“When they had fulfilled all of the prescriptions of the law of the Lord, they returned to Galilee, to their own town of Nazareth.” (Luke 2:39)
After the baby Jesus was presented in the temple, Luke reports that Mary and Joseph returned to their home in Nazareth. How ordinary! The Son of God is born of Mary and entrusted to Joseph and her. With the exception of a few humble shepherds and the Magi, people gave them little notice.
Joseph and Mary were practicing Jews who observed the laws and traditions of Judaism. Jesus was circumcised on the eighth day and consecrated to God in the Temple in Jerusalem as was required for first born males of Jewish families.
The Gospels give us few facts about Jesus’ childhood other than the incident when he was 12 and stayed behind in the temple during the family’s annual pilgrimage to Jerusalem. The likelihood is that Jesus’ early life was very ordinary with Jesus growing up as a young Jewish boy, experiencing all of the things any Jewish boy would have experienced with family and neighbors. They would observe family traditions and the practice of Judaism in a small village. Jesus likely learned his father’s trade of being a carpenter, for scripture says, “Is he not the carpenter, the son of Mary…?” (Mark 6:3)
God inhabits the ordinary. He did this with Jesus. He inhabited the ordinary in preparation for the extraordinary. He did this with the prophets that went before Jesus. He does this with us. We cannot expect to experience God in the extraordinary if we are not experiencing him in the ordinary.
The ordinary includes our daily work and contact with co-workers. It includes taking out the trash and helping our children with homework; standing in line at the checkout counter and the many choices we make each day, large and small.
Jesus tells us in John 14;23, that if we love him, the Father and he will come and make their home in us. One of his last words to the disciples was that he will be with us always. He is in us and with us as we choose to act on his presence. As a result, instead of cursing the person who cuts us off on our way to work, we bless him. We show patience to our children in helping them with their homework. We listen to a co-worker who wants to share a problem. We forbear in reacting negatively to an inattentive retail clerk.
Ninety-nine percent of life is ordinary. If we are experiencing Jesus in the ordinary, we are experiencing the kingdom of God, which Jesus says is here and now. When a need or crisis hits we can then experience Jesus in the extraordinary as we pray with a sick friend for healing, bring reconciling words to a troubled relationship or love to a forgotten stranger – anticipating that God will act in and through us.
Are you experiencing God in the ordinary events of your life, so that you can also experience him in the extraordinary?
Great post Bill! If our faith is a focus in our ordinary Daily lives then we are missing out on much that Jesus offers. Keep em coming brotjer!
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Thanks, Rick.
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Bill I believe the extraordinary begins when we encounter a personal connection to Jesus and we realize and understand that we have received the gift of righteousness and the abundance of grace as Paul explains in Romans. His revelation of salvation by grace only was given to him as a “game changer” to the keeping of the law which prevailed in the prior dispensation. Yes, we still put out the garbage so to speak but we do so with the joy of the Lord, a song in our hearts and the understanding that we are not under the law but saved and looking for the soon rapture of the Church (Heb. 9.28). Thanks to you always for your thoughtful presentations….Love to all….
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Thanks, Steve.
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