Christmas
Bells
By Lloyd Newell
Few
sounds gladden the heart like church bells ringing. In days gone
by, villages full of people gathered to the sound of bells. On
Christmas Day, church bells rang far and wide resonating with
hope and goodwill.
The
story is told of a village where the church bells stopped ringing
for many years. No one really knew why. But Christmases had come
and gone without bells echoing against the mountainside. The townspeople
were concerned. They began to think it had something to do with
their offerings. So they put more jewels, more treasures, more
of everything on the altar. But the bells remained silent.
Then one year a boy named Pedro and his younger brother set
out from their humble home, miles from the church, to attend the
wonderful Christmas Eve service they had heard so much about.
The boys walked through the wind and chill more than half the
day and into the night so they could join in the festivities.
But just as they entered the city, they saw an old woman lying
in a bed of snow. She was cold and weak and barely breathing.
Pedro could not pass by without helping. He looked into the
distance and knew that he would miss the service, but he asked
his little brother to go ahead and take his only silver coin,
still warm in his pocket, and place it on the altar. Pedro stayed
with the woman and helped her. He did not hear the organ play
or the choir sing, but he did hear the bells ring — for the first
time in many, many years. The people said the bells started ringing
when Pedro’s little brother dropped his silver coin onto the altar.
No one in the Church knew why — but Pedro did. He had given away
what he wanted for himself to help someone else. [i]
This
year as we hear the Christmas bells chime, remember the wondrous
gift that was given so long ago in Bethlehem. As we selflessly
give, we too will hear the bells on Christmas Day.
[i]
“Why the Chimes Rang,” Pure Love: Readings on Sixteen Enduring
Virtues, sel. Marilyn Arnold (1997),
188–92.