A new year is about to begin! What do you know about it? Like time itself, it reaches out ahead of us – unknown!
We have our plans, of course – the things we want to do, the specifics we have decided on. And we have some dates for these too. An old saying reminds us that “there’s many a slip ’twixt cup and lip” – and that can be true of any of our plans.
With the rest of the world we are wondering about climate
change and what might really result from
Combine that with local concerns about the economics of sugar production and questions about the future of the industry and we can become very unsure of many of our goals and plans for 2010. Aside from all the usual problems we may have in keeping New Year’s resolutions, we can’t set absolute guarantees on so much that we want to achieve.
Just two days ago, we celebrated Christmas, the coming of the Saviour, Christ the Lord, fulfilling God’s promise of the one to be called “Wonderful Counsellor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace” (Is 9.6).
Yet the Son of God was born as a baby, having laid aside his divine splendour and prerogatives. The record gives no indication of the process by which the growing boy knew his identity and mission. Was it an awareness that was always present, but deepened and intensified? Was it a growing realisation – or a revelation, perhaps?
Those “hidden years”, as they have been called, are truly hidden from us! Today’s reading is the only indication from those times.
The family had returned from
But then the knowledge that Archelaus
had succeeded his father as King of Judaea put the matter beyond question – to
stay in
This too was part of the divine plan. Jesus grew up away from the eye of both the political and the religious leadership. Where did he come from? was their question later on.
But now Jesus was twelve. The family had been to
Both of them had received angelic visitations before his birth. They heard the stories brought by shepherds and wise men. They had acted to protect the child from danger. But since then he had simply been growing up as a normal child. Now comes the reminder that the divine plan is not forgotten – “Didn’t you know – understand – that I must be in my Father’s house – among my Father’s things – about my Father’s business?” (The original Greek simply reads “in or among my Father’s” – no noun, which is why translators supply different words like “things”, “house”, “business”).
But then, after this flash reminder to them, back to
Our idea of growing up, of becoming adult, is very much being free to “express ourselves”, to “do our own thing”, to “make our own mark in the world”. The idea that a child might follow in a parent’s footsteps is reckoned to be old, out-of-date. Even in farming communities the future of the farm can no longer be taken for granted, even though it may still be the case.
In those days it was a reasonable assumption that Jesus
would follow Joseph into the carpenter’s business. His virgin conception was unknown
to the people of
But Jesus hadn’t come into the world to be a carpenter! Even at twelve the realisation was clear to him – Son of God with a divine mission to fulfil!
In my Father’s house – and
that’s not actually
Jesus went home with them to
But this whole incident raises an important question for us, too. Whose business are we about?
In our own adulthood, what has been the guiding principle – the goal – of our life? It is easy for us to say, “That was Jesus! He was the Son of God! He had to be locked into God’s mission, whether he liked it or not! I’m different! I’m just human! I have my life to live!” True, Jesus was unique and had a unique mission as Saviour of the world. Yet he was also illustrating human life as it was always meant to be lived – both in his submission to his earthly parents, and in his commitment to his heavenly Father’s business.
And as we raise our children, do we release them to be about their heavenly Father’s business, to fulfil his purposes in and through their lives? or do we see them as an extension of ourselves, to further our own ambitions – perhaps even to achieve where we haven’t been successful!?
A new year is about to begin! Here is a resolution for 2010 – “This year I must be about my heavenly Father’s business!” And it’s a resolution for our church too – “This year we must be about our heavenly Father’s business!”
It’s a resolution that shouldn’t in the least be changed by the “season” or the value of the dollar or whatever happens on the world scene, though events here and elsewhere may well alter the priorities and urgency we see in our resolve.
We’re in this together! HAPPY NEW YEAR TO YOU ALL!
© Peter J. Blackburn, Halifax &
Ingham, 27 December 2009
Except where otherwise noted, Scripture
quotations are from the New International Version, © International Bible
Society, 1984.
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