Finding Hope When Our Expectations are Disrupted

by Beth Vogt @BethVogt
We’re all adjusting our expectations for Christmas this year, aren’t we?
With an ongoing pandemic, we’ll experience a “socially distant” holiday season, whatever that looks like in our states, our towns, our homes.
This certainly isn’t the Christmas we imagined months ago as we packed away all the fa-la-la-la-la, while treasuring the newly-made memories at the beginning of 2020.
But what about that first Christmas all those hundreds of years ago? Now there’s a story that required adjusting expectations.
Mary and Joseph were betrothed, but their joy was disrupted by her unexpected pregnancy. The young couple accepted this miracle, only then to be required to journey to Bethlehem for a census. Not what any young, pregnant woman wants to do: travel by donkey to another town along with hundreds of other people.
Upon their arrival in Bethlehem – at last! – things only got worse. No room in the inn. In any inn. The kindness of a stranger provided them shelter with common farm animals.
And there she gave birth to their son.
Certainly not how they expected the miracle to occur.
God’s promised Savior was birthed in the midst of disappointment and inconvenience and filth.
Outside, people’s normal lives were interrupted by the census, separating them from family and friends. Everyone was oblivious to a baby’s birth in a stable behind an inn – and how that affected them for all eternity.
Perhaps the circumstances we’re facing today can help us better understand that first Christmas, with all its unexpected disruptions, demands, and hardships. Let’s not forget, the miracle still holds true for us today, too.
May we cling ever tighter to hope as we release our hold on our usual expectations for holidays. What’s bringing you hope as 2020 comes to a close?
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Published on December 11, 2020 22:00
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