
Author: A Little Faith Lift…Finding Joy Beyond Rejection
www.alittlefaithlift.com
AWSA (Advanced Writers & Speakers Assoc.)
Have you ever looked at your manger scene, placed prominently for everyone who enters your home, and wondered why your life seems like a mess compared to the peace presented by the creche? Mary, prayerfully kneeling before her newborn baby. Joseph standing nearby, pondering how God would use this infant to accomplish His purposes. Shepherds, dirty and overlooked, who were invited by angels into a scene they could not understand. Magi, men who (we pretend) were there after this God-birth happened. And baby Jesus himself, tucked into the straw of a dirty manger.
Luke 2 tells us that after the birth of Jesus, a host of angels appeared to the straggly shepherds and told them to travel to Bethlehem. At first terrified, the shepherds soon put away their fears and hurried to view this newborn. Estimates are they traveled between two and six miles, all at night. After their encounter with the Messiah, they “spread the word concerning what had been told them about this child.” All who heard the shepherds’ report were “amazed” by this report (not amazed like we are when our daughter makes cheerleader or when the stock market takes an up-turn). The Greed word used here for “amazed” is “thaumazo”; it means stopped in their tracks.
There they were, looking at God in human form, the One who was the answer to all the scriptures they had learned. One minute, caring for helpless, stupid sheep, and the next…looking at perfection. Heaven had come to the hillside in the middle of the night, proving that God’s presence isn’t limited to Holy places or to Holy people. God had not chosen kings or Levitical priests or religious Pharisees to announce His coming in human form. He chose a group of men who had no credentials. No surprises there. After all, He delights in using ordinary people for extraordinary purposes.
What does surprise me is what the shepherds did after this miraculous encounter. Unlike many of us, they did not go on a speaking circuit or write a book or sit at the gate to their city, signing autographs. Scripture says that they returned to their sheep. They went back to herding and protecting animals that follow each other off cliffs. They returned with gladdened, worshipful hearts and tongues filled with praise to do what they knew how to do.
I frequently meet people who want to have the celebratory experience of speaking to huge crowds of people, when instead, God wants them to be used right where they are, no matter how mundane their job status or where they live. All can learn from this story. From humble beginnings to divine callings, shepherds are integral figures in this biblical narrative, serving as symbols of faith, humility, and divine favor. We need to do likewise.
No matter where we work or live, we all have the opportunity to follow the lead of the shepherds: to obey, to follow, to worship and to share. As Christmas approaches, let us all be mindful of our call to do the same.