you now, but I will allow you to find some dignity and not make a big deal out of
this. But go you will."
Mary: "Please Joseph! You've got to believe me! Why would I make something like this up!"
Joseph: "Enough! I don't want to hear another word."
And he walks away, leaving Mary distraught and worrying.
You know the story. An angel appears to Joseph and verifies that what Mary says is truth.
Hopefully by now you are not thinking of the story of Jesus' birth as the same
old boring story that we read every Christmas season!
Stop your busyness and ponder with me these next few weeks.
Think of God as a fetus, leaving Heaven and all of its splendor and becoming one
of the most fragile things on Earth: a human baby. An animal baby is more able
to defend and adapt when they are born than a human is.
As a writer, I would never have written the story this way. If I'm going to write
the story of God coming to Earth, He's going to be on a white stallion when He
rides out of Heaven. Every hoof-beat will leave lightning-like sparks on the streets
of gold and peals of thunder in the air. The stars will line up as letters in every
language that will blink: "The King of Kings is Coming!" He's going to burst through
the ozone layer in a fiery explosion that will rock the foundation of the earth and
send humans and animals to a prone position on the ground. Then He's going to
circle the entire earth from east to west and the clouds will trail behind Him like a
pure white flowing robe. There'll be the deafening sound of heavenly trumpets and
the majestic pureness of millions of angels' voices hitting your ears as if they were
right next to you.
That's how I'd write it.
God says, "Nope. He's going to live inside of an unwed teenage girl and He's going
to be born in a stable." Which is a really nice word for a cave where smelly animals
live. There was manure and urine on the floor, and the stench was almost unbearable.
Priceless paintings and works of art did not hang on the walls in this nursery. No, if
you were to look on these walls you would see cobwebs.
Psalm 33:6 reads, "By the word of the LORD were the heavens made, their starry
host by the breath of his mouth." The One who breathed galaxies into existence,
now depended on an umbilical cord for His oxygen. Amazing!
In your wildest dreams, can you equate the deity of the King of Kings making
his entrance into this world through the human process we call birth.
Instead of noticing a crown of purest gold on his head, you notice the cone-shape
of his head as he was forced through the birth canal. Instead of wearing the finest
robes money can buy, he is wrapped in rags.
Instead of a finely crafted bed made by the most gifted craftsman in the land, he
is laid in a feeding trough. Don't give me this "manger" stuff. Manger sounds too
romantic. God was put in a feeding trough where cows put their tongues to lick
up food. That's where the King of the universe slept.
He who sustains the entire universe is now being sustained through the milk of a teenage girl.
If Mary could have written a book, it would be on the New York Times' Best-Selling
List. The title of the book would have been, "I Changed God's Diapers." Have you
ever thought of that? Someone had to change the God of the universe's diapers.
This gets a little gross, and I'm used to talking to youth, so forgive me, but, human
waste was next to Jesus' skin. Is it hard to imagine Jesus in such a mundane and
human way? In fact it is almost irreverent. But the God of the universe loved us so
much that he was willing to humble Himself and give us the most precious Christmas
present ever given: His Son Jesus.
May we never let ourselves say, "The same old Christmas story," ever again. And
may we never get so caught up in the hustle and bustle of the holiday season to
not stop and ponder about what an amazing God we have.
May this Christmas, and every Christmas from here on out, never lose it's magic
or it's meaning.
From my family to yours,
Michael T. Powers
HeartTouchers@aol.com
© 2006 by Michael T. Powers
Write Michael and let him know your thoughts on this story!
Michael T. Powers, the youth minister at Faith Community Church in Janesville, Wisconsin is also the founder of HeartTouchers.com, a popular website with over 2.7 million visitors in the last four years. He is happily married to his high school sweetheart, Kristi, and the proud father of three boys.
He is also an author with stories in 28 inspirational books including many in the Chicken Soup for the Soul series and his own entitled: Heart Touchers "Life-Changing Stories of Faith, Love, and Laughter." To preview his book or to join the thousands of world-wide readers on his inspirational e-mail list, visit: http://www.HeartTouchers.com
Most importantly, Michael believes that life is not about religion, but about a relationship -- a relationship with Jesus Christ.