The anticipation has been building for a month. Christmas is at the door. Twinkling lights illuminate windows, roof
tops and lawns. I like the concerts, the
majestic music celebrating Christ’s birth. I like the brightly wrapped gifts
full of suspense and promise collecting under the tree.
Christmas is the time to communicate and gather with
friends. The gathering part can be a
challenge. Office parties, church groups, close friends and family quickly fill
the calendar. We travel great distances
and juggle schedules to spend this special time with family members we have not
seen in a year. It isn’t easy. All of this communicating and gathering
challenges us for control of our time and our lives. When our continuing duties for work, school
and family are overlaid with Christmas commitments we sometimes find ourselves
weary and exhausted, feeling that our lives are spinning out of control.
We search for Christmas in the spectacular: the spectacular
event, spectacular lights, the spectacular gift. We want to re-create the
perfect Christmas card moment that we wish exemplified our lives.
The first Christmas had little resemblance to our
contemporary traditions. The birth of Christ occurred in the chaos of the
common and the ordinary: a common stable surrounded by common animals in a
common village. Few took notice. There
was no extravaganza staged in the cities. The angels’ announcement occurred in
a remote region with only a few simple shepherds present. The Magi, who observed the star in the east,
came and went almost unnoticed.
It was for the common and the ordinary that Christ
came. He grew up in a carpenter’s shop
in the remote village of Nazareth. He
owned no house and had no possessions.
He had no place to lay his head.
And, after a brief public ministry in which he healed and taught
thousands, he died upon a common cross outside Jerusalem and was buried in a
borrowed tomb. In birth, life and death,
Jesus redeemed the common and the ordinary and elevated each of us to an
extraordinary relationship with God.
The first Christmas was an “out of control” event for Mary
and Joseph. The tax summons that took
them to Bethlehem could not have come at a worse time. The baby was due. She was in no condition for such a long and
arduous journey. When they arrived, the town was a bedlam of people. No one wanted to be there. They had come because they were obligated
under Roman law. Of course, it was not out of God’s control. What appeared to
be an onerous obligation and an inconvenient time was actually a fulfillment of
prophecy that the Messiah would be born in Bethlehem.
Perhaps God planned it this way to teach us that His
intervention must be experienced in the common and the ordinary chaos of life.
When we look for Christmas in the spectacular, we can only experience it once a
year. But when we discover Christmas in the common and the chaotic, it can
change our life every day.
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