Jesus,
Oh Sweet Jesus
Out
of the Carpentry Shop
The heavy door creaked
on its hinges as he pushed it open.
With a few
strides he crossed the silent shop and opened
the wooden
shutters to a square shaft of sunshine
that pierced the
darkness, painting a box of daylight on the dirt floor.
He looked around
the carpentry shop.
He stood
for a moment in the refuge of the little room
that housed so
many sweet memories.
He balanced the
hammer in his hand.
He ran his
fingers across the sharp teeth of the saw.
He stroked
the smoothly worn wood of the sawhorse.
He
had come to say good-bye.
It was time for
him to leave.
He had heard
something that made him know it was time to go.
So he came
one last time to smell the sawdust and lumber.
Life was peaceful
here. Life was so...safe.
Here he had spent
countless hours of contentment.
On this dirt floor
he had played as a toddler while his father worked.
Here Joseph
had taught him how to grip a hammer.
And on this workbench
he had built his first chair.
I wonder what he
thought as he took one last look around the room.
Perhaps he stood
for a moment at the workbench
looking at the
tiny shadows cast by the chisel and shavings.
Perhaps he listened
as voices from the past filled the air.
"Good job, Jesus."
"Joseph, Jesus--come
and eat!"
"Don't worry, sir,
we'll get it finished on time.
I'll get
Jesus to help me."
I wonder if he hesitated.
I wonder if his heart was torn.
I wonder if he
rolled a nail between his thumb and fingers, anticipating the pain.
It was in the carpentry
shop that he must have given birth to his thoughts.
Here concepts and
convictions were woven together to form the fabric of his ministry.
You can almost see
the tools of his trade in his words as he spoke.
You can see
the trueness of a plumb line as he called for moral standards.
You can hear the
whistle of the plane as he pleads for religion
to shave away unnecessary
traditions.
You can picture
the snugness of a dovetail
as he demands loyalty
in relationships.
You can imagine
him with a pencil and a ledger as he urges honesty.
It was here that
his human hands shaped the wood
his divine
hands had created.
And it was
here that his body matured while his spirit
waited for
the right moment, the right day.
And now that day
had arrived.
It must have
been difficult to leave.
After all,
life as a carpenter hadn't been bad.
It wasn't bad at
all.
Business
was good.
The future
was bright and his work was enjoyable.
In Nazareth he was
known only as Jesus, the son of Joseph.
You can be
sure he was respected in the community.
He was good
with his hands.
He had many
friends.
He was a favorite
among the children.
He could tell a
good joke and had a habit of
filling the air
with contagious laughter.
I wonder if he wanted
to stay.
"I could do a good
job here in Nazareth.
Settle down.
Raise a family. Be a civic leader."
I wonder because
I know he had already read the last chapter.
He knew that the
feet that step out of the safe shadow of the carpentry shop
would not rest
until they had been pierced and placed on a Roman cross.
You
see, he didn't have to go.
He
had a choice.
He
could have stayed.
He
could have kept his mouth shut.
He
could have ignored the call or at least postponed it.
And
had he chosen to stay, who would've known?
Who
would have blamed him?
He could have come
back as a man in another era
when society was
not so volatile,
when religion wasn't
so stale,
when people would
listen better.
He could
have come back when crosses were out of style,
but his heart wouldn't
let him.
If there was hesitation
on his part of humanity,
it was overcome
by the compassion of his divinity.
His divinity heard
the voices.
His divinity
heard the hopeless cries of the poor,
the bitter accusations
of the abandoned, t
he dangling despair
of those who are trying to save themselves.
And his divinity
saw the faces. Some wrinkled.
Some weeping.
Some hidden behind veils.
Some obscured
by fear. Some earnest with searching.
Some blank with
boredom.
From the
face of Adam to the face of the infant born
somewhere in the
world as you read these words,
He
saw them all.
And you can be sure
of one thing.
Among the
voices that found their way into that carpentry shop
in Nazareth was
your voice.
Your silent prayers
uttered on tearstained pillows
were heard before
they were said.
Your deepest questions
about death and eternity
were answered before
they were asked.
And your
direst need, your need for a Savior,
was met before
you ever sinned.
And not only did
he hear you, he saw you.
He saw your
face aglow the hour you first knew him.
He saw your face
in shame the hour you first fell.
The same face that
looked back at you
from this
mornings mirror, looked at him.
And it was enough
to kill him.
He
left because of you.
He laid his security
down with his hammer.
He hung tranquility
on the peg with his nail apron.
He closed the window
shutters on the sunshine of his youth and
locked the
door on the comfort and ease of anonymity.
Since he could bear
your sins more easily than he could bear
the thought
of your hopelessness, he chose to leave.
It wasn't
easy.
Leaving
the carpentry shop never has been.
By
Max Lucado