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12/25/2011 - selected by Chuck Monan, Preaching Minister
(Editor’s Note – Every year at this time I read the words of the late
Reuel Lemmons on the subject of Christmas. My hope is that the
following thoughts bless you as much as they have blessed me. ~ Chuck)
We are again at that time on the calendar when the Western world pauses
to acknowledge that Jesus Christ was born in the world. The date makes
little difference. And we heartily agree that some other time of year
suits the occasion best, but that makes little actual difference. We
also agree that the celebration of a special religious holiday has no
foundation in scripture, and that it had its sources in pagan rites and
apostate festivals. This will acknowledge in advance all those letters
differing with us in what we are about to say here.
Personally, we are glad that the world, bent on carnage and drunk on
hedonism takes time out to acknowledge that God has sent his Son into
the world. Even atheists, like the stones of the ground, cry out. We
deplore the fact that men make merchandise of the occasion – as the
moneychangers took advantage of the opportunity in the temple – but even
they help the world to stop and take note of God’s gift to man. In a
world of war they talk about peace; in a world of hate they talk about
love; in a world of sorrow they talk about joy. All the advertising,
all the decorations, all the plans for family gatherings call attention
to the fact that there is something better in the world than the rat
race.
A lot of attention is given in the Bible to the birth of Jesus. The
gospels abound in details. The numbering, the birth, the stable, the
flight into Egypt – there was a lot of excitement in both heaven and
earth when God sent his Son into the world. Without controversy the
greatest event in all human history was heralded by that star that shone
over Bethlehem. One might argue the merits of the cross as the
greatest, but had there been no manger there would have been no cross.
With the coming of the Son of God in human flesh a love was born that
the world had never before known. “God so loved the world that he gave
his only begotten Son.” With all we think we know about love, we can
grasp but a very small concept of that love. No wonder the angels sang!
The eloquence of tongue and pen have been exhausted in paying homage to
the babe of Bethlehem, the man of Galilee and the lamb on the cross.
Limited as we are by our humanism it is impossible for us to grasp the
full significance of what God did in Christ at that time. About the
best we can do is acknowledge that if he had not come into the world
we would die without hope of heaven. He was the light shining in the
dark place. “They that sat in darkness saw a great light.”
We can understand the love of a mother for her child. We can even
understand the love of a man who might give his life for his country.
But it is beyond us to understand the love of a God who would rob Heaven
to bless earth; empty Glory to full us with glory. It was no natural
affection that made God send Jesus into the world. What he did at
Bethlehem matured until it became what he did at the cross. It is
fitting that we should pause and note that we didn’t earn it; it was an
act of grace.
History is sometimes turned around by the smallest of events, and
destiny is balanced on the point of a pin. The almost totally unnoticed
event of Bethlehem has affected the world more than all the battles
that were ever fought or all the governments that have ever convened.
For four thousand years sin-cursed man had hoped for the seed of woman
that would bruise the serpent’s head, and for two thousand years the
Jews had looked for a Messiah. But when he came they didn’t recognize
him. He came in the seclusion of a stable, in the darkness of night,
and in the guise of a man. The greatest forces of all time do not come
with powerful explosions or the noise of racing chariots; they come on
silent wings. The power of love is such a force. And grace and
goodness make little racket.
In a night without light came the Light. In a world without hope, hope
was born. In the midst of despair there was the singing of angels.
They had but a star, but we have Son-light. The hopes and fears of all
the years were pinned, whether the shepherds realized it or not, upon a
little baby in a young mother’s arms. Really, that is where hope still
lies.
Wise men brought him gifts. But their gold, frankincense and myrrh have
long since turned to dust. It was the best they had, and they set
precedent for our giving gifts, but they gave only gifts that perish.
We have an opportunity to give a living sacrifice. If giving is the
test of loving, then let us give the consecration of our lives. He
himself has said, “Greater love hath no man than this: that a man would
lay down his life for his friend.”
After all, it isn’t the gaudy tinsel in which the gift is wrapped, nor
is it the extravagant price paid for it, it is the heart that is given
with the gift that really makes the gift worth receiving.
~ Reuel Lemmons
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