Change is a key part of life. It breathes with us. It blossoms with us. Every step we take and moment we experience has an undercoating of change.
Some changes are more obvious than others. Some halt you in your tracks, while others, whisper in the winds.
We only seem to notice the big ones. Yet, every day we are circled by it. We all grow older slowly. The colors and seasons change in nature. These subtle differences do not raise our alarms until they become loud. Until they become big.
We notice when Cindy chops her hair off and Steve gets a motorcycle after turning 50.
Yet, we don't see tiny fragments of growth in the blades of grass we walk through every day. We do not notice the miles creeping up on our cars.
So, why is it that the big and sudden changes can feel so brutal?
Change is an effective tool to snap you out of your dulled haze of mundane.
When you are forced to look around and face the shifts happening all the time, you have to accept what you have been oblivious to.
In my own life, I recently experienced a time of catastrophic, complete and total change-hitting like bullets into a target.
All at once, everything was different. All at once, I was different.
I think sudden large changes scare us because we did not expect them. But if we are honest, there are always little whispers we ignore before the windstorm.
I used to be so scared of change. I was so scared of losing control. I think it took experiencing it so brutally and wondrously all together, for me to see its beauty.
Change is hard and it can be painful.
Yet, the world "changed" when Jesus died on the cross did it not?
A painful and seemingly dark change that actually saved humanity.
A baby was born in a manger in the middle of nowhere with no one caring about what was happening and YET, the world was forever changed.
Christmas is next week. Crazy right?
But it is. It marks a day when everything changed in the history of humanity.
I think it is safe to say giving birth did not feel pleasant for Mary. Does that mean it was bad?
You know the answer.
A beautiful shift in the universe to allow for salvation and restoration with God and yet it also coincided with pain and agony.
Change may hurt but it births breakthrough.
The most brutal of pivots can create the most beautiful of paradises.
I don't know who needs to hear that this Christmas season. I know I did.
Sometimes we need to be reminded that God is bigger than what we can see.
He is making a way for new beautiful things that will bring him glory.
"And the God of all grace, who called you to his eternal glory in Christ, after you have suffered a little while, will himself restore you and make you strong, firm and steadfast," - 1 Peter 5:10 NIV
"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," - Isaiah 9:6 NIV.
Merry Christmas!
In His love,
Sarah Hill
Founder of BTDM