Llamas join cast of annual live Christmas pageant at Faith,
North Windham, Maine
You never know what might happen at Christmas in the Barn, the live Christmas pageant that Faith,
Sometimes a chicken flies up and joins the angels on stage. The donkey may decide that it wants to join in with the Christmas carols and bray. A llama may do what llamas do and spit. And no one is sure if the baby will sleep through the event or wake up and cry.
“You never know,” said Jocelia Hartwell, the parishioner at whose barn in
The realism adds meaning to the story, according to Hartwell and Pr.
Seeing the farm animals also allows people “to get back in touch with our food sources and what goes into caring for these animals,” said Pr. Thorp. Among the animals are llamas, which play the part of camels because they are in the same family, as well as goats, cows, horses and a miniature donkey. Hay bales are piled on top of each other to provide seating for the audience and to create a rustic atmosphere.
The free pageant draws about 125 visitors, some from other churches, and some who don’t attend a church. The audience joins the cast in singing Christmas hymns and carols.
Pr. Thorp said that the opportunity to sing is unique because as a community “we’ve sort of lost our song.” Christmas in the Barn, he said, “is about building relationships.
Excerpted from
Photo #1: Jason LaWind (Joseph) plays a Native American flute