Tradition lost
November 30, 2014
We bounced on the scene fifty years ago with energy, youth,
and great expectations. We had a firm handle on addresses of friends,
neighbors, and relatives we would eagerly send Christmas greetings each year as
a token of friendship and remembrance of our Savior, Jesus Christ. We sent them
in early December and eagerly await the glistening cards and messages of hope.
The personal messages we carefully placed inside the cards became a “one size
fits all” cheery message about our family and how they had grown and progressed
in life. About twenty years ago, the messages we sent and received slowed down
to a trickle, but we still enjoyed them and continued corresponding; in many
cases only on the occasion of Christmas. In the beginning we had a list that we
groomed and improved each year, but time has a way of withering our enthusiasm
and dimming our memories. Addresses got lost, people died, divorced, forgot
about us, and the list dwindled to a relative small size. Three years ago we
stopped sending cards and letters and went with the thrill of the day – E MAIL.
We talked recently about many of the people we have enjoyed as friends and
found that we had no idea of where they were or what they were doing. We fared
equally as well with relatives, noting that we that we had lost track of many
cousins and others.
Jean has reconnected with one cousin in the last year and
found great reciprocal joy in sharing notes about family circumstances. We met
with friends from my high school days in Scottsdale for lunch and solved all
the problems on earth. Thursday and Friday of this week we celebrated
Thanksgiving and shared beautiful experiences, watched our children and
grandchildren learn about and play with each other. We talked about their college,
high school, and elementary school activities and found the cycle of life to be
working well. We observed that some have brilliant minds and other are more
like Jean and me. We both floundered through school, through social and
athletic experiences, and consider ourselves extremely blessed to have survived
those experiences; then grown together as a team through good times and bad.
My dear cousin Clara Jo Fitch (Candelaria) recently made
what she called her last pilgrimage to New Mexico to see family and experience
– once again – the land of enchantment. She was not able to get to Utah so she
called me and we had a delightful visit. Several months before my mother, Lucy
Baca Jacobs Livermore, passed away Jo made a special trip to Utah to visit with
mother regarding her spiritual health. Jo is a life-long Catholic and mother
converted to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints when she was in
her mid thirties. Mother was always one that wanted to please her family and Jo
was on a mission to return mother to the Catholic Church. Mother always had warm
feelings for the Catholic Church because of her heritage and the beautiful
message of Christ which both her childhood church and the Church of Jesus
Christ hold as the centerpiece of spirituality. In the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day
Saints, a list of thirteen Articles of Faith set the stage for understanding
how mother could be an active, temple attending member of the LDS Church and
still hold these beautiful feelings for the people, the heritage, and the
spiritual message of the Catholic faith. The thirteenth article shares the
admonition of Paul in which he declares that all truth is from God. “ . . . we believe all things, we hope all things,
we have endured many things, and hope to be able to endure all things. If there
is anything virtuous, lovely, or of good report, or praiseworthy, we seek after
these things.” Capped with the first article of faith, “We believe in God the
Father, and in his Son, Jesus Christ, and in the Holy Ghost” mother found great
strength in her faith in God, in her hope for an eternal reunion with her
family, and with a desire to understand and embrace Charity – the pure love of
Jesus Christ.
All humanity must hold close to the truths provided in God’s
law. We must unite together in understanding and love of family and country
under God. May we share our blessings with our family, friends, and countrymen
through understanding and love.
Duane Jacobs, grandfather, father, husband, brother, cousin,
uncle and friend
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