It
would have been a night very much like tonight - dark, cold and quiet.
A
child was born. But he had no home. There was no place for him to stay. So his
mother and father took shelter in a stable among cows, donkeys and lambs.
No
doctors or nurses attended him. There were no sterile instruments to cut his
umbilical cord. No anesthetics to soothe Mary's labor pains. No bottles of
formula to fill his empty belly. We can only imagine Joseph's concern as he
watched on, doing what he could to ease Mary's discomfort. We can only imagine
their anxiety as they delivered alone their first-born son, the only Son of
God, our brother.
However,
God would not allow the appearance of his Son on earth to go unnoticed, without
anyone to worship him. Certainly Joseph and Mary sat in awe as they held God
made flesh in their arms. But just as he has gathered us here in the middle of
the night, God sent angels to nearby shepherds watching their flocks at night.
They were alone keeping watch when the angels announced to them tidings of
great joy. At first, the appearance of the angels and their strange message
gripped them with fear. Then, as the news began to sink in that they were the
first to learn of the birth of their Savior, they made haste to find the place
where he was staying.
Where
were they to find the newborn King of the Jews? The angels gave them two clues.
First, he was to be found in David's city, Bethlehem. Second, he would be lying
in a manger.
David
was the storied king of Israel's past. He was also born in Bethlehem. Jesus
would inherit David's throne as prophesied by Isaiah to establish a rule which
would never end.
The
word, "Bethlehem", means "house of bread". This child would
not only rule over his people, but he would be their food. He would meet the
deep pang of every human heart - friendship with God. For this reason, his
resting place was a manger, where straw and hay are placed for the beasts of
the stable to feed on. Just so, Jesus would be food for the lowliest among
us.
It
is also significant that our Almighty God appears among us as a baby. When we
hold a baby in our arms, something happens to us. We are moved by the child's
innocence, warmth and beauty. We want nothing else but to love and protect the
baby. In Jesus, God comes among us as one who is small, vulnerable and
beautiful asking nothing else than that we love him. All the demands of the
Christian life and all the teachings of the Church have no other purpose than
to show us how to the love the God who is born to us in a manger.
We
gather here at this late hour to hear the glad tidings pronounced to us once
again: "A child is born to us; a son is given to us!" We receive the
news with joy for it is truly good news of a God who lives among us. But where
are we to find such a God this evening? He is not where we would expect. He is
with the homeless woman protecting herself from the cold with only a cardboard
box. He is with the child who is too poor to have presents. He is with
the single mother who has to leave her children with others as she works third
shift. He is with the elderly man who has no other friend tonight except the
television. Jesus was born as just such an outcast and outsider.
When
we leave this church tonight, we will be different because Christ is born anew
in our hearts. We cannot meet Jesus, we cannot take him into our arms, and fail
to be changed by him. Let us, then, not only worship him there in the stable,
but pick him up and take him with us into the dark places of the world. Let us
not only feed ourselves with the bread of life but take food to others. The
Savior of the world was born not to leave the world as he found it but to
transform it through love.
No comments:
Post a Comment