Therefore the Lord himself will give you a sign. Behold,
the virgin shall conceive and bear a son, and shall call his name Immanuel.
- Isaiah 7:14, ESV
I have a friend at work whose son is singing the Amy Grant
song “Emmanuel” for a school Christmas show.
He comically describes his son rocking out to this eighties smoothrocking anthem. It is undoubtedly a peppy song and I remember singing it
loudly, while having no idea what Emmanuel even meant. One day, I found out that it means “God with us.” That is what God promised Israel. Not a distant, removed god, but God who
dwells with his people. The course of
history changed with Christ’s birth - his seemingly, by outward appearances,
insignificant birth.
This is what we celebrate at Christmas – that God sent
Jesus to be our Emmanuel. Yet, the
greatest gift for us is so often the most challenging one to really
believe. As a Christian, I mentally
assent that Emmanuel is a reality for me today.
But my heart does not always act out of that reality. If anything, one of the deepest wars in my
soul is battling out whether I truly believe that God is with me.
Because there are days when I try to take up my own causes
and defend myself. When I trace back
what fuels these actions, I see that there are parts of my very own heart that
struggle to trust that God really is with me.
There are days when I avoid what I’m really feeling and
will use any TV show or movie to ignore my churning, lonely heart. These are the parts of my heart that feel as
though I’m invisible. Again, I struggle
to believe that God can meet me in my obscurity.
There are days when I’m impatient, feeling as though the
waiting (waiting for, fill in the blank) will never end. In those moments, my heart suspects that God
has forgotten me.
I see the Christian life as the place where the Spirit
confronts our half-truths and lies. It
is a process that is anything but pristine.
Rather, it’s a tangled place, where my fragmented heart comes to
light. It’s the place where I realize I
am just as much in need of God today, as I was on the day I first met him. And it’s in the place of neediness that I can
receive the gift of Emmanuel.
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