wonder if I qualify as a
"Bystander," too. For the last several years, I’ve written about bystanders
whose lives were touched by Jesus as he walked the face of this earth. These
women lived in an oppressive culture that defined them as inferior. I wanted
them to come alive, to tell their stories. As a woman, I found myself
identifying with their reactions, their feelings and emotions. I stood beside
them as they encountered Jesus. Observing how he treated these women brought
about a turning point in my life. It showed me what Jesus, the healer of hearts,
is like. His unconditional love, tenderness, compassion all became more real to
me.
So, yes, I think we too can call
ourselves "bystanders." The Son of Man willingly opened himself up and disclosed
himself to us through the pages of the Gospels so that our lives here and now
can be touched personally. And mine certainly has been.
After years of serving God out
of fear and self-interest, my heart broke the first time I truly found myself at
the foot of the cross and realized the depth and cost of God’s love for me. I
wept deep-cleansing tears that softened my hardened and dried-out soul. I
couldn’t help but respond to such overwhelming love.
And in the same way I stand
transformed at the cross of Jesus and the unthinkable rejection and agony he
suffered for me, I am also transformed by the Incarnation—God of all creation
born as a helpless baby. The very thing we as humans long for, the splendor and
glory of the heavenly realm, our Savior readily gave up to become an
infinitesimal speck of life in Mary’s dark womb. Just as Jesus’ death convicts
me of his unconditional love, so does his birth.
Who, but Jesus, would abandon
greater power and authority than we can imagine for still, quiet moments as a
fragile infant nestled in the arms of a teen-aged girl, unable to even lift his
head? Who, but Jesus, would trade the praises and adulation of thousands of
angels to become a three-month-old baby, whose only claim to fame was a silly,
toothless grin?
Some time ago, I came across a
book with illustrations depicting Jesus from when he was first born through
toddler age. I stared at the images, and again, I wept. On one page, a young
Mary is protectively embracing her newborn Jesus. He has wispy hair, wrinkles on
his forehead, and dark, searching eyes. This was God, with tiny fingers and
toes, who would soon begin to rediscover the world he himself had created
through the eyes, heart and mind of a small child. The incarnation is a thing of
beauty, of wonder and mystery, of unconditional love beyond our comprehension.
Something truly to be celebrated!
As we join the ranks of the
first-century bystanders in the greatest story ever told, we enter the divine
reality, we encounter Jesus and our hearts are eternally changed. •