Dear Trailhead family,
Christmas is almost here.
Maybe you are excited.
Maybe you are not.
Maybe it doesn't feel like Christmas should be almost here because someone or something is missing from this season.
Regardless, Christmas comes.
Or, a better way to say it is, Christ arrives right on time.
The story of humanity is that we have not fully shown up to the moment—any moment. Maybe it was a simple command in a good garden not to eat from a certain tree or maybe it was a solemn covenant made between the Almighty and his people, but the consistent part is that we have consistently not held up our end of the bargain.
Shame on us?
Game over?
Go home, you didn’t make the team?
You’d think, but no.
Rather, it would seem that our limits, our fallibility, has been factored into the story from the very beginning.
Paul, the rangy theologian/missionary/author/former persecutor of all things Jesus, writes to this effect,
“Christ arrives right on time…. He didn’t, and doesn’t, wait for us to get ready. He presented himself for this sacrificial death when we were far too weak and rebellious to do anything to get ourselves ready. And even if we hadn’t been so weak, we wouldn’t have known what to do anyway.” (Romans 5, MSG)
Christ arrives right on time.
One day, in a tiny village that was bursting to the seams with visitors because a far-off person with power had made a degree, a baby was born.
Born in a room frequented by animals to a young girl, a virgin girl.
By the birthing virgin’s side was a young man who was tasked with caring for the baby and the baby's momma.
The baby was not his.
The circumstances seem less than ideal.
Maybe no one is ever ready for Christmas.
And yet, Christ arrives right on time.
While this miracle of birth was miraculously happening, outside of town a group of shepherds were shepherding.
In contrast to the hustle and bustle of Bethlehem, these shepherds appear to be left out. Whatever is happening in town, they are not necessary nor significant enough to leave their sheep to participate.
But the quiet of the night suddenly broke when a figure appeared to them. Not only did this thing, this being, appear out of nowhere and begin to speak, but something called “the glory of the Lord” shone all around them.
They were terrified.
The shepherds weren’t ready for Christmas.
I remember moments like this as a child when I was minding my own business, playing with Lincoln Logs or Lego blocks or Hot Wheels cars, and suddenly my mom appeared out of nowhere and the glory of her authority shone about her and I was terrified.
Why? I can't say for sure.
But what I am sure about is that anyone who cared to do a little sleuthing could find some dirt on me. Most likely recent dirt, incriminating dirt.
I had siblings after all; I was never innocent.
Some way, somehow, I was guilty and I knew it.
And my mom’s presence must mean that justice would be served.
We know little for certain about the shepherds but we do know this with certainty, they were every bit as guilty as little me.
And yet, my mom, I mean the angel, had a message that caught the shepherds completely by surprise.
The greatest event in the history of great events was taking place and they had been exclusively invited to witness the moment.
This wasn’t about the guilty being held to account, but about the account no longer belonging to the guilty.
But let’s back up to where we began.
The lead-up to the first Christmas was not magical.
The birth of the Savior of the world was not preceded by massive discounts on TVs and Toyotas, it was not anticipated by the lighting of the Rockefeller Christmas Tree and Myriah Carey’s soulful voice singing Christmas classics, nor was it celebrated by elaborate church productions and candlelit services.
Hardly.
The lead-up to The Birth was the worst of times.
And into the despair, the questions, the anxiety, the shortfalls, Christ arrives right on time.
After all, how anticlimactic would it be for a savior to show up to a people and a place that needed no saving?
So rejoice in your weakness, in your unpreparedness, in the tinge of sadness and regret.
Christ, your Savior, arrives right on time.
Grace and peace be upon you,
Grant