(You can listen to this reflection here.)
Christmas is coming… and after four hospital visits, three funerals (one the annual Homeless Persons Memorial Day service), two Baby Showers for Mary and Joseph, and one baptism, I got to the end of last week with no partridge in my pear tree – not even a tree up yet. I squeezed in some baking here and there, wondering when I could do some shopping. Finally on Saturday I had time to haul out the Christmas boxes and begin my own preparations.
So Joseph also went up from the town of Nazareth in Galilee to Judea, to Bethlehem the town of David, because he belonged to the house and line of David. He went there to register with Mary, who was pledged to be married to him and was expecting a child. While they were there, the time came for the baby to be born…
It gets real for me when I set up the crèche. I do it the same way each year, placing the figures the same way in the stable, the angels at the same angles on the gold lame cloth that represents theglory of the Lord (that “shone round about them…”). The three kings are on a higher book shelf, still on their journey. The shepherd and the sheep are nearby in the field. One year I moved the stable cat down from the hayloft, closer to the manger. (A velociraptor remains in the loft… danger lurks in the most pastoral of scenes.)
And Mary and Joseph await the birth, gazing at an empty manger, waiting… waiting… waiting for the moment when it all changes, when new life brings an end to the old. Mary and Joseph were never going to be able to go back to what they’d known. No new parents can – and these two were going to face more change than most.
What are you waiting for in your life this week? Perhaps it’s related to Christmas, perhaps not.
What new life are you praying for? And what are you hoping will never go away?New life is always coming at us, sometimes taking up the space of something we rather liked, or had grown comfortable with. Is there something yearning to take up space in your life, space you’re willing to make by letting something else go?On Christmas Eve, when I get home from church, I will fetch the baby out of the little wicker trunk in the back of the stable (Mary had to have some luggage…) and place him in the manger. Jesus always shows up, eventually. Sometimes we just have to let him out of the baggage.To receive Water Daily by email each morning, subscribe here. Sunday’s readings are here.
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