Editor’s note: This recent Christmas reflection is one we can ponder as we begin a new year. Do we enter into it distressed and dispirited or with the peace of our Savior and Good Shepherd?
By Lynn Murphy
Was Jesus Christmas Shopping?
Seeing the people, Jesus felt compassion for them, because they were distressed and dispirited like sheep without a shepherd. Matthew 9:36
When I heard this verse, isolated from its context, I wondered, “Had Jesus been out among the masses on Black Friday?” Or perhaps He was grocery shopping the day before Thanksgiving. Or at the post office in line behind 7 other people waiting to mail a package.
In context, I know this verse is not referring to the crowds making holiday preparations, but I did notice people have not changed much in two thousand years. If I were to describe the people I encounter, I could use those exact words, “distressed” and “dispirited” and include a few of my own, such as “anxious,” “unsettled,” and “without peace.”
Even as believers, it is all too easy for our lives to become characterized by hectic busyness so that we too are distressed and dispirited, without peace. This transpires when we forget we have a Great Shepherd who longs to restore our fragmented souls to wholeness and peace.
Preparing for the holiday of Christmas is so much different than anticipating the Christ. Those who were alive for that first Christmas did not realize the birth of the promised One was upon them, yet to the extent they longed to see the fulfillment of the promise, they were willing to alter their lives to worship as soon as they received the good news.
I pondered, “What is the good news that we are celebrating at Christmas?” He is called Jesusbecause He will save the people from their sins. He will be called Immanuel because God is with us. Through His death on the cross and His resurrection, He presents the gift of eternal lifefor those who believe.
Striving after any other goal than Jesus, whether at Christmas, or during any other time of the year, leaves me frazzled and fragmented. Therefore, what measures can I take to return my soul to the care of my Great Shepherd?
First, I ask myself if the items on my list are something the Lord is asking me to do or something I have put on my own plate that is not from God? God strengthens me to do any good work He has given, yet He doesn’t promise me the same strength for all those tasks I choose to engage in for some other reason (such as pleasing others or looking good). I remind myself I don’t have to fulfill every expectation, because if I am putting too much pressure on myself to show love or prevent disappointment, I am really not pointing others to the right source of true hope and love – Jesus.
I try to listen to songs about the Savior’s birth, not the Christmas songs bombarding the airways that have nothing to do with Christ. I stop to stare at the Christmas lights on the tree or sit still to watch God’s handiwork as the snow falls. Actually, I don’t have much of a plan because detailed plans and over-scheduling seem to steal my peace when I have dismissed the One Sovereign Ruler and appointed myself as CEO of my own little world.
However, I have a daily choice, whether in December or in the months ahead, to continue in my hurried distractions or to relinquish this position into His fully capable hands and allow the King of Kings to rule the universe and the Prince of Peace to rule my heart.
Even though Lynn Murphy considers her life ordinary, she recognizes she is child of an EXTRAORDINARY GOD! She says, “I consider my primary purpose to love the Lord with all my heart, soul, mind and strength. I enjoy Precepts Bible studies, hiking, and reading. When time permits, I paint watercolor cards to send my friends and organize my thoughts into essays which I hope will enable others to abide in Jesus and persevere in faith.” You can read more of Lynn’s writing at www.poiema2016.wordpress.com.
Dispirited