Advent Scriptural Reference for December 12, 2008
Sing and rejoice, O daughter Zion!    
See, I am coming to dwell among you, says the LORD. –Psalms 1:1
Click below to listen, if you don't have time to read.
Catching The Gingerbread  Man
by Davidae Stewart
Sing and rejoice,  O daughter Zion!
See, I am coming to dwell among you, says the LORD.
 
Advent Scriptural Reference for December 12, 2008
Psalms 1:1
I placed my last Gingerbread  Donovan in the basket when the phone rang. 
I checked my watch. 6:30pm.  The party started in thirty minutes. I didn't have time to drive, let  alone talk. Yet I checked the caller ID anyway. Thank Goodness I did.  It was Mama and she would have had a hot fit if I didn't pick up.
I answered. "Mom, let  me call you from my cell phone. Have to get to the party." 
"No need. Just checking  to see if Donovan had picked you up already." 
"Mama.." I sighed.  "We've been through this before. I'm driving myself." 
She scoffed. "For something  so important he should at least pick you up tonight. He never escorts  you anywhere." 
"Mom, that's not true.  But today there's no time,  I had to run home and bake the cookies."
"What cookies?" Mama  paused. "Please tell me you did not make that man those gingerbread  cookies again.Lord, what you do for that man..."
I huffed. "Ma, don't ruin  my night."
"Kelli, let me tell you  something. I want the best for you, and that includes being with someone  who treasures you just as much as they treasure the cookies you make  and the free publicity you provide. I want you to see you are more precious...."  She paused. "I wished I were there."
"But you're in London,  by your choosing might I add." I chuckled.
Our fights never last longer  than a hot second. I'm too soft she often said.
" I know you care about  me. You love me. I get it, but listen. I figured I'd give God a break.  After all, I asked for a great man  last Christmas, and this year I have  one. Why should I ask for more?"
"Honey, you don't ask  God to give you a man when He's here loving you as He promised all this  time. I have never taught you that." 
"Mama..." I rolled  my eyes and shook my head. She belonged to a different generation. There  was no need to argue the point any further. "I 'll call you after  the party."
***
Bishop Stevens' Family Christmas  Dinner was always held at the Blue Willow Inn in Social Circle. For  years I had helped in the event planning of the event, but never was  invited to attend until this year after Donovan and  I became "special  friends."
Donovan's single ministry classes  had taught us that dating wasn't a Christian concept and that we should  follow a different courtship path. I agreed and I'm so glad that I did.  It felt good to no longer waste my time with men who had no intention  to marry me. 
I turned into the Blue Willow  parking lot and awed in wonder. The beautiful golden brick, Greek Revival  converted mansion dazzled against the holiday lights and blossoming  poinsettias that blanketed that garden walk.Immediately I had decided  that this would be where we would host our wedding rehearsal dinner.  I'm sure in the spring this place would look like a Georgia Eden filled  with white magnolia's, dogwoods and and azaleas.
In fact, these colors mirrored  my handpainted Gingerbread man cookies. I looked down at them and smiled.  I had made Donovan those cookes this time last year, and according to  him he knew I was a perfect woman the moment he tasted them. Although  I knew The Blue Willow had exceptional desserts I wanted to surprise  him with a memento of our first meeting. Perhaps these cookies would  become a tradition in our home and for our children.
I exhaled.
God I never knew I would  be this happy, that my future would expand this brilliant and wide.  Thank you. 
I stepped out of my car and  took a step toward my new and bigger life.
*** 
A waitstaff attendant saw me  coming toward the main entrance, so he opened the door for me. I thanked  him. He lingered at the entrance door for a while. I turned to see what  was the matter. 
"Are you okay?" I  asked him.
He nodded and smiled. His smile  somehow reminded of Donovan's. "I'm fine, just admiring a beautiful  woman that's all."
I smiled back. "Thank  you, but I'm spoken for." 
"As you should be."  He nodded. "Have a Merry Christmas." 
I waved, flattered by his interest.  I guessed the old-wives-tales were true. Once you're spoken for men  come out the woodwork. 
I giggled and walked through  the threshold with my basket in hand. Inside this place was magical.  It smelled yummy like I would imagine Paula Dean's studio smells on  Food Network: ginger, chocolate, roasted turkey...hmmm. A huge white  Christmas tree stood in the foyer. Gold angels and ribbons and ornaments  were placed extravagantly, yet balanced over it. I checked my watch  again. I was five minutes early. Great. The worst thing I could do was  be late to my own proposal party.
A hostess returned to her station  and greeted me. I told her what party I belonged to.
She smiled so big. as if she  knew me "Hello, Kelli. Everyone's waiting for you."
I gasped. "I'm late?"
"The Stephens are always  early. Don't worry, sugar.," she said. "The best is always  last."
She escorted me upstairs to  the private dining area. I recited her words of wisdom in my head. The  best is always last. The best is always last until the bubbles in my  stomach subsided.
Before I could enter the dining  room my girlfriend, Tanika met me at the top of the staircase. Tanika  was the Bishop's personal assistant and my matchmaker. 
"What's up, girl?"  I hugged her with one arm, still securing the gingerbread men in the  other.
"The question you should  be asking is who's that girl." She stepped away and turned her  head in the direction of Donovan standing near the dessert table with  his arm wrapped around some woman we had never met.
I shook my head. "You're  the publicist. Don't you know who's on the guestlist?" 
"Her name is Yasmine Taylor.  She's not related. A transplant from New Orleans. Donovan invited her  at the last minute without telling you I'm sure." 
"Stop." I flicked  the matter off with my hand. "It's not like that. You know him." 
She scoffed. "I do know  him and you better get over there and take care of your man." 
"You're right and I have  the perfect thing." I reached down and marveled over my cookies  again. "Donovan asked me to bring these tonight." 
"Then get on over there  and give him what he wants." She slapped my back.
I rolled my eyes and giggled.  Tanika was a mess sometimes.
Donovan saw me approach and  smiled. His smile could light this entire mansion. God gave him warm  brown eyes that seemed to beckon me to want to bear him many children  and spend lazy rainy days snuggled in is arms. My knees grew weak the  closer he came to me.
He looked down at the basket,  then up at me. The way he looked at me always sent a heated rush threw  my entire body. I had to breathe through my mouth just to calm myself  down.
"Are these for me?"  he asked.
"Yes, like you wanted." 
He smiled wider. "You  are a treasure, Kelli Monroe." 
I think I gushed and blushed  at the same time. "Thank you."
The strange woman walked up  to us. She placed her slender arm over Donovan's shoulder. "Are  these what I think they are?" 
He turned to her, grinned,  then returned his attention to me. I observed the woman. She was beautiful,  the kind of beautiful most men would describe easily with their eyes  closed.  My beauty seemed to always be  tied to a task I had accomplished  or a selfless act I had done. I studied her some more and determined  that she must be a cousin Tanika forgot about. I gulped. I hoped.
Donovan looked at me, still  in that way that had me hypnotized. "Kelli, I would like you to  meet, Gabrielle...my fiancee." 
She flung her slender hands  and the engagement ring that had picked out and held on my own finger  four weeks ago when Donovan had asked me to accompany him to Jared's  Jewelers.
Then my world changed. It grew  very small. The basket fell. It grew dark. The next thing I knew I was  in my car crying, more like screaming into my steering wheel..
God I never knew  I would be this sad. I have no future. I am a fool Why did you let this  happen to me?
***
Someone tapped my car window.  "Are you okay?"
I kept my face lowered on the  steering wheel and shouted. "No, leave me alone."  The last  thing I needed was a Tanika I-Told-You-So.
"How about we take these  men for a walk?" The voice grew stronger. It was a man's voice,  a familiar man's voice.
I peaked. It was the waitstaff  guy. He was dressed in a suit this time and held my basket of Gingerbread  men in his hand.
I rolled my driver's side door  down. "What are you doing with those?" 
"What do you think? I  want to eat them with you. Get out the car." 
"Ttt..." I scoffed.  "I don't know you." 
"But you know my brother,  Donovan. Right?" 
***
We took a stroll past the Inn  toward a local pizza parlor in the shopping plaza in the back.
"I hate to beat around  the bush but um...what happened in there?" 
I mumbled. "I'm not telling  you." 
"Why not?" 
"Because I don't know  what I'm doing and definitely not why I am talking to a stranger.  I  know all of the Stephens, exept..." I stopped. "The missionary,  Jason?" 
"Is that what they call  me now?" He smiled.
"You're not a missionary?" 
He smiled. "Tonight I'm  whatever you need me to be." 
"I need to know why Donovan  lied to me." 
"You don't need to know  that. You want to know that. Try again."
I stopped. "Excuse me?  I thought you were here to cheer me up." 
We were a few paces in front  of the pizza parlor now.
"Nope." The staffer  opened the door, then asked. "This Pizza will cheer up, I'm gonna  tell you your truth, so you can go back in there and hold your head  up high." 
"That's not what I need."  I shook my head and chuckled. I knew that it was.  "What if I don't  want to go back?" 
"You have to." 
"Why?" 
"Because you're my guest.  Did you read the guest list?"
*** 
We sat in the back in a dim  lit booth in Pizza Palace. We could see the Blue Willow perfectly from  there. I saw clearly that the party was going on without me. I saw clearly  that the engagement party wasn't for me.
I sipped a Cola from a red  plastic cup. "Wow I hadn't seen cups like these in a long time." 
"Feeling Naustalgic?" 
"No Tragic." I slumped  backward. "How could I have been so stupid?" 
"Easy." He picked  up a slice of pizza and extended it toward me to eat.
If I wasn't crazy out of my  mind I wouldn't have given this guy the time of day, let alone allow  him to feed me in a public place. But I was feeling all over the place  and needed someone to pick me up. I couldn't call my Mom or look Tanika  in the eyes right now. I wondered why she hadn't run out to get me.
"Why easy?" I took  a bite.
"It's simple. You replaced  God's promise to you with a desire you wanted to fulfill." 
"A desire to marry to  a good godly man what's wrong with that?" 
"There's nothing wrong  with that, but allowing that desire to turn in an unquenchable hunger  to have a man that looks the part is wrong. Just as wrong as you and  I believe that these Gingerbread men are real." 
I scoffed again. "You're  crazy," 
"No, I'm not. If you take  some time to think back on this past year with Mr. Gingerbread Man,  you will realize that you cooked him up, painted sweet nothings all  over him, and made him what you wanted him to be."   
"I did do that."I  lowered my head on the table and sobbed. "My mom tried to warn  me. My friend did, too. I...I wanted to believe that God had answered  my prayers, because he looked like that man I thought I was supposed  to be with."
He placed his hand on my shoulder.  "Any man that would make a gorgeous woman bake cookies for his  too skinny girlfriend isn't the man you deserve." 
I looked up. "You're discrediting  your brother."
"I'm telling you the truth."  He smiled. "Now are you ready to go back I'll introduce you as  my fiancee." 
I laughed. "We've never  been on a date and I don't know you." 
He took my hand. "We have  years to figure that out." 
"You're crazy." 
"Maybe, but I'm no Gingerbread  Man eitherm and I would be honored to fulfill God's promise to you." 
I took his hand and we left  together.
***
Now don't be stupid. Of course  I didn't let him call me his fiancee at the dinner, but I did take him  home to meet Mamma for Christmas this year.
Dee Stewart is a bookseller,  multimedia journalist, novelist, publicist and now talk show host.  She  is also inspirational book reviewer for Romantic  Times Magazine,  Atlanta Satellite Bookseller for The  Mocha  Bookstores,  and owner of Christian  Fiction Blog.  Her  writings have appeared in: Spirit  Led Woman, Gospel Today, Advanced  Christian Writer, Atlanta Christian  Family, Mosaic Literary, Precious  Times, Vertical Fix just a few.  In  2009 she will begin hosting book marketing coaching sessions. Follow  her on Twitter at DeeGospel. Or visit her site at www.deestewart.com.  
 



 
 

 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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