Manger, by Greyson Joralemon via Unsplash
Thank you,
Scandalous God,
For giving yourself to the world,
Not in the powerful and extraordinary,
But in weakness and the familiar:
In a baby; in bread and wine.
Thank you
For offering, at journey’s end, a new beginning;
For setting, in the poverty of a stable,
The richest jewel of your love;
For revealing, in a particular place,
Your light for all nations.
Thank you
For bringing us to Bethlehem, House of Bread,
Where the empty are filled,
And the filled are emptied;
Where the poor find riches,
And the rich recognize their poverty;
Where all who kneel and hold out their hands
Are unstintingly fed.
Kate Compston, English author
Scandalous God,
For giving yourself to the world,
Not in the powerful and extraordinary,
But in weakness and the familiar:
In a baby; in bread and wine.
Thank you
For offering, at journey’s end, a new beginning;
For setting, in the poverty of a stable,
The richest jewel of your love;
For revealing, in a particular place,
Your light for all nations.
Thank you
For bringing us to Bethlehem, House of Bread,
Where the empty are filled,
And the filled are emptied;
Where the poor find riches,
And the rich recognize their poverty;
Where all who kneel and hold out their hands
Are unstintingly fed.
Kate Compston, English author
_______________________________
John 7:42
Does not Scripture say that the Messiah will come from David’s descendants
and from Bethlehem, the town where David lived?
_______________________________
Why do you think God chose the insignificant town of Bethlehem to be the birthplace of his only begotten son?
How does the humble beginning of the Son of God relate to your own story?
John 7:42
Does not Scripture say that the Messiah will come from David’s descendants
and from Bethlehem, the town where David lived?
_______________________________
Why do you think God chose the insignificant town of Bethlehem to be the birthplace of his only begotten son?
How does the humble beginning of the Son of God relate to your own story?
Good questions, Eric (and beautiful poem). My own story? I think I needed to know that God would lower himself to my level to reach me.
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Thanks, Mitch. I like your answer. It makes me appeciate how God went as low as possible for both Jesus’ birth as well as his death – to reach us.
My daughter and I put together Advent booklets, and she said we needed to add questions, so she gets the credit.
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Good for her!
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