A couple years ago, we took on
the massive task of trimming the tree and putting up Christmas decorations. It
pains me to even speak that sentence, for fear of sounding so completely bah
humbug that you all write me off as a total party pooper. Don't get me wrong, I
LOVE having decorated for Christmas.
The twinkling lights. The red and green. The smell of a fresh cut tree. But the
actual process of decorating? It really isn't my thing. I struggle with change
and perhaps could be accused of being “a little too practical,” so the idea of
pulling tubs down from the garage rafter, changing out throw pillows and
dishes, and re-doing the mantle for just a 4-week period every year sometimes
feels not worth the effort.
In so many ways,
I have loosened up over the years. Like for instance, this year I’m referring
to, when I agreed to run off to McLendon's Hardware at 6:30 PM to select our
Christmas tree under the cover of pitch darkness. We could see next to nothing
beyond the height of the tree options before us and I honestly didn't have the
energy to care. I think we took home the third tree we touched. Short, sweet
and simple. Those three adjectives are rarely used together to describe my typical
process of accomplishing things. More often, my perfectionist tendencies weave
a gnarly web of high expectations and a desire for things to be just so. It
makes me a tough cookie to live with, this I know.
Going back to my
story… by the time we got the tree home and in the stand, it was far too late
in the evening to begin the process of decking it, so my husband suggested that
we wait until the morning and have a "nice relaxing breakfast
together" with tree decorating to follow. The only trouble with this plan
was that we also had family pictures scheduled at 11 AM that, after our "relaxing"
time trimming the tree, we would need to rush off to, all dressed and beautiful.
I bet you can guess where there is going. As it turns out, I don't really do
"nice and relaxing" followed by "dressed and beautiful"
within the same 2-hour window. I summarized our morning at that time on social
media as follows:
"Ok all you
people with kids, let's keep this Christmas decorating thing real. Despite any
beautiful pictures we might post of a glowing tree or lovely mantle, let's
remember that, behind the scenes, decorations were flying out of boxes in all
directions, ornaments were shattering, breakfast dishes were still on the
table, only 1 of our strands of lights were 100% functional, and we ended up Scotch-taping
our star to the top of the tree. And all the while, mom was standing by having
a panic attack in the corner."
So yeah. This
whole changing out seasonal decorations thing? It's not really my jam. But as I
began to ponder it all, I realized so many things are not enjoyable in the
process. I don't enjoy decorating, but I love having decorated. I don't always
enjoy running but I love having run. Heaven knows I don't always enjoy
parenting, but I love having parented. Are you catching my drift?
The process is
typically messy and confusing and even painful. It can be tempting to throw our
hands up and concede - to say darn it all to the tree this year, or to slow our
run to a walk or to surrender to yelling at our kids instead of finding another
way. The process. It's the nit and grit. It's the part that’s excruciating.
Last week, I was
asked to share some words at my Bible study’s Christmas celebration. My first thought was, I’ve never been one to win any awards for my positivity and I worried
what I had to say might bring people down. Any regular readers know I tend to
be a deep thinker and that I ponder hard things – just the message everyone
wants to hear at Christmas! I considered asking for a different date, maybe
sometime in the spring we aren’t assumed to be full of “holiday cheer.”
But as I began
to pray through what the Lord might have for me to share, it was clear that
this was exactly the time of year that He wanted me to speak. And that, during
this season of Advent, where we remember and anticipate the arrival of our Savior
into the world, I was to speak about the idea of expectant waiting.
I began thinking
about how each one of us, no matter where we are in our lives right now, have
an area of deep longing, a place where we are waiting for movement with bated
breath. It’s that painful part of us that we like to pretend isn’t there.
Perhaps we’ve shoved that longing into hiding in hopes that it will just go
away. For others of us, we wear that longing like we do our very own skin. We
couldn’t hide it, even if we tried because the havoc it has wreaked on our
hearts is so blatant. These longings are uncomfortable, and they bring out our “ugly.”
When we spend any length of time considering the void left by our longing, we
often come away with more questions than answers. We begin to wonder if perhaps
our God truly is as faithful and good as He claims to be.
So, I would pose
the same question here that I asked last week during my talk - what is it that
you are longing for today? Where are you filled with a sense of expectant
waiting? Is it for a next step or calling, a clear sense of purpose? Is it for
children? Has infertility been your gaping hole? For those who are single, is
it a longing for a spouse? And for those married, is it a profound sense of loneliness
despite the ring on your finger? Is there a part of you that feels broken? Are
you longing for healing, for yourself or for others? Are you longing for
connection, to finally feel like you are welcome and that you truly
belong?
Psalm 40:1-3 says
“I waited patiently for the Lord; he turned to me and heard my cry. He lifted
me out of the slimy pit, out of the mud and mire; he set my feet on a rock and
gave me a firm place to stand. He put a new song in my mouth, a hymn of praise
to our God. Many will see and fear and put their trust in the Lord.”
How can we
possibly reconcile our areas of profound pain and hurt and longing with the
goodness of our God?
God has had me
on a journey in recent years that I would describe as a total unraveling. The
image that comes to mind is that of a carefully-crocheted blanket. It’s a
beautiful sight to behold, gorgeous color, an intricate pattern, and even
stitching throughout. It seems perfectly fine from all outward appearances. Why
would it require unraveling?
The trouble is
this: it was stitched together on all the wrong premises – lies overtaking the
truth, a belief that my worth is based on what I accomplish. I have valued
image over authenticity, justice before grace, and focused on achievement,
success, hard work, people-pleasing, and rule-following. The stitches were, to
put it bluntly, far too tight.
All the lies
I’ve internalized for so long have needed to be undone before God could begin
the great work of re-stitching together my blanket, this time founded on truth.
The process has been so painful. There are parts of my story that don’t make
sense. At times it feels as if no part of my life has been left untouched – my
marriage, my kids, my work, my family. I have had to face so many of my demons.
Just when it seems like there couldn’t possibly be any more yarn left to
unravel, I realize there is yet another row of stitching that needs to come
undone.
In these moments
of unraveling, when I am sitting in the middle of the floor, surrounded by a
mess of tangled yarn, I have spent a lot of timing crying out “Why, God!? I
followed the rules! I thought I was doing what you asked of me! Why is this the result? Why must I endure the
heartache? THIS. ISN’T. FAIR.”
The reality, it
seems, is that God wants to start anew in my life. He has a totally different
pattern in mind for me. He desires to loosen the stitching a little. He is
assigning me new attributes: loved, cherished, worthy, deserving. The resulting
blanket will be softer, less stiff, imperfect yet wholly, undeniably accepted. Beloved.
He has loving, healing work that he wants to do.
And do you know
what else he is teaching me? My deep pain, my longing is FOR something. It is
being used for good. Whether it is to encourage another or cause me to cling to
God in times when I otherwise might be tempted to give him the cold shoulder,
or whether it is to keep me fighting for healing, this process has a purpose.
Brene Brown
writes, “Owning our story can be hard but not nearly as difficult as spending
our lives running from it. Embracing our vulnerabilities is risky but not
nearly as dangerous as giving up on love and belonging and joy—the experiences
that make us the most vulnerable. Only when we are brave enough to explore the
darkness will we discover the infinite power of our light.”
Were it not for
these hardships, I would never have had a reason to cling to Christ in the way
I have in this most recent season. I had always been so self-sufficient; I was doing
just fine on my own. Until I wasn’t.
Words like these
became my sustenance: “He will cover you will his feathers and under his wings
you will find refuge; his faithfulness will be your shield and rampart.” Psalm
91:4
So, while I wait
expectantly and hold on to hope for continued healing in the broken areas of my
life, will I choose to trust His hand?
Author Rebekah
Lyons, in her book, You Are Free, writes, “Joy is not the absence of darkness.
Joy is the confidence that the darkness will lift.”
I’ll be honest.
There have been so many points in my own process where have been filled with
doubt. I remember sitting in my therapist’s office one night, overwhelmed and
undone, feeling hope slip through my fingers. It all felt too hard. I didn’t
think healing would ever come. At that time, my therapist said something that
has meant so much to me. She asked for permission to hold onto to hope for me,
when I no longer felt I could, to be a buoy to help keep me afloat until I had
the strength to continue swimming.
God’s answer to
our longings, the things for which we are expectantly waiting, may never be one
we have been dreaming of, the one we feel is best. But what I can say with full
confidence is that he is with us in the waiting and he is using our
circumstances to draw us nearer to himself.
Lyons writes, “You
straddle promise and doubt, feebly holding onto the hope of promise. Keep
holding on. You may not know the outcome, but you can rest in the tension of
the waiting. It’s in the tension that the music is made.” Isn’t that beautiful?
Later she goes
on to say, “There will come a moment in your waiting when God says, ‘It’s
time.’ Waiting is a critical part of your anointing. It prepares you,
strengthens you, equips and trains you to step up when the moment comes.”
The process
often makes us question the endeavor but, it is worth it. Romans 8:24 says, “But hope that is seen is
not hope at all. Who hopes for what they already have? But if we hope for what
we do not yet have, we wait for it patiently.”
So, in the same
way that we wait for the coming of our Savior to earth at Christmas, may we also
wait with great expectation for Christ, the Ultimate Buoy to meet each of us,
right where we are at, even in our areas of deepest longing.
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posted by kelsie