Nativity
by Vernie Lynn DeMille
Is this what it means to be humble?
To carry swaddling cloth,
Coarse but clean,
Always ready to catch
Lambs without blemish,
Fresh from the blood of birthing,
And carry them,
Clean and perfect,
To the blood of sacrifice.
Is this humility?
To know the earth by feel in the dark;
The stones and scent of grass and shrub.
To see it illuminated
By the angels of God,
Brilliant and beautiful,
Full of awe and good tidings
In a field where the laborers watch stars and shadows
Beside the temple sheep.
Is this the absence of pride?
To hurry, following the herald’s directions,
Seeking out the lamb of God,
Perfect in his innocence and poverty,
Freshly wrapped in swaddling.
Born for sacrifice.
Seeking only His glory, weeping at his meekness,
And proclaiming His worth,
Not their own,
Nor boasting of the part they played in prophecy
And divine visitation.
—
Is this the meaning of Wisdom?
To spend decades looking for God
In the words of other wise men
Carved in stone and scratched on skins,
And to find his sign, at last,
Amidst the galaxies.
To know books,
Meanings within meanings,
And truth hidden in the counting of syllables;
Only to leave off study
And spend years searching the landscape by starlight.
To travel weeks and leagues
In search of God on earth
And be disappointed in His choice of nursery.
To come face to face with dashed expectations,
And see the only begotten of Heaven
In the eyes of a poor woman’s child.
To see the Alpha and Omega In a rough bed of wood slats and straw
Despite the carpenter’s skill for fine creations,
Instead of seated on an honored throne.
Is this what it means to be wise?
To offer precious things for all of His possibilities,
And recognition of the weight He will one day carry,
Instead of denying Him help
Due to the gossip, rumor, and prejudice
For his mother’s past and
Uncertainty of his father’s lineage.
Is this the product of seeking?
The ability to find what is,
Regardless of how it seems,
And to know the truth of the Word made flesh,
For they already knew Him by heart.
—
Is this what it means to provide and protect?
To stand beside the choicest of all women,
To forgive the illusion of betrayal by his espoused
When God bade him love and trust
She who his friends and family told him to reject.
To have an open heart to match his ready mind,
And learn to see virtue and holiness,
In what the world would label sin.
Is this fatherhood?
To obey an emperor, or to flee a king,
In the dead of night when God warned him to run,
And to trust a land of strangers with the welfare of his family.
To lay aside political allegiance
In order to raise the stature and education
Of God’s son who called him “father.”
To love the child who shared only his home and his heart,
But not his blood,
And cradle him in hands that set aside their own plans and dreams,
For the work of nurturing.
Is this the providence of Heaven?
A good man
With willing hands.
Who showed the child by daily example,
How to set aside his own pride
And do the work of the Father of them both.
—
Is this what it means to be a messenger?
To adjust your salutations of glory
And go where God bids you
In the quiet of the night.
Not to the vain or pompous,
Nor to the kings and leaders of nations,
But to the presence of the humble and the willing
In their fields of stone.
And tell with simple words
The good news of redemption for every soul.
Is this the errand of angels?
To speak the wisdom of ages
To only the handful who will believe.
While you desire in your heart to trumpet loud and long
From the tops of mountains, temple spires, and fortress walls,
That deliverance is come into the world.
To find yourself mourning,
Knowing your message is peace,
But you will see it turned into hate and war.
To speak words full of love,
And know they are rejected before they are felt.
And to rejoice,
That no rejection of truth
Can change the truth of the message,
Or that though there be but one listener,
God would still have sent His hosts
To call them home.
—
Is this what it means to be willing?
To welcome in the exhausted and dusty travelers
To a house already full of the cares of the world,
And people in need of respite, safety, and the peace of home
While they are far from their own.
To feel inadequate in the face of desperate need,
But still offering all the service they could,
After emptying themselves
Of every bit of strength they already believed they had.
Searching the recesses of cupboards
To provide food
For the weary travelers.
And watching desperate,
Pain-filled eyes seek a sanctuary,
Or comfort,
Or at very least some privacy,
To complete the travail
Of birth.
Is this the truth of hospitality?
To learn by living
That another’s need draws more
Compassion from the depth of our hearts
Than we previously believed we had.
And teaches us the beauty of shared sorrow,
Even in rough accommodations,
Insufficient for the needs and the worth
Of those we offer our meager efforts to.
Discovering that the willingness to make room
For love, kindness, and empathy
Is all that’s needed for the
Salvation of humanity
To come into the world.
—
Is this what it means to be holy?
To know a messenger from God
When he arrives with a difficult message.
To be unafraid to question the how of performance,
While understanding the why of obedience.
To know condemnation for submission
Before the comfort of loyalty;
The pain of gestation before the pleasure of consummation;
And the weight of divine trust
With no promise of earthly reprieve from pain.
To choose God
Before herself.
And to know that what grew within her,
Who lay in her arms
Fresh from blood and birth,
Would submit
In the way of His mother’s faithfulness,
To blood and death
For the sake of humanity’s rebirth.
Is this God’s definition
Of choice?
The willing heart,
The soul that endures,
The mind that keeps and ponders truth,
Seeks counsel with willing ears,
And walks miles,
Crosses deserts,
And treasures a child
From before conception
To after crucifixion,
Never failing in faith, hope, and love.
—
Is this the fullness of grace?
An infant, weak and subject to the weakness of humanity,
Holding acceptance, forgiveness, and love in his tiny heart?
So tiny that it could be discounted or discarded,
And yet,
Upon his throne,
The king of a worldly kingdom
Trembled in fear at its beating.
And upon their knees,
King and servant alike
Trembled in wonder
That it beat for them.
Is this, then, the fullness of glory?
This simplicity that cries,
Craves touch and tending,
Desires comfort and belonging
In a world that seeks destruction.
Is this what it means
For the promise of the Word
To become a covenant kept?
A God become flesh,
Acquainted with our heartbreaks,
Our heaviest disappointments,
And ingloriousness of our most bitter betrayals.
God with us, beside us,
Descended below us;
Cradled amongst cattle,
Caught speaking with harlots, beggars, slaves, and the diseased.
A God on His knees,
Catching a world in freefall,
And rising with an invitation
To come and partake of such grandeur as this humanity.
—
Is this call,
To come unto Him,
The invitation to our own
Nativity?
An opportunity for rebirth and
Becoming
A new people,
Keeping a new covenant
And ushering in
A new world.
Built upon the humility,
Wisdom, providence, willingness, holiness, and
Grace of a God
Who meets us where we are,
And greets our efforts with His abundance.
Because he knows what grows
From broken beginnings,
Shattered dreams,
Cruel judgments,
And unlikely odds.
He knows how small and simple
Are the homes wherein the
Glory of God resides.
And it matters not where we lay our head,
Or what our lineage and title be;
Homeless, refugee, or beloved royalty alike,
We become more than we have ever been,
In the circle of the light
Cast by that one brilliant life.
—
December 25, 2021
Wonderful writing, really captured the true meaning of Christmas