208: Christmas - A Time to Reflect

Published: Dec. 20, 2023, 9 a.m.

There are many cultural dimensions to all that is Christmas. Pick your favorite. I have a few that I look forward to every year. But as I get older, I\u2019m seeing Christmas more as a great time to reflect on my relationship with Jesus.

In Luke\u2019s gospel, for example, I\u2019m especially drawn to the mother of Jesus, Mary, and how she reflects upon the birth of her son and all that it means to her, both in the present and the future. There are things we can learn from Mary as she takes time to reflect on this most important event in all of history.

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To set the scene for when Mary took time to reflect on all that happened at the first Christmas, I\u2019ll read a few verses from Luke\u2019s gospel that tell the story.

They\u2019re the ones that occur right after Mary gave birth to Jesus. An angel of the Lord had just appeared to a group of shepherds who were on the job out in the fields tending to their sheep. God\u2019s glory surrounded all of them, having appeared out of nowhere. Quite naturally the shepherds were terrified for they had never seen anything like this.\xa0

But the angel, a messenger from God, reassured them and told them there\u2019s nothing to be afraid of because he was there to simply announce that Jesus. the savior, the Messiah the Lord. had been born in Bethlehem. Other angels then appear filling the sky and praising God. What a majestic sight that must have been.

After the angels leave

We\u2019ll pick up the story in chapter 2 of Luke\u2019s Gospel, verse 15. Luke writes:

When the angels had left them and gone into heaven, the shepherds said to one another, \u201cLet\u2019s go to Bethlehem and see this thing that has happened, which the Lord has told us about.\u201d

So they hurried off and found Mary and Joseph, and the baby, who was lying in the manger. When they had seen him, they spread the word concerning what had been told them about this child,\xa0and all who heard it were amazed at what the shepherds said to them. But Mary treasured up all these things and pondered them in her heart.\xa0

It\u2019s this last line that has captained me lately, But Mary treasured up all these things and pondered them in her heart.

Two important actions going on

There are two important verbs in the sentence I just read, \u201ctreasured\u201d and \u201cpondered.\u201d at least that\u2019s how the New International translation renders them.\xa0 Other translations use the phrase \u201cMary kept all these things in\xa0 her heart\u201d rather than \u201ctreasure.\u201d

For the verb \u201cPondered,\u201d other translations use \u201cthought about them often.\u201d

But the translation I like best is the New International Bible Reader\u2019s Version\xa0 which translates Luke 2:19 like this,

But Mary kept all these things like a secret treasure in her heart. She thought about them over and over.\xa0

What are the \u201cthese things\u201d of Christmas

Regardless of how you translate the two verbs in this verse, the noun phrase that is the object of the first sentence in the verse is always translated the same, \u201cthese things.\u201d

But what are the things Mary was keeping, or treasuring, and pondering or thinking about over and over? It\u2019s one of the beautiful mysteries of the Christmas story that\u2019s worth taking the time to reflect upon.

I imagine Mary obviously reflecting upon what the shepherds told her about the angel of the Lord appearing to them and how terrifying it was. But how their fear turned to joy when the angel told them not to be afraid because\xa0

Today in the town of David a Savior has been born to you; he is the Messiah, the Lord.

What a comforting independent confirmation that what the angel Gabriel told Mary when he visited her 9 months earlier was actually true! This truth alone is like a treasure worth appreciating over and over again. What Gabriel told her wasn\u2019t something she just imagined. The sky was full of angels confirming this was all true.

But there are a few other less obvious \u201cthese things\u201d

The \u201call these things\u201d phrase Luke uses in describing Mary\u2019s response to what is happening, implies different layers to what Mary is experiencing.\xa0 One layer I imagine is Mary taking time to reflect upon her relationship with her elderly relative Elizabeth.\xa0

Imagine these two improbable pregnancies.\xa0 One to someone too old to bear a child, and the other to a virgin. This was certainly something to treasure and think about often.\xa0 It would naturally draw Mary to God and his amazing ways in accomplishing his purposes.

Author Anne Lamont would describe this layer to the Christmas story, in the most reverent of tones, as \u201cGod showing off.\u201d\xa0 It\u2019s one of her favorite expressions.

It makes me wonder about the improbable things God has done in your life. What things has he done for you that\u2019s worthy of treasuring?

Joseph

And then there\u2019s Mary\u2019s husband Joseph. Another layer to the Christmas story. I imagine Mary sitting there in the cave with the baby Jesus looking at Joseph and treasuring her relationship with him. I picture her taking time to reflect on where they\u2019ve come from in their time together. We don\u2019t know how old Joseph was, but we\u2019re pretty sure Mary was probably 14 or 15 years old. Maybe they went to high school together.

They were both from the small backwater town of Nazareth, which had a lot going against it in terms of its reputation. Remember one of Jesus\u2019 disciples remarking, \u201ccan anything good come out of Nazareth?\u201d

While I imagine Mary was the subject of a lot of gossip surrounding her pre-marital pregnancy, she had to know Joseph dealt with the same thing. There was a cost to his reputation and standing in the community, too. Yet he stood by her and believed what Mary and the angel Gabriel told him - as implausible as it was. What woman wouldn\u2019t want a husband like this?

Scripture doesn\u2019t have a lot to say about Joseph, except that he was described as a \u201cgood man.\u201d I did an earlier episode about him, episode no 135, \u201cChristmas with a Good Man Brings Joy.\u201d\xa0 I\u2019ll have a link to it at the bottom of the show notes in case you're interested. It\u2019s one of my favorite Christmas episodes.

"All these men around my baby"

Another layer to what Mary treasured and took time to reflect upon could very well have been the place of the shepherds in the birth of Jesus. If I were Mary, I\u2019d wonder why all these men were here to see my baby. Birthing is typically a female kind of thing, but here are all these guys - Joseph and the shepherds. There\u2019s not another lady to be found in the whole story. What gives with that?

Why are the shepherds even part of the Christmas story? Why couldn\u2019t the angels appear to Mary and Joseph directly?

The answer to this question is another example of God showing off, in the best sense of the word. You see these shepherds were not the ordinary run-of-the-mill shepherd.\xa0 They were actually temple priests who cared for a special flock of sheep used for the Passover celebration and other temple festivals where ceremonial sheep were sacrificed.\xa0

Each of these sheep were without any blemish or defect. They were as perfect as any sheep could be. Their one and only purpose was to one day be a perfect sacrifice. These perfect sheep were what the priestly shepherds were watching over the night the angels appeared to them.

The shepherds knew that one day they would be out of a job when the Messiah, the savior , the son of God would come to earth. They knew he would be the once and for all perfect sacrifice for all mankind. No more sheep. A one and done sacrifice. So no wonder they were excited when the angel appears to them out in their fields around Bethlehem to announce the birth of Jesus.

\u201cFor there is born to you today, in David\u2019s city, a Savior, who is Christ the Lord.\u201d Luke 2:11

Time to reflect on the future

Mary knew all this, too. The role of these temple shepherds was well-known, So I\u2019m sure Mary would be reflecting upon the similarity between what they cared for, and what she would be caring for. Jesus is described in several places as the \u201clamb of God.\u201d His once and for all sacrifice would replace the system these shepherds were part of.

Imagine what it must have been like for Mary, as a teenager knowing that in 33 years the baby you just gave birth to would be offered up by God as a sacrifice to redeem all of mankind.

So what does all this mean for YOU?\xa0

There was certainly no shortage of things for Mary to think about there besides her newborn baby. Lot\u2019s of things to treasure and many things to reflect on, mull over, and ponder over and over again.

But what about you?\xa0

What about the role of Jesus in your life do you treasure? What are the layers of your relationships with him, that you think about from time to time? I encourage you to take time to reflect upon this.\xa0

You know this, I\u2019m sure, but considering questions like these is so much more fulfilling than the other questions we usually ask at Christmas.

Closing

In closing, I\u2019d also love to hear any thoughts you have about today\u2019s episode. I hope your thinking was stimulated by today\u2019s show, to do what Mary did, to take time to reflect on your relationship with Jesus.

For when you do, it will help you experience the joy of relationships God desires for you. Because after all, You Were Made for This.

The next time you hear my voice will be on Christmas Day when I read the entire Christmas story from Luke\u2019s Gospel. It\u2019s only 20 verses.

In the meantime don\u2019t forget to spread a little relational sunshine around the people you meet this week. Spark some joy for them.\xa0 And I\u2019ll see you again next time. Goodbye for now.

Other episodes or resources related to today\u2019s shows

207: How to Help the People We Love At Christmas

139: Why Should I Listen to This Podcast?

021: The Most Important Relationship of All

135: Christmas with a Good Man Brings Joy

Last week\u2019s blog post: The Joy of Christmas Past

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