Road Trip!
Tuesday,
the second week of Advent
Today’s Reading:
Micah 5:2-3 / Luke 2:1-5
I can but only imagine the tension mixed with an atmosphere
of excitement in the air as Mary and Joseph packed their things in preparation
for the trip to Bethlehem. To many it
must have seemed to have been the worst timing ever for the Roman Emperor to
have decreed a Census of the people under his authority. With Mary in the final trimester of her
pregnancy, a journey of that magnitude would be unbearable. But nowhere in the recorded manuscript of the
event do we find the principle cast members ever uttering a single word of
complaint! Mary and Joseph had casted
the care of their lives and that of the special baby into the hands of their
God, and nothing was going to sway them away from their intended course.
God used the reach and authority of the reigning heathen
power of the world at that time to unknowingly set the stage for His grand
plan. The timing was perfect, and every
detail was in place for our intrepid travelers to set out on a trip that most
scholars say took about a week. The
Romans had built an extensive array of roads designed for them to move their
troops and equipment around the empire.
With the world experiencing a time of peace, Mary and Joseph were able
to take advantage of the roadways and due to the broad scope of the Census,
were able to safely travel with groups of others as they made their ways to
their hometowns.
If Joseph had been anything like me, I am positive that he
must have done some research into the prophecies concerning the adventure that
they had been chosen by God to fulfill.
He would have read from the writings of Micah as to the location where
the Christ child would be born. He would
have learned that the name Bethlehem meant “the
house of bread”, and while probably not knowing the significance of that as
Mary’s child would later refer to Himself as the “bread of life” (John 6:35), he would have understood that Micah’s
prophecy “respects the personal character
of the Messiah, and the discoveries of himself to the world, (and how) it
distinguishes his human birth from his existing from eternity.” (Matthew
Henry’s Concise Commentary – Micah 5:1-6)
As the drama began to unfold on that first day of the
journey, I can picture Joseph smiling at his lovely wife to be, holding her
hand with a comforting grasp and uttering the calming words that “everything was going to be alright!”
They may not have known the multitude of situations that they would have to
deal with along the way, but they were confident that the hand of their Lord
was upon them. They were aware that they
were part of a well-orchestrated plan that had been set in motion many years
before.
When they turned to take one last look at the city limits
of Nazareth, I would imagine the words from Mary’s son’s namesake Joshua was
buzzing in their hearts saying “I’ve
commanded you to be strong and brave.
Don’t ever be afraid or discouraged!
I am the LORD your God, and I will be there to help you wherever you
go.” (Joshua 1:9 Contemporary
English Version) With that they would
have turned and set their faces toward Bethlehem and the task that was set
before them.
As this year comes to an end and you take your final
considerations of all that you successfully accomplished as well as those
things that were not done as well, or maybe not at all because of the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020, I would
encourage you to be like Mary and Joseph.
Let your heavenly Father’s words of encouragement and faithfulness fill
your heart and then set your face toward all that He has for you in the New
Year to come! Have a great day! Stay in tune to His Word, and keep asking
yourself… “What GOOD THINGS am I
expecting in 2021?”
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