Source: cheandfidel.blogspot.com via Sarah on Pinterest
If more women were pastors or preachers, we’d have a lot more sermons and books about the metaphors of birth and pregnancy connecting us to the story of God. (I am rather tired of sports and war metaphors.)
The divinity of God is on display at Christmas in beautiful creche scenes. We sing songs of babies who don’t cry. We mistake quiet for peace. A properly antiseptic and church-y view of birth, arranged as high art to convey the seriousness and sacredness of the incarnation. It is as though the truth of birth is too secular for Emmanuel, it doesn’t look too holy in its real state. So the first days of the God-with-us requires the dignity afforded by our editing.
But this? This creating out of passion and love, the carrying, the seemingly-never-ending-waiting, the knitting-together-of-wonder-in-secret-places, the pain, the labour, the blurred line between joy and “someone please make it stop,” the “I can’t do it” even while you’re in the doing of it, the delivery of new life in blood and hope and humanity?
This is the stuff of God.
There is something Godly in the waiting, in the mystery, in the fact that we are a part of it, a partner with it but we are not the author of it. How you know that there is life coming and the anticipation is sometimes exciting and other times exhausting, never-ending. How there is a price that you pay for the love love love.
I was fortunate to give birth to three of my tinies without complications. I find myself thinking of those experiences often during Advent; they are still very fresh for me. My eldest daughter was born in the hospital in a fairly usual way. My littlest girl was born at home, in water, with midwives, a beautiful and redemptive experience for me. But it’s the birth of my son, my Joe, that stays with me in these winter months. His was an unintended free birth in our building’s parking garage while we were on our way to the hospital. We were alone – no midwife, no doctor, not even in our own home with a clean floor but instead a garage filled with gasoline and tire smells. My husband was scared; a lot of things could go wrong in this scenario (he had the good sense to act like he was in control though). And we were surrounded by strangers – helpful, concerned strangers but strangers nonetheless – and they were witnessing me give birth.
And yet my body had taken over and all we could do, all I could do, was surrender to that moment fully. Every muscle in my body was focused, my entire world had narrowed to that very moment. And then there he was, born while I was leaning against our old truck, standing up, into my own hands, nearly 9 pounds of shrieking boy-child humanity, welcomed by my uncontrollable laughter and his father’s uncontrollable relief-tears. A few people applauded.
There wasn’t anything very dignified about giving birth.
And yet it was the moment when I felt the line between the sacred and the secular of my life shatter once and for all. The sacred and holy moments of life are somehow the most raw, the most human moments, aren’t they?
But we keep it quiet, the mess of the Incarnation, because it’s just not church-y enough and men don’t quite understand and it’s personal, private, there aren’t words for this and it’s a bit too much. It’s too much pain, too much waiting, too much humanity, too much God, too much work, too much joy, too much love and far too messy. With far too little control. And sometimes it does not go the way we thought it was supposed to go and then we are also left with questions, with deep sadness, with longing.
My entire concept of God shifted in that moment, leaving my brain and my life and my theology to catch up with what my soul now knew deep. I could never see God as anything other than through the lens of the Incarnation, of his Father-Mother heart and his birth now. No theologian or counter-circumstance-experience can take away from what I know, what many mothers the world over know in their heart of hearts about loss and birth and raising babies and real transformation: it’s Love and it is sacred and it is human and it all redeems. The very truth that God put on flesh and blood and moved into the neighbourhood through birth, even – especially – that experience of birth, now showing us what it means to be truly human.
Women can tell this part of the story this Christmas, the glimpse behind the veil, the life lived in the in-between of the stuff of God. There is a story on your lips, isn’t there, mama? of how you saw the face of God in the midst of fear or pain or joy and understood, really understood, Mary, not kneeling chastely beside a clean manger refraining from touching her babe, just moments after birth but instead, sore and exhilarated, weary and pressing a sleepy, wrinkled newborn to her breasts, treasuring every moment in her heart, marvelling not only at his very presence but at her own strength, how surrender and letting go is true work, tucking every sight and smell and smack of his lips into her own marrow.
God, Incarnate, Word made flesh, born of a woman. We can tell the true, messy stories of the Incarnation. Emmanuel, God with us. May we recognise the miracle of the Incarnation, not in spite of the mess, but because of the very humanness of it.









{ 78 comments… read them below or add one }
“There is a story on your lips, isn’t there, mama? of how you saw the face of God in the midst of fear or pain or joy and understood, really understood, Mary, not kneeling chastely beside a clean manger refraining from touching her babe,” this season of Advent has been more real than ever from experiencing birth to loss to knowing that babe, knowing Jesus taking on flesh to wait, to know the end of 33 years and still do it all over. We do have stories don’t we.
Yes, yes, we do. And the stories are also in the losses we’ve experienced, aren’t they? God was there, too.
How very real, how very true… this blessed my heart. from the consuming love depicted in the picture to every word strung together beautifully, but more so the message. As a young woman, yet to give myself to a man in marriage, and to give birth, this really shed light on the divinity of it all… thank
Thank you, luv.
sarah, my soul cries yes at this truth! thank you for your voice! scripture says that male and female were created in the image of God… for so long we have only been taught the male side. but i believe females are created to reflect God’s femaleness and males his maleness. if we had women pastors wouldn’t this bring so much balance and therefore a greater picture?
and this….The sacred and holy moments of life are somehow the most raw, the most human moments, aren’t they?…. YES.
“if we had women pastors wouldn’t this bring so much balance and therefore a greater picture”
God spells out the roles of men and women pretty clearly in the New Testament. He calls women not to be pastors (elders) in the church, but to teach younger women. So women’s ministry leaders are definitely in the picture. The female role is to be the “help-meet” for the men of the church in their leadership roles, whether that be as a wife, or as a sister in Christ.
I think you put your finger on it when you noticed: “My husband was scared . . . he had the good sense to act like he was in control though.” When we’re “doing” belief right, it’s scary. When we’re doing church right—when there’s a whole bunch of us scared people squished together in the pews—it’s hard not to slip out of the courage that brought us together into acting like *we’re* in control. God is. I believe he is. When we’re all doing courage, bearing witness with one another as we pass through situations beyond our control instead of faking it, what a powerful thing that is!
I never thought of it that way but yes, very true! Good catch!
You know I definitely agree with you about more birth stories!
“My entire concept of God shifted in that moment”
This is definitely true for me too in regards to my birthing story and let me tell you, it was long and hard and scary and messy, totally the secular meeting the sacred. I definitely see the christmas story in a new light since giving birth and carrying a child within me. Raw is definitely a good word for it. Beautiful piece! Did I mention you need to write a book so I can read even more by you?
Raw is absolutely the word for it. I love that we’re getting bolder with our truth in these things, too.
Wow! Goosebumps every sentence! Thank you.
beautiful!!!
Beautifully said, and so true! Wow, birth in a parking garage. I cannot fathom it. I love that you are writing from that kind of experience.
I have been reflecting on the song “Labor of Love” a lot this season- the first lines are “It was not a silent night… there was blood on the floor.” There is so much redemption and beauty in a God who comes into the story in such a way. He could have come as an adult. He didn’t. He chose to enter the human story in the same way humans do.
Another forgotten piece, I think, is the pregnancy. Jesus was not only a baby, he was a fetus. The humility and love involved in that astounds me. I marvel at what Mary must have felt during those months. (That was how I reflected on the incarnation this year http://everydayawe.com/2011/12/09/advent-series-day-9-immanuel/)
Let’s hope for more female voices telling these often overlooked parts of the story that add so much depth and wonder.
Yes, the whole pregnancy and “carrying” aspect of the story! We could go on forever and a day on that, too!
Oh how my heart connects here! I am overdue with my first baby, just waiting for him or her to become outside of me. This post (as so many here do) put into words what I am sure to feel within the next few days. Being pregnant at this time of year has shifted my view and thoughts on Advent entirely – I can’t quite grasp yet what giving birth so near Christmas will do to my heart. Thanks, Sarah.
Praying for you and thinking of you, Anna. I was 8 days over with my son, 4 with my littlest girl. Those are long days, I know, the waiting. A sermon in there, for sure.
Absolutely Sacred. My three births ( two natural) were astounding. Heaven’s veil was open for a few moments…It is unexplainable. We just hosted a speaker in our home who has her masters in developmental health and aid for the oppressed women in the world. She directed me to you. In our typical home based sessions we usually have 12 men and two women. We try to get more women…The men sometimes come to argue things like Pacifism:) But this topic “Are we There Yet”(on gender equality) brought one local doctor/therapist and my husband…the rest was women. No men, not even the more open minded typical, thought it was worthwhile to hear that topic. We need our men to be aware to. My second last blog post speaks on this. We need our men as much as we need our women to view gender equality and oppression. The question is “how to motivate them to want to see?”
Oh– I do want to see, and understand; and I do to some extent. It’s been a rough and long road, with contributions to its making by good women like my mother, and my wife, and my sisters, and midwives and nurses. I am a man. I am a nurse. I am a prenatal educator. I am a minister. And one of my deepest passions is to raise the awareness among boys and men, girls and women, of how much we can know our Maker and our selves if we will but look and listen to what Birth teaches us. What love and sexual reproduction teach us. What God teaches us through these raw and beautiful gifts of Life. I long for the days when I will spend more time communicating these things instead of bandaid-ing the chronically ill in a hospital. (not that doing so is a lesser thing, but birth and life stir my passions more warmly)
Thank you, Marty. I appreciate your work in every way.
I don’t know how to motivate them to want to see but I agree that it’s a universal story for us all. I love that imagery you used: the opening of heaven’s veil. So good.
Lovely, Sarah.
This fits so well with what you wrote about not fighting for a seat at the table anymore, and what Rachel wrote about being prophets where we are not allowed to be preachers.
Another thing that occurred to me, is that not only are women too often silenced, but it seems young women especially.
And Mary is a prime example of a young woman who was of great importance to God’s plan. I’m finding her someone to identify with right now. Young, and female, and yet if it were not for her (or any women)…
Love this, Sarah. Thank you.
Yes, the “important” ones weren’t the ones there, were they?
My word, this is beautiful. Not only the writing, but the true message of it all. I am not a “mama” yet but have always dug deeper into the heart of Mary when looking at the manger scene. I always thought, “there’s no way” when she was depicted at praying near her newborn son, Jesus Christ.
Wonderful word today, this season.
Thanks, Natalie.
This is so beautiful. My baby is 10 months old – and I will never look at those “labor pains” metaphors in the Bible the same way again!
I found out recently that the Catholic Church believes that Mary experienced no pain during labor. My first reaction was “grrr” …but then I thought of the stories of women who experienced effortful, but pain-free births, and smiled. For sure, there was blood and it was hard, and oh, you hit it on the head with this: “…Mary, not kneeling chastely beside a clean manger refraining from touching her babe, just moments after birth but instead, sore and exhilarated, weary and pressing a sleepy, wrinkled newborn to her breasts, treasuring every moment in her heart, marvelling not only at his very presence but at her own strength, how surrender and letting go is true work, tucking every sight and smell and smack of his lips into her own marrow.”
Birth changes things – and everything. Right on.
Gorgeous. I’m so grateful that I’m finding a community of women out there who are discovering ways to understand God through our femininity.
Amen. It’s always nice to find our tribe.
Lovely, Sarah. Thank you. Birth has forever changed me and I praise God for the experience. I had never felt such pain and such blessing in one moment; it is utterly other-worldly.
It is other-worldy, amen.
I love the contrast of the “I can’t do it” moment with the joy of the actual birth. So much of life is like that. Moments of reality breaking in and filling the space–overwhelming and preparing for something greater. Thank you for a wonderful analogy.
I thought the same thing, Michael. How “the “I can’t do it” even while you’re in the doing of it” can be applied to so many of life’s greatest struggles, which ultimately are the things that shape us into something more like Christ.
Thank you.
Beautifully written. Love it. It’s amazing that as follows of a suffering savior we avoid thinking about painful experiences let alone allowing ourselves to follow Him into life-giving suffering. Thank you for bringing this forward in such a personal and powerful reflection, just in time to change my view of the nativity scene forever.
Thanks, Musu!
Gorgeous, all of it, and brings me back. But this small thought, tucked in to so much truth: “how surrender and letting go is true work…” and I’m still crying. Yes, yes, yes.
It is the hardest thing we can do, the letting go.
Gorgeous. Just gorgeous. Sharing.
Thanks, Jenny!
It was awhile before I even read your words, I couldn’t stop looking at the picture. My God, Yes.
Your words redeemed many things for me. Thank you for spreading light and hope, for us many, many women who want to believe.
I know. That picture really captured me, too. Amazing!
Oh my goodness yes and it’s so true. And LOL So many pastors use Star Wars or Braveheart or even Shawshank Redemption (yes, our pastor used that recently!!)
Steph
I’m so.over. Braveheart. Gah. And I’m Scottish!
One of the most memorable sermons I ever heard was by a woman preacher who was preaching on being “born again” (from the Nicodemus story). She talked about being present in the delivery room when her sister gave birth – and described the experience being born again as “wrenching, tearing work.” I’ve never again thought about being “born again” quite the same way.
Wow! That is vivid (and pretty right on).
Since giving birth to my two little ones (now very big and still so lovely), I have fought against the image of Mary plunking her baby into a little cold, drafty manger. My picture is of a huge manger filled with straw, that allowed her to lie in there with Jesus wrapped up against her warm body.
Oh, that’s beautiful.
Thank you for this. I too birthed a child earlier than I anticipated – in my case, at home before we left for the hospital – and it has deepened how I think about the Word who became Flesh in a stable, delivered by His on-the-spot father – as my daughter was by hers.
It certainly does add something to our understanding, doesn’t it?
wow, reading this and in a pile of tears. I have not experienced birth. We have done 3 IVF rounds 2 took but miscarried at 6 and 9 weeks. I pray to feel what this is like. I love ” The glimpse behind the veil”. To give birth to a life created and blessed by God. What a glorious gift. Thank you for the story.
Praying for you, truly, Alison. We’ve lost three as well.
I so appreciated this article. During Advent this year I walk around the days and find myself wondering – how did it ever become possible to speak of the Incarnation without direct reference to the body of a woman? Sure, Protestants trot out Mary this time of year; for Catholics, Mary seems closer at hand throughout the year. But for centuries the theology of the Incarnation has been spoken of without any reference to pregnancy, to birth, to the feminine. It is God who becomes incarnate in Jesus….and Mary is (and pregnancy and birth is)…where?
Thank you so much for this excellently written and provocative piece!
Yes, it’s time to reclaim our stories for the Gospel. There’s redemption in them.
Raw indeed, and moving. This year our little girl arrived early as an “accidental” home birth, and that made me ponder Mary and her fearful yet wonderful experience all the more. It was for me a personal encounter with the true light that comes through an unplanned birthing experience.
Beautiful piece.
Hi Sarah -
Wondering if you would allow this piece to be posted in its entirety on our blog (with credit and links back to your site) ? So beautiful. (We deliver babies at a small non-profit Christ-centered Maternity program in Haiti and love the connections you’ve made here.)
Tara Livesay
Heartline Ministries
Hey Tara – Of course. I checked with Nish, our editor, and she’s good with it as well. Go right ahead. And blessings on you and the work of Heartline!
This is BEAUTIFUL. thank-you.
Good words…needed words…and yes, I so wish more pastor/preacher types would drop their swords…some of us are trying – http://thebeautifuldue.wordpress.com/2011/12/20/deviation/
John
I am due with our first child Jan. 4th – he or she could arrive any day now. It has made the Advent season that much more beautiful for my husband and I. I often think about Mary with new appreciation for what she did. I know that our birth will bring me even closer to understand the incarnation. Thank you so much for sharing this piece of your heart. I am excited to join the club.
Thank you so much for sharing your story. It brought me back to the birth of my 3 sons each one of them very different experiences and all overwhelmed with love that took over me.
Thank you so much for this post. It is incredibly moving to me – both as a preacher and as a mother. We are expecting our second child in a few months. Our first birth was very scary and ended in a c-section. We are hoping for a VBAC this time around. I will be channeling Mary and connecting with the power of all the mothers who have gone before me during my upcoming labor. Thank you for reminding me of one more image to call upon as I prepare for the birth.
This mommy priest is preaching Christmas Eve and just read the encouragement she needed to preach a messier version of the gospel. This beautifully written article was the perfect thing to ponder and treasure in my heart as I crafted my sermon. Thank you.
Wow. I’ve thought of a few of these things, but you have put it into words so amazingly. Thank you.
Thank you so much for this. It’s true and beautiful.
i do remember being pregnant and feeling like i was participating in a miracle with God…you’ve articulated it very well, but for me it felt otherworldly; something i couldnt put in to words.
Have a merry Christmas
Wow. Mesmerizing, moving, true. And that photograph! Thank you for this gift.
I don’t mean to be crudely self-promoting, but since you mentioned the dearth of sermons/books that connect us to the story of God through metaphors of pregnancy and birth… my book, Any Day a Beautiful Change: A Story of Faith and Family, is coming out next year (Chalice Press, March 2012). It aims to do just that. I learned more about God through my pregnancy than from all my years of theological study! At least, that’s when it all became real to me… Which is what it’s all about. Here’s the Amazon link if you’re interested:
http://www.amazon.com/Any-Day-Beautiful-Change-Family/dp/0827200293/ref=sr_1_cc_1?s=home-garden&ie=UTF8&qid=1319593873&sr=1-1-catcorr
Thanks so much for sharing this.
Hi – just discovering you via this blog which as you know is making the Facebook rounds. I am “mommy preacher”, having given birth 27 years ago to my daughter, and having been ordained as an Episcopal priest 14 yrs. ago. The birth was not as I expected, and she has had a difficult life of spina bifida. However. I still remember the exact moment when I first saw her face. It was the holiest moment I have ever experienced. One other thing that your post has me thinking about though are so many women who cannot get pregnant, and will never know the feeling and reality of birth, and have and have adopted precious little ones. Where do you see these women in the story?
As a woman who has long struggled with the complete obliteration of the female side of the story when it comes to almost all religions, this article reinvigorated what I always knew, that without us, humanity would not exist. We alone are asked to embark upon an arduous journey of plus or minus nine months, with stories of loss along the way. As strong and capable as our spouses or partners are, they are not able to take away the pain, nor are they able to share in the true epic change, the shift in our spirits as our child makes its way into this world. Women will forever be the answer to war stories; for we have our own. But our war is what will save humanity not damn it. It is when we are asked to put away childish things and become women. It was the single most important and amazing experience of my life. Nothing has changed me so profoundly. It’s about time we put credit where it’s due.
Thank you for your elegant prose, and for helping me find the Spirit in this Christmas season.
Jesus talks about birth several times! It’s picture that God uses for
1. Being born again John 3
2. Jesus resurrected John 16:19-22
3. End Times Matthew 24:9
I loved the article. I do agree with Daniel. Jesus was a man and he was able to talk about birth too. My man (and others I know) could have written a similar piece. Give the guys some credit.
Here is a better source for that photo, with a caption by the photographer: http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/ngm/photo-contest/2011/entries/rate/people-week-11/#/106048
fabulous, thank you for sharing this.
Very powerful and so true. I said to my Sunday School Class if Mary was truly given voice we would have much more than her wrapping him in clothe and placing Jesus in the Manger. (And truly most father’s today would say more as well).
I do share my wife’s reflection on our Son’s birth (C-section) and the cross. http://dmergent.org/2011/10/25/the-intersection-of-cesarean-sections-and-the-cross-of-crucifixion/
We need more of these nativity narratives to get a better theological understanding of Emmanuel. The incarnation.
Blessings, JC
PS I wonder if your 3rd will be a race car driver.
Wow. This is just beautiful. It “clicked” for me when, after going through my own two deliveries a bit disconnected (long story), I was blessed to be present at the birth of my nephew. You can never question the existence of God after experiencing the birth of a child; it wakes you up to the reality.
Thanks.
What a beautiful picture. Ten years ago, our parish priest adopted a girl who’d come to the UK from Rwanda, fleeing the genocide that had killed her parents, her asylum claim had been rejected and this was the only way to prevent her being sent back. During Advent she gave birth to a little boy, and the priest, in a turn of events that he said “would have astonished me at my ordination 40 years ago, would astonish, I’m sure, the Pope in Rome if he knew too” was present at the birth. His Christmas Eve homily, normally so measured, was a total outpouring of everything you’ve described, “the mess of the Incarnation”.
Crying now. That was beautiful.