1: "Would you
hold my baby for me, please?"
Years ago a young man was riding a bus from Chicago to Miami. He had a
stop-over in Atlanta. While he was sitting at the lunch counter, a woman came
out of the ladies' restroom carrying a tiny baby. She walked up to this man and
asked, "Would you hold my baby for me? I left my purse in the
restroom." He did. But as the woman neared the front door of the bus
station, she darted out into the crowded street and was immediately lost in the
crowd. This guy couldn't believe his eyes. He rushed to the door to call the
woman, but couldn't see her anywhere. Now what should he do? Put the baby down
and run? When calmness finally settled in, he went to the Traveler's Aid booth
and together with the local police, they soon found the real mother. You see,
the woman who'd left him holding the baby wasn't the baby's real mother. She'd
taken the child. Maybe it was to satisfy some motherly urge to hold a child or
something else. No one really knows. But we do know that this man breathed a
sigh of relief when the real mother was found. After all, what was he going to
do with a baby? In a way, each of us, is in the same sort of situation as this
young man. Every Christmas God Himself walks up to us and asks, "Would you
hold My Baby for Me, please?" and then thrusts the Christ Child into our
arms. And we're left with the question, "What are we going to do with this
Baby?" But an even deeper question is just, "Who is this Baby?"
If we look at Scripture, we find all kinds of titles and names for this Baby we
hold in our arms: Emmanuel, "God-with-us;" Wonderful Counselor,
Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace, Christ the King, Jesus. In
today’s Gospel describing the presentation ceremony, Simeon asks Mary the
question: "Can I hold your Baby for a few minutes, please?" (King
Duncan).