I was asked today if I still
believed in Christmas any more. I found myself repeating this thought and
reflecting the inner responses to that question to myself as the afternoon went
on. Truth is that I think maybe I never did to begin with; that is, in the form
it takes today and that to be anything other than the blindly happy supplicant
who beams with joy at the repeated sounds of rehashed same old same old Christmas
music and imagery. But I think that to truly answer that one must step back and
ask what defines Christmas and what do we mean when referring to this time of
year. Is it the celebration? The pageantry or the aweing displays of things
that “look” Christmas-y? Maybe it’s the biblical version of what the season
represents – although, historically speaking, the makings of this season mostly
all come from early pagan rituals grafted into the Christian tradition combined
with the visions of Charles Dickens and the advertising campaigns of Coca-Cola
(Santa Claus). Such aspects are all of an inauthentic spirit to me. I can’t
seem to “get with the times” lately concerning the holiday season. Maddening
rushes plunged into retail frenzy; frantic schedules to beat the clock to see
family and friends. The true meaning is lost upon me as is the home for the core
of my faith. And yes, I still have a faith; buried as it is beneath an as yet
incomplete journey of self-re-discovery and a reemerging of my personhood following
a very long season of isolation and depravity.
I think this blog post from
December 9th from John Pavlovitz sums up and paraphrases my feelings
almost without exception.
He writes:
The holidays
are difficult when you’re losing your religion.
When your beliefs begin to shift and when doubt
creeps in, those dates on the calendar that used to bring such joy, the
ones that once set the steady rhythm of your spiritual journey each
year suddenly don’t provide the familiar comfort they used to.
Instead of being more deeply connected to
God and to your community of faith than ever, you tend to feel more
like an orphan; a former insider pushed to the periphery of the party,
no longer sure whether to try again or walk away for good.Having
something that once was such an integral part of you, now leave you oddly
estranged can bring a terrifying existential free fall.
I’ve heard from and spoken to so many
Christians these past few weeks who aren’t sure what to make of this
season anymore.Many of them are
struggling with what they actually believe about the birth and life of
Jesus, about his divinity, about how salvation works—and that all adds up to
one really strange holiday.
There’s such a commonality
of experience for the people I’ve heard from; the religious muscle memory that
tells their hearts that they should be in a building somewhere singing songs
and praying prayers and feeling feelings, mixed with the profound guilt
when they no longer have the slightest desire to do any of it.There is the pining for spiritual security—and tremendous guilt
when that security is elusive.
If you’re there right now friend, know that you’re in
good company. Many people
both inside and outside churches are navigating
the treacherous minefield that is carrying faith in seasons
of profound doubt.
The bad news, is that there are no easy
answers if you find yourself at the precipice of this Christmas
season unsure of what to do or what you believe; no silver bullet response
that will instantly clear all that is cloudy in you or suddenly usher in simple
answers to complex questions that have pestered you for a while.
The good news, is that theonly and perfect answer, is to walk into Christmas just as you are without
pretense or guilt or editing and know that this is enough.This transparency is a spiritual
journey which might lead you back to a building that used to be
so familiar to try once more.It might bring you to your computer
screen to participate in a new community of faith half a world away from the
safe confines of anonymity.It may bring you to a quiet place of
solitary prayer or meditation or to a small gathering of like hearted people.
It might lead you far away from anything remotely
resembling religion or church or spirituality—and that’s okay too.
Despite the lights and the tinsel, this season is not
about pageantry it’s about authenticity.It’s not about pulling the
wool over God’s eyes but about giving God the full weight of yourself
and trusting that God is able to bear it all.It’s about what you can profess or believe at this moment
and making peace with whatever that might be.
Because whatever is true is no less
true in those moments we are unable to believe it, anyway.In
other words, God is still God even if we can’t see that from where we’re standing;
the same way we trust that the sun is shining somewhere, even
when all appears dark to us.It
doesn’t need our consent to shine.
One of the things that can be so easy to
forget when we are struggling with our faith, is that God is not
struggling with us.God
sees the cavernous depths of our hearts, the meandering curves of our
road, and God has a mercy for us that transcends what we are capable of
understanding.Because
of this we can be encouraged even when we waver, knowing we are fully loved
even still.
Others may lose patience
or write you off when you vacillate, but you needn’t worry.Though people around you might
seek to shame you back into secure faith or to judge you harshly in
your doubts, they are not the final word on that matter, and not at all
the point either.
Therealtidings
of great joy, are that God isalwaysgoing
to be more loving, forgiving, understanding, and Grace-giving than God’s
followers, and that you are safe in your truth.
Rest securely in that truth, and however you are this
Christmas season; whether you are feeling drawn back toward or fully repelled
by the religion you grew up with, know this is all you can give
and give it unapologetically.
Pray whatever prayer you are capable of praying, even if
it barely feels like prayer. Profess the faith you are
able to, even if it is still somewhat smaller than a mustard seed. Give thanks for what is
good in your life; celebrate the people and the things around you that give you
joy, and let that be the thread connecting you to this season. Let your
honest declaration of faith or doubt be the most spiritual act you perform.
And as with any day on your spiritual journey, may you be
your truest self this Christmas.
Let that be the gift you giveandreceive—and believe that
this is enough.
I
choose to engage with the holiday season this year as a reluctant and hesitant
participant, confident that my place on the last, back row of the celebration
is just fine with me for now. If I’m not smiling or singing then know this: I
am alive and continuing my journey, going through what I need to go through to
find my own place of peace which is real and comes from within, not falsely manufactured
from without and lacking in connection with my reality. Rediscovering who I am
and where the light shines in my life, places new and old. This is my pilgrimage back to me. Its
not complete yet.
Whomever you may be that reads this, I
wish the truest and most honest tidings of joy and peace in the form of the
knowledge of Gods presence in the manner in which you understand him to be; in
the strands of your past, the serenity of your present and the promises of your
future.
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