
We have so many expectations for the end of the year, as well as Christmas. Expectations for ourselves, for those around us, for our lives.
I came into Advent thinking that I had a lot of things figured out which, as it turns out, are very unfigured out. This season seems to emphasize messiness, for better or for worse. And Iām seeing that the closer you get to the manger, the more undone you become.Ā
You canāt hide from Light that is obsessed with encompassing even the darkest parts of your heart. You canāt hide from a God who put it all on the line to restore. He never stops chasing, He never stops invading.
Iāve found that Iām not alone in the tension of upset plans and unexpected realities. Perhaps thatās exactly what Christmas is all about.
It all started with a simple āyesā before the answers, before the game plan was revealed. Just āyesā to what was offered, to what was asked. One question, on the foundation of knowledge of identity: the daughter knew her Father, and that was enough, without the answers.
Maryās āyesā didnāt launch her into a world of solutions to the problems that the unexpected inevitably brought about. When the Father invites us to open our hearts to newness, the certainty weāre offering is knowing that, not knowing how. Knowing that He never lets us down. Knowing that He never leaves. Knowing that Heās always victorious.Ā
Not really knowing how that looks practically all the time.
And, because weāre human, we try to take from the pieces that we do have to construct a full picture. To construct a plan to prevent our hearts from breaking (again) and allow us to hold the reigns of control.
Except: when we say yes to something greater than ourselves, we canāt keep our plans. We have to allow Him to upset our plans, and we have to choose to worship in the unexpected. We have to let our hearts be undone: what we thought we knew, who we thought He was, who we thought we were.
Some of the most powerful worship comes from the place of the undoing. That space where youāve been knocking at the door of the inn and theyāre all full or nobody is even answering, and suddenly you find yourself in a stable. When plans are upset and whatever was expected, whatever was sure, whatever was hoped for Ā is nowhere to be found. When looking straight down at whatās been handed to you, and you see absolutely no reason to trust, because thereās absolutely no reason to believe that good comes, because thatās not where your heart is at.
But worship in this space enables a step to be taken back, breath to be breathed where the air is suffocating. Worship enables us to look further back, recognizing His faithfulness, seeing all the places that heās come through. Answers to how and why might not be here, but He is.
And if Heās here, this is the safest place to be upset, to let it all go. Here, at the feet of Love Himself, the unexpected becomes the miracle. Here, we can allow ourselves to just be undone.
āJust be in the mess,ā Iāve been told. He didnāt hesitate to do the same.Ā
I wonder if Maryās heart screamed out as it encountered the unexpected some nights, even as she chose peace and joy. There is power in the praise that is lifted through tears. Thereās a reason itās called a sacrifice of praise.
So letās be like wrapping paper, after the present is opened. Letās just be undone, hiding nothing. Nothing left to contain or obtain at the feet of the King. The feet of baby Jesus in a manger, perfect and pure.
Christmas is about a God who upset all of our plans and did the unexpected, removing all of the expectations weāve placed on ourselves and allowing us to just be undone. This is the undoing space. Thereās even an undoing of the expectations weāve placed on Him, the boxes and the labels, the neatness that weāve encased Him in.Ā
Christmas is so not an emotion, so if youāre not feeling the whole WE NEED A LITTLE CHRISTMAS RIGHT THIS VERY MOMENT rush, then, just breathe. You donāt need to get hype and scream about lights.
The best way to enter into Christmas and end this year might not be to have this perfect version of yourself to present, with all the ends tied up. It might just be to enter into the mess, and give Him the mess-- because thatās why He came.
He wants to be present in the mess of the upsetting, of the unexpected. Letās be undone in the simplicity of the stable, where we can have total confidence that all is made right before we can even see it. Come to the manger, for there is no better time to worship than when we are undone. Where He is, there is peace, beyond circumstances.
Be at peace.









