When I tell people how many siblings I have, their eyes usually grow to unflattering proportions and they say something like, “Wow. That’s a lot of kids.”

You don’t say.

None of us is adopted and no, we’re not catholic. My mom just always dreamed of a having a big, beautiful (and slightly chaotic) mess of kids for her own. And seven children did that job perfectly.

One of the luxuries of having so many children is that there’s never a short of comic relief. Who needs Cheaper by the Dozen or The Brady Bunch when you have your own tribe to entertain you? For example, when one of my brothers was old enough to learn to dress himself but still young enough to need coaching, my mom began reminding him every day to put on a clean pair of underwear. She thought this plan was working well and her young man was sprouting wings of independence, till she noticed that his backside was growing and beginning to resemble a small watermelon.

Upon investigation, she found that my brother was being quite faithful in putting on clean underwear each day. In fact, he had several pairs on. The problem was that he was neglecting to take each old pair off.

See what I mean? Kids are quite entertaining. Gross, but definitely entertaining, especially when it comes to things they don’t understand, like wearing clean underwear. What’s the big deal anyway? (Just kidding. I change mine every day.)

…what we are on the inside should accurately reflect what we present to others on the outside.

I once picked up a children’s book that actually addressed this question. I don’t remember the title of the book, but I do remember the life lesson the author communicated: Our parents teach us to always wear clean underwear because what we are on the inside should accurately reflect what we present to others on the outside.

Intuitively, we all know this to be true. Integrity, as rare as it is, is something that we find as refreshing as Gatorade after a marathon and as valuable as Wi-Fi to a millennial. We instinctively know that the person we are when others are around should be the same person we are when we’re alone, when no one is watching. And we expect the same of everyone else.

But nowhere is our desire and need for integrity more glaringly apparent than in leadership. When we elect leaders, we want to know that they’ll have backbone, that they’ll be the same through and through. We want to know that even when they’ve been stripped down to their moral underwear, we’re going to find people who are still just as clean as they appeared to be in their suits and ties.

Unfortunately, if you’ve ever spent even five minutes reading a history book or watching the news, you know humanity has never found a man or woman who fits that shoe. I can’t help but think of the present political climate. I haven’t lived through many presidential elections, so I don’t have the right to brag about how “back in my day things were different” (unless we’re talking about the price of candy). However, even I can tell this election has been unusually tumultuous, confusing, and—quite honestly—crazy. In the last several months the media has done a fabulous job of stripping both Hilary and Trump of all their dirty laundry and stringing out each stitch for all the world to see, like lights on a giant American Christmas tree. The scandals, the gossip, the allegations, the question of which candidate has the larger gap in moral integrity—all have created an enormously mounting mote of tension surrounding the recent election day.

Things might be really chaotic right now. But at the end of the day, God is love and He will win.

But now that we’ve crossed over it, I don’t hear many sighs of relief. Only aftershocks of uncertainty.

I felt it myself just after the election (and to some extent I still do). I was scrolling through my Facebook feed just the other night, slogging through political status after political status, and as I read, I began to feel the weight of people’s fear, anger, disappointment, and bewilderment settling onto me like a suffocating blanket. But then I got the following text from a close friend of mine:

“Hey, I just had this idea. It’s been an interesting past 24 hours and I’m realizing that time is short for us on this earth. I made a google doc for jotting some notes—just some reminders for me about the things I know for sure are true, no matter what the world looks like or what everyone else says. I was thinking about maybe sharing it with a few friends so we could each add and be encouraged by these reminders.”

I opened up the document with a sense of relief, a little like coming up for air after being under water. After stepping in all the political cow pies on social media, I could stand to be immersed in something stable and true. And I wasn’t disappointed. As I read my friend’s thoughts and have continued to ponder them the last couple of days, my mind has been redirected. No matter what the world looks like, I can know, like my friend, that this is true:

“Love wins through self-sacrifice, not through violence or manipulation or bullying or lies or vengeance or anything that is not found in the broken and spilled out love of Jesus.”

Things might be really chaotic right now. But at the end of the day, God is love and He will win. No matter where you or I lean on the political spectrum, as Christians, this is something we all know to be true: Jesus is our King, He sits on the throne, and heaven is our real home.

…since Adam and Eve sinned, humans have always looked to other humans for salvation. And we’ve always been disappointed.

In the book of Daniel (a prophetic book that actually foretells the future of our world so we can know what’s going to happen ahead of time and we don’t have to freak out about it as if we had no hope in the world) there is a passage I find especially comforting:

“Blessed be the name of God forever and ever, for wisdom and might are His. And He changes the times and the seasons; He removes kings and raises up kings; He gives wisdom to the wise and knowledge to those who have understanding. He reveals deep and secret things; He knows what is in the darkness, and light dwells with Him” (Daniel 2:20-22, NKVJ).

God is ultimately the one in control. He isn’t freaking out about who is the President of the United States or who isn’t, so my guess is we probably shouldn’t either.

The reality is that since Adam and Eve sinned, humans have always looked to other humans for salvation. And we’ve always been disappointed. We’ve searched high and low for leaders who, even when they’re stripped down to their moral underwear, are still going to have integrity. But the stink of dirty laundry has, one way or another, eventually disillusioned us and reminded us of what will always be true:

“Do not put your trust in princes, nor in a son of man, in whom there is no help…. Happy is he who has the God of Jacob for his help, whose hope is in the Lord his God” (Psalm 146:3, 5, NKJV).

There is only one Man that I know of who has always been worth following. He never made promises He couldn’t keep. He never stooped to mudslinging when His enemies tried to lure Him into the ring. He never campaigned to promote Himself, but was always living to serve others.

Oh, there were definitely rumors that followed Him like a dark shadow. People gossiped about the circumstances surrounding His birth, they questioned His faithfulness to the law, and they looked down on His shady associates.

But He always and only showed love. He healed people, believed in people, and transformed people. As He did so, His popularity rose…and then quickly fell, like it has for every other leader the world has ever known.

The public opinion swayed, the tabloids bashed His reputation, and supposed scandal was exposed. Everyone was done with Him and Messiah wasn’t trending anymore. Religious and political leaders joined forces as they mutilated His body and literally stripped Him down to His underwear and killed Him.

“Christianity is the only major religion to have as its central event the humiliation of its God.”

But instead of finding out that He was hiding a skeleton in the closet, we find that God willingly exposed His own flesh to us. Bruce Shelley pointed out succinctly, “Christianity is the only major religion to have as its central event the humiliation of its God.” Why is this so significant? Because, if God had been hiding behind a mask, if He had been making empty promises, if He had only been saying what we wanted to hear, the cross would have been the place to find out. But unlike every other human leader’s moment of humiliation, this point in history revealed to everyone in the universe that this Man was exactly who He said He was all along: Love.

God was in His underwear, and—forgive me for this—it was His moment of glory.

In the greatest twist of irony of all time, the event we’d expect to bring the utmost disillusionment—the crucifixion—actually brought the greatest enlightenment. What looked like the ultimate political “scandal” was actually the grandest revealing of Love. And no matter how deep we continue to dig into His heart, we’re only ever going to find love through and through, as we did at Calvary.

When God was in His underwear. When God was in His glory.

May we always remember that no matter what happens, no matter how chaotic this world gets, no matter who is in power over what country, this is something we can know to be true: Jesus is the real King and He is the only one we can safely put our trust in because He has proven Himself faithful, even in His underwear.

Anneliese Wahlman
Creative Writer at Light Bearers

Allie is a 2012 ARISE graduate and on-staff writer and communications assistant for Light Bearers. She is fascinated by the intersection of faith and the creative process and enjoys poetry. When she’s not watching a good movie with her friends, she enjoys narrating life with mediocre accents.