Reflecting in the Holy City:
Yesterday we visited Bethlehem and the Church of the Nativity. This church is built on the traditional site of Jesus' birthplace. It was commissioned by Constantine in the early 300's, but recognition of the site is referenced as early as the second century by Justin Martyr. The basilica is actually built over the cave where Jesus is thought to have been born, and we entered that grotto by descending a short flight of stairs. It is more sobering and profound than I can describe, and my mind and heart were overwhelmed as I stood in that small, hewn-out area, in what could well be the place where Jesus entered this world. More on that another time, perhaps. But first, there was something else that impactedme before I even reached this spot.
This building, massive and impressive, has somehow survived centuries of war and conflict. When the Persians attacked the region in the 600's, they destroyed every house of worship they plundered. But as they approached this church, they stopped. This place was different. This place had meaning, even to marauders from the east. Not because they recognized it as Jesus' birthplace. But on the front of the building (at that time) there was a large mosaic depicting the coming of the wise men to worship the newborn king. And those wise men looked like Persians...because, in all likelihood they were! Upon seeing such a rendering, the army spared the church and moved on.
The significance of this story? It's not just the fact that this special site survived the onslaught of a foreign power, although that's of great importance. Rather (as simple as it seems), it's that this group of people saw themselves in the Story! That a group of "outsiders" were able to place themselves within the very message of the Gospel, and it so impacted them them that their hearts were turned in that moment.
And I thought about how we paint the picture of the Story with those around us today. Do we share that Good News in such a way that people see themselves in it? Do we communicate in such a way that it makes sense to their life situations? So they are drawn in and make a personal connection, causing them to change direction? The message of Jesus is not a fable, not simply historical, and not designed to help us be better people. It is power! Power to change life courses. Power to provide a new path. Power to bring and preserve life, even when death is at the door.
I want my friends to be able to see themselves in the story of Jesus. And they will, if I embody it in such a way that the Story is alive, current and relevant to me. If it empowers me to be what I could never be without it. If it changes my life and leaves an indelible mark, making my appearance something different than it would otherwise be. And if it reflects, not only the Story, but the faces of those who see that Story in me.
Do people see themselves in the Story because of the way it's painted upon your life?
Yesterday we visited Bethlehem and the Church of the Nativity. This church is built on the traditional site of Jesus' birthplace. It was commissioned by Constantine in the early 300's, but recognition of the site is referenced as early as the second century by Justin Martyr. The basilica is actually built over the cave where Jesus is thought to have been born, and we entered that grotto by descending a short flight of stairs. It is more sobering and profound than I can describe, and my mind and heart were overwhelmed as I stood in that small, hewn-out area, in what could well be the place where Jesus entered this world. More on that another time, perhaps. But first, there was something else that impactedme before I even reached this spot.
This building, massive and impressive, has somehow survived centuries of war and conflict. When the Persians attacked the region in the 600's, they destroyed every house of worship they plundered. But as they approached this church, they stopped. This place was different. This place had meaning, even to marauders from the east. Not because they recognized it as Jesus' birthplace. But on the front of the building (at that time) there was a large mosaic depicting the coming of the wise men to worship the newborn king. And those wise men looked like Persians...because, in all likelihood they were! Upon seeing such a rendering, the army spared the church and moved on.
The significance of this story? It's not just the fact that this special site survived the onslaught of a foreign power, although that's of great importance. Rather (as simple as it seems), it's that this group of people saw themselves in the Story! That a group of "outsiders" were able to place themselves within the very message of the Gospel, and it so impacted them them that their hearts were turned in that moment.
And I thought about how we paint the picture of the Story with those around us today. Do we share that Good News in such a way that people see themselves in it? Do we communicate in such a way that it makes sense to their life situations? So they are drawn in and make a personal connection, causing them to change direction? The message of Jesus is not a fable, not simply historical, and not designed to help us be better people. It is power! Power to change life courses. Power to provide a new path. Power to bring and preserve life, even when death is at the door.
I want my friends to be able to see themselves in the story of Jesus. And they will, if I embody it in such a way that the Story is alive, current and relevant to me. If it empowers me to be what I could never be without it. If it changes my life and leaves an indelible mark, making my appearance something different than it would otherwise be. And if it reflects, not only the Story, but the faces of those who see that Story in me.
Do people see themselves in the Story because of the way it's painted upon your life?





