanksgiving. The headline read "Yule Shoppers Clash."
The first line of the article read, " 'Keep the Peace' replaced 'Peace on Earth' as the holiday season's official greeting Friday when spirited arguments broke out at two Tulsa stores on perhaps the most--frenzied shopping day of the year."
The Tulsa police had to stop two separate fights - one at a Target and one at a Best Buy. What caused the mini riots? Arguments over a place in line to enter the stores. Shoppers arrived early to claim the place to be one of the first to enter the stores. The stores were offering special promotions to a specific number of first customers. These shoppers were facing assault and battery charges over free Beanie Babies and Hot Wheels.
With a poetic promise of peace from Isaiah, we wonder when it will be realized. During the season in which we find ourselves with a wonderful giving spirit, we still see people picking up swords and spears. One must remember that the Hebrew word for peace is shalom, and it means wholeness or well--being. In Wishful Thinking: A Seeker's ABC, Frederick Buechner defines shalom as "having everything you need to be wholly and happily yourself."
To experience peace as we prepare for the Prince of Peace is to love one another. We have peace when we realize we have love. It is then that we lay down swords and spears and Beanie Babies and Hot Wheels. Isaiah invites us to participate in this peace.
(Details taken from an 11/28/98 story from the Tulsa World.)

