At the beginning of December, Luiz and I had a big red bow on the top of our Christmas tree at home, like we do every year. But a few days after we put it up there Amayah came home from school and looked up at that bow for just a minute before she grabbed some paper and markers and made up a paper star. When she finished, she held it out to me and says, Mommy you can use it for the tree because we need a star.
So I tied that star to the top of the tree. And if you saw our Christmas tree right now you’d see, the top of the tree curves in a point and there is that paper star tied on there.
That star was something she wanted to see up there so much that she made it for us herself and it’s been something that has been a great reminder to me.
I have very little sense of direction and I tend to get lost as a habit. This week, on Wednesday, I was headed to Mount Vernon when I got turned around and ended up all the way in Sulpher Springs before I realized I was headed the wrong way. And, while I was there, I got my car stuck on the side of the road. I cried that morning, frustrated at myself for not realizing how off course I was, frustrated that I got myself stuck.
And as someone who gets lost often, it’s beautiful to me that when God told the wise men how to find their way to Jesus, He made it simple. He put a star up in the sky, like an arrow pointing their way, and all they had to do was follow.
And thinking on how God gives directions is comforting when you’re not only directionally challenged on the outside but your directionally challenged on the inside too.
Because of Amayah’s gift, Christmas this year has been a reminder that while God gives us the baby, God never stops giving us the way to find the baby too.
I can struggle so deeply with shame over the childlike need for love in my heart. I can frustrate myself to tears over how childlike and needy my heart can feel. And I can shame myself even more when the love I want to give feels like a child holding out a handmade paper star or a bunch of dandelions I picked from the grass.
But that same childlike need for love, like a star, it points down a journey looking for someone else who will be a child too.
When someone dares to be a child with me, it breathes love on the scars in my heart and it frees my heart to be loved like a child again and to love like a child again.
Because when a child gives a gift, they hold out tender beauty straight from their own heart. And it can touch the heart it gives to in a way that nothing else can.
And Love is the star that is always this learning, growing, crushing dare to let the heart be a child one more time, so it can dare to find the child it needs.
And there is Someone who made His own self into a child for me in the most complete way. He makes Himself into a child and offers Himself as a gift to the child in me.
He held out his heart formed into an unborn baby inside of a womb, and they wanted to put away into the dark the mother’s body that encased him. He held out His fragile heart coming through the sacred bloody entry of a woman’s birthing body. And he wasn’t met with a warm home, but with a bed where the donkeys eat. His offering given defenseless was met with those who sought the death of His child form.
The Child of Christmas gave His whole heart, holding it out for the world in the shape of a baby. He let His heart be a child to hold out vulnerable for the lost child heart.
And the person of Love kept on in his exposed human form, offering Himself until He was crushed.
What He offers is the crushing we all need for our human love that’s been given in so many broken ways and wounded beyond recognition. We all know wounded love. I can carry my wounded and fallen love so heavy. I can long for it all to go away so I can feel whole again.
For the crushing we need, he gives the Cross where the wounded child heart is always offered crushing and renewing-fresh in new life to love again.
He gave the Cross we need and how would we know we needed it if it were not for the child?
There is nothing like a gift from a child. A gift from a child can love on the coldest part of my heart. And only the touch from a baby’s hand can touch the closed-shut scars in my heart tender enough to open them up and make room for Love.
I desperately need a gift from a child. And this Christmas, as always, that is exactly what I am given. That is what we all are given.
There is a child in Bethlehem, who is king of the world. He accepts the gifts they bring of gold, frankincense and myrrh, even though, these are things that He himself made, things He already has.
Why does He accept them? Why does He receive the gifts of those who have nothing of their own to give? Because he is a king who treasures the simple beauty of a gift from a child, so much so, that that is exactly how He offered Himself.
As much as I need the cross, I need the child.
The best way to heal a heart that is broke, is to take it to the child and let his tiny fingers touch it’s scars and make room to love like a child again. Where there is room for the child, the child makes room for love.
Joy to the world. The Lord has come. Let earth receive her king. Let every heart prepare him room.
Whatever your Christmas season may look like this year, we can trust it for each other, that the baby’s touch makes room for this Christmas to be bright and merry to each of our hearts.
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A note of thanks: I was so incredibly grateful to be able to share these words in spoken form this week. If you were there, thank you so very much for being the kindest audience ever. I was so touched by you all.
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