Christmas has to do with children. After all of this, given all of this, is that not clear? We are here for the little onesThe wind speaks to the lamb, and the lamb speaks to the shepherd and the shepherd speaks to all of us. The answer to all our problems is a gift, one that we only learn we have by teaching others how to accept.
The idea is, you write each day, and the rhythm carries you, and your control slips a little keeping up, and so here and there, God’s grace appears, and something interesting happens. Maybe.
Advent is the only liturgical season in which I have a consistent and dedicated spiritual practice. It’s hard to talk about, and hard sometimes to even recognize. I don’t know why. I think it’s connected to my pathological willingness to be disappointed, and maybe also to certain threads of optimism I can’t quite seem to destroy. It’s embarrassing how idealistic I am, how Utopian, apocalyptic even (in the sapiential sense). But mostly I’m dreamy and wordy. I think a lot and write a lot but not a lot gets done. Somewhere a child is born in conditions I wouldn’t wish on anyone. Did I say that already? These things don’t happen by accident.
Christmas is my favorite holiday so a season anticipating it always felt appropriate. Christmas is beginning again, but a little recklessly. Hope is a big river whose currents are no joke. Growing up, Christmas was my only experience of abundance – of enough, of more than enough even. There was a spaciousness to Christmas, a generosity. Nobody went without. Food, toys, games, rest, laughter – it was all sufficient. It was a dream but it was a good dream. It was a happy dream. The true self – content, cooperative, communal – broke through like a star and its light touched everything. In Christmastime I was content, not cynical or anxious. Attack and defense were meaningless. Briefly but undeniably the night that never ends, ended.
But I am stumbling this year in Advent. I am forgetting the prayer and forsaking the ritual. I asked to see Jesus, and over the summer I saw Jesus, and sister nothing has been the same ever since. Will he love me if I can only stumble through Advent? What if I ignore Christmas altogether? Why is this so hard still? Part of me wants to be unlovable in order to make others prove their love. It’s a trick I learned a long time ago, a move I’ve gotten regrettably good at. But Jesus doesn’t play that game. He doesn’t love the way you or I love but rather the way God loves. I have failed so often in this life – intentionally and otherwise – and yet here I am happier and freer than I ever dreamed possible. What does this say about God? About Jesus? About us?
I wonder if Advent – seen at last as a season emphasizing renewal and beginning again – has finally put the lie to my pathological fantasy of spiritual purity and religious perfection? I wonder if it’s time to let disappointment go, in favor of . . . what exactly? What is the world if we emphasize process and presence, not perfection? Jesus is clear: the practice of love always reveals the shallowness of our obsession with ideals and standards and rules. Everybody belongs; everybody is welcome. What else could love possibly mean? Of course it’s messy. Of course it’s more like a party than a mass. Have you read the gospels?
Advent is not contingent on a formal practice. You can’t do it wrong. The ritual this year – the prayer, the writing – has proven itself fragile and imperfect. It didn’t work, and I had to let it go. Doing so foregrounds my broken nature but brokenness is not a sin. It’s not a crime against God. You and I can be the beautiful selves we are without polishing up. You and I are no improvement needed. Jesus laughs a lot, in my experience. “You don’t need Advent, you need a hug.”
So in Advent this year I lean into the appearance of imperfection and the experience of fragility. It’s scary. I see it – and my fear of it – everywhere. In my heart, in the news, in this craft which is the means by which we connect. And yet somehow the imperfection and fragility – and the fear they beget – are without effect. When I look around I see a world into which the possibility of another way is about to be born yet again. It’s okay to begin! And begin again. The very act of preparing oneself to be born again is fraught and blemished and it’s okay. It’s more than okay. Love is always showing up in that manger, on that cross, on the road to Emmaus, and in an empty tomb we are afraid to approach. Welcome to my heart, which is lit up by your heart.
A few days before Christmas, something in me softens and unclenches and the road ahead clears. There is no separation anywhere. Do you hear what I hear? Do you see what I see? A song, high above the trees and hills, its voice as large as the sea? A sleeping child whose heart is full of goodness and light? Both are given.
Oh another morning writing with coffee, love in attendance. How grateful I am! How sustained this morning by the gift you showed me was mine to accept. Humming and muttering a carol I am learning it is okay to love and be lifted by.
