The young couple knew the long trip
would be difficult, but it was the Depression, and although there was no work
in the small Texas town where they had started their married life, the husband
had heard of work in California. So they packed up their car, praying that it
would hold up for the trip. The wife’s father slipped a couple of crumpled
bills into her hand and said, “In case of emergency, Honey.” Her mother stood
nearby, twisting her apron, obviously worrying about her daughter but just as
obviously trying not to show it.
The couple used up the last of the
daylight driving. They had reached deep West Texas when they realized it was
time to stop for the night. “We can’t spare the money for a hotel,” the husband
said. “I’m going to see if the folks at one of these farms will put us up for
the night.”
They pushed on between pastures
marked by sagging barbed wire, the road a winding black ribbon in the
flickering yellow headlights. At last the driver spied a cluster of lights in
the distance. “I’ll try there.”
The man who came to the door wore
overalls and a gray, long-sleeved undershirt. He didn’t seem to take to the
idea of this couple spending the night, but his wife came up behind him and
said, “Oh, can’t you see she’s pregnant. The hands are out in the north pasture
with the herd, and the bunkhouse is empty. Let them stay there.”
In the middle of the night, the
young husband was awakened by his wife’s cries. “I’m in labor.”
“But, you’re not due until—“
“Just get help. Please.”
He did. In a few minutes, the
rancher’s wife bustled in, laden with towels and blankets. “Just put that
down,” she said to her husband, who trailed her carrying a bucket of hot water
in one hand. “Then you two men get out.”
Soon, the men tired of waiting
outside and the rancher grudgingly invited the stranger into the kitchen.
They’d almost exhausted a pot of extra strong coffee when they heard a faint
cry. Then, “You men can come back now.”
The two men were halfway to the
bunkhouse, following the faint light of a kerosene lantern, when three weary
cowboys rode up and climbed off their mounts. “We saw lights on here. What’s
going on?”
“Come and see,” the young husband
said. And they did.
When he saw the mother holding a
wrinkled, fussing newborn close to her, the gruff old rancher turned to his
wife and said, “Well, Mother, I’m glad you talked me into letting these folks
stay.”
“We had to,” she said. “It was a
wonderful gift for me, seeing that little baby born. Who knows? Maybe he’ll
grow up to be someone special.”
Now imagine that the scene wasn’t
West Texas, it was Bethlehem. It didn’t take place in a bunkhouse, it occurred
in a stable. And it wasn’t just a baby—this was God’s own Son. Does that make
it more real to you? I hope so.
During this season, as you think
about Jesus’ birth, don’t put him in spotless white swaddling clothes in the
middle of a Christmas card. Picture him in the most humble surroundings your
imagination can conjure up, the Son of God Himself in a diaper, born to give each
of us the best gift we could ever imagine.
Merry Christmas.
Thank you for this version of the most wonderful birth ever!
ReplyDeleteMerry Christmas to all!
Thanks, Connie. And Merry Christmas to all the readers of this blog.
ReplyDeleteThat was beautifully written and made my heart skip a few beats. It reminded of a movie I watched called Christmas Coming to Willow Creek. Where a sheepherder helped deliver a baby in mist of a major snowstorm inside a rig of an 18-wheeler. Merry Christmas to all
ReplyDeleteWell done, Doc!
ReplyDeleteA nice "time out" for me in the middle of a very busy day--and a good reminder of what the Season is all about!
ReplyDeleteThank you. A beautiful story!
ReplyDeleteThank you. Beautiful
ReplyDeleteBeautiful. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteThanks for all your nice comments. And, once more, Merry Christmas to each of you.
ReplyDeleteWonderful story. Thank you!
ReplyDelete