shepherds
The only thing I have to tell you today is that it is very hard to do one good thing every day. Really hard. Take yesterday: I got up and sat chatting to Mum, took her out shopping briefly ( she can only do about two shops before its time to come home again) walked round town and cruised the charity shops whilst mum snoozed in the afternoon. Chatted and watched telly and went to bed. I did buy Mum some flowers. But I always buy her flowers so that doesnt really count. I did keep my eyes open as I pottered round the shops in case there was anyone who needed help or who I thought I should talk to. There wasnt. It was just a non-event sort of day. And on those days ( and I have many of them) its hard to do even one good thing.
I wonder if Jesus had ' non-event' days.
So today Im cheating with the blog and re-posting something I wrote a few years back which I hope is worth another read. Its about shepherds
Im not sure that we in 21st century UK have much idea about what Bible time shepherds were about. I know they will have been very poor and that the sheep will NOT have been of the white fluffy variety so often depicted in Christmas cards.! More likely scrawny collections of goats and half breed hardy shabby dirty brown things.
Christmas cards have a lot to answer for actually. They subtly structure our perceptions and ideas so that when we read the scriptures we have those cosy comfy images in mind. For example we always see the shepherds in groups of three or more adults..... but Im not sure thats how it would have been. In the middle east today shepherds are solitary souls driving their flocks to find the best grazing in hot scrubby land. Its probably a family concern and almost certainly its a job that fairly young children could do . In the Old Testament we see the young boy David looking after his flock - at the most an adolescent and certainly not
old enough to fight. So when we hear ' now there were in the same country shepherds....' perhaps we are talking about a father and son, or two or three brothers, or a few teenage boys..... who knows?
Lambs were important in Biblical times. Everyone who was able to afford one would take one up to the temple at Passover to sacrifice. So they were a must-have item on the shopping list and as such there were up to 1000 lambs at any one time being looked after in the fields around about Jerusalem and the temple. It was big business. There must have been money to be made. The Bible tells us that the shepherds were ' living out in the fields' - ie they were homeless. Their sheep were the main thing and their only source of income. They were prepared to sleep out in bothys and caves in order to ensure the safety and wellbeing of the flock. As such one would imagine the shepherds were not really part of society. Their job didnt really facilitate them being part of the community - they lived outside it. And whilst not exactly outcasts, they most certainly were not people of any note or distinction.
So it is to these homeless, possibly young, probably tough, lowly individuals that God decides to announce His arrival. And the remarkable thing is that having been terrified half to death and regardless of the consequences the shepherds to a man decide to leave their precious flocks - their livelihood - that for which they have invested everything until now - and go to town to check it out. I wonder how long it took to get there and what they talked about on the way.


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