To you is born this...
Illustration
"To you is born this day ..." said the angel to the shepherds. But just who is meant by the pronoun "you"? Did it refer to the shepherds -- were they in more need of a Savior than the rest of Judea? Did "you" refer to the Jews -- was Jesus only the Messiah of Israel? Did "you" refer to all people of that age -- before the age of science and medicine and technology that questioned the need and even the existence of spiritual authority? Or did "you" refer to all humanity, of all times and places? We may marvel that the angels appeared to village sheepherders, to nameless folk without education or reputation. But we may marvel even more that the angels' message grips all of us, even twenty centuries later. The thirteenth century Dominican preacher Meister Eckhart expressed it from the theological perspective of his age: "What good is it to me if Mary gave birth to the Son of God fourteen hundred years ago, and I did not give birth to the Son of God in my time and in my culture? We are all meant to be mothers of God."
-- Bristow
-- Bristow
