She brought forth her firstborn son, and wrapped him in swaddling clothes, and laid him in a manger, because there was no room for them in the inn. Luke 2.7
Don’t think of a Premier Inn.
The ‘inn’ was nothing like that.
It most likely was a guest room in a house in Bethlehem.
Perhaps Mary and Joseph went there because they knew the owners. Perhaps they
were related. But we all know the result.
No room in the inn.
That’s not an incidental detail.
He was born like this so the humble might feel free to come
to Him. The very manner of His birth, turned away from the inn, born in a
stable, means God invites the rejected,
the abused, the mistreated, the forgotten, the overlooked, to come to him for
salvation. ‘We might tremble to approach a throne, but we cannot fear to
approach a manger.’ (Charles Spurgeon)
If Jesus had been in Paris or Beverly Hills, only the rich
and famous would feel at home with Him. But since He was born in a stable, all the
outsiders of the world (and there are far more outsiders than insiders)
instinctively feel a kinship with Him.
Is there a hint here of His upcoming death? I believe there
is. Turned away from the inn and resting in a feeding trough, he was already
bearing the only cross a baby can bear, extreme poverty and the contempt and
indifference of mankind.
This baby lying forgotten in an exposed stable, resting in a
feeding trough, is God’s appointed ‘sign’ to us all. This is a true
incarnation. God has come to the world in a most unlikely way. This is what
Philippians 2.7 means when it says He ‘emptied himself, by taking the form of a
servant, being born in the likeness of men.’ Nothing about the baby Jesus
appeared supernatural. There were no halos, no angels visible, and no choirs
singing. If you had been there, you might have concluded this was just a baby
born to a young couple down on their luck. Nothing about the outward circumstances
pointed to God. Yet all of it, every part of it, every single, solitary,
seemingly random detail, was planned by the Father before the foundation of the
world. To the unseeing eye, nothing looks less like God, to those who
understand, His fingerprints are everywhere.
There was no room for Jesus that night in Bethlehem. Will you
make room for Him in your heart this year?
My Lord, though the world has no room for You, come and
dwell in my heart today. In Jesus' name, Amen
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