It was Christmas Eve, 2002. I had graduated from high school a few months earlier, and unlike almost all of my close friends (who went on to major universities) I had stayed home and begun my college career at Chemeketa Community College. I had honestly loved high school and had feared leaving it behind, but was unprepared for how lonely I would feel during this stage of my life. I had hated my first quarter of college, and was only temporarily boosted during Christmas Break by the return of many good friends. Community College just didn’t seem to be a place to meet people, let alone something I’d had briefly during my sophomore year of high school, and badly wanted to find again. Sigh. A boyfriend.
At this stage in my life, I have spent a lot of time thinking about why I was so single for so long, and have come to a complex and intertwining variety of reasons. But I was a young 18 years old and took it oh so very personally.
I attended Midnight Mass at St. Mary’s with my two brothers. I sat between them in the pew, and sadly watched as both of them got called on to be a part of the almost comically enormous Midnight Mass altar serving corps. In a time in my life where I felt very alone anyway, it felt devastating to be at Midnight Mass alone. As I knelt to pray before mass started, I bit my lip hard to keep from crying. I prayed so hard to not feel this alone forever, and all of the sudden, I felt a sort of warmth in my body, beginning in my scalp and spreading quickly through my torso and limbs. It sounds so cheesy and unreal, but I swear it’s how I experienced it. It was this huge comfort, as if Jesus was saying “I’m here. That’s what today is all about. I came here to be with you, to walk with you.” And as I let myself be comforted by that feeling, I looked around me and realized that I knew many people there, and that the church was filling fast. I may have attended alone, but I was far from being alone that night.
As the years passed by, I felt very close to the Christ Child during Christmas, and have made it a point to go to Midnight Mass every year. Up until 2009 (more on that later) there wasn’t a Christmas/Advent season that felt devoid of that loneliness (specifically of being STILL single), but there was ALWAYS comfort in Midnight Mass.
I got to thinking today how wonderfully symbolic that is, and how it fits in so perfectly with the love story that is still being written as we speak. I love to imagine that God often creates on a micro level in my life what he has created on a macro level with his plan for the world and for salvation. And maybe it’s true…I think those who have similar beliefs to me would have little trouble in seeing it that way.
The Israelites waited many generations spanning thousands of years for the arrival of their Messiah. They wandered through the desert, were persecuted by other nations, and many probably, frankly, started to wonder if He was ever going to show up. And when He finally did, it didn’t even seem believable. A baby? And where? Born to whom? This wasn’t exactly the mighty leader they had been looking for. But through the years and centuries, He was revealed to be more amazing than anything they could have dreamed up. When speaking of Sacrifice, many Christians think of the Good Friday story, but until a few years ago, my attention had not been drawn to the Sacrifice of the Christmas Story.
Before Jesus came to earth, we can assume that Heaven was his home. Don’t get me wrong, I think the Earth is an amazing place with resounding beauty. But it is no heaven. It meant Jesus was far away from the Father and the Holy Spirit. And of course there were the pieces of poverty and persecution. But he chose this fate, because he chose us. He chose me. He wanted to come and walk among us.
Which leads me to Christmas 2008. I thought I was doing well. I steeled myself against what I had come to dub “The Christmas Lonelies.” I was helping a friend through a very difficult time and didn’t want to be self-pitying. I also had many loving and fun friends and family members around me and just said to myself “don’t pout.” I invited the Christ Child into my worship during Christmas Eve Mass, but invited him in as joy rather than as comfort. But maybe this was prideful of me. Maybe I wanted the comfort. Maybe I needed the comfort. Because on the 26th, we celebrated Christmas with my grandmother. She is very generous in giving gifts, and puts a lot of thought and heart into what she gives. But this particular Christmas she gave me something that sent me almost immediately to tears. She gave me a rose vase she found in an antique shop. I opened it and smiled thinking that even though it didn’t really fit with the décor of my apartment, it was pretty and I appreciated it. I thanked her and she said “Well I just saw it and thought maybe somebody would be sending you flowers sometime soon.” I found an excuse to leave 15 minutes after that, because the first thought in my head was “other than a short high school thing and a short dysfunctional on again off again college thing, I’ve never had anyone that wants to give me flowers. I have no reason to think anyone will want to anytime soon…or ever.”
There began a relatively short bout of being convinced that my love life was going nowhere, and I should start thinking about what else I wanted to do with my life because nobody would ever want to be with me or marry me. It sounds so melodramatic now, but it was honestly what I felt and believed at the time, and couldn’t even confide it aloud to my best friend.
Ironically, it was less than a week and a half later that things started up with Zach. At first, I felt probably pretty similar to the way the Israelites felt about the Messiah being born a baby in a barn. “That’s sweet and all, but really, he lives far away and this is going nowhere.” Slowly, very slowly, a bigger plan was revealed, and ultimately Zach made a pretty sizeable sacrifice to be able to come and walk with me, too.
I love the way God can use the parables of our own lives to tell us about His great love for us.
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