Yesterday a friend of mine was grousing about how bad
Christmas is—the expectation that we are all supposed to be merry and happy and
jolly.
But true followers of Jesus know that Christmas is not about
happiness. It’s about waiting. It’s about a long, hard journey. It’s about fear and being rejected. And
ultimately it’s about finding Light.
The Christmas story that’s all about cozy families, caroling
and giving gifts? That’s the Madison Avenue story, the retailer’s story. That’s
the Target, Macy’s, Amazon story.
If you read the actual Christmas story you know it’s a story
about struggle: finding out your fiancée is pregnant (and not by you). It’s
about hearing that your son is supposed to bring healing to a broken world (WTF?
I just want him to go to college, get married and have kids.). It’s about
giving birth in a filthy manger. And it’s about strangers approaching your
newborn.
Does any of that sound happy and jolly?
I know, I know, what about the angels? They’re a small part
of the story. There’s one at the beginning to say, “Hi, you’re pregnant and God
is the father.” And of course Joseph gets one in a dream to say, “Mary is not
some slut and you should really marry her.” But that’s it for Joseph and Mary.
They don’t get any more angels.
The shepherds get a boatload of angels to give them
traveling directions. But that’s it. Those pictures of angels surrounding the
manger? I don’t think so. Read the book.
I really don’t take
the Bible literally. The Christmas story is most powerful as a metaphor for a difficult
journey at the end of which—impossible though it may seem—we find the Light.
We need Light for our broken lives. For our confusion, our
grief, our anger, for all the crap in our lives that makes us say, “It’s just
too damn hard.”
Make no mistake: finding the Light isn’t usually happy or
jolly or merry. Because sometimes the Light shows us what jerks we’ve been or how
we’ve made our own misery.
But as painful as that realization is—what a gift! Because of the Light we can see a
different path. Then we have to make a choice. Choice—another gift!
That means that Christmas happens all year long because
we’re constantly embarking on new and difficult journeys.
So let me end by saying, “Strength to you on your Christmas
journey and may it be Light.”
2 comments:
Very true. Thank you, Debra!
Thank you.
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