Journey is an important theme throughout the Bible. In the book of Genesis, Abraham journeyed to an unknown land in response to God’s call. The Israelites journeyed for 40 years in the desert before reaching their destination. Jesus calls His disciples to follow Him on His own journey. Biblical journeys are not just about physical travel: they are always about humans journeying in their understanding of God and God’s ways. Mary journeys to accepting the angel’s explanation that this will be done by the power of the Holy Spirit. Joseph’s journeys from his initial instinct to divorce Mary, to his decision to take Mary to his home as his wife. Human journeying – whether physical, as in the trek to Bethlehem, or metaphorical, as in the rethinking done by Joseph and Mary – is only half of the story. The wonder of the Christmas story we reflect on tonight is not human journey but the divine journey. With the birth of Christ, God enters the world of humans in a way that had never happened before. If we remain with the idea of journey, we see that, in the birth of Jesus, God enters the lives of humans precisely where they are. Although Mary and Joseph travel to Bethlehem, it is in reality God who is traveling to them in the gift of this unique child they are given. What is even more remarkable is that shepherds, who were forbidden even to enter the synagogue or Temple because they worked with animals, are visited by God’s agent precisely when they are at work with the animals who made them unclean.
Here is where we find the wonder of Christmas: it is about God who comes to our lives exactly where we are at any given time. It is about the birth of Emmanuel, a name used by Isaiah, meaning “God is with us”. The birth of Jesus is about the God who is never far from us, because God is always living among us. It is about the closeness to us of God who never leaves our side, even when we are not sure of where our own journey is leading. On our own, we could never reach God. In the birth of Jesus, God reaches down to us.