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Real Meaning

by Rob on December 22, 2008 · View Comments

in Being a Doctor,Personal Musings

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Every day I go to work and spend time with suffering people.  They come to me for help and for comfort.  They open up to me with problems that they would not tell anyone else.  They put trust in me – even if I am not able to fix their problems.  I serve as a source of healing, but I also am a source of hope.

Christmas is a moving season for many of the same reasons.  No, I am not talking about the giving of gifts, or the time spent with family.  I am not talking about traditions, church services, or singing carols.  I am not even talking about what many see as the real meaning of Christmas: Mary, Joseph, shepherds, wise men, and baby Jesus.  The Christmas story most of us see in pictures or read about in story books is a far cry from the Biblical account.  The story we see and hear is sanctified, clean, and safe.

Before I go on, I want to assure my readers that I am in no way trying to persuade them to become Christians.  I am a Christian, but whether or not you believe the actual truth of the story, there is much to be learned from it.  I find it terribly hard to see the real Christmas story here in a country where the season is filled with so much else – much of it very good.  It is far easier to just be happy with family, friends, giving gifts, singing songs, and maybe even going to church, than it is to contemplate the Christmas story.  I think the Christians in our culture have gotten way off base on this – much to our shame.

slumsChristmas is not about prosperity and comfort, it is about help to the hopeless.  The central doctrine to this season is the incarnation: God becoming man.  God didn’t become a man because he thought it would be nice to spend time with us; he did so because we were hopeless.  He didn’t come to live in comfort, but to be poor.  He didn’t come to help good people, but to rescue the outcast.  He didn’t come to hear cheers for saving people, he came to be rejected and so to identify with rejects.  He scorned the self-righteous, and embraced the shameful.

What about the Christmas story itself?  Mary got pregnant out of wedlock and Joseph chose to bear the social shame.  They were in a country that was occupied by a foreign empire, ruled by self-seeking despots and self-righteous religious leaders.  Jesus was born in a barn -  not the clean manger scene we are used to.  The birth was announced to shepherds – people who were scorned by the “good” people of society.  The local ruler was so worried the messiah would overthrow him, he sent death squads to murder all children under two in the town where Jesus was born.

Fact or fiction, the scene was not pretty, but instead was filled with pain, despair, and hopelessness.  This is hardly what we see on TV.  This is hardly what we hear in church.  That is the setting describing the first Christmas, not a mall or warm living room with a tree.  Christmas is doesn’t hide from pain, it addresses it.

Whether you take it as truth or just as an inspiring story, we should pay far more attention to this meaning.  Yes, it is great to give gifts and be with family – I will be doing that as well.  But there is no escaping the pervasive pain and suffering in this world.  The Christmas message is not about sheltering ourselves from that suffering, but instead going out among the suffering and providing comfort.  The lonely woman weeping in the exam room or the drug-seeking addict who is trying to pry a narcotics prescription from me – they are the ones to whom this Christmas message is proclaimed.  Whether you do it to imitate God or simply to be a good person, we can perpetuate Christmas by helping instead of hiding.

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To those who spend little time around the suffering of others, I urge you to break out of the cozy shell and really celebrate Christmas.  Pain and suffering are not far from you; even in our affluent society.  What I encounter in my exam room has convinced me that society is obsessed with denying this truth.  We have made Christmas into a comfy commercial family time, when the real meaning is something far more profound.  If you don’t feel adequate to help the suffering, then let me offer this: medical professionals are no more morally upright than the rest of society, yet we are honored with the task of helping the suffering.  We are no better than you are.  Really.

So go out there and have a great Christmas.

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  • Wow and bummer. I just wrote a long response to Robert and it disappeared due to some technical problem. :( Maybe it wasn't meant to go through. I have to run now though.
  • Robert
    This life is not our final destination, SeaSpray; to me,

    that's the reason for the suffering we see and experience.
  • Well said and so true Dr Rob!

    As physicians... you have more opportunity to be God's instruments of healing as he works through you. I believe he has given special gifts that enable and cause people to be doctors.

    And each of us can also be his instruments by being a willing vessel through which God can work with whomever he places in our paths.

    I struggled this Christmas because of personal things and I didn't "feel" it.

    I admit...I was drained and felt like I had nothing to give. It all felt so hollow. But i am dealing with loss of loved ones.

    And because of his birth... we have hope of seeing them again. But I lost my perspective.

    I love how God doesn't fit into the mold/box some people try to put him in and I love that he'll do things that confound the wise or the understood logic.

    His plan was awesome.. is awesome! And it is so beautiful how he loved us so much...that he came to us, lived among us and died for us. The way he reached out to the poor, the outcasts and his message of hope.

    I guess my ministry..of sorts is the nursing home. I am a frequent flier there because Mom is in there now.She is my primary concern, but where ever I go while in there...I reach out with encouragement (sometimes a thousand questions and concerns too) to the staff and I also am friendly, encouraging and supportive to the residents milling around... even when they are in their own Alzheimer world.

    It is all so sad to see. It causes me to wonder. Why? And how did people handle these things before nursing homes? Enjoy today... because we don't know what tomorrow brings.

    that being said... It is the hope in Christ that gives hope for our future... at least to those of us that choose to believe in him. I say this from a Christian perspective and in no way intend to negate that people have hope for other reasons and hope is a beautiful thing. Hope keeps us going and it brings peace.
  • True words!!!!!!!
  • You did a great job on this post. Our Lord was placed in a trough. Placed where they usually fed the animals from. Humble beginnings for a King. I loved the message in your writing here. Beautiful.
  • this is so well said and so true. may I print part of this on my blog? and link it to yours for Christmas day?
  • Great post. Merry Christmas.
  • Rob
    I did. I actually thought this is a very moving picture, as it is a black policeman handing out a gift to a white girl. It was taken in the 60's, which makes it even more significant. Wonderful picture.
  • Hi. Please credit the Los Angeles Times for that photograph. Thank you.
  • Robert
    Wow, what a marvelous post -

    Merry Christmas and happy new year, Dr. Rob!
  • Squirrell
    Absolutely brilliant post. I wish you and your family a very Merry Christmas and a blessed New Year.
  • Great post. While I don't think anyone should feel guilty for enjoying Christmas with family, friends and gifts, I agree that we Christians should practice mercy and love all year long.

    Merry Christmas
  • Pat Brown, RN
    Thank you....a cold, smelly stable; an "illegitamate" child, poverty and pain: not what most of us think of this time of year. He came, He suffered, He died...all to show us that "here" is just a brief classroom on our way Home. A Blessed Christmas to all reading...even those who don't believe in the only Truth!
  • That was great!
  • I found your site by accident. I really enjoyed reading it. My husband is a family practice physician. I agree with your Christmas message 100%. I will forward it on to my husband. I'm sure he'll enjoy your writing as well. He too is a gifted writer, but tends to write about spiritual things, rather than dealing with patients and/or medical things. Some times he's discouraged because no one "gets" his writing. (perhaps if he'd write in english instead of 4 sylable words...) He also writes science fiction. I have added your blog to my favorites and look forward to hearing from you.
  • As an atheist, I take the story to be fiction of course. That being said, I think you have latched onto something important here. Christmas truly has wandered off into a rotten, consumerist holiday with people so worried about "making" it a joyous occasion that they forget to actually enjoy the spirit of helping others.

    It is quite possible, and perhaps beyond hope, but with people tightening their belts, and trying to avoid the depths of debt that they usually get into this year, that they might try to go back to a holiday of thinking of the less fortunate. Being that it is rooted in the solstice, perhaps people of all religious beliefs will start seeing it as a joyous occasion (in the northern hemisphere) simply because the days are going to get longer. Winter doesn't last forever. The sun returns.

    Merry Christmas, Happy New Year, and for all those who celebrate the holidays under different names I wish that you all enjoy them tremendously.
  • victoria
    Yes exactly! I have been saying this forever-I live in a 3rd world country where people isolate themselves if they can (if they have the money). I am always amazed at how Americans and Europeans don't get this message...and keep looking for satisfaction only in the gratification of their own desires.

    BTW did you receive and/or like the goat photo I sent you?
  • Dr. Rob,
    Well done. That was exactly what I needed to read. I haven't been "feeling it" this Christmas. I've been feeling guilty for my lack of enthusiasm for shopping, baking, making things, writing cards, decorating... While those things are fun for the kids, they just make me feel like a gluttonous consumer bent on doing what's normal or expected, plastering a smile on... Your post has redefined what "it" is for me and inspires me to want to do something else. Thank you so much for writing this, and so many other heartfelt pieces. And Merry Christmas!
  • my pastor could not have said it better. thank you for this.
  • Merry Christmas, Dr Rob!
  • LisaK
    This is brilliant. I am so glad I found your blog.
  • joan calvin
    Thank you. You get it.
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