By the tender mercy of our God, the dawn from on high will break upon us, to give light to those who sit in darkness and in the shadow of death, to guide our feet into the way of peace.’ (Luke 1:78-79)
Having loved a child, you never get beyond the longing to
envelop them in your arms and love away their pain. Their age doesn’t matter,
nor does yours. You hear struggle in their voice, and love’s longing springs to
life, your heart aching to enfold them in a circle of love where burdens are
shared and the load lightened.
It never goes away. The years do nothing to diminish the
desire to bathe them in the love first awakened by their infant faces, those
faces now lined with the anxious wear having lived, loved and lost.
Love’s longing is the truest, most noble and beautiful part of
us, the most divine and the answer to my annual Christmas prayer, a prayer that
has never gone unrequited.
Each year I pray to feel Christmas, ever hungry to be enveloped
in the Love who comes to us, incarnate in the Lord Jesus Christ. I cannot abide
the thought that Advent days would slip by without tears filling my eyes with
the unspeakable beauty of Love’s sweet presence in the poverty of my heart,
making me rich once more.
Some might argue this is a selfish prayer, self-indulgent and
insensitive to the millions who will never enjoy the kind of life I take for
granted. Or maybe it’s merely the yearning to escape the sad welter of the daily
news where what bleeds … leads.
Perhaps, but I don’t think so. I think my prayer is as average
as I am, normal, typical, the common longing of human hearts hungry for home,
for the unfailing Love we each secretly crave.
So, I pray it ever year: Let me feel Christmas, Holy One; bathe
me in the beauty of your heart. I hunger to feel what you feel for me and for
the whole broken world, at least to what paltry extent that I can.
It’s an audacious petition. Who can feel what God feels, if it
is even proper to attribute human emotions to the greatness of the Unimaginable
One? But this year, again, I realize that the Holy One answered that prayer
long ago in love’s longing for my own children and those others for whom I am
moved to pray.
Love’s longing appears, even here, in this feeble heart of
mine, as I think of my beloved ones, yearning to sweep each of them up and enfold
them love’s healing circle. And each time it happens I feel Christmas once more.
I feel what God feels, love’s holy longing, for me, for you, for this whole
beloved world.
For the Holy One sees it all, all that we are, all this broken
world with all its wounded souls and tortured places, longing to sweep us up in
Love’s healing embrace.
Surely, we know the feeling.
David L. Miller
1 comment:
David, I too read Christ in Our Home daily. Yesterday, Dec 21, was especially for me. My husband Don died 3 1/2 years ago and I miss him horribly. I know he is above watching me, he even appeared in a dream and said "I'm okay and smiled". It was a beautiful marriage for us of later years. This year has been the worst. Thank you for sharing and being here for me. God bless you. Deanna Palmer
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