The
stable matters
Christmas? Love it or hate it we cannot avoid it. It is the largest grossing global festival of
the year and, especially if you have children, can seem all-encompassing.
What
is your Christmas about? How are you
making sure your priorities are not overwhelmed by everyone else’s – the
shop-keepers’ especially? How are you
pressing the pause button for you and your children so that something stuns us (not
simply numbs us) at Christmas? Can you name
a goal you have for Christmas? Have you
a plan to make it happen?
A
stable
This
year I am stunned by the stable! Does
that sound odd? ‘Had he never realised
Jesus was born in a stable before?’ you snicker. ‘Not much of a pastor if he missed that!’
But
it is a shock! I’m thinking about how to
help our children be surprised by it too.
There
is a big difference between a palace and a stable. A palace has restricted access, high fences
and armed guards. You get in my
invitation only, if you are lucky or rich or famous. And once in just a brief appointment. Hardly anyone gets in to see a baby in a
palace. Have you met Prince George?
A
stable! Anyone gets in there. It’s a farm yard. Cows, donkeys, shepherds, wise-men – anyone
and everyone can come and pay their respects to a baby in a stable.
The
stable is a shock. A shock because if
there ever was a king; someone who should be born in a palace, its Jesus.
Names
His
names give it away.
Jesus
means ‘God’s Saviour’. Its Hebrew
version is Joshua (same name, different language). Jesus, meaning ‘God’s Saviour’ is named after
Joshua one of the greatest military leaders ever seen.
Emmanuel
means ‘God with us’. That’s some laden
expectation by his parents! ‘What a
bundle of joy you have there - what’s his name?’ asks the kind passer-by. ‘It’s God’ you say! A little arrogant perhaps. Somewhat unfair on the poor baby. Crippling expectations. No wonder in Jesus’ day no one named their
child ‘Emmanuel’. In Islamic culture it
would be like naming you child ‘Allah’.
Unheard of.
Christ
(or Messiah - same word, different language) is a title, like ‘sir’ or ‘doctor’
but far more weighty. It means
‘anointed’ or ‘unique’ one and was reserved for only the
crème-de-la-crème. Like someone being
canonised as a saint, or knighted as a sir.
Rare, unique, special.
History
Agrees
History
shows those names were not wrongly attributed.
We decided to re-start the calendar to mark his birth as his wake in
history was so great. Even our greatest
only get a day set aside to remember them – Jesus got the calendar!
Napoleon
sees it: “I know men and I tell you that Jesus Christ is no mere man. Between
Him and every other person in the world there is no possible term of
comparison. Alexander, Caesar, Charlemagne, and I have founded empires. But on
what did we rest the creation of our genius? Upon force. Jesus Christ founded
His empire upon love; and at this hour millions of men would die for Him.”
Contemporary
historian James C. Hefley affirms it “…all the armies that ever marched, and
all the navies that ever were built, and all the parliaments that ever sat, and
all the kings that ever reigned, put together, have not affected the life of
man upon this earth as powerfully as has that One Solitary Life.”
The
stable matters
‘God’s
Saviour’; ‘God with us’; the ‘unique one’; ‘that One Solitary Life’ - born not
in a palace (where no-one would get to pay their respects) but in a stable
(where everyone and anyone can search him out or stumble upon him). The stable matters.
Somehow
this year I want to press pause on the stable.
To say what does this mean? To really
see it. From the moment Jesus enters the
world it was orchestrated we would realise everyone and anyone, and you too,
are welcome and expected to pay your tributes.
He
wasn’t born in a palace, he was born in a stable. Have you consider what that means for you?
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