When Heaven Whispered in a Manger
Luke chapter 2 is often treated like a familiar melody that plays every December, so familiar that we stop listening to the words and only remember the tune. But when I slow down and read it carefully, what strikes me is not the beauty of the nativity scene but the tension inside it. This is not a peaceful world into which Jesus is born. It is a world of forced movement, fear, taxation, political pressure, and uncertainty. Mary is not resting in a quiet home. Joseph is not settled in stability. They are traveling because an empire demands it. They are moving because someone in power wants to count them. The Son of God enters history not at a moment of comfort, but at a moment when everything feels unsettled. That alone tells us something important about the way God works. He does not wait until life is tidy before He enters it. He steps into the mess while it is still a mess. The decree from Caesar Augustus does more than create a census. It creates disruption. It uproots people ...