Ironically, the word bedlam is a corruption of the word Bethlehem which literally means house of bread. But in the 1500’s, the London monastery known as St. Mary of Bethlehem was converted from a monastic hospital into a city-run insane asylum. For a small admission price, people could visit the asylum and heckle the inmates. Although the practice may sound horrible, astonishingly enough, it became one of London’s most famous tourist attractions.
Eventually, the asylum’s name was
shortened to Bethlehem and when people hurriedly said the word, the slur became
BEDLAM. As time went on “bedlam” became
to mean “noisy uproar and confusion” which symbolized the happenings within an insane
asylum. Yet, this word is an apt
description of what happens in the days prior to Christmas. What ever happened to peace on earth? Or peace in the malls? Or peace in the family when Santa failed to
deliver the right goods?
The first Christmas at Bethlehem in
Israel was probably a scene of bedlam as well.
Noise and confusion abounded as people poured into the town to register
for the census. Caesar Augustus decreed
that a census be taken every 14 years for the purposes of drafting men into the
Roman army and to assess taxation. The
census mentioned by the gospel writer Luke was taken in 7 BC.
The mention of a census is
important because it pinpoints the Incarnation - when God came to earth in
human form. It documents the reality of
the birth of Christ. The census was an
historical fact. Since the census was a
recorded and documented event, there is no legitimate reason to deny the fact
that an unusual birth occurred in Bethlehem in or around 7 BC.
A
Bethlehem Christmas is about Christ who was born in the city of David in
fulfillment of prophecy. The prophet
Micah had foretold that “Bethlehem Ephrathah, too little to be among the clans
of Judah” would be the city from which Messiah would come (Micah 5:2). Joseph and Mary, descendants of David, were
led to Bethlehem because of a government decree to register their family. And there in a stable in the town that meant
house of bread, the Bread of Life would be born.
Christ was born to die in
fulfillment of God’s promise to provide a sacrifice, an atonement, for the sins
of mankind. This Messiah would take the
punishment for sin which all of us deserve, for the Scripture says no one is
good (Romans 3:12). A Bethlehem
Christmas is a reminder that Jesus was the bread of life in that His sacrifice
on the cross was a fulfillment of Isaiah’s prophecy which said that Messiah
bore our iniquities as a guilt offering, was pierced through for our
transgressions, and was poured out unto death on our behalf (Isa. 53:4,5, &
12).
Christmas
is a time for celebrating the Incarnation.
This should be done with joy and festivities. Traditions should be honored and gift giving
practiced, but not to the degree that the true meaning of Christ is
camouflage. Observe a Bethlehem
Christmas by remembering that a child was born to die for you. Merry Christmas!
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