Just for Fun: Sandy Becker’s Christmas Carol

This blast from the past comes from I don’t know what year, exactly–late 1950s, early 60s. Nor do I know if the puppet play ever actually came off. Anyway, here’s Clive Clive introducing the star of Sandy Becker’s Christmas carol, the inimitable Geba Geba.

Sandy not only performed these puppets; he created and hand-crafted them himself. This was kids’ TV way back when, and it was wonderful. Becker had a wild imagination, and you never knew what he was going to come up with next.

Geba Geba as Scrooge–if only I could’ve seen it!

‘I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day’ (Burl Ives)

There was a lot more to Burl Ives than singing “Jimmy Crack Corn.”

This carol defies the evils of a fallen world. What more can we add to that, but “Sing Louder!”

Oh, Christmas Tree!

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I have just finished decorating our Christmas tree. We arranged it so all I had to do was put on the ornaments, and the job still took two hours. Our tree isn’t quite as loaded as the one in the picture, but it’s close.

See, everything on our tree has a story. The lights are from my grandpa’s store which he had in the 1930s–and every bulb still works. We have ornaments from Grammie and my aunts and uncles, from my father and mother, and even from assorted jobs we used to have. It’s very hard for me to leave anything unused.

And of course the two cats are a big,  big help!

Anyway, now it’s done, and we can love it for a while.

More than any other holiday, I think, Christmas is about continuity, about remembering, the present reaching out to hold hands with the past. And together they will stride into the future–which we can do without dread because it belongs to Jesus Christ Our Lord, and we have many mansions waiting for us in His Father’s house.

‘Away in a Manger’ (British Melody)

I don’t know how many versions there are of Away in a Manger, but I do know there’s an American version and this British version: same lyrics, very different melodies. I love them both.

This is by the King’s College Choir at Cambridge.

Well, now I have to go to the nursing home, do a couple of last-minute errands, and rush back home to trim our tree. We will have duck for supper, and tonight it’s presents.

Even so, I remain poised to post Christmas hymns requested by any and all readers. Don’t catch yourself sometime in February muttering, “Gee, I wish I’d asked him to post such-and-such a Christmas hymn! Oh, what regret I labor under!” And so on.

‘For Unto Us a Child is Born’

This is part of Handel’s Messiah, performed by the London Symphony Orchestra; and for once I can give you the lyrics.

For unto us a child is born, unto us a son is given; and the government shall be upon his shoulder; and his name shall be called Wonderful, Counselor, The mighty God, The everlasting Father, the Prince of Peace…      –Isaiah 9:6

Suggested by Erlene.

Memory Lane: The Sears Roebuck Christmas Catalogue

Vintage 1959 Sears Roebuck & Company Christmas Wishbook Catalog

When I was a boy, one of the sure signs that Christmas really was coming at last, honest, was the annual Sears Roebuck Christmas Book, better known as the Sears Catalogue.

How I loved to pore over this enormous thick book! It was as thick as the phone book, but with dozens of captivating pictures on each and every page. Of course, I rushed through the long and tedious sections on clothes and bedding and the like, lingered over the guns–real guns, not toys–and then, aaah! The toy section. El Dorado!

My favorites were the play sets, consisting mostly of little plastic figures of animals and people. Pictured in the catalogue, all set up and ready to go, I could just groove on these for hours–imagining myself imagining all kinds of adventures for these little characters, once I got them. The farm set! The circus! The African safari! Not to mention pirates, army men, cowboys and Indians, and, one of the best ever, Cape Canaveral with spring-launched rockets that made a gloriously loud “bonk!” if you shot them into the ceiling. And the sheer ecstasy of finding the dinosaur play set under the tree on Christmas morning–!

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Some of the gang from the dinosaur play set

I understand, now, what it meant: that my mother and father, grandparents, aunts and uncles, loved the living dickens out of me and all the other child-kin and delighted in seeing our faces light up when we got those gifts.

In that sense, those gifts continue to give, to this day.

And if love and giving and joy are not the way to celebrate Our Savior Jesus Christ, I don’t know what is.

‘Angels from the Realms of Glory’

Well, we’ve just set up our Christmas tree, and tomorrow we will trim it. The cats are enthused.

Meanwhile, here’s Angels from the Realms of Glory, a rousing rendition by the Reformed Church in Grand Rapids, Michigan.

Is anybody going to ask for any Christmas hymns today? We’re ready to post ’em!

‘While Shepherds Watch’

First published in 1700–that’s right, 1700–While Shepherds Watched is an antique Anglo-Irish carol: sung here the old-fashioned way by Maddy Prior and the Carnival Band.

Meanwhile–Hey, everybody, only two days left to request Christmas hymns before it’s Christmas! You ask for ’em, I’ll post ’em.

The enemies of Christmas are now working harder than ever to take it away from us. And for us that means: Sing louder! For our God will hear us.

‘A Great and Mighty Wonder’

Suggested by Erlene: A Great and Mighty Wonder, sung by the King’s College Choir at Cambridge.

Keep singing!

‘O Come All Ye Faithful’

This is sung by someone named F. Oakley, which is all I know about it–other than that it’s a very nice version of one of our favorite Christmas carols.

And I hope you like it, folks, because now I don’t know whether this blog’ll still be here ten minutes from now, WordPress has got me so confused.

Get your Christmas hymn requests in while you can! We have good news to proclaim!