Showing posts with label Christmas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christmas. Show all posts

Friday, December 18, 2020

Away in a Manger

 

or, How I worked my way up from junior shepherd to senior Wise Man, one Christmas at a time.


Living Nativity Scene, Centenary Methodist Church, New Bern, N.C., 24 Dec 2001. Sun-Journal photograph.

by John B. Green III

As a small child, I was fascinated by the Nativity Scene that my father brought down from the attic each year along with the rest of the Christmas decorations. It was the same one that he had enjoyed as a child. There was the stable with its dried moss roof and the manger filled with straw. There were sections of fence which surrounded the stable. And there were figurines of all the Bible characters - Mary and Joseph and the baby Jesus, angels, shepherds, and the Three Wise Men. When arranged beneath the Christmas tree and lit from above,  it seemed to my small self to be magical. I would stare at it for hours and if I squinted my eyes I could almost imagine the figures coming to life.


Nativity Scene, maker unknown, c. 1930

Imagine my amazement, when I had grown a little older, to be taken to see the Nativity Scene that stretched across the lawn of Centenary Methodist Church - my church - and which included real people and real animals!  My astonishment was complete when my father revealed that he would, on occasion, struggle into costume and play a shepherd or Wise Man or Joseph himself in the very Nativity Scene arrayed before me.  From then on we always went  to see the Nativity Scene on Christmas Eve.  My mother and I would stand on the courthouse steps across the street trying to detect my father among the shepherds or Wise Men.  There they stood, perfectly still, as Christmas carols filled the frosty air.


Nativity Scene, Centenary Methodist Church, c.1990.

The Living Nativity Scene, as it was called, had first been performed for the community in 1954, two years before I was born.  By the time I was old enough to participate, the performance had become a well-oiled effort.  The hour-long display would be on view for three nights, usually between the hours of seven and eight, with the final performance on Christmas Eve.  Each hour consisted of three twenty-minute shifts of actors. The goal - and the magic - of the performance was to accomplish the shift changes of twelve actors each in such a way that a casual observer might not notice that a change had taken place.  The first shift was easy enough.  The actors had already moved into place and assumed their poses before the lights were turned on.  The arrival of the second and third shift actors was more complicated.  Moving at an even pace, two actors at a time would move into position behind the actors they were to replace.  A brief sideways movement and hand-off of any prop and the exchange was complete.  The third shift would stay in place until the lights went out at 8 o'clock and then silently file off.   The wild cards in this silent tableau were always the live animals who occasionally got skittish and the spectators who occasionally got rambunctious.  A farmer for the one and a policeman for the other were always able to calm things down.


I began participating in this spectacle when I was about ten or 12 years old. My first role was that of junior shepherd.  The shepherds stood off to one side in front of a small wood fire and with one or two live sheep staked out to graze beyond us. My job was to keep the fire going with wood stashed under the low bench I sat on. After a few years of playing one or another of the three shepherds, I graduated to Wise Man. It was during this time that I was joined by my younger brother Bill, and together with our father, we started a family tradition of the three of us serving one shift each Christmas as the Three Wise Men. I enjoyed these years not only because I was with my father and brother, but because standing perfectly still for twenty minutes in the cold, clear air allowed me to settle my thoughts and appreciate the scene around me.

My brother and I bedecked in the splendors of the Orient.  I'm on the left.  Bill seems to be portraying a wise guy rather than a Wise Man.

This year will see the sixty-sixth consecutive performance of Centenary's Living Nativity Scene. My brother and I go to different churches now and my father has passed away, but come Christmas Eve, you will find me standing on the courthouse steps, taking it all in, and grateful for the memories.







Thursday, December 24, 2015

Tuesday, December 15, 2015

Deck the halls with boughs of holly and cedar and pine and bamboo vine!


 Trimmings for a Carolina Christmas


by John B. Green III

Since time out of mind, Europeans have been bringing evergreen foliage into their homes and sacred places at this time of year.  It served to give hope of renewed life during the bleakness of winter.

Eastern North Carolinians continued the tradition, especially after decorating for Christmas became popular in the mid-19th century.  A variety of native evergreen trees, shrubs, and vines were enlisted to give a festive air to homes, businesses, and churches.  You could gather your own greenery or buy it from farmers and other country dwellers who made extra money at Christmas time by harvesting wagon loads of  holly and cedar for sale in the towns and cities.

Morning New Bernian, 19 December 1922.

The Daily Journal (New Bern), 20 December 1905.

For garlands and arrangements natives such as American Holly, 

American Holly, Ilex opaca
Loblolly Pine,

Loblolly Pine, Pinus taeda
and the oddly named Bamboo Vine, could be used.

Bamboo Vine, Smilax laurifolia
Bamboo or Bamboo Vine was the local name for a species of Smilax.  How a native woody vine acquired the name of an Asian grass is lost to the ages, but it is still known by that name among older Carolinians.

For Christmas trees, the universal favorite was the native Red Cedar which came complete with bluish-white berries for ornaments.

Red Cedar, Juniperus virginiana
And finally, that old trouble-maker, Mistletoe.  The European mistletoe revered by the ancients had a number of American counterparts.  In this area it was the Eastern Mistletoe with green leaves and glossy white berries that was used.  It served well as both decoration and romantic diversion.

Eastern Mistletoe, Phoradendron serotinum

All these native plants still grow in abundance in Eastern North Carolina, but they have mostly been replaced with non-native firs and various plastic replicas.  Perhaps it's time to revive a few of the old ways and deck the halls with holly and pine and bamboo vine!