Day 14 Lost Sheep
It happens every Advent.
I begin peaceful and calm, resting in the start of the season of joy and peace.
I pace myself.
Then I look at the calendar and realize the time is passing and I still have much to do. A few presents to purchase. Cookies to bake. Letters to write. I begin to lose my joy and like sheep, I wander off.
Even in worship, I still have things to do.
Things to think about more deeply.
Things to ponder over and over in my heart.
I turn to Isaiah 53. It is about the serious role Jesus
would play in our lives. There is nothing about silent nights or peace or
beauty or calm; instead Isaiah points to the future about an unattractive man
who people will despise. Isaiah writes about people who will hate so much they
will kill the man and sell his clothes. Even friends will desert him. Isaiah brings it
closer to home and points to the reader and says that all of us, like stupid
sheep, wander off and this man - this Jesus - will be the one who will take our wanderings
and stupidity, forgive us and perfect us.
Hard things to think about at Christmas time.
We'd rather bake fruitcake and wrap presents than consider the cost of Christmas in God's economy.
And yet He came.
He took thirty years from His reign in Heaven and
humbled himself to be Jesus, the one who would love perfectly. The one who
would offer his life so you and I might live forever. He comes today as the
good shepherd looking for his lost sheep.
I remember the music of Handel's Messiah proclaiming the very
words:
"And He shall feed his flock like a shepherd; and He
shall gather the lambs with His arms, and carry them in His bosom and gently
lead those that are with young." (Isaiah 40:11)
Great Shepherd,
You have experienced more than I can comprehend,
and here you are this Christmas - feeding me, gathering me,
carrying me.
Lead on, Gentle
Shepherd.
No comments:
Post a Comment