At last ! At last!

We are always relieved when times of waiting are over. ‘At last! At last! is what we say or think at such times so we can celebrate or return to normal as the case may be.
‘At last!’ - would have been in the minds of Mary and Joseph as they saw
Bethlehem ahead of them after their long and difficult, at least for Mary, journey from Nazareth.
‘At last!’ - when they found some sort of shelter for their stay in Joseph’s home town when everyone was saying, ‘Sorry, no room. We’re full up with all these people returning to be counted in the census ordered by the Romans.’
And ‘At Last!’ - when Mary was safely delivered of a baby boy after a trying pregnancy ending in that long, exhausting journey.
There were others who would say ‘At last!’
Shepherds, who were told of the birth of ‘a Saviour, which is Christ the Lord’ by the angels (Luke 2.11), could think that, at last, someone had recognised that the lowest in society should not be the last to know what was happening.
The wise men could say ‘At last!’ when their long journey, guided by the star, brought them to the place where Jesus was and they could bow down and worship Him, and offer Him their gifts (Matthew 2.11).
Simeon and Anna, devout people waiting for ‘the consolation of Israel’, in other words the coming of the Messiah, recognised who Jesus was when He was taken to the Temple in Jerusalem by His parents to ‘present Him to the Lord’. In modern parlance, Simeon’s words were, ‘Lord, at last I can die in peace. I have seen the Saviour You have promised’ (Luke 29-30).
Maybe there was also a divine ‘At last!’ up in heaven as Almighty God determined that this was the moment, the right moment, to put His plan for our salvation into operation. St Paul tells us that it was ‘when the right time finally came’ that ‘God sent His own Son…so that we might become God’s sons’ (Gal.4.4-5 [GNB]).
The Roman emperor, Caesar Augustus, probably with much fanfare and imperial gesturing, ‘sent out a decree’ announcing a census of all his people for taxation purposes (Luke 2.1). In contrast, God sent His Son, inconspicuously and unnoticed by many, to become the Saviour of the world, a gift of love to His people.
We may be saying ‘At last!’ when Christmas arrives, either because we can relax as all the preparations have been completed, or because we can start to open our presents. But let’s also celebrate the real ‘At last!’ of that first Christmas when Christ was born.








