Wednesday, November 20, 2013

What Betokens the Shepherds’ Arrival (as based on Luke 2:8-18)

What Betokens the Shepherds’ Arrival
By Dr. Chris King
(as based on Luke 2:8-18)


On a quiet, mid-winter’s eve while dancing their shadow and amber reel
The light from wicks of olive oil lamps, hung and placed throughout the homes
Silhouetting the inhabitants of the house as they ended their day,
Preparing their twilight meal.

Outside darkness fell.
The sky blanketed in pitch, speckled only in dots of white.
The countryside mingled with the dimness, accenting the loneliness
Of the shepherds’ golden hillside fires.

As the blessing of thanksgiving was said, the bread was broken and conversation begun.
A familiar, yet untimely, smell entered the room, making the meal a most reprehensible feast.
A scent most unwelcome, early and inappropriate.
Yet, it was enough of a prompter to warrant an outside peek at the window
To see the source of this unseasonable visit.

The stench of sheep and their keepers who were normally prevented from entering the city
Until the time of shearing and the selling of their wares
Followed in the wake of their unexpected visit.
They passed house unto house through the village as if on mission
Speaking to none apart from among themselves.
Their search specific, their attention riveted on one focus.

Having taken their ill-favored smell with them,
The residents began again to settle down to their meal.
Their course of conversation steered to the shepherds
And then on to other subjects of the day as needed.
Yet, the odd behavior of these denizens of the field
Could not be forgotten—Why did they come to town tonight?

As the dishes of their evening repast were removed and washed,
In the distance was heard, of all things, singing, laughter, and…shouts.
Attention of all, thus captured, the residents rushed to window and door
To see and hear this disturbance that had overtaken their quiet hamlet.
To their surprise, none other than the previous inopportune shepherds
Returned in a state of uncharacteristic joy and abandonment, declaring…

“The angel spoke truth to us. We have seen it ourselves.
The long-awaited Messiah is here. God’s salvation has finally come.
He is born tonight among us in a stable on the other end of town.
Here, of all places, in our small village of Bethlehem.
The angel spoke to us and the host of heaven as well. Come and see!”

In their joy, the shepherds danced arm-in-arm
Overwhelmed by God’s blessing upon them
As they shouted to Bethlehem’s residents, young and old,
“Come and see. The long-awaited Messiah is here. God’s salvation has finally come.”

It is not known how those who heard the words of the shepherds
Responded to their acclamations or to the joy that drove them from the fields
To see if the angel’s declaration to them was, in fact, true.
It is, however, known that the same invitation
That the sheep keepers extended to those village inhabitants
Is the very same one the Scripture offers to everyone each Christmas and each day hence:

“Come and see. The long-awaited Messiah is here. God’s salvation has finally come.”

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