Tags
acceptance, Christmas, church, disoriented, family, imperfection, Jesus, love, perfect, Savior, welcome, womb

This Christmas will be the first Christmas I am able to spend time with my husband’s family in five years. We used to travel there more regularly, but about the time we would have visited, the pandemic hit, and here we are years later returning to something that feels comfortingly familiar. I find a deep sense of relief knowing the familiar faces that will greet us, the warmer temperatures and beautiful landscape that will refresh us, the smells and tastes that will delight us, and the love and acceptance that will overwhelm us.
In some ways, I think attending church on Christmas Eve is a lot like that comforting familiar experience. We know the lessons we will hear, the songs we will sing, the greenery we will find, and the hospitality we will experience. In what has been a time of disorientation, suffering, grief, and struggle these last years, nothing feels as enticing as the promise of a warm, welcoming womb in which to gather.
What’s fascinating about the Christmas story and experience is that the first Christmas had little other than a womb in common with our modern experience. Mary and Joseph are likely still recovering from the rocky beginning to their relationship – nothing like an unorthodox pregnancy to bring on marital strain! Mary and Joseph also join hordes of their kin in being displaced by the government, only to find accommodations entirely unsuited for childbirth. Strangers of ill repute show up sharing stories quite unfathomable, inserting themselves into the chaos of that night. And Mary is left overwhelmed, trying to figure out what is happening to her life. Why, of all the stories we could hear, is this crazy, disorienting story the one we want to hear year after year?
I suppose, in part, we breathe in a comforting deep breath on Christmas Eve because no matter where our journey has taken us over the last year – or years – knowing the imperfection of that perfect night helps us bless and honor our own imperfection. Perhaps we revel in Christmas at church because we know that every year, no matter how off-track our lives have become, we have a place where we can go, a family with whom we can journey, and a Savior who is just as vulnerable as we are. This Christmas, I hope you know there is no imperfection in you that is not perfectly welcome at the Table. You are welcome here.