Are we willing to be "a womb" for Christ to dwell in us? Merry Christmas, ladies.
Why a True Christmas May Hurt
A
ll day I pray to be a womb for God.
ll day I pray to be a womb for God.
On the way through the early blue light to the dentist, I whisper it to Father, “A womb, Lord. Come dwell in me.”
When we come home from the appointment to crusty bowls still on the table and the entrails of scarves and mittens and boots flung everywhere, I remember and pray it in earnest, the arms filling with the strewn innards, the words coming breathless like a woman made heavy, “A womb, Lord, a womb, a dwelling place for You.”
It’s when the phone rings, supper hour and I’m caught off guard, that I forget. I don’t even remember that I have forgotten until afterward, after dinner and after readings, when we light the candles and she who is swollen with the Child lumbers ever closer to her deliverance.


Little One counts the holes of our spiral Advent wreath, the candlelit evenings we have already passed. “Seventeen nights of waiting…” She methodically counts the remaining carved cups for candles. “And just… four, five, six… seven more nights and Mary will be in Bethlehem!”
She’s clenches her hands in giddy glee and it’s not about waiting for gifts, but waiting for the Child, and she turns and says to me knowingly, her head slightly tilted, her nod and smile so certain, “I know it didn’t take her 24 nights to really go to Bethlehem. It’s just the way we count the waiting... right, Caleb?”
She asks Caleb because he’s the one, inspired by another Advent wreath, who drew this pattern onto a plank of oak, cut it out, sanded it down, stained it and lit the candles.
“Yep.” His rocking chair creaks. “Twenty-four holes, one for each night, perfectly spaced.” He leans forward to straighten one of the candles. “Did you move Mary a bit closer, Shalom?”


It’s when she reaches for the wooden figure of Mary that I remember. I see the swelling silhouette of Mary there on the back of the donkey and the starkness of it strikes me, what it really means to be a womb.
Mary’s distended. Her skin is pulled taut. Her belly swells round and her abdomen bulges and she is drawn to the outer rim of herself.
Mary’s stretched.
To be a dwelling place of God, a womb for Christ, means to be extended, taken to one’s outer edges… stretched.
To be a womb for God means there’ll be stretchmarks.
I reach out and touch Mary full with Child and I hurt in the knowing: A true Christmas, one that God indwells, will experience pangs and pain and I will feel myself asked to love to the furthest edges of myself, asked to extend grace to the outermost reaches, asked to grow full and large and round with God.
To be a womb for Christ, I’ll feel my inner walls, my boundaries, stretch.
Stretching the shape of a soul hurts.


Little One waits long before she blows out the candles on one more peaceful night of our advent waiting. And I linger with her in the flickering light and I pray.
I pray for the names of those pregnant with Christ this Christmas who will extend themselves for difficult family members, who will let God take them to the utmost extremity of selflessness, who will be heavy with the Grace-Child. And I pray for the willingness to return a phone call and let go of the stiff sides of my heart so that God might stir within.
I pray for the soul stretchmarks.
Little One blows out the candles and I’m expecting Christ.
Gail, I definitely had to read this and read this and read it again. lol It is written a little over my head but I think that the message it is saying is good. That we need to be full of Christ and truly give of ourselves until it hurts. Right?
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing!
Ha, Brandy. I had to read it several times, too, but the more I read it the more I fell in love with the imagine she painted for us. We tend to glamorize Mary as the chosen one, the cute stable with cute animals. Mary looks so peaceful and content riding on that donkey 9 months pregnant. But, in reality, her world was turned upside down.
ReplyDeleteI loved how she described being a "dwelling place for Christ" and how that comes with a cost. We are stretched, it is painful, we are going to experience "labor pains" per say and that is how Christ is birthed in our souls.
I'll never look at Mary as the sweet, peaceful mother of Jesus the same way. It cost her. It cost us and the stretch marks will be visible - and that is a good thing!
Gail, thank you for sharing this post. I found it thought provoking and challenging. She is a deep thinker, I like that. Visible stretch marks, now that is a thought. May my heart and soul be found to be full of Christ.
ReplyDelete