The Hills and Valleys of the Nativity #8

DAY 8 — VALLEY

Where the Healer Meets the Hurt: The Valley of Nazareth and the Prophetic Name

Some valleys roar.
Some valleys whisper.
Day 8 is the valley that whispers prophecy — the valley where obscurity becomes destiny.

After angels and shepherds,
after Magi and warnings,
after Egypt and return — the story settles into Nazareth.

A small town with a smaller reputation.
A place people mock.
A place people overlook.
A place stamped with a verdict:

“Nazareth — can anything good come from there?”

It’s not a joke. It’s a cultural sneer. A dismissal baked into the soil.

And yet this is where the Messiah grows.


THE PROPHETIC FRAME OF “NAZARENE”

Matthew says Jesus lived in Nazareth
“so that what was spoken by the prophets might be fulfilled:
He shall be called a Nazarene.”

Not one prophet — prophets.
A chorus.
A constellation of echoes.

1. The Nazarene as the Despised One (Isaiah 53)

Isaiah’s Servant is:

  • despised
  • rejected
  • without beauty or majesty
  • one from whom people hide their faces

Nazareth was despised.
To call someone a “Nazarene” was to call them a nobody.

Matthew is saying:

The Messiah will be the One the world writes off —
and Nazareth is the perfect address for that prophecy.

2. The Nazarene as the Netzer — the Branch (Isaiah 11:1)

“A shoot will come from the stump of Jesse,
a netzer (branch) from his roots will bear fruit.”

Netzer — branch.
Natzrat — Nazareth.
Natzri — Nazarene.

The Branch grows from a cut down stump.
The Messiah grows from a cut down town.

3. The Nazarene as the Rejected Cornerstone (Psalms, Isaiah)

The stone the builders rejected
becomes the cornerstone.

Nazareth is the rejected stone.
Jesus is the cornerstone rising from it.

4. The Nazarene as the Humble King (Zechariah)

Lowly.
Riding on a donkey.
Not entering from Jerusalem’s heights
but from Galilee’s margins.

Nazareth fits the humility of the King.

5. The Nazarene as the Fulfillment of Divine Reversal

God chooses:

  • the younger over the older
  • the barren over the fertile
  • the shepherd over the king
  • the exile over the insider
  • the small over the mighty
  • the overlooked over the celebrated

Nazareth is the emblem of God’s upside down kingdom.


THE VALLEY OF ENCOUNTER

And in this overlooked town,
the Incarnate One begins to meet the world He came to heal.

The Physician meets the sick.

Nazareth is full of fevers, injuries, infections, and chronic pain.
Jesus grows up breathing the air of a world that needs healing.

Before He heals the sick,
He lives among them.

The Lifegiver meets the dead.

Funerals pass by the carpenter’s shop.
He watches graves dug into the hillside.
He hears the wails of neighbors.

Before He raises the dead,
He walks behind their coffins.

The Light meets the darkness.

Nazareth is weary.
People argue, cheat, despair, give up.

Before He breaks the darkness,
He sits in its shadows.

The Shepherd meets the lost.

Children wander.
Families fracture.
Dreams collapse.

Before He gathers the lost,
He grows up beside them.


THE VALLEY OF GOD-WITH-US

This is the valley where God learns our world from the inside.
Where compassion becomes muscle.
Where empathy becomes flesh.
Where the mission becomes personal.

The world says,
“Nothing good can come from Nazareth.”

God says,
“Watch Me.”

The glory is coming —
but the Healer has already begun His rounds.

The Hills and Valleys of the Nativity – Benediction

A Benediction for Orthodox Christmas

Come to Bethlehem — Taste and See the Grace of God

Come to Bethlehem.
Not the Bethlehem of postcards,
but the Bethlehem of Scripture —
dusty, crowded, overlooked,
the place where heaven slipped into the world
without asking permission.

Come to the manger,
where the Ancient of Days
rests in the arms of a teenage girl
who stitched revelation into resilience.

Come to the Child,
laid in a feeding trough —
not because He is small,
but because the world is,
and the world is His.

Come to the valley,
where Rachel weeps
and Mary carries hope through her tears.
Where the Physician breathes the air of the sick,
the Lifegiver walks behind the dead,
the Light sits in the shadows,
and the Shepherd grows up among the lost.

Come to Nazareth,
the town the world dismissed —
“Can anything good come from there?”
And watch God answer –
with a life that will heal the nations.

Come to the mountain,
where shepherds proclaim,
Joseph obeys,
Mary ponders,
Magi bow,
angels shout,
and elders bless.

Come to the Child
who is Savior,
Christ,
Lord,
Immanuel —
God with us in every valley,
God with us on every mountain,
God with us in every hidden place.

Come to Bethlehem.
Taste and see the grace of God.
The glory is coming,
but the grace is already here.

And may the One who entered our world in humility
enter your heart with peace,
your home with light,
your days with strength,
and your valleys with His presence.

Amen.

The Hills and Valleys of the Nativity #7

DAY 7 — MOUNTAIN

The Worship That Breaks Open the World: When Heaven and Earth Bow Together

Some mountains are climbed with effort.
Others rise beneath your feet.

Day 7 is the latter —
the mountain where worship erupts not from command,
but from recognition.

Because when God draws near,
the only fitting response is awe.

The Shepherds — First Witnesses, First Worshipers

They arrive breathless,
still carrying the night on their clothes,
still blinking from the glory that shattered their darkness.

They kneel beside the manger —
the feeding trough that has become a throne —
and they worship.

Not because they understand everything,
but because they have seen enough.

They leave proclaiming what they’ve witnessed,
their voices booming with the first gospel ever preached.

Mary — The Quiet Worshiper

She does not shout. She does not run. She does not preach.

She worships by pondering —
stitching revelation into resilience,
letting every word, every sign, every visitor
become another thread in the tapestry God is weaving inside her.

Her worship is interior, but it is no less powerful. She becomes the sanctuary where the mystery rests.

Joseph — The Worship of Obedience

He doesn’t sing.
He doesn’t prophesy.
He doesn’t speak a single recorded word.

His worship is action. Steady. Quiet. Unwavering.

He protects the Child. He shelters the mother.
He listens for God in dreams and moves without hesitation.

Joseph’s worship is the kind that holds families together.

The Magi — Worship from the Ends of the Earth

They arrive late for the birth, but they arrive true.

Men from another culture, another religion, another world —
drawn by a star that refused to be ignored.

They fall to the ground.
They open their treasures.
They offer gold, frankincense, and myrrh —
gifts that whisper of kingship, deity, and death.

Their worship is global, prophetic, cosmic.

The nations bow at the feet of a Jewish infant.

The Angels — Worship That Shakes the Sky

They cannot contain themselves.
The veil between worlds thins,
and suddenly the night explodes with sound.

“Glory to God in the highest.”

Their worship is not polite.
It is not restrained.
It is not background music.

It is the roar of heaven celebrating the moment God steps into His own creation.

Simeon and Anna — Worship at the End of Waiting

Two elders who have carried hope longer than most people live.
Two souls who refused to let the promise die in them.

When they see the Child, their waiting ends in worship.

Simeon blesses God with trembling hands.
Anna becomes the first evangelist in the Temple.

Their worship is the worship of fulfillment —
the worship of people who have seen the faithfulness of God with their own eyes.


This is the mountain of worship.

The mountain where:

  • shepherds proclaim,
  • Mary ponders,
  • Joseph obeys,
  • Magi bow,
  • angels shout,
  • elders bless.

Heaven and earth meet in adoration.
The world bends toward its Maker.
The story rises into praise.

Because when God comes near,
worship is not commanded —
it is inevitable.


Which form of worship resonates with you today — proclamation, pondering, obedience, offering, praise, or fulfilled hope?


The Hills and Valleys of the Nativity #6

DAY 6 — VALLEY

The Shadow Beneath the Mission: When the Cradle Points Toward the Cross

If Day 5 was the bright summit of purpose, Day 6 is the valley where that purpose becomes painfully clear, because the Child who came to save will not be spared the world He came to rescue.

Herod’s rage erupts.

The same king who trembled at the news of a baby now unleashes violence on a town that never asked to be part of prophecy.

It is the darkest moment in the Nativity —
a massacre ordered by a man terrified of losing a throne he was never meant to keep.

And heaven does not stop him.

Not because God is indifferent, but because the story is moving toward a different kind of victory.

A newborn becomes a refugee.

Joseph wakes from a dream with urgency in his chest.
“Get up. Take the child. Flee.”

And so the Holy Family runs.

Into the night.
Into uncertainty.
Into Egypt — the land of Israel’s ancient bondage.

The Messiah begins His life as a displaced child,
carried by parents who have nothing but obedience and each other.

This is the valley of displacement,
the valley where God Himself becomes the stranger.


THE PROPHETIC CRY: RACHEL WEEPS

Matthew reaches back to Jeremiah —
to the mother whose tears became the national lament of Israel.

But to understand why her cry belongs here,
we must trace her story through the generations.

Rachel — the mother of sorrow and beginnings.

She dies giving birth to Benjamin.
Her final breath names him Ben-Oni
“son of my sorrow.”

Her death becomes the first great maternal grief in Israel’s story.
Her absence becomes a presence.
Her tears become a symbol.

Rachel is the mother who knows the cost of bringing life into a broken world.

Rachel — the mother of the nation.

Her sons, Joseph and Benjamin, become the tribes that anchor Israel’s identity:

  • Joseph gives us Ephraim and Manasseh — the northern tribes.
  • Benjamin gives us the tribe from which Saul, Esther, and Paul will come.

So when Jeremiah says,
“Rachel weeps for her children,”
he is not speaking of two sons.
He is speaking of the whole nation
the exiles, the captives, the lost.

Rachel becomes the mother of Israel’s tears.

Rachel — the mother of Bethlehem.

She is buried near Bethlehem.
Her tomb stands on the road where mothers have walked for centuries.

So when Herod’s soldiers descend on Bethlehem,
Matthew is not being poetic.
He is being literal.

Rachel’s tomb is right there.
Her cry is right there.
Her grief is right there.

Bethlehem’s mothers become Rachel’s daughters.

Rachel — the mother of the world’s sorrow.

Her cry is not confined to Israel.
It is the cry of every mother who has lost a child.
Every parent who has buried hope.
Every family crushed by the violence of kings and systems.

Rachel’s voice becomes the universal lament of humanity.


MARY — THE ANSWER TO RACHEL’S CRY

And now Mary enters the valley.

Mary, who stitched revelation into resilience.
Mary, who carried the Ancient of Days beneath her heart.
Mary, who knows her child is the Savior.

Simeon’s prophecy lands like a stone in her chest:

“A sword will pierce your own soul too.”

Rachel weeps for children lost.
Mary bears the Child who will restore them.

Rachel cries for a nation in exile.
Mary carries the One who will bring them home.

Rachel mourns the world’s sorrow.
Mary delivers the world’s Savior.

Rachel’s tears are the valley.
Mary’s Child is the mountain rising from it.

The cradle points toward the cross.

This is the valley beneath the mission.
Not a valley of despair,
but a valley of honesty.

The incarnation is not God avoiding suffering.
It is God choosing it.
Entering it. Carrying it.

The shadow beneath the star is long, but it is not the final word.


Which part of this prophetic valley resonates most — Rachel’s ancient cry, Mary’s quiet courage, or the God who enters human sorrow from the inside?


The Hills and Valleys of the Nativity #5

DAY 5 — MOUNTAIN

Certifying the Purpose: When God Makes His Intent Unmistakable

Some mountains are climbed slowly. Others lift you in a single breath. Day 5 is the latter.

Because after the valleys of census, rejection, fear, and indifference, the story suddenly opens — wide, bright, unmistakable.
The purpose of this Child is not hidden in riddles or buried in symbolism It is spoken plainly.

“He will save His people from their sins.”

Matthew doesn’t warm up.
He doesn’t ease into theology.
He drops the mission statement like a stone into still water.

This Child is not here to inspire.
Not here to decorate December.
Not here to offer moral uplift.

He is here to save.

To rescue. To heal. To break chains no human hand can touch.

“They shall call His name Immanuel — God with us.”

Not God above us.
Not God beyond us.
Not God against us.

God with us.

With us in the census.
With us in the forced travel.
With us in the “no room.”
With us in the valleys we didn’t choose.

The incarnation is not God visiting.
It is God staying.

“A Savior, Christ, Lord.”

Luke gives us the triple title that shakes the cosmos.

Savior — the One who delivers.
Christ — the Anointed King.
Lord — the One who reigns.

The angels don’t whisper this.
They shout it into the night sky.
They announce it to shepherds who never expected heaven to speak their names.

“Peace on earth.”

Not the fragile peace of empires.
Not the temporary peace of treaties.
Not the shallow peace of avoidance.

The peace that comes when God Himself steps into the fracture.

Prophecy fulfilled.

Isaiah’s virgin.
Micah’s Bethlehem.
David’s throne.
The star that guides nations.

The entire Old Testament is leaning forward, whispering,
“This is the One.”


This is the mountain of clarity.
The moment when the fog lifts and the purpose of the Child stands sharp and undeniable.

He came to save.
He came to dwell.
He came to reign.
He came to bring peace.
He came because the world is His — and He wants it back.


Which name speaks most deeply to you today — Savior, Christ, Lord, or Immanuel?


The Hills and Valleys of the Nativity #4

DAY 4 — VALLEY

The People Who Resist or Miss the Moment: When God Moves and Some Stay Still

Every mountain has a shadow.
Every revelation has a resistance.
Every “yes” has a corresponding “not now,” “not me,” or “not interested.”

Day 4 is where we meet the people who do not rise.

Herod — the man who fears a baby.

News reaches the palace:
A child has been born.
A king.
A threat.

Herod doesn’t rejoice.
He doesn’t inquire with humility.
He doesn’t even pretend curiosity for long.

He panics.

Because some people don’t fear losing power —
they fear losing the illusion of control.

And when fear rules a heart, even a newborn becomes an enemy.

Jerusalem — the city that trembles instead of hoping.

Matthew says all Jerusalem was troubled with Herod.
Not moved. Not awakened. Not stirred to seek.

Troubled.

Because sometimes the presence of God exposes the cracks in our comfort.

The priests and scribes — the ones who know but don’t go.

Herod asks where the Messiah is to be born.
They answer instantly.
They quote Micah 5:2 without blinking.

Bethlehem. Five miles away. A short walk. But they don’t take it.

They know the prophecy.
They know the location.
They know the signs.

But knowledge without hunger is just trivia.

The innkeeper — the man who misses the moment.

Luke doesn’t name him, but we feel him.
A man overwhelmed by crowds, business, noise, and pressure.
A man who has no idea that the Messiah is standing at his door.

He isn’t cruel.
He isn’t malicious.
He’s just busy.

And sometimes busy is the most dangerous valley of all.

Nazareth — the town that shapes a reputation.

“Can anything good come from there?”
A place dismissed.
A place overlooked.
A place where the King of Kings will grow up in obscurity.

Because God often encrypts glory where people least expect it.

This is the valley of resistance, indifference, distraction, and misjudgment.
The valley where God moves — and some stay still.

Not everyone rises. Not everyone sees. Not everyone wants the light.

And yet the story moves forward anyway.


Which valley figure warns you the most — Herod’s fear, the scribes’ indifference, Jerusalem’s anxiety, or the innkeeper’s distraction?


Nativity Lecture 2022 -1

A revolution begins in private


The birth of Christ was a big deal, so big that a star appeared in the sky, angels lit up the sky  announcing his birth, and sages from foreign countries east of Judea came to worship the newborn.  This is unprecedented!   Singing angels, ringing bells, gifts for the well-behaved are all empty hype when we compare them to what happened when Christ came into the world and when we compare them to what he came to do.  Throughout  the three and a half years of the Messiah’s life people have found all kinds of trinkets, and the trinketologists have been trying to convince people who are drawn to the the Messiah that the trinkets define and summarize the benefits. It only makes sense to treasure the most dramatic and traumatic events; birth which brings joy in expectation, and death which brings life.

This is the first of three lectures on the birth of Christ


The Nativity’s Revolution Breaks Out in 42 Months


When it dawns on us that the Bethlehem babe was born to die the mega decoration and spending blitz, the holy night proclamation, and the wholesale rejection of monarchy fizzles like the dew on a hot day.  A thin slice of Judean life and the traditions of the chosen people were involved in the drama of the nativity.  David’s family in Bethlehem made no parade or fanfare as the king of the Jews came into the world.  The priests and the officials of the temple had no idea what was happening and had no interest, even when they were asked by Herod the king to investigate the circumstances and manner of the birth of Israel’s King. They could not care less.  The huge crowds that accompanied Yeshua during the three and a half years of his public ministry are  anachronisms, because in both his birth and his death Yeshua was quite alone.

Right to rule and salvation rights

He came to His own, and those who were His own did not receive Him. But as many as received Him, to them He gave the right to become children of God, even to those who believe in His name, who were born, not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man, but of God.

John 1:11-13, NASB


I am sure that someone will say that the star, the angels and the foreign sages being hip to a cosmic event are regular happenings, or at least happens on the appropriate circumstances.  Even so the government of Judea was moved in a direction  other than welcome and alliance.  Governments outside of Palestine / Judea are headed up by people wanting to have absolute rule over the citizens. Government in Judea was schizophrenic to say the least. Herod was afraid and launched a massacre of babies, while the Romans were fearless and ruthless in keeping the people of Judea under the thumb.  The right to become a child of God was what the birth of Christ was signaling and the record tells us that people did not receive Christ in droves.  Throughout his life people questioned his authority, even after his words and actions came to life in thousands of converted people after the Pentecostal Event there still was no wholesale reception of the king.

Huge crowds in the city square

This year, 2022, we are likely to be treated to the spectacle of huge crowds in the city squares singing carols and celebrating Christmas.  Our churches may be filled on Christmas Eve and there are many churches that put on convincing and spectacular  dramatizations and musicals of the birth of Christ.

The season for life’s most amazing gift


Despite the high level operatives who we might expect to be closely involved in such a seismic  event like the birth of a king, the people who were  at the centre of the nativity were not priests, royals, or prophets.   The arrival of the Saviour-King, listed as the cause for great joy, was noted by a few chosen ones.  We must, however, be aware that God’s gift of a son was intended to exceed the wildest expectations of the Jewish people and bring salvation to all mankind.