There’s a certain odd hush that comes upon a town at Christmas Eve.
It’s not that people aren’t still working — those days when everyone got off work for Christmas are gone. But a calm still descends as families gather, and the majority of stores shut off their lights and workers head home.
That’s the scene we all long for, I believe — the gathering of loved ones together: those rare times when all who’re truly valuable in your life — your family — are safely together in one place.
But not everyone experiences that at Christmas.Some of those we love are far away, and some are gone from this world for good. This is the bittersweet aspect of the holidays — a longing for perfect unity with loved ones that is illusive, ephemeral.
Sometimes Christmas is as much about the ones missing and the ones in the room surrounding us…
I remember a middle-aged couple from out of town that visited my church over the holidays one year. Their son was in city’s jail, and they traveled down to spend a few moments with him. Actually they weren’t really with him; they told me they were only allowed to talk to him through a video monitor.
Though they admitted he’d done wrong, they still wished they could somehow save their son from a punishment his bad choices had brought on himself. As they shared their hearts with me, I tried to be sympathetic and concerned. However, one thing I knew for sure: I had NO IDEA how they really felt. Not a clue.
As I spoke with them that Sunday, the faces of my own kids flashing through my mind. I must admit that as we talked, I whispered a raw prayer under my breath that God willing, I’d never know how they felt.
Well, here I am several years later, and I can finally say I know a little of how they felt. Our 8-year old foster son whom we had hoped to adopt is far away. The twisted logic of the foster system says he’s too much for us, when they really don’t want to be bothered with his bad behavior. So for the past 8 months we’ve had no contact, and he is staying with strangers.
Since we have no legal claim to him as of yet, we don’t even know where he is. And with no communication allowed, for all he knows we’ve abandoned him.
We’d hoped to have him home for Christmas, but the reality is setting in that won’t be happening any time soon. So we are stuck in this odd situation where we need to give our other kids a wonderful Christmas and go through all the motions. But for my wife and me, all we really feel like doing now is crying.
My question for God this Christmas is pretty simple. It’s probably what that couple wanted to ask me when they told me their story about their imprisoned son. It’s a rather blunt question, not very appropriate for a candlelight service:
“Dear God, do you know how this feels?”
I’ve asked it far too many times over the past 8 months. However, as angry as my question is, I already know the answer…
One Bible passage quoted a lot in the Christmas seasons is a prophecy from Isaiah, quoted in Matthew 1:23. It offered a name for the son born of a virgin: Immanuel, meaning God with us. And it’s in that name that God answered my question, and the question of a thousand other parents of prodigals tonight.
I know some writers more theological than I would remind me there’s nothing God doesn’t know. However, while He technically must know everything, He really couldn’t say He had experiential knowledge of what it’s like to be a limited, fragile, vulnerable human being, especially when everything about Him is by definition limitless.
But with Christ’s Incarnation on earth, God stepped out of his cushy place in heaven and into our painful existence firmly with both feet. So now, finally God actually does know, from experience, what you and I are going through. He knows very specifically the pain in the out of my stomach tonight. He does in fact know what it means to be human and fragile.
And He knows what it feels like to have someone you love missing a whole world away at Christmastime.
By coming to earth in the most vulnerable form possible, God is saying to us, “I get it. I do know what it’s like to be human… to be hurt deeply”.
Of the three major events in Jesus’ life – birth, crucifixion, and resurrection – each sends a personal message to us…
The message of the cross is that everything you ever fouled up — it’s over and done, paid in full!
The message of the resurrection is no worries. Death, the most devastating enemy you’ve got, is already defeated. So live life with confidence, a recklessly holy abandon.
And the message of Christmas to all of us is this: Where you are now, I’ve already been. Not only that — I am with you there now as well!
So to those parents longing for the safe return of their wayward son, God says, “I know exactly how you feel”. To those alone, separated from family and friends this Christmas, God says, “I’ve been through that too”. To the betrayed, abused and abandoned, who has experienced that more than Jesus?
So the answer to your darkest question this holiday season is “Yes, He knows exactly how you feel tonight”.
In fact, He is so much the “God with us” that if you breathe His name right now, He has slipped into the room beside you. The Christ of Christmas is now the Risen Christ of the cross, and He has come down into the midst of your chaotic, incomplete world today. As He sits beside you, He doesn’t speak.
Instead, He looks directly into your eyes with that straightforward look of one who is part of the Fellowship of the Brokenhearted. That look says to you, without a word, “Yes, I know.’’
Allow Him to sit quietly with you now, sensing the pain you endure, experiencing it with you as your own personal Gethsemane.
And ever so gently, He will take His hand, the hand with that wound so pronounced at its center, and He’ll gently slips it into yours.
This is the message of Christmas: God is with us. And as my wife tries to hide her tears while she finishes the last minute baking, and I smile weakly as if our boy isn’t constantly in my mind, I know this. The same God who knows how my heart breaks tonight is also sitting beside our boy at his bedside. He is watching him and loving him for us. He is with all of us: with my wife, with me, and with our boy so very far away.
He is with you as well on every dark Christmas evening. And yes, He knows exactly how it feels…