As we begin Part 2 of our Christmas Story Revisited series, you might say that America’s Christmas season is trucking along in predictable fashion because trucks loaded with Christmas surprises seem to be everywhere.
Amazon trucks, FedEx trucks, UPS trucks, Post Office trucks, and other delivery trucks are keeping the roads hot. It reminds me that when God designed the story of how He became one of us, He delivered some amazing surprises as well and Gabriel dropping in for a visit last week was just the beginning. The initial announcements alone were mind numbing enough, but Mary and Joseph had more surprises awaiting them.
No Travel Plan Included ~
For instance, Gabriel didn’t bother to tell Mary to make a packing list, because she’d soon be heading off to Bethlehem. And whether it was him or some other angel who drew the
assignment to reign Joseph in before he dumped Mary with a behind-the-scenes divorce, he didn’t mention Bethlehem, either. All Joseph was told at that point was that Mary had not been unfaithful to him, and no other human being had been involved in conceiving the child in her womb. And nothing was said about an upcoming trip to Bethlehem. That’s intriguing, since it was Joseph’s hometown and so many eternally glorious things were soon going to happen there.
The journey to Bethlehem might have been unexpected for Joseph and Mary, but it shouldn’t surprise us. Their impending journey to Bethlehem is reminiscent of another time thousands of years earlier when a pregnant woman close to God’s heart was traveling that same road. That story took place shortly after Jacob’s incredible meeting with God when the covenant He made with Abraham and Isaac was renewed and when Jacob’s name was changed to Israel. After that, Jacob, now Israel, along with his pregnant wife, Rachel, continued their homeward journey. As they approached Bethlehem, Rachel’s time came, and it didn’t end with joy as they had hoped. In an article I wrote years ago, I described it like this:
“It must have been heartbreaking for Jacob to watch—Rachel’s infant son struggling to breathe his first breaths as his beloved Rachel fought to breathe those that would soon be her last. As her life ebbed away in sacrifice for his, Rachel called her baby, Ben-oni—“son of my sorrow”. Wracked with grief as he looked at the little face that had brought so much pain with it, Jacob saw that beyond the suffering, there was promise. In his infant son’s eyes, he saw life and strength and hope, and he called his name, Benjamin—“son of my right hand”. Heartache and hope joined hands in the shadow of that little village. Pain and promise weren’t enemies that night. They clung to each other, sharing the tears that love inevitably demands, and embracing the promise they accomplish together.”
No one but God knew then that in that same obscure little village, perhaps not far from the place where the son of Rachel’s sorrow became the son of Jacob’s right hand, pain and promise were destined to hold hands again. Now, thousands of years later, we still feel the power of that moment.
No Afterthought ~
So, Bethlehem was not an afterthought God inserted because a Roman ruler wanted a tax
increase, but quite the opposite. Bethlehem was a special part of His plan from the beginning, and He used Caesar to get Mary and Joseph there to fulfill a promise He made. Through the prophet, Micah, God unveiled that Bethlehem would be the place where He would deliver the greatest gift the world would ever receive. Micah declared …
But you, Bethlehem Ephrathah,
Though you are little among the thousands of Judah,
Yet out of you shall come forth to Me
The One to be Ruler in Israel,
Whose goings forth are from of old,
From everlasting. (Micah 5:2 NKJV)
Given the traditional images we’ve seen all our lives, several things need to be addressed. To begin, their journey would not have been one of those “grab your overnight bag and go” kinds of trips. Covering the 94 miles from Nazareth to Bethlehem would have represented at least a 4 to 5 day trek over difficult terrain. And once there, they may not have known how long they might have to stay, making it hard to know how much to try to take with them. Complicating everything was the fact that they were poor, and their resources were very limited. The potential cost could have seemed overwhelming to them.
Our traditional images of the trip depict Mary and Joseph trudging along the road alone with Joseph leading a little donkey carrying Mary, who looks like she could give birth at almost any moment. We can’t help but feel sorry for them, but the lens of cultural reality allows us to upgrade our emotions.
“Not” a Lonely Journey ~
No sane person or couple would have undertaken a trip like that alone. The dangers from potential robbers, predators, and accidents were too great. People in that day traveled in
groups; the larger the better. That enabled them, especially in the strong communal culture of the time, to share resources and provide protection and assistance. Joseph and Mary would likely not have been the only people in the Nazareth area going to Bethlehem to be registered, and it’s likely that family members were among those traveling with them, as well. Either way, there’s virtually no likelihood that Mary and Joseph were traveling alone.
Another problem is that our relative wealth and extravagance makes it hard for us to relate to what being poor meant for them. We get a glimpse of that when Mary had to offer the required sacrifice for ritual cleansing after the birth of Jesus. A lamb was the preferred offering, but they could afford only a couple of doves, the cheapest sacrifice that was allowed. If they couldn’t even afford a lamb for such an important sacrifice, there’s no way they could have owned a donkey. Like most travelers in that day, Mary may have walked the entire way, but if she got to ride a donkey at all, it almost certainly would have belonged to someone else traveling with them.
Another part of the picture that has no reasonable or verifiable accuracy is the stage of Mary’s pregnancy and their arrival in Bethlehem. They’re constantly depicted as arriving alone and exhausted, late at night, and with Mary about to go into labor. They desperately pound on the door of the “Bethlehem Motel 6” until eventually the gruff, crude, heartless night manager opens the door and says something like, “Sorry Dude – the ‘No vacancy’ sign means what it says.”
No Biblical Roots ~
That tale was not derived from the actual biblical narrative or the prevailing social and cultural realities of the time. The story that has become an entrenched tradition has its roots
in a spurious, non-biblical, pseudepigraphical account concocted by an anonymous writer somewhere around 400 AD who claimed to be the biblical author, James. The biblical text offers no indication of how far along Mary’s pregnancy was when they made the journey or how long they had already been in Bethlehem when her time did come. The Scripture simply says that Joseph went to Bethlehem…
…to be registered with Mary, his betrothed wife, who was with child [a condition that existed from conception to delivery] So it was, that while they were there, [staying in Bethlehem] the days were completed for her to be delivered. (Luke 2:5–6 NKJV)
We’ll see next week that the Greek term translated “inn” was not a place for travelers to lodge at all, and we’ll see that the situation that actually awaited them in Bethlehem makes the miraculous story even more glorious.
There are more lessons to be learned in our journey from Nazareth to Bethlehem with Mary and Joseph. A few that came to mind are listed below, but feel free to join the conversation and post some of your own in the comments section, along with any questions you may have.
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- Obedience can be challenging and sometimes painful, but there is no obstacle God cannot overcome to fulfill His plan for our life when we say “Yes” to Him.
- The tough roads ahead are better traveled in groups. The Church Jesus designed was designed to promote sharing resources, protecting one another, and reaching out to help those who trip and fall.
- God doesn’t just show up in the miracle moments. He’s with us on the road that leads to them.
As we continue next week with Part 3 in ‘revisiting’ the Christmas Story series, we hope you’ll join us again as we do just that … ‘revisit’ the “Little Town of Bethlehem”.
“TWEETABLES” ~ Click to Tweet & Share from the pull quotes below. Each quote links directly back to this article through Twitter.
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- “Embracing the Christmas story and its characters as God ‘really’ presented them highlights how He can work in and through the realities that exist in the world at any point in time. He’ll work out His plan for us in whatever conditions exist in the world we live in.” @GallaghersPen (Click here to Tweet)
- “A lamb was the preferred sacrificial offering, but Mary and Joseph could afford only a couple of doves, the cheapest sacrifice that was allowed. If they couldn’t even afford a lamb for such an important sacrifice, there’s no way they could have owned a donkey.” @GallaghersPen (Click here to Tweet)
- “Traditional images of the trip depict Mary and Joseph trudging along the road alone with Joseph leading a little donkey carrying Mary, who looks like she could give birth at almost any moment. BUT the lens of cultural reality allows us to upgrade our sad emotions.” @GallaghersPen (Click here to Tweet)
- Lesson learned: “The tough roads ahead are better traveled in groups. The Church Jesus designed was designed to promote sharing resources, protecting one another, and reaching out to help those who who trip and fall.” @GallaghersPen (Click here to Tweet)
Check out Ron’s book, “Right Side Up Thinking in an Upside Down World ~ Looking at the World through the Lens of Biblical Truth” The Kindle e-version is just $1.99. No Kindle device is needed. E-book readers are included on most computers, tablets, and smartphones. If you don’t have one, the free Kindle app can be easily downloaded directly from the Amazon site on almost any device.
Click here for a “Look Inside” preview at Amazon.
© 2023 Gallagher’s Pen, Ronald L. Gallagher, Ed.S. All rights reserved.
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My apologies for being so tardy today brother; it’s been a long month this week. Regardless, I could not rest until I read the latest submission in this enlightening series. I made a comment on “anti-social” media along the lines of, “What happens when truth meets myth? Learning occurs.” I think this sums up this wonderful series well.
It’s been said that, “If a lie is told long enough, it becomes a truth.” It appears, this is exactly what has happened with the CHRISTmas story. We’ve heard the world’s version for so long, we’re blinded to what the truth of God’s Word actually says. Add to that, the logic and historical accuracy that you add, and the world’s fabrication quickly begins to unravel.
When you wrote that the author of the modern Christmas story (see what I did there, don’t you) claimed he was the biblical author James (and many ascribe that the author of the book of James was Jesus’ half-brother, but we cannot know for sure), around 400A.D., I was floored. I had never heard that before, and immediately knew that I was in the midst of a falsehood. James, the brother of Jesus, was stoned to death by the Pharisees sometime before 70A.D. The math cannot work my friend, as you so eloquently point out.
Add to this your logical and historically accurate descriptions of the importance of traveling together for safety, the example of what being poor looked like (i.e., doves to sacrifice), and other pertinent facts and we can see how we’ve been deceived.
I can’t help but think, “but this is exactly how Satan works. He deceives subtly. He never opposes God’s Word, but he subverts it just enough to make it believable.” I think that is exactly the case of the work of fiction that the Christmas story we all grew up hearing, seeing, and reading about came about. Satan subverted us with enough “facts” to make it believable. I purposely used the term “fiction”, as a writer, I’ve learned a term called “world-building” where a fiction writer intersperses truth (e.g., time-relevant information such a weather patterns, world events, etc.) with the fictional story to make it more believable in the reader’s mind.
Loving the learning that I’m enjoying at your feet sir. Thank you for sharing truth in a way that does not oppose what the world has told us directly, but leads us to examine the lies we’ve believed for ourselves and desire to seek more of the truth you are sharing. I’ll be sure to be tuned in next Saturday for the next edition sir.
God’s blessings, and all the best to your wonderful family. Thank you!
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You never need an apology, Brother–your “long month this week” comment said it all, and I’m continually amazed at the things you manage to get done. Re. the post, I’m so very encouraged by the things you shared about how your reaction to looking at some of the ways the story looks so different, and so much more understandable and real, when we see it in the context of the world that the characters really lived in. And your insightful comment about how the devil takes words and images and twists them just enough to obscure the truth was well said and absolutely true. After getting to spend some time in the land and in the presence of some incredible historical/cultural scholars, my “nativity set” will no longer be displayed as a Christmas decoration in our house. My first inclination is to just toss it on the fire and burn it, but I might use it at some point to illustrate how ridiculous it is and how easily people are duped by the purveyors, promoters, and marketers of systematic lies.
Thanks again for the spiritual boost that comes with anything you write and for making the morning look brighter after a stormy and deadly night here relatively close to us here in Middle Tennessee. We’re praying for our neighbors who lost everything, and in some cases their lives, in a few awful minutes last night. It reminds us in the worst ways that we’re just stewards of all this stuff and it can be blown away with little or no warning. All these manipulative idiots who think they can control the weather with solar panels and a few wind mills should take note of what God can do with the sun and wind whenever He wants to, and how helpless they are to do anything about it. God bless you for courageously standing for the truth. Someone reminded me a day or two ago that even the smallest light can have a powerful effect on the darkness, so keep the Light shining, Bro…
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Thanks brother. You saved me a telephone call to check on y’all this morning. And yes, my heart goes out to those harmed, both physically and emotionally, in your neck of the woods. We’re pretty used to them and prepared (as much as one can be) here in north Texas and Oklahoma, but the severity of nature unleashed can be disconcerting wherever we are. Ever-important that we are right with God because we never know when that moment might come. Be ready friends.
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Blessed that you would have thought about making a call–hope the rest of your Sunday adds strength in all your weak places.
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So many things to ponder, Ron, and I so appreciate you allowing to view the Christmas story with fresh and curious eyes. Understanding that people did not travel alone in those days puts a wonderful perspective on this, too. I’m reminded of how it was possible for Joseph and Mary to “lose” Jesus on their way back home from Jerusalem. That used to sound a bit ridiculous to me before I understood the group traveling dimension.
You are certainly making my Christmas journey merry and bright with your wise words and insights here. Looking forward to Part 3!
Blessings!
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Thank you so much, Martha. Your comments were so sweet and encouraging, and I, too, love seeing the world Jesus came into like it really was. Seeing things differently than the traditional story presents, as I mentioned, don’t make the story less glorious, for me, it makes the heart of the Father and His power to intervene in human affairs even clearer. In any case, your response has brightened our day, and we are grateful to be in your circle of fans and friends, and we pray that your preparations and celebrations for Christmas are blessed in unexpectedly uplifting ways.
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