Christmas Hardships
Author: Dr. Ralph F. Wilson, The Workman Quarterly, Winter 1988
"Do you really
expect me to go to

Ephraim, his cousin, had
just entered the low workshop. "You don't have a choice, Joseph. If you
don't go the Romans will confiscate your house and your precious tools. Just
try to carve a yoke with your fingernails."
"What are we,
cowards?" the carpenter retorted. "Mark my words, Ephraim, this
'Enroll-in-your-ancestral-city' business is nothing more than a way to squeeze
more taxes out of us. If we give into those foreign tyrants now they'll just be
back for more money."
"What's more,"
Joseph continued, "you're crazy if you think I'd take Mary on a trip this
month. She'd probably have the baby on the way!"
"Couldn't you just
leave her with your mother for a couple of weeks? She'd be all right. Nobody says
the women have to go. It's the heads of households who have to register."
"Register, hah! Be
taxed, you mean."
"So why not leave
her at home?"
Joseph brushed the
woodchips aside and motioned for his cousin to sit down. The carpenter spoke in
a low but earnest voice. "Mary's aunt has made life miserable for her ever
since she found out Mary was pregnant. Some people were willing to let it go.
Not Tabitha."
"She got my wife
all stirred up about it," Ephraim volunteered.
"Not just your wife.
Most of the women in this town go out of their way to avoid her. At the village
well they whisper, "Little slut!" just loud enough for her to hear.
Many's the day she's come running home in tears."
"People sure can be
cruel," Ephraim said. "At least you and Mary went ahead and got
married."
Joseph bit his lip, but
didn't say more.
Ephraim got up.
"Well, you are going to
Joseph stood up slowly.
"Yes, I'll go. But Mary'll have to come along. There's no way I'd leave
her in
However, when Joseph
talked to Mary about it, she didn't seem nearly as sure as her husband.
"How could I walk all that way?" she said. "I waddle now. I just
can't make it."
"Mary, we'll bring
old Jake. You can ride him when you get tired."
"Have you ever
ridden on Jake?"
"Well, no."
"That animal is the
most bony, jolting mule in
She did ride, though .. some
of the way. Joseph would finally stop for the day when Mary just couldn't take
any more. He'd help her down off Jake, then he'd fix a fire while she would
unload their heavy blankets and try to find some shelter under a tree or large
rock.
Mary would always be the
center of attention among the few women traveling that time of year.
"I remember when I
was carrying Levi," one would start. "Made my feet swell. I couldn't
do anything for months."
"That's
nothing," replied another, "my sister got so big everyone thought she
was carrying twins. But her time came there was only one baby. Died
though."
Joseph glanced over at
Mary in the flickering firelight. He could see fear flit across her face. Her
hands moved to her swollen belly so she could feel the baby's reassuring kick.
The women didn't notice.
The first one went on, "Oh, the pain's so awful! I'm glad I'm too old to
have any more babies."
Joseph put his arm
around Mary's shoulders and pulled her close. Only one more night on the road before
They reached the sleepy
All at once he saw
Mary's face tighten. She tried to suppress a groan as she fought with the pain.
It was a long moment before she relaxed, but he could see worry written all
over her.
Joseph went back to the
innkeeper again. "Are you sure there isn't any room? My wife's about to
have a baby. We've got to find a place out of this wind tonight!"
The innkeeper thought a
while. "Did you try the house at the end of the street? They sometimes
take people in."
"I tried an hour
ago."
"Any relatives in
town? Any second cousins?"
"No."
Mary was shivering now,
in obvious discomfort. "Joseph," she said weakly, "I've got to
lie down somewhere."
"Well, there's the stable
in the back," offered the innkeeper at long last. "Of course, it's
full of animals from all the visitors in town for that blasted Roman census.
But if you can find a place in the corner, I guess that'd be okay." He
paused. "Just don't keep the animals awake all night."
It was the other way
around. The dozen donkeys in the strange barn never stopped moving. And the
smell was overpowering to Mary who had been fighting nausea as her pains got
stronger.
In the wee hours of the
morning Joseph knocked on the innkeeper's door again.
"What do you want
this time of night?" the innkeeper snarled when he finally came to the
door.
"Is there a midwife
in town?"
"Oh, it's you. A
midwife? Yes, old Martha lives in a little house about three blocks from here.
You go down the main road, turn left at the two-story house, and go to the
alley. You can't miss it. You go down the alley and across the pasture. She
lives in a shack just behind the third house after that."
"I ... I really
don't think I should leave my wife. Her pains are coming awfully fast now....
Could you go?"
"Jonathan!"
the innkeeper yelled into his darkened house. "Get up and fetch old
Martha. A lady's having a baby in the barn. Hurry!"
He turned to Joseph as
he closed the door. "Have some pity, man. My whole family's awake
now."
Pretty soon the door
opened again and a young lad ran off in the chilly air. After a while he
returned, walking slowly so he wouldn't outdistance the old midwife whose
arthritis certainly didn't to take to cold winter nights. The boy was shivering
by the time he got to the stable.
"Here's Martha,
sir," he muttered quickly, and darted back into the warmth of his house.
The old lady put them at
ease right away. She had Joseph fetch water and cloths from the innkeeper. It
must have been nearly two in the morning by the time the baby came, and another
hour before Joseph dug into his robe for a few coins to give the old woman as
she hobbled away.
Then he returned to his
wife and took her hand as they looked into the puffy face of their son. Alone
at last.
"I'm so tired,
Joseph," Mary said, settling back into the blanket-covered straw.
The baby finally stopped
crying and drifted off to sleep.
Joseph stirred a few
minutes later as some men peered from the darkness into the lamp-lit stable. He
nudged Mary awake and reached for his staff.
"What do you
want?" Joseph said to the men in a forced whisper. "Don't wake the
baby."
"We're
shepherds," one called out. The baby started crying.
"We saw angels out
on the hills an hour ago." The entire story tumbled out as the shepherds
edged into the stable to see the baby. Joseph relaxed his grip on the staff.
The shepherd continued,
"And the angel told us, 'To you is born this day in the City of David a
Savior which is Messiah the Lord.' The angel even told us about the swaddling
cloths and the manger here."
"The angel told you
about the manger, too?" Joseph interrupted.
"Oh, yes. That's
how we knew where to look."
Joseph glanced over at
Mary. Her eyes met his. He squeezed her hand.
"This baby is the
Messiah, isn't he?" Joseph said quietly. "After all these hassles I
had started to question. But..." He paused. "It's almost like God
planned the whole thing: the trip neither of us wanted to take." He
chuckled. "He must have seen you on bony old Jake." Joseph laughed
out loud. "Even this smelly old barn and its manger."
He stood up, still chuckling.
"What do you know? In spite of the problems--no, in the midst of the
problems--God's been at work all along."