Home by another way
I wonder how the magi made it home. We’re
told that, “When they were warned in a dream not to return to Herod, they
departed to their own country by another way.” (Matt. 2:12) But were they also given the new route they
were to follow? (“Go three days east and
then left at the rock that looks like a sheep.”) Did they stop in Jericho and ask
directions? Did they keep looking back
longingly at the star that had guided them to Jesus?
This is one of the Bible’s
many unexpanded stories that begs for its own mini-series.

I am thinking about unplanned detours today. On my way to pick up my daughter at the same university that her three
brothers attended, I come to a small town intersection I know well. I always turn left. But today, on a whim, I decide to continue on
straight and see what happens.
Outside of town,
farmlands open up again. I stop to enjoy
a picture-perfect red barn. And then,
the winding road brings me to a private, gated drive. And standing guard at the entrance is a wild,
energetic sculpture. It has a slight
hint of an arrow, but confused, like some knotted scarecrow after a windstorm.
A little like the map
of my route today.
We want life to be an undeviating path. Like the red-barn farm’s lane. A
straight shot. Point A to Point B. We set a goal, we reach the goal. We camel it to Bethlehem then follow the
hoofprints back.
Why are we like
this? Walt Whitman blames the road:
O highway I travel, do you say to me Do not leave me?
Do you say Venture not—if you leave me you are lost?
Do you say I am already prepared, I am well-beaten and
undenied, adhere to me?
The fact is, we don’t like detours. But God seems to delight in giving them to us anyway. And it’s a good thing, because those
seemingly pointless roads hold many delights we would otherwise have
missed. When we are forced in another
way, we often have to rely on the Lord more.
Our faith is strengthened. Our
lives enriched.
There’s always more
than one way home.
Lord, guide us. And if your path veers off of the road we
have mapped out, then so be it. We said
we would follow you and we mean it. Detours
and all.
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