We Grieve

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Adam Johnson and his wife Abbie are 2007 graduates of Lincoln Christian University.

 Here is Adam's post, shared with his permission for you to use.

Many people, some I know and most I don’t, have lost a lot during the last nine months. It seems as if nothing has been left untouched by the impact of this nasty little virus, and though the virus is invisible to the naked eye, we see the impacts of this seemingly never-ending global pandemic every day.

The broken dreams, struggling finances, lost loved ones, and difficult circumstances are obvious in the lives of people surrounding us, or in the life of the person, we stare at in the mirror. Some losses are painfully clear, others painfully felt, even others remain unearthed or unrealized. People have lost more than they could have anticipated with no foreseeable end to the destruction, and one way we are like-minded despite background or status or belief is being forced to deal with this grief.

We grieve the damage to minds and relationships through quarantines.
We grieve the closed businesses and difficult decisions that seem to be too strong to defeat.
We grieve the loss of control or lack of understanding and the fiery fury we feel as we fruitlessly negotiate between man and illness.
We grieve the lost celebrations and opportunities and mourn with echoing "might haves" and "could have beens."
We grieve that this “new normal” feels neither “new” nor “normal” but is outside our ability to command.

I’d guess you’re no different. You’ve lost something or someone, perhaps multiple things and ones, over the past months. I have, too. At first glance, some of these losses seem trivial. Other losses are deep and painful.

One of these deep losses for me is something called "Christmas in the Chapel."
(For those who don't know, "Christmas in the Chapel" is an original musical written every year and performed at my alma mater in Illinois, Lincoln Christian University.)

Christmas in the Chapel has played a large role in my life. I've had the honor to be a part of it in one way or another for ten plus years, including writing and directing. Throughout the past few years, though I’ve seen my personal involvement lessen, my love for this random musical in the middle of a random cornfield in the middle of Illinois continues to grow. Christmas in the Chapel has been a safe respite during difficult times and, for me, a place of community and creativity, and challenge.

This year, like many other places and many other things damaged by this pathogen, we cannot gather together in the (newly remodeled) cavernous chapel to celebrate the birth of Jesus. This week would have begun the week leading up to the opening night.
 

I'm grieving the loss.

I've been thinking about what this week "could have been" - with rehearsals and lights and costumes demanding attention. People filling up a space to experience some reminder of music and laughter and Christmas. And, as I've been thinking and grieving and crying, one word keeps coming to mind. Though I’m tempted for the word to be “depressed” or “devastated” or “distressed,” the more I think about it, the more I’m drawn to the word that would typically hang suspended above my head during rehearsal and performances, majestically reminding me of the reason for each and every season. This one word best describes God’s desire for our hearts in the midst of the loss.

"Rejoice."

I've sat below this word hanging up over the stage for years. I have to admit, I don't think about it a lot. The sign is pretty, but also largely out of view, and we have things to do. I have to really stop and put in some effort and focus upward to see it shining brightly.

How can this word mean anything in the midst of this chaos? What do we have to rejoice about?

But what if rejoicing isn't dependent on our circumstances, but on our response? What if rejoicing isn't about us, but about God? What if we can rejoice even as we lament?

So I come back to the word.

"Rejoice."

Rejoice, because even though there is much pain, there is much love in the world.

Rejoice, because even though many things are closed or canceled, Christmas cannot be closed, and it will never be canceled.

Rejoice, because even though the despair today is real, so is the joy of knowing that Jesus came at all.

And the fact that this one word has been sung in one of my favorite places more times than I can count brings me hope and peace. Because with this one word comes the song that has been imprinted on my heart because of my dear beloved

Christmas in the Chapel.
Good Christian Men, Rejoice!
With heart and soul and voice.
Now ye need not fear the grave:
Jesus Christ was born to save!
Calls you one and calls you all
to gain his everlasting hall.
Christ was born to save.
Christ was born to save!

We have grief. We have pain. We have loss.

Yes, but we also can sing loudly and boldly and wait expectantly for the true and grace-filled impact of Christmas.

"Rejoice."

 

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