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Lesson 3
"Unto
You is Born a Savior"
Luke
2, Matthew 2
By Maurine
Jensen Proctor
A baby cried
in the stillness of a spring night in Bethlehem, and the world
would never be the same. Here in the vulnerability and tenderness
of an infant was the Lord Himself. Jesus Christ had come to walk
the dusty roads of mortality, to know hunger, pain, and rejection—all
to ease our burdens. When we kneel at the very limits of our earthly
endurance, we can always know that He has been there before us.
It was the
ultimate and complete condescension. The creator of worlds without
number come to be Immanuel, God with us, and find no room at the
inn. The one who had given the law on Mt. Sinai come to fulfill
the law. The one who would heal, making the lame to walk and the
blind to see, come to receive piercing in his hands and feet and
a great wound in the side. The one come to befriend the friendless,
prepared to be betrayed by one of his closest friends.
His birth
took place in Bethlehem, but in that manger was the promise of
Gethsemane and the hope of billions who had rejoiced when he said,
“Here am I. Send me.”
A Yoke on Israel
How Israel
needed the long-promised Messiah! Not only in the Roman oppression,
but in the land itself, the absence of rain and dew, the disorder
of society, the silence of prophecy, they needed their deliverer,
but they had lost sight of who He would be. They looked for an
earthly king who would come in sudden splendor and vanquish all
their foes. What a surprise He would be to their dearest expectations.
The Jews had
not been a completely sovereign people since they had been carried
off to Babylon, oppressed by Persia, Greece and now Caesar. They
had seen their temple decimated, then a rebuilt temple desecrated
with Jews commanded to sacrifice pigs. They had suffered and struggled
and sold their souls, and they looked forward to the Messiah who
would break the yoke, be a mighty conqueror.
Jesus Christ
was bound to be a disappointment to them. God often is to earth’s
inhabitants who long for shows of power when he so often works
in quiet, steadiness.
A Spring Birth
On a spring
morning in Bethlehem, restless donkeys loudly bray, roosters crow,
and the sound of tinkling bells play off the hills where sheep
graze. Not in a frosty December but in a season of green, new
life, Jesus Christ was born in an ancient, dusty village long
prophesied as the place.
All things
testify of him, and so it was at his birth. Bethlehem in Hebrew
means "house of bread," and He was the Bread of Life
to a hungry world. Its pools of Solomon were a principle water
source for Jerusalem, and He came to give living water. Lambs
to be sacrificed in the temple roamed its countryside, and He
was the sacrificial Lamb. It was the City of David, and He came,
a Son of David, to be the King of kings.
So it was,
with the spring flowers spread across the hills, that Joseph and
Mary, both descendants of the royal line of David, came to their
ancestral home to be registered for a tax ordered by their Roman
overseers. A decree had gone out from Caesar that “all the
world should be taxed” (Luke 2:1) Rome was the world in
this ancient time, and at the word of a tyrant, an entire population
could be on the move. These taxations were actually enrollments
or registrations, in order that taxes could be properly assessed.
Romans registered where they lived, but it was the custom among
the Jews to return to their place of birth, their ancestral home.
Three such
general registrations or censuses were ordered through Rome during
this period, this being the second.
It was a
journey of eighty uncomfortable miles for Mary, now nearing delivery,
and she and Joseph probably traveled with family to protect themselves
against desert marauders. Bethlehem was swollen with visitors
when Joseph and Mary arrived seeking room at an inn. Frederic
W. Farrar described what an inn (khan) of the time would have
been:
A
khan is a low structure, built of rough stones, and generally
only a single story in height. It consists for the most part of
a square enclosure, in which the cattle can be tied up in safety
for the night, and an arched recess for the accommodation of travelers.
The leewan, or paved floor of the recess, is raised a foot or
two above the level of the courtyard.
A
large khan…might contain a series of such recesses, which
are, in fact, low small rooms with no front wall to them. They
are, of course, perfectly public; everything that takes place
in them is visible to every person in the khan. They are also
totally devoid of even the most ordinary furniture. The traveler
may bring his own carpet if he likes, may sit cross-legged upon
it for his meals, and may lie upon it at night. As a rule, too,
he must bring his own food, attend to his own cattle, and draw
his own water from the neighboring spring. He would neither expect
nor require attendance, and would pay only the merest trifle for
the advantage of shelter, safety, and a floor on which to lie.
But
if he chanced to arrive late, and the leewans were all occupied
by earlier guests, he would have no choice but to be content with
such accommodation as he could find in the court-yard below, and
secure for himself and his family such small amount of cleanliness
and decency as are compatible with an unoccupied corner on the
filthy area, which must be shared with horses, mules, and camels.
The litter, the closeness, the unpleasant smell of the crowded
animals, the unwelcome intrusion of the pariah dogs, the necessary
society of the very lowest hangers-on of the caravansery, are
adjuncts to such a position which can only be realized by any
traveler in the East who happens to have been placed in similar
circumstances.
In
Palestine it not unfrequently happens that the entire khan, or
at any rate the portion of it in which the animals are housed,
is one of those innumerable caves which abound in the limestone
rocks of its central hills. Such seems to have been the case at
the little town of. Bethlehem. [1]
In Bethlehem, swollen with visitors, "there was no room for
them in the inn," but the Joseph Smith translation tells
us more: "There was none to give room for them in the inn"
(JST Luke 2:7) It is hard to imagine that no one could find room
for a woman who was clearly in travail and close to delivery.
But, apparently, it wasn’t just a question of room, but,
as it always is, of heart.
We have sung
about that birth, rejoiced in it, imagined it, decorated our homes
around it, taken ourselves there in a thousand flights of fancy,
but in actuality, though the heavens brimmed with songs of herald
angels, and a new star had been created, how many billions of
years before to appear in the universe at just the perfect moment,
to those in Bethlehem probably nothing set the couple apart. They
were weary with the dust of the road, exhausted from travel, perhaps
poor, undistinguished from everybody else. The spiritual stirrings
at his birth were probably all but invisible to most.
The innkeepers
were distracted, self-serving; they had no eye for new stars or
heavenly things. The very Creator of the earth could find no place
here. Jesus later said, "The foxes have holes, and the birds
of the air have nests; but the Son of man hath not where to lay
his head" (Mathew 8:20).
“And
so it was, that, while they were there, the days were accomplished
that she should be delivered” (Luke 2:6) Mary, that “precious
and chosen vessel” (Alma 7:10) “brought forth her
firstborn son, and wrapped him in swaddling clothes, and laid
him in a manger,” (Luke 2:7) in a stable for animals. Not
for this birth would there be rich finery or skilled attendants,
just a new star overhead for those who would look heavenward.
Into the darkness, the Light of the World had come.
We have been
trained by European nativity scenes to think of the manger as
a wooden trough. In Palestine, animals were fed from stone troughs.
Even the resting place of the infant Jesus was symbolic. The Rock
of Israel laid in a stone crib.
Shepherds in the Fields
With sheep
folded safely in caves scattered about the hills of Bethlehem,
shepherds watched over them, alert for night dangers. Tonight
there would be little sleep, for this was the season of special
care when fragile, new lambs had to be protected. Then, out of
the darkness, brighter than the stars, an angel of the Lord appeared
to them, “and the glory of the Lord shone round about them,
and they were sore afraid” (Luke 2:9). Calm came to their
troubled hearts as the angel gave the holiest announcement that
had ever come to the world. It was delivered not to the pompous
or the powerful—and Jerusalem had plenty of those. Instead
the message was delivered to a group representing one of the lowest
occupations in class-conscious Israel.
We sometimes
think of shepherds in a pastoral, idealized light. In actuality,
shepherds, burned in the sun, out in all weather, eking out an
existence, often had a difficult, grueling life. But, just as
Christ first announced publicly who he was to a fallen woman of
Samaria, so the angels told their good tidings of great joy to
one of the least in Israel.
In Ezekiel
34, the Lord addresses the shepherds of Israel, reproving them
for having not fed the flocks. This is metaphoric, reminding us
of the larger symbol for which shepherds stand. Christ, of course,
called himself a shepherd, but in a sense all of those of us who
have the gospel are called to be missionaries and search the face
of the earth to seek after the lost sheep and gather them into
the fold of Israel. We are the shepherds of Israel.
We can see
that announcing the good news of the Lord’s birth to the
shepherds and recording that story for all future generations
was also a type. What do the shepherds do? “Let us now go…and
see this thing which is come to pass which the Lord hath made
known unto us”(Luke 2:15) They visit the Christ child, receive
their witness, and “when they had seen it, they made known
abroad the saying which was told them concerning this child”
(Luke 2:17)
As a young
child, I used to wish I could have been a shepherd in those fields
who had looked up to see a heavenly chorus of angels praising
God. Once I saw that connection, I realized that I am a shepherd
of Israel. I go to the source of light for my strength and my
witness, and then I am called, as they were to make it known abroad.
The Wise Men
Much speculation
has surrounded the identity of the wise men. Meridian has published
two articles recently that summarize various possibilities. [see
articles by John Tvedtnes
and George Potter] The scriptures
do not tell us who they were or where they were from exactly.
They may have been Jews of the diaspora. They certainly recognized
the star, even in their distant land and knew what it signified.
We don’t
know if there were three or many. They had wealth enough to bring
significant gifts.
What we do
know is that they assumed the information they sought about the
new king could be given them in the palace, and so they visited
Herod. Frederic W. Farrar writes of Herod:
Herod
the Great, who, after a life of splendid misery and criminal success,
had now sunk into the jealous decrepitude of his savage old age,
was residing in his new palace on Zion, when, half maddened as
he was already by the crimes of his past careeer, he was thrown
into a fresh paroxysm of alarm and anxiety by the visit of some
Eastern Magi, bearing the strange intelligence that they had seen
in the East the star of a new-born king of the Jews, and had come
to worship him.
Herod, a mere Idumaean usurper, a more than suspected apostate,
the detested tyrant over an unwilling people, the sacrilegious
plunderer of the tomb of David—Herod, a descendant of the
despised Ishmael and the hated Esau, heard the tidings with a
terror and indignation which it was hard to dissimulate.
He well knew how worthless were his pretensions to an historic
throne which he held solely by successful adventure. But his craft
equalled his cruelty, and finding that all Jerusalem shared his
suspense, he summoned to his palace the leading priests and theologians
of the Jews—perhaps the relics of that Sanhedrin which he
had long reduced to a despicable shadow—to inquire of them
where the Messiah was to be born. He received the ready and confident
answer that Bethlehem was the town indicated for that honor by
the prophecy of Micah. Concealing, therefore, his desperate intention,
he dispatched the wise men to Bethlehem, bidding them to let him
know as soon as they had found the child, that he too might come
and do him reverence. [2]
Another indication
of the spiritual grounding of the wise men is that they could
respond to God’s warning in a dream to not return to Herod
and deliver news of the whereabouts of the Christ child.
Presentation at the Temple and Slaughter of the Innocents
To the glorious,
golden temple Joseph and Mary came bearing Jesus forty-one days
after His birth to present Him to the Father. The child Jesus,
as the firstborn son of a Hebrew family, had to be redeemed, and
Mary, having given birth, had to be purified. The wealthy bought
lambs for the burnt offering of purification, but this family
was poor and bought the offering of the poor—a turtledove
or a young pigeon. Among the worshipers at the temple that morning
was devout Simeon, brought there by the Spirit, for it had been
revealed unto him "that he should not see death, before he
had seen the Lord's Christ." Seeing the baby, he rejoiced
and took Him into his arms, blessing God and saying, "Lord,
now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace"(Luke 2: 26,
29) Then, looking at Mary, he prophesied, "A spear shall
pierce through him to the wounding of thine own soul also"
(JST Luke 2:35) Already, Golgotha cast a shadow in their lives.
Aged Anna,
too, stepped forward to bear joyful witness that this child was
the Lord, but in his palace not far away Herod was not so joyful.
This promised King of the Jews was a threat to his power, and
Herod's mad and frenzied history showed that he responded to threat
with violence. "His whole career was red with the blood of
murder. He had massacred priests and nobles; he had decimated
the Sanhedrin; he had caused the High Priest, his brother-in-law
. . . to be drowned in pretended sport before his eyes; he had
ordered the strangulation of his favorite wife, . . . though she
seems to have been the only [one] whom he passionately loved."[3]
His three sons, the uncle and father of his wife, his mother-in-law,
his friends, all fell victim to his suspicious and guilty terrors.
Now he added to the pool of blood at his door by ordering the
death of all the children from two years and under in Bethlehem
and the nearby coasts, hoping thereby to massacre Jesus. Thus
the revelation was fulfilled, "In Rama was there a voice
heard, lamentation and weeping, and great mourning, Rachael weeping
for [the loss of] her children, and would not be comforted because
they were not" (Matthew 2:18)
One apocryphal
source gives insight into how John was spared: "Elizabeth
also, hearing that her son John was about to be searched for,
took him and went up unto the mountains. . . . But Herod made
search after John, and sent servants to Zacharias . . . at the
altar, and said unto him: 'Where hast thou hid thy son?' And he
answered and said to them 'I am a minister of God, and a servant
at the altar; how should I know where my son is? . . . I am a
martyr for God, and if he shed my blood, the Lord will receive
my soul. Besides, know that ye shed innocent blood.'" Then
they slew Zacharias "in the entrance of the temple and altar."
[4]
Jesus was
spared because an angel appeared to Joseph in vision, telling
him to flee with Mary and the child to Egypt. The Lord had said
of His people, "Israel is my son, even my firstborn,"(Exodus
4:22) and because the Lord works in patterns, types, and shadows,
the miracles, events, and deliverances of Israel's past were reenacted
in the life of Christ. The prophets spoke of both Israel and Christ
when they wrote, "Out of Egypt have I called my son"
(Matthew 2:15).
Childhood
Of the upbringing
of Christ, the scriptures are significantly silent. Other than
the scene at the temple where the men were asking questions of
him, we know very little. But JST Matthew 3:24-26 is telling:
And
it came to pass that Jesus grew up with his brethren, and waxed
strong, and waited upon the Lord for the time of his ministry
to come.
And he served under his father, and he spake not as other men,
neither could he be taught; for he needed not that any man should
teach him.
And after many years, the hour of his ministry drew nigh.
1 Frederic
W. Farrar, Life of Christ. (Salt Lake City, Utah: Bookcraft) pp.
33-34
2 Ibid. pp. 48-49
3 Ibid. p. 61
From “The Protevangelion of James,” in The Lost Books
of the Bible (New York: Alpha House, 1926), pp. 35-36
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© 2002 Meridian
Magazine. All Rights Reserved.
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| About
the Author: |
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After receiving
her education from University of Utah and Harvard, Maurine Jensen
Proctor, the Editor-in-Chief and co-founder of Meridian Magazine,
began her writing career with McGraw Hill Magazines and the Chicago
Sun-Times. She has created award-winning television documentaries,
has written a radio show for more than six years that played on
300 radio stations, and was a long-time writer of The Spoken Word
for the Mormon Tabernacle Choir.
She, and her
husband, Scot, have written several books together, including Witness
of the Light, Source of the Light, Light from the Dust and The Gathering.
They also edited a new version of Lucy Mack Smith’s biography
of her son called The Revised and Enhanced History of Joseph Smith
by His Mother and The Autobiography of Parley P. Pratt. They were
formerly the editors of This People magazine.
Maurine has
been a part-time Institute teacher for the past 13 years and is
the mother of eleven children and grandmother of one.
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