The Beauty God Brings Together “Emmanuel”
As we pull out our Christmas decorations each year, most of us don’t start with brand-new ornaments. We reach for boxes that have been packed away for years—sometimes decades. Inside are ornaments from every season of life.
Some are beautiful.
Some are sentimental.
And some—if we’re honest—are kind of ugly.
They don’t match. They feel outdated. A few may even stir memories from difficult seasons—years marked by loss, disappointment, or pain we’d rather forget. Just holding certain ornaments can remind us of moments that were anything but joyful.
Yet we still hang them on the tree.
Why? Because when the tree is fully decorated, those ornaments aren’t meant to stand alone. Together, they tell a story. And together, they create something beautiful.
Our lives are much the same.
When we isolate certain moments—especially the painful ones—they can feel out of place or hard to revisit. Seasons we never asked for. Experiences we wouldn’t want to repeat. Chapters we hoped God would somehow skip.
But God never looks at our lives one ornament at a time.
Romans 8:28 reminds us, “We know that all things work together for the good of those who love God, who are called according to his purpose.”
It doesn’t say all things are good.
It says God works all things together for good.
At Christmas, we celebrate one of the most powerful truths in all of Scripture: Emmanuel—God with us.
“See, the virgin will become pregnant and give birth to a son, and they will name him Immanuel,” which means, “God is with us” (Matthew 1:23).
That truth matters deeply—especially in the ugly seasons.
God never promised a life without hardship, but He did promise His presence. Emmanuel means that when life is confusing, painful, or overwhelming, we are never alone. God is with us in the sorrow. God is with us in the waiting. God is with us in the seasons that don’t yet make sense.
James encourages us in James 1:2–4 to consider it joy when we face trials—not because trials are easy, but because God uses them to produce endurance and maturity in us. Often, it is in those hardest moments that Emmanuel becomes most real.
Looking back, many of us can now see that some of the most defining seasons of our lives were also the hardest. At the time, they felt ugly. But with time, we see how God was present—shaping us, refining us, and preparing us for what He had ahead.
And even when we can’t yet see the outcome, Paul reminds us in 2 Corinthians 4:16–17 that our present troubles are producing something far greater: “an eternal weight of glory beyond all comparison.”
So let me offer two gentle challenges this Christmas.
First, think about a tough season from your past—one you once wanted to forget. Can you now see how God used it to bring you to where you are today? How His presence sustained you and shaped who you’ve become?
Second, think about the season you are in right now. If it feels heavy, unresolved, or painful, remember this: Emmanuel means God is with you now. One day, this season may become a life-shaping memory—an ornament that testifies not to your strength, but to God’s faithfulness.
Christmas reminds us that God entered our broken world—not to avoid suffering, but to redeem it. The cross itself looked ugly before it became beautiful. And through Christ, God continues to bring beauty from brokenness.
So don’t hide the hard ornaments of your life.
Hang them with trust.
Hold them with gratitude.
And remember—Emmanuel, God with us, is working everything together.
And when He is finished, the beauty will be undeniable.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Ed Emmerling is the Executive Director of the Baptist State Convention of Michigan (BSCM). Ed was privileged to be the pastor of Westside Church Flushing since 2002. Ed and his wife Reneé have 4 children and 5 grandchildren.
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