Gold Rush town hosts Las Posadas for Christmas
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A UMNS photo by Jeneane Jones Jared, with help from his father the Rev. Alex Cambe, fills a luminary.
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The
Rev. Alex Cambe, pastor of Sutter Creek (Calif.) United Methodist
Church, and his son, Jared, 6, fill a luminary for the Las Posadas
celebration sponsored by the church. The event which originated in Spain
commemorates Mary and Joseph's journey to Bethlehem. A procession down
the town's main street reenacts the Christmas story with Mary and Joseph
being denied lodging at various homes and ends at a manger set up in
front of the church. A UMNS photo by Jeneane Jones. Photo #061411.
Accompanies UMNS story #726. 12/14/06. |
Dec. 14, 2006
A UMNS Feature
By Jeneane Jones*
It's 2 in the afternoon, and Faye Fyock, her short dark hair catching
a gust of early December wind, clicks off the items still to be
completed before the evening's festivities.
"At three, about 30 people will start making the luminaries," she
explains. "The lights will go up around 5:30. We'll gather the angels.
We thought we would have a just few, but it's up to 14 now -- everyone
wants their child to be in it. We've been getting calls all week."
Faye and husband Bob are members of Sutter Creek United Methodist
Church, a part of the historic town of Sutter Creek, Calif., since hard
rock miners made it famous during California's Gold Rush.
Downtown Sutter Creek's postcard-ready looks haven't changed much since
the 1870s. The white-steepled United Methodist church stands where it
was first erected in 1862. "Back then it was the Methodist Episcopal
church," says Bill Hepworth, mayor and historian.
The church has played a significant role in the town's Christmas
celebrations in the past. This year is no exception. The annual
Christmas tree lighting was on the church's front lawn and Bob and Faye
Fyock, the reigning Santa and Mrs. Claus, helped transform the church
fellowship hall into a Santa-themed photo op for the kids in town.
But they wanted more for their beloved community. So this year, the
church offered something special -- its first ever Las Posadas. The
event is based on a Hispanic/Latino tradition of re-enacting the journey
by Mary and Joseph to Bethlehem.
The Fyocks had seen a Las Posadas in a neighboring community last year,
so they talked to their pastor about it. He responded with enthusiasm.
"Words cannot express the excitement we have," says the Rev. Alex Cambe.
"We believe that Christmas is not something you see in Wal-Mart or
Kmart. There is a spiritual dimension, and that is where the churches
can fill in."
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A UMNS photo by Jeneane Jones Three angels are ready to lead a Las Posadas procession.
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Three
angels are ready to lead the Las Posadas procession sponsored by Sutter
Creek (Calif.) United Methodist Church. The celebration which
originated in Spain commemorates Mary and Joseph's journey to Bethlehem.
A procession down the town's main street reenacts the Christmas story
with Mary and Joseph being denied lodging at various homes and ends at a
manger set up in front of the church. A UMNS photo by Jeneane Jones.
Photo #061412. Accompanies UMNS story #726. 12/14/06. |
With Cambe's support, the event grew to include the local Episcopal and
Catholic churches. Even the mayor of Sutter Creek gave his blessing.
"I'm from Los Angeles and Las Posadas is something I grew up with,"
Hepworth says. "This is a way of bringing together the entire ethnic
community of Sutter Creek. We're proud that the churches approached us
to be part of this. Together we're putting Christ back in Christmas."
The celebration of Las Posadas, which translates to "lodging,"
originated in Spain, according to "Fiesta Cristiana," written by United
Methodist Bishop Joel Martínez.
In Mexico, it consists of a ceremonial procession that traditionally
takes place Dec. 16-24. Each night for nine days a group of people walk
through the streets, stopping at homes where it has been pre- arranged
that they would ask for shelter.
The procession stops along the way to sing songs and read from the
Gospel story asking for shelter. At each door the group is turned away
and not until the ninth night do they finally find shelter arriving at
the doors of a church.
Community gathers
Jared Cambe is helping his dad with the luminary assembly line. "It's
supposed to be filled but not all the way," explains the 6-year-old.
On this evening, along the aptly named Spanish Street, the luminaries
have been set out for the procession that begins at Immaculate
Conception Catholic church and continues through the neighborhood,
ending at the manger scene on the lawn of Sutter Creek United Methodist
Church.
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A UMNS photo by Jeneane Jones Christmas carols are sung during the Las Posadas procession.
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Christmas
carols are sung during the Las Posadas procession through the streets
of Sutter Creek, Calif. Sutter Creek United Methodist Church. The church
sponsored the celebration that commemorates Mary and Joseph's journey
to Bethlehem. A procession down the town's main street reenacts the
Christmas story with Mary and Joseph being denied lodging at various
homes and ends at a manger set up in front of the church. A UMNS photo
by Jeneane Jones. Photo #061413. Accompanies UMNS story #726. 12/14/06. |
Nine-year-old Alexis Lewis, who will be one of the 14 angels in the
procession, says the message behind the story of Mary and Joseph, "is we
should be more considerate and try to help each other. That's the right
thing to do. If my best friend came to visit, I would find her
somewhere to stay. Even if it meant giving up my own bed, then I would
give it up."
As the luminaries are lit, families begin making their way to the end of
Spanish Street to wait at the steps of the Immaculate Conception
church. Joseph, played by Sutter Creek member Joshua Hall leads a
donkey, or in this case a mule named Festus carrying Mary, played by
13-year-old Addie Peralta. More than 200 people have begun singing
carols and carrying candles.
This version of Las Posadas will only last one night, and there will be
stops at only three houses. The crowd moves slowly down the street
singing as they go. Joseph and Mary make their first stop. There's a
knock at the door of the home. Mike Koepke, the retired fire chief, has
agreed to be part of the dramatization and as requested, does not
answer.
Mary and Joseph and a growing entourage continue along Spanish Street to
two more houses before finally arriving at the manger, complete with
sheep and shepherds, in front of Sutter Creek. The crowd, now double in
size, is joined by a choir from the community, and time for more carols,
as well as refreshments.
Seven-year-old Mason Hall, whose father was Joseph in the night's
procession, stands in his Boy Scout uniform, alongside two of the angels
from his church. "I was supposed to be selling Christmas trees across
the street," he says. "This was actually pretty cool."
*Jones is communications director for California-Nevada Annual (regional) Conference.
News media contact: Kathy L. Gilbert, Nashville, Tenn., (615) 742-5470 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
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