CHAPTER XIII. The First Visitors to Bethlehem
The angels’ song died away in
the solemn silence, and the shepherds were left alone.
It was a critical hour with them. Would they follow
this vision and turn it into victory, or would they
let it vanish with the last echo of the song and relapse
into the old dull routine? No, they did not let
it pass, and life was never the same to them again.
“Let us now go,” they said, “even
unto Bethlehem, and see this thing which is come to
pass, which the Lord hath made known unto us.”
They translated vision into action and presently were
climbing the rocky slope to Bethlehem. Had these
shepherds not followed up the message their knowledge
of their Messiah would have immediately been cut short.
We hear divine messages and see heavenly visions enough,
but too often we let them fade into forgetfulness
and pass into nothingness. A message does us
no good until it becomes action, the grandest vision
that ever swept through our brain or illuminated our
sky leaves no vestige of worth unless it is turned
into conduct and character. “Let us now
go and see this thing.” We do not know
Christ until we see him as our Saviour. Seeing
is believing, this is the simplicity of faith, and
when we see Christ through the direct vision and personal
experience of faith and obedience we are transfigured
into his likeness.
“And they came with haste, and
found both Mary and Joseph, and the babe lying in
the manger.” Were they disappointed at the
humble mother, wife of a workingman, and at the manger
cradle? These did not match the desire and expectation
of the Jews. They had long cherished the passionate
hope of an earthly prince who would come wearing purple
robes and marshaling armies to trample hated oppressors
under feet and make Jerusalem the mistress of the
world. They would have said that the Christ should
be born in a palace and laid on softest down and covered
with silken robes. What a surprise was this manger
to their thoughts and shock to their feelings.
Were ever deep-seated, long-cherished hopes treated
with more cruel irony? But God’s ways are
not as our ways. Christ was brought into the
world at the very point where he could get the deepest
strongest hold upon it and most powerfully swing it
starward from the dust. He was born among neither
the very rich nor the very poor, but in the great
middle class at the center of gravity of humanity,
by lifting which he would lift the world. Had
he come as a pampered child of wealth he would never
have got hold of the great heart of humanity; but
he came as one of the people, knitting himself into
humble relations, growing up among plain folk of the
countryside and toiling as a common workingman.
And so when he began to preach the common people heard
him gladly.
Promise was exactly matched by fulfillment.
“Ye shall find a babe,” was the promise
of the angel, and now the record reads, “And
they found the babe.” When did God ever
lead us to expect anything and then disappoint us?
He gave us thirst that urges us to find water, and
matching this need he has created bubbling springs
and sparkling streams. He gave us hunger that
seeks bread, and it finds fields of golden grain and
orchards of rosy fruit. He gave us minds that
seek truth, and they find it; he gave us a craving
for love, and heart matches heart. He set eternity
in our hearts and gave us deep instincts that reach
after the Infinite, hearts that cry, “Shew,
us the Father and it sufficeth us.” Shall
all lower needs be satisfied and this supreme search
and cry of the soul be disappointed and mocked?
“And they found the babe,” is the answer
to this need and promise. God sends us with all
our deep needs and mysterious longings to that cradle
in Bethlehem, where they will be exactly and fully
matched and satisfied. He that hath seen this
Child hath seen the Father.
The shepherds, having seen for themselves,
immediately began to make known abroad the saying
which was told them concerning the Child. The
gospel is a social and expansive blessing and cannot
be shut up in the individual heart. We are saved
to serve, we are told the good news that we may tell
it to others, we get it that we may give it. And
the more we give it the more we get it, for this bread
multiplies in our own hands as we share it with others,
as did the loaves beside the Galilean sea. Great
souls have ever grown rich by the lavish prodigality
with which they bestowed their gifts on others, and
because Jesus gave himself God hath highly exalted
him.
First angels and then shepherds:
how startling the contrast. Jesus has deep affinities
with both: on his divine side he is related to
heaven, and on his human side he is related to earth.
And the first men he drew to his side were shepherds,
representatives of the common people. He did
not come as a member of any special class, especially
of the upper class. No one can ever save the
world by winning over the rich and the great.
Society cannot be lifted from the top. Whoever
would raise the level of society must get his lever
under its foundation stones. Taking hold of the
carved cornice will tear the roof off and lift it away
from the building, but raising the lowest stone will
also push up the spire’s gilded point.
He who elevates the peasant will also in time elevate
the prince. Jesus did not begin with Cæsar, but
with shepherds, and then in three hundred years a
Christian Cæsar sat on the throne.
The gospel still works from beneath;
going down into the slums of Christian cities; working
among the poor and degraded of heathen lands; and
seeking the lowest tribes of men from whom have been
defaced almost the last vestige of humanity and restoring
them to the image of God. Christ is saving the
world as a whole. He is not slicing the loaf of
society horizontally, cutting off the upper crust,
but he is slicing it vertically from top to bottom.
How wonderful is the simplicity and
beauty of this gospel that shepherds are drawn by
it. It takes some brain to read Plato. Shepherds
would not get much out of Sir Isaac Newton, or a child
out of Shakespeare, or a sorrowing heart out of Emerson.
But every one can get milk and honey for his soul
out of the gospel of Jesus. His wonderful words
of life have the same sweetness and saving power for
shepherd and scholar, peasant and prince. However
lowly and unlettered one may be there is wide room
for him around the manger of this Child.