No Room
Two little significant
words: “no room.”
The inn had no available
rooms.
Because of the new census
being taken,
Bethlehem was overflowing
with citizens.
"No rooms" may
have been passed along the street.
"No rooms"
greeted many who stood on tired feet.
Amidst the excitement of
seeing family and friends,
there was no rooms for
these travel-worn citizens.
The streets were crowded
with visitors.
The inns were full with
weary travelers.
The innkeepers had no more
available rooms
though one innkeeper
offered shelter, none too soon.
Did this innkeeper realize
he was part of God's plan?
Had he prayed, "O
Lord, may my life bless other humans?"
Or was he in it just for a
profit?
Surely he knew the stable
wasn't fit.
Did the innkeeper take
pity on their plight?
Did other travelers sleep
under the stars that night?
Was Bethlehem's weather
forecast chilly or mild?
Did he know Mary was
expecting her first child?
Mary and Joseph were
offered a roof over their head.
A humble, crude protection
without even a bed.
Not the delivery room one
would expect
though this baby's birth
was foretold by prophets.
There were no rooms, but
God provided in the 11th hour.
Yes, even these parents
had to wait on God to reveal his power.
Not in the way one would
expect to be sent
but in a way only God
would invent.
* * * * *
No room history writes.
No rooms available that
night.
No rooms anywhere.
No rooms to share.
Rejected even before he
was born.
Later he would be beaten
and scorned.
Promised as the Savior of
the world
yet born in a humble
cattle fold.
The question of the hour
is: do you have room in your heart?
Have you rejected God and
His Word or have you given God your heart?
Have you said to God
there's "no room" for you?
Or have you found His
promises to be true?
Though you may have
rejected Him
God will never reject you.
Amen!
Today, ask God to come in.
You'll be blessed again
and again.
In those days Caesar
Augustus issued a decree
that a census should be
taken of the entire Roman world.
(This was the first
census that took place
while Quirinius was
governor of Syria.)
So Joseph also went up
from the town of Nazareth in Galilee to Judea,
to Bethlehem the town of
David,
because he belonged to
the house and line of David.
He went there to
register with Mary,
who was pledged to be
married to him and was expecting a child.
While they were there,
the time came for the baby to be born,
and she gave birth to
her firstborn, a son.
She wrapped him in
cloths and placed him in a manger,
because there was no
room for them in the inn.
Luke 2:1-7
He was despised and
rejected by men,
a man of sorrows, and
familiar with suffering.
Isaiah 53:3
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