What Child is This? Welcoming A Peace-less Christmas.
Comfort and joy are elusive for many of us right now. They should be.
What child is this?
Have you ever felt like something was off, something you couldn't quite place but you were sure of just the same; a subtle but very profound not rightness?
Well, something is not right in me these days and I know it.
I'm not sure how to describe it other than to say that lately there is something missing.
I think it might be peace.
I think I'm becoming starved of peace.
It hasn't happened overnight but over time my soul's been so weighed down by suffering, so saturated by the sadness all around that the expectancy's been completely squeezed out, the possibility all but drained away.
Maybe you understand what I’m talking about.
The calendar tells me it’s time to welcome Christmas but I am finding little room in the inn of my spirit. No good tidings of great joy from the heralds of these days, no silence in the dark nights of the soul.
I know what I'm supposed to believe, the response I'm expected to have, the joy I'm supposed to overflow with, but these are getting more and more difficult to muster in the face of all the horrible that's happening in the world: genocide, death, terror, war, bigotry, and violence all on heavy rotation with seemingly no relief.
What child is this?
I’ve sung this song for my entire life and as a younger version of myself I would always see a single child, born in the cold, surrounded by the smell of damp straw and animal dung. I would see one child cradled in adoration and ushering in peace for the world.
Now, I see different children:
Children in Gaza.
Children in Israel.
Children at our Southern border.
Children on the streets here at home.
So many children to whom peace and rest will not visit, children whose stories are the stuff of nightmares, children who will never see the coming year.
How do we celebrate one child while so many children are being discarded?
How do we celebrate one child while so many children are bring mourned?
How do we celebrate one child while so many are orphaned and disfigured?
These are desperate days on the planet.
They are desperate days in my heart.
I need Christmas.
But I don't need it on the calendar, I need it within me.
I need the birth of something beautiful, that thrill of hope I used to sing about as a child to return again to my spirit.
I need the arrival of a great light into the deep, dark recesses of myself where joy and wonder have nearly vanished.
I need new life to change the landscape and alter the temperature in the way only new life can.
The word Emmanuel means "God with us," and Christmas is the promise of an imminent holy, healing presence but frankly many days it feels like we're on our own here.
It seems like we're fending for ourselves in this brutality, surrounded by so much that is wrong and hurtful, and because of this all is not merry and bright within me.
Christmas is not bringing the wide-eyed optimism that looks to the skies, fully certain that goodness is on the way and coming close.
It is not carrying assurance of the temporary discomfort that will soon yield to life and relief.
This season isn't coming with bubbling expectancy in advance of a celebration.
This is more a frightened, exhausting, painful present and the fear this might be the best we can expect.
So many have shared with me that their hearts cannot be reconciled with the calendar right now, that they are incapable of holding both the story of their faith tradition with the stories on their timeline.
This, ironically is the closest thing to encouragement I feel right now: the disturbance to the peace of so many who claim faith around the world. We should be discomforted by our prayers and platitudes and sickened by our songs.
What child is this, whose body was violated by a missile strike?
What child is this, dying in anonymity and darkness?
What child is this, whose family was obliterated in the blink of an eye?
What child is this, weaned on a blind hatred that makes killing a holy offering?
What child is this, who is dehumanized thousands of miles away?
What child is this, who is fodder for the fears of a neighbor?
No, this unrest is not an interruption to the calendar, it is the prompt of humanity that says the calendar be damned.
It is the fierce love that demands the world not go on as normal.
Those of us celebrating Christmas should be peace-less until the planet is peaceful.
Then, the songs will be worth singing.
What child is this who, laid to rest, on Mary’s lap is sleeping?
"Comfort and joy are elusive for many of us right now. They should be." I think you may be experiencing a part of the Christmas story that is often neglected. The oppresion of a foreign power was painfully real to Joseph, Mary and all of his community. The hypocrisy and legalism of relgious authorites and the institutions they ruled made Judaism into an added burden instead of refuge for the poor and oppressed. The weight of those burdens were multiplied when Joseph and Mary were made to travel during her eigth month and then, upon arrival at their destination, to find no room at the inn. I can just see Joseph saying to God: "What is going on here? Isn't there enough suffering without this?". Then, shortly after Jesus is born, he is told to flee to Egypt, because Herod wants to kill him. And can you imagine what went through Joseph's mind when he learned what Herod did to all of the other children in Bethlehem? So maybe that feeling of "a frightened, exhausting, painful present" is part of what we should also be experiencing in preparation for Christmas. If so, you are on the right track....as you should be.
Moving through a season of Advent with intentional meditation, prayer, journaling, and sharing with others through the darkness of devastation and losses in my own life as well as in our communities, the world, is a help to me. Advent reminds me that I am connected to this suffering while remembering the oppression and violence of Jesus's times. A time to be encouraged to be awake to God's nearness in all of this. There will always be evil and destruction. We have to hold onto hope with faith, that we are part of a larger, more cosmic process of creative evolution. I believe God is with all these children through the suffering. I can only do what I can do while here on earth to serve, support and join with the forces of love and goodness. Yet, I am weak and God's grace will be sufficient for me.