Madona and Child Soweto

Madona and Child Soweto
Larry Scully

Saturday, December 19, 2009

Open Your Eyes this Advent Season


We used Luke 2: 8-14 for our discussion time this past Wednesday night at Church. The passage tells the story of the angels announcing the good news of the birth of Christ to "shepherds living out in the fields nearby, keeping watch over their flocks at night."(NIV).
We know that being a shepherd was not the greatest of jobs, but there was an additional stigma attached to that profession by the Hebrew laws regarding cleanliness. See, shepherds live out with their flocks (remember). There wasn't much available to them in the way personal hygiene products. Additionally, shepherds didn't own the sheep. The owner of the sheep was safe and warm and ritually clean in his home.

This discussion opened my eyes to the reality that from Christ's very conception, the Immaculate Conception, God has used Him to focus attention on the invisible people in society. A teenage Hebrew girl living in a small village, the shepherds. These people weren't the poorest in Hebrew society. They were working class people. People who struggled to keep their heads just above water.

In our modern culture invisible people are the store clerks, the people that pick up our trash. The bulldozer driver at the construction site. The school crossing guard. People we walk past, drive past, and bike past every day. Hundreds of times a week, each one of us encounter these people and hardly think twice about them or their lives. Often these invisible people frustrate us by taking too much time to ring up our purchase or stopping us so 1 kid can cross the street in on the way school.


All throughout the Gospels, we cannot look at Jesus without seeing these invisible people. Christ ate with them, slept in their homes and attended their weddings.


Far to often Christian Churches today focus their ministries on the poorest of the poor. Now, I'm not saying poor and homeless should be ignored. I am saying that often, when we focus on the very poor, we fail to see the marginally poor. Families that aren't a paycheck away from loosing it all but a days wages away. Single moms and dads struggling to raise their kids, earn a living, and take classes in hope of a better life for their families. Invisible people. Invisible to us as we hurry past them on our way to Church. Invisible to the Church as it looks past them when designing ministries.


As we wait for Christ this Advent Season, let our eyes be opened to the invisible people around us. Take the time to engage them, to appreciate them as children of God, and be the Light of Christ to them that day.

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