Well we’ve made it to the end of the year. Who could have thought how this year would unfold, we started hearing about a flu that was from China and had begun to impact Italy and then Spain. We didn’t understand the impact of this flu. Who could have imagined a year when hardly any planes flew anywhere? Travel agents, museums, cafes were all impacted. In fact, a lot of retail was affected as people began to shop online as whole nations went in to lockdown for months.
There were completely unexpected positives to the pandemic – in April National Geographic said that from China to industrial northern Italy and beyond, pollution levels plummeted as lockdowns closed businesses and trapped billions of people at home. In India, where air pollution is among the world’s worst, people reported seeing the Himalayas for the first time from where they live.
Then in May George Floyd died in the US, and protests around the world ensued. The whole year seemed consumed with news of the US election - we couldn’t escape it! And it turned out to be a divisive and polarising election – even in Australia, people usually have a strong view about it.
The whole year saw skyrocketing anxiety and loneliness. People in China with their front doors nailed shut, tower blocks of residents in Victoria told of a snap lock down and the scramble to get food and other essential products and services to them.
Many people lost their jobs, many people lost businesses. Everything’s been pushed to it’s limits - health systems, our economy, teaching via zoom and parents home schooling. People worked from home with varying degrees of success. Some people loved the flexibility of working hours, the lack of wasted time travelling to work, and going to ‘work’ in their slippers. Those who found it more challenging were parents of toddlers (there were a few who made a surprise appearance on their parents zoom call), extroverts who needed to see and talk to someone…anyone, and anyone who doesn’t have a good internet connection! The quote for the year is ‘you’re on mute!’ Unprecedented, Unimaginable, Unbelievable. Such tough times.
But in the midst of this God’s kingdom prevails. Whilst the kingdoms of this world suffer and fight and groan under the weight of pain, God’s Kingdom – a Kingdom of goodness, and kindness, and generosity, and healing, and peace - prevails. Our opening reading said that, Jesus “will be very great and will be called the Son of the Most High. The Lord God will give him the throne of his ancestor David. And he will reign over Israel forever; his Kingdom will never end!” The greatness of Jesus has not been diminished one bit, and his Kingdom is as trustworthy, strong and reliable as ever.
Our reading earlier spoke gave us some context to the birth of Jesus. Israel was part of the Roman empire, and Augustus who was the Emperor, decided to check out who exactly was in this empire for the first time. So, Augustus decreed that there would be a census and many say, the primary reason was taxation purposes!
Everyone had to go back to the town their family came from. If I went back 2 or 3 generations I would have to go back to Petersham in Sydney. There was no choice and so Joseph and Mary set off. They were living in Nazareth and they had to travel to Bethlehem – just a government requirement. Or was it?
You see, there were lots of prophecies in the Old Testament about the coming Messiah or Saviour of the world, and none said he would be born in Nazareth. Old Testament prophecy specifically said that the Messiah would be born in Bethlehem. But Mary and Joseph were going to Bethlehem to fulfil a government requirement weren’t they? Surely that had nothing to do with God??? And yet going to Bethlehem was fulfilling the plans and purposes of God.
This really encourages me, because it wasn’t that they heard an angel tell them to go to Bethlehem. They went to Bethlehem because that was there everyday life at that moment. And that is precisely where God works in us and through us.
I know many people feel that they don’t have the faith to move mountains, or the belief of someone else at church, or they aren’t as ‘spiritual’ as others. But God doesn’t need to be sending angels all the time to announce ‘you go here’, ‘you – go there’. All he needs is for you to commit yourself whole heartedly to God in the ordinary stuff of life, and he WILL lead you, he WILL guide you…and you may not even be aware.
Mary and Joseph thought they were just fulfilling a government requirement. But that was all part of God’s bigger plan. You may think you’re just going to get the groceries. Or you’re just talking to someone at Officeworks. Or you’re just calling someone to say hello. Or you’re just mowing a lawn. But who’s to say that it’s not all part of God’s bigger plan to work in you and through you. The mundane stuff, the stuff that feels like fulfilling a requirement, may be the very stuff that God uses and works through.
There’s been plenty of fulfilling requirements this year, sanitise hands, stand 1.5 meters apart, stay at home. I pray that in all of these requirements that God is weaving the details of your life in a vast eternal tapestry…making a thing of beauty as we commit our ways to him in the ordinariness of life. You know God hasn’t given up on our world and he hasn’t given up on you. He came to bring peace and hope on earth, and it’s possible through faith in Jesus. I love the words in the 2nd verse of ‘It came upon a midnight clear’. Yet with the woes of sin and strife, The world has suffered long,
Beneath the angel strain have rolled, Two thousand years of wrong. And man, at war with man, hears not, The love song which they bring. O hush the noise, ye men of strife, And hear the angels sing. God bless you this week.