Christmas in the middle of a global pandemic… and just in time for another lockdown.
Words I never thought I’d type, unless I was writing a work of fiction. And sometimes that’s exactly what this all feels like.
Someone pinch me.
Since moving to Leamington nearly six years ago, our family visits Montreal to spend the holidays with our loved ones. So for me, pandemic Christmas means missing our family festivities for the first time in my life.
Not a tradition I was looking to break, if I’m being honest.

I’m trying not to be discouraged. I want to be positive, and cheerful, and I’m really trying to make the most of it. But honestly, I’m discouraged. I’m tired, and weary, and morale is so damn low. Because frankly, it sucks! And I’m just so disappointed.
And I know very well that I’m not the only one…
I often ask God how He could allow this to drag on the way it has. Doesn’t He understand how special Christmas is? Doesn’t He know how much we were looking forward to it, how much we need it? Especially after all we’ve been through! How could this be part of His plan?
I BELIEVE STRONGLY that misery loves company. Sharing our struggles with those who can relate is a huge consolation to us. It makes us feel seen, heard, and validated.
Well for me, this is no less true than when I dive into the Scriptures.
For the first time, I’m trying to take in the Christmas story by imagining myself as a woman living through the final scene of the 400 Years of Silence.
Yep! You read that right. 400 years of dead silence. Radio silence. Not-a-peep-from-God silence. After years of slavery, desert-wandering, war, famine, drought, and exile…
God.
Said.
Nothing.
Not a single word spoken through king, prophet, or priest.
Nothing. Just silence.
Ok now go there with me. How would you feel if your family was waiting for God to fulfill a big promise… and then still be waiting on it for hundreds and hundreds of years?
I’d be so over it. Honestly, I’m just not built for the kind of life of faith that kept God’s people faithful through much of the Old Testament.
But I guess that’s the point. They were not the faithful ones. He was. God was the Faithful One. Even when God’s people were faithless… even when we feel like we’ve lost hope or faith… God was, and is, still faithful. (II Timothy 2:13)
Even for us, this past year has often felt like endless, disappointing silence from the Lord. Waiting for restrictions to lift. Waiting for circumstances to change. Just waiting for the waiting to be over!
After all that waiting, and 400 years of silence, the Messiah finally enters the scene. Real deliverance was at hand! For so long God’s people had been waiting for redemption. For a Saviour. But it’s no wonder so many hardly noticed when Jesus arrived. The religious leaders who anticipated His coming didn’t recognize Him at all – and worse – they rejected the One born to save them.
They expected the might of a military power promised to them in the Scriptures.
Here’s one familiar passage that gave them this hope:
For to us a child is born,
to us a son is given,
and the government will be on his shoulders.
And he will be called
Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God,
Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace.7 Of the greatness of his government and peace
– Isaiah 9:6-7
there will be no end.
He will reign on David’s throne
and over his kingdom,
establishing and upholding it
with justice and righteousness
from that time on and forever.

So rather than a mighty ruler on a throne, what they got instead was a baby. And not just any baby. But a baby born into near-poverty, to a teenage mother, without a biological father. Oh, and on refugee status, to top it all off.
On one occasion, Jesus even told the religious leaders:
You search the Scriptures because you think they give you eternal life. But the Scriptures point to me! Yet you refuse to come to me to receive this life.
– John 5:39-40
I can just picture myself as a woman in the first century. Waiting on the deliverance my family had been promised generations ago. Oppressed yet again by another governing power that’s doing nothing to honour the Lord…
Enter: Jesus.
Coming in all meek and mild – as one 18th century hymn writer put it. Giving no indication of any plans to stop the Roman oppression of God’s chosen people. Instead, He hardly addresses that elephant in the room at all, and talks instead of going the extra mile (Matt. 5:41), turning the other cheek (Matt. 5:39), giving to Caesar what is Caesar’s (Mark 12:17). Umm what?! Talk about a letdown! I’d be so confused. And fully understand why Jesus was rejected by so many.
But we know now that God wasn’t turning up on earth in the form of a baby to save Israel politically. He was doing so much more than that.
Because of His great love, His plan was to save us from the burden of sin and the consequence of death. Not because of our own goodness, but because of His great mercy. (Titus 3:5)
He was after soul transformation. Just as He still is today. For His kingdom is not of this world. (John 18:36)
So even if nothing changes externally, God’s working to change everything internally. To turn our hearts of stone into hearts of flesh. (Ezekiel 36:26) To transform us from the inside out. If we’ll just let Him.
Don’t we still long for comfort in this waiting though? That’s why I’m reminded of these words from the great prophet Isaiah, and my heart soars… with the eagle’s nest. (Michael Scott, anyone?)

I’ve included the link below to Isaiah 40 and even though it’s long, I promise you it’s SO worth the read.
Just note that this isn’t a typical Christmas passage, with the warm fuzzies turned up to Buddy the Elf festive levels. However, as I reflect upon it over this unique of Christmas days, it’s blessing me so much. I pray it does the same for you as well.
So pour yourself a holiday bevvy (coffee with eggnog and spiced rum for me) and curl up in front of your lit tree.
Then take a moment to reflect on these words of comfort amidst this seemingly endless season of waiting.
Life may not look the way you want it to. It certainly doesn’t to me. Not by a long shot! But let’s wait for the Lord; be strong and take heart and wait for the Lord. (Psalm 27:14) And let’s just see what He does with this hot mess.
Isaiah 40
“Comfort, comfort my people,”
says your God.
2 “Speak tenderly to Jerusalem.
Tell her that her sad days are gone…….
Click here for the rest of Isaiah 40!!
As this is my last blog post of 2020, I also want to take this opportunity to express my deep gratitude for you, dear reader. Your dedicated readership has given me this special opportunity to write through this past year, and that blesses me more than I can begin to express in typed word.

Snapped when I wrote the bulk of this post, before lockdown hit and I could no longer write at my favourite spot.
One final passage before signing off because it’s too good and i can’t help myself…
24 ‘May the Lord bless you
– Numbers 6:24-26
and protect you.
25 May the Lord smile on you
and be gracious to you.
26 May the Lord show you His favor
and give you His peace.’
I pray the Lord’s blessing and favour over you and your loved ones in 2021.
Cheers to new beginnings! For if we live, we live for the Lord; and if we die, we die for the Lord. So, whether we live or die, we belong to the Lord. (Romans 14:8)
Ok, I lied. I guess I did have one more Bible verse… don’t @ me.
But actually, please @ me (AKA: send me a comment, message, etc!) I really love to hear from you! Merry Christmas! Byeeeeeeeeee









