A Peaceful Night Sky Shattered

Christmas-Shepherd-flock

Just about the time I am envisioning the shepherds abiding in the fields with their flocks during the night watches, my reverie is lost with the sound and sight of an angel entering the inky night sky. Scripture clearly states the shepherds were frightened and I have no doubt that I would have been as well. The sky may have been dotted with stars, but suddenly an angel floods the night sky with light and the sound of an unearthly voice. Picture your response to a UFO if an image of an angel is a bit too hard to capture.

 

I might think the shepherds were frightened because they did not know what they were seeing. There was likely more than a little shock going on as well, but as I reflected on it a bit more I wondered about another possibility.

 

Could it be their knowledge of the history of Israel reminded them of other times an angel or angels appeared? If so, they might have recalled that it was not always simply to share good news. Sometimes they came to bring judgment under God’s orders such as when strangers appeared to Lot with the news that Sodom and Gomorrah would be destroyed. The shepherds did not know whether the message was for their good or their destruction until the angel speaks.

 

One example that can give me a possible glimpse happens in the movie series of the Lord of the Rings where Cate Blanchett appears as Galadriel. In some scenes she appears as one meant only to help and guide. In other scenes her appearance reminds me of a power within her that I cannot fully understand nor trust.

 

Clearly, they were not aware of what had already happened in Bethlehem or that a lamb more precious than those they tended had picked them to first behold Him. These simple shepherds are the first to see Him, not the wise men or anyone of high station.

 

I also need to remind myself that the earlier scene of the birth in Luke is now converging with the scene of the shepherds that have been abiding in the field.

 

How would the reverberation of an angelic host sound? I wish I knew.

 

 I cannot help but believe that the stillness of the night and the dark starlit vaulted canopy under which they tended their sheep would have provided the perfect setting and acoustics for the dramatic entrance of the angel and then an angelic host.

 

In that singular moment, the shepherds receive a momentary taste of the sounds of heaven.

 

 I can perhaps only get a glimmer of that sound when I think of how Handel’s Hallelujah Chorus never fails to cause my eyes to well with tears as it sweeps over me each time I hear it.

 

And what does the angel share with them? First, the angel seeks to calm their fears. They are told not to be afraid because the news they are about to hear will bring joy not only to them, but will be for “all the people”.

 

What a seeming paradox! These least likely shepherds, considered to be of no account by the people of the day, will not only be the first to hear but will also be potentially the first to tell others about this miraculous event. After so many years, prophecy has been fulfilled on this night. That is made clear by the declaration it occurred at the right spot, the city of David.

 

The Messiah has come. Nothing will ever be the same again. A Savior, their Redeemer, our Redeemer, has been born.

 

 The news is so breathtaking that an angelic host enters the scene singing praise to God.   When I see “heavenly host” in the passage, I do not immediately think army, but that is what is meant. An army in the night sky? Almost any one of us would be shaking as we see an army appear in the sky.

 

“Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace among those with whom he is pleased”

 

 Then, nearly as abruptly as they appear in the sky, they return to heaven leaving the awe-struck shepherds once more alone under a starry night sky. The evidence of their faith comes when their response to the heavenly messengers is to go to Bethlehem to see what has happened and what the Lord has made known to them.

 

Some images we see show the shepherds gazing up into the sky at a bright star, but the sign the angel spoke about is not a star. The sign is a baby lying in a manger. Sure enough upon entering Bethlehem, they find just such a scene with Mary, Joseph and the baby. I wonder if Mary and Joseph were stunned with the appearance of these visitors.

 

What I do know is that the shepherds went away praising God and made this discovery known as well as what the angel had spoken to them. They bring the Good News.

 

So many hundreds of years later, when anyone of us first discovers the Good News, we too go away praising the Lord and telling anyone we know.

 

Even if this news is not new to you, I pray you will see it with fresh eyes this season so you experience the joy of the shepherds. No matter what your station in life, know He has chosen you even as He chose the shepherds.

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12 thoughts on “A Peaceful Night Sky Shattered

  1. Pam
    I really enjoyed your blog. Keep writing
    Larry
    Pam , Really like your blog. Love you
    Blessings
    Larry

    you and Gene

  2. Thanking you for inviting me to see “The Christmas Story” with “fresh eyes”!
    Through your writing…I’m doing just that. Love the picture of the shepherd in the field with his sheep. Loved when you said after the news of the birth of “The Messiah” nothing would be the same. A baby changes everything…especially when His Name is Jesus!

  3. Beautiful post. Your words really bring the scene to life and help me consider what it would have been like for the shepherds. So amazing to be the first people to hear the good news and to tell others.

    1. Thanks, Carly! This December series really was the Lord leading me to pause and put myself in the story as I was reading it rather than simply reading it. I feel it has made the whole story fresh once again!

    1. Thanks, Larry! I love having you here and hope you will enjoy each part of the retelling of the Christmas passages we know so well between now and Christmas! I appreciate your encouragement! Love you, my friend!

  4. Such encouragement here, Pam. I love the way you are leading us to look with awe at the scene before us. Much like the shepherds who were diligently performing the tasks they were given, the Lord made sure they heard the sound of the angels triumph and were able to take in the glory of the heaven’s proclamation with a sight that beheld them. It is a paradox of great proportions that the King comes close to those whose station is considered lowly and unobtrusive. 🙂
    Standing in awe with you!
    Blessings,
    Dawn

    1. Thanks so much, Dawn! I really feel it has been the Lord who has slowed me down as I was reading that led me on this trek as never before. Your encouragement has blessed my day! Christmas blessings to you. I hope you enjoy the rest of them. Love and grace,
      Pam

  5. Dear Pam … you’ve taken us there, to that place of awesome glory, and startling anticipation! What a sacred moment. We linger. Who’d want to leave a company of angels?

    Thank you, thank you.

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