Walking up to church one Sunday this past December, I was amused to find a remnant of the preceding night’s downtown festivities—a single section of city-owned barricade, used for our Mardi Gras and Christmas Parades. Standing solitarily, the forgotten barricade's singleness was peculiar, and in the light of day so obvious, but it remained merely as an oversight in the chaos of parade cleanup. Some city employee would come for it Monday morning, and the minor mistake would soon be forgotten. My 7-year-old ran right up to it, pretending to climb it like he had at the parade. This time, though, instead of reaching from the sidewalk over the barricade into the street for goodies, he faced the church with his arms outstretched. Yes, my boy, the good stuff is on that side, I thought and smiled. The image of him blocked from the church and reaching for it from the curb struck me with a metaphor that resonated in the busy days that barreled into Christmas. Yet again, there ...
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