We’ve all tasted rejection. However, some of us have lived
under a blanket of shame – a constant sense, even a conviction, that we are “losers.”
We feel hated by the world, and we consequently hate back. It’s a prison worse
than bars and a ball and chain!
Jesus was the quintessential reject or “loser.” Luke reports
that He was born “in a manger, because there was no room for them in the inn” (Luke
2:7). Although Mary’s husband Joseph came from Bethlehem, it seems that there were no family
members to take them in. Perhaps, this was because it was plain to all that
Jesus had been conceived out of wedlock. Although He had been conceived by the
Holy Spirit, it appeared to everyone else that He was no more than a bastard.
To add to the shame and disgrace, His parents was virtually
homeless, and Jesus had no other birthing place than a filthy animal manger.
Our crèche scenes tend to make this setting seem idyllic. However, a manger was
anything but that. It was generally covered with manure, thoughtlessly deposited
as the animals ate from their manger. Of course, this environment also attracted
all types of insect pests and their manure-eating larvae.
To add further to the shame, Joseph and Mary seemed to lack
baby clothing. Perhaps they had expected to receive these from Joseph’s family?
Consequently, they had to wrap the baby Jesus in strips of cloth they found in
the manger.
Some commentators insist that these strips of cloth were
actually used to wrap the dead. And perhaps they kept them in the mangers to
keep them out of sight and out of mind. If this is the case, the symbolism is
unmistakable. Jesus was born to die.
Meanwhile, an angel beckoned a troupe of lowly shepherds to
visit the smelly manger and gave them a sign so that they would know that they
came to the right place:
·
“This will be a sign to you: You will find a
baby wrapped in cloths and lying in a manger." (Luke 2:12)
The shepherds needed some forewarning. It was inconceivable
that the homeless parents they’d encounter in a smelly manger would be the
parents of the Messiah, the Savior of the world and that the child nestled in
filth would one day become their Savior.
Yet, there they found Him, just as the angel had promised.
It was also too difficult for Joseph and Mary to believe that, out of such shameful
circumstances, a Messiah would arise to save the world.
Instead of touching down in a palace before adoring kings,
King Herod attempted to kill the Messiah. Instead of the reception He deserved,
He was met with utter rejection. The family then had to flee to Egypt and eventually returned to Nazareth to face the
music of an out-of-wedlock birth.
Why did not the Father prepare a glorious earthly welcome for
His Son? As Savior, He was meant to be the lowest of the lowly – the ultimate
reject. Why? So that all would be able to identify with Him! So no one could
say, “You just don’t understand. You haven’t been through what I have.”
Therefore Jesus could say:
·
“Come to Me, all you who labor and are heavy
laden, and I will give you rest. Take My yoke upon you and learn from Me, for I
am gentle and lowly in heart, and you will find rest for your souls.” (Matthew
11:28-29; NKJV)
Finding “rest for your souls” depended upon His being “gentle
and lowly.” We have a mistaken idea that Jesus’ time hear on earth was like a
vacation. However, Isaiah informs us that:
·
He was despised and rejected by men, a man of
sorrows, and familiar with suffering. Like one from whom men hide their faces
he was despised, and we esteemed him not. (Isaiah 53:3)
His incarnation was no joy-ride. He was misunderstood and
rejected even by His own people and family. Meanwhile, He had to live under the
prospect of the worst death conceivable – a crucifixion. Nor was He able to
just turn off the fear and pain. He even prayed to the Father that if there was
any other way to accomplish the salvation of humanity, then He should spare
Jesus the cross (Luke 22:42).
The cross was more than excruciating; it was also
humiliating to the max. Jesus had been beaten to a bloody pulp and then
stripped naked – the ultimate humiliation.
He did this for us. In my decades-long struggle with severe
depression, feeling that I was the ultimate looser, I often wondered if God was
a cosmic sadist, passively watching a freak show called “humanity.” That’s the
way it felt to me. However, over the years, the life of my Messiah and His
cross have become radiantly alive for me.
Jesus isn’t robotic, unfeeling or sadistic. He suffered
humiliation, rejection, and death for me even though I had hated Him. If He was
willing to suffer so much for us, He must really love us! He became a loser so
that we might become winners. He experienced the worst humiliations so that we
would be exalted.
In His death, He has set me free. Jesus offers us a new life
and a dignity. At the least, shouldn’t we be willing to “Taste and see that the
Lord is good” (Psalm 34:8)?
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