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Messy Christmas

The moment that changed everything did not arrive with royal processions or golden cradles.

It came in the dark, in a cave hollowed out beneath a simple home. In the stillness of night, heaven entered the world through pain, dirt, and animal dung. 

"And she gave birth to her firstborn son and wrapped him in swaddling cloths and laid him in a manger." (Luke 2:7)

That manger was not made of polished wood. It was a stone feeding trough, likely used for lambs. 

It was a rough and raw entrance into the world.

Jesus was not placed in comfort but in vulnerability. Not in a palace, not even in an inn, but in the same kind of cave-stable that sheltered livestock.

The irony is staggering:

The Bread of Life was born where animals were fed.
The Lamb of God was laid where lambs lived.

And who did God choose to announce this to first? 

Not kings. Not scribes. Not the powerful.

"And in the same region there were shepherds out in the field, keeping watch over their flock by night." (Luke 2:8).

Shepherds were considered unclean. Their testimony was not valid in court. They lived on the fringes. 

But heaven did not hesitate.

"An angel of the Lord appeared to them, and the glory of the Lord shone around them." ( (Luke 2:9)

The first divine announcement of the Messiah's birth is made to the least likely audience. 

But this choice is not random. 

According to rabbinical tradition, shepherds in the fields around Bethlehem had a special role.

These were not ordinary flocks. They were temple flocks, lambs raised for sacrifice, lambs destined for the altar. 

These shepherds were trained to spot blemishes. They knew what a perfect lamb looked like.

And now they are the first to see the One John would later call "the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world."  (John 1:29)

God invites the lamb-watchers to meet the Lamb.

This is the rhythm of the Kingdom.

The world crowns the elite. God lifts the lowly. The world rewards status. God reveals Himself to the humble.

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The Son of God wasn’t adorned with gold and jewels. 

The hero of heaven wasn’t born in a palace or surrounded by servants. 

Jesus was born into chaos, dirt, and lowliness. 

These details matter.

Before Jesus was about to die, he gathered his disciples for a meal. And before that meal, he grabbed a basin of water, exchanged his clothes for some rags, and began to wash their feet. 

In that act of service, they became clean while he became dirty. 

That event in John 13 mirrors his birth and communicates the same message: The Son of God came into our mess. 

Jesus embraces the mess. He embraces your mess. And he washes us clean. 

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