He knew me before I was born.
I keep coming back to that line.
Not because it sounds poetic, but because it’s unsettling in the best way. If it’s true, and Scripture doesn’t hedge here, then it changes how I understand everything else. It means my life didn’t begin as a coincidence that later acquired meaning.
When I ponder the question what is the greatest gift someone could give me. I realize that God has already given me the greatest gift(s) which I could receive. He has given me, besides Himself, something whose value isn’t complicated. It’s not something I had to grow into or earn. It isn’t even something I remember receiving.
It’s my life.
Given at conception.
Wanted before it was visible.
Known before it was named.
That matters.
Because being given life is one thing. Being wanted into life is something else entirely.
Before I had a personality. Before I had opinions or accomplishments or failures. Before I could disappoint anyone or impress anyone. Before I could choose anything at all. God said yes to my existence.
That wasn’t a backup plan. It wasn’t provisional. It wasn’t “we’ll see how this turns out.” It was deliberate.
And when I really sit with that, it reframes the way I think about Christ, too.
He didn’t come into the world as an idea or a symbol. He entered life the same way we do. Conceived. Carried. Born into dependency. Exposed. Vulnerable. He accepted the whole structure of human life from the very beginning, knowing exactly where it would lead.
That’s not abstract love. That’s costly love.
Epiphany only makes sense in that light. God doesn’t reveal Himself from a safe distance. He reveals Himself from inside the human story, starting at its smallest and quietest point. A child. A life. A beginning no one would call impressive.
And yet that’s where everything turns.
If my life was given intentionally, then it isn’t fragile in the way fear tells me it is. It can be wounded. It can be shaped by things I didn’t choose. It can be tired. But it is not accidental, and it is not disposable. And neither is yours.
That realization doesn’t inflate the ego. If anything, it steadies it.
I don’t have to prove that my life matters. I don’t have to perform meaning into existence. I don’t have to justify why I take up space in the world. The foundation was already laid before I ever arrived.
Little ole’ me.
Not in a minimizing way, but in wonder. That God would choose to begin something eternal through lives as ordinary and unremarkable as ours. He entrusted His own entry into the world to a fragile beginning. It is the same beginning He gives to each of us.
So maybe the greatest gift, besides Himself, isn’t something separate from Christ at all. Maybe it’s the way He mirrors His own coming in our own beginning. Life given freely. Life given knowingly. Life given without guarantees of how it will be received.
That kind of gift carries responsibility, yes, but it also carries dignity.
It means my life isn’t something I need to defend or constantly evaluate for worth. It’s something I’m meant to tend. To live honestly. To steward well. To allow it to be shaped by the same light that once rose quietly in the world. And still rises quietly in human hearts. So does yours.
Epiphany is coming. The revealing of Christ to the world.
But today feels like a threshold moment. A pause before recognition. A reminder that before revelation comes gratitude, and before gratitude comes the simple acknowledgment of what has already been given.
Life.
Known.
Wanted.
Held.
Long before I ever knew how to ask for it.
And maybe that’s where seeing truly begins.


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