“What
I am saying is that as long as an heir is underage, he is no different from a
slave, although he owns the whole estate. The heir is subject to guardians and
trustees until the time set by his father. So also, when we were underage, we
were in slavery under the elemental spiritual forces of the world. But when the
set time had fully come, God sent his Son, born of a woman, born under the law,
to redeem those under the law, that we might receive adoption to sonship”. (Galatians
4:1-6)
Christmas is not our reaching out or up to God. Christmas
is God reaching down to us. The Christmas story has become too familiar. That’s
a pity. When the incarnation of God as the baby Jesus becomes as repetitious as
turkey leftovers, we lose sight of the significance of God’s incredible act.
In the comfortable warmth of the manger scene, we forget
why God chose to become human. A man woke up to find that two birds had somehow
flown into his house. He opened doors and windows for them, but they couldn’t
find their way out. He tried to show them out, but they only became more panic
stricken. In his frustration, he thought: “they can’t understand that I’m
trying to help them. But if I could become one of them, I could show them the
way out.” After awhile he stopped and suddenly realized that that was what God
had done. All through the Old Testament, God tried to tell humans how to free
themselves from sin. Because he wouldn’t or couldn’t, God decided to show us.
So, “the Word became flesh and dwelt
among us” (John 1:14).
There’s a difference between becoming human, which is
what happened in Jesus, and merely assuming a human disguise. God could have
taken the form of an instant adult, bypassing thirty years of growing pains.
But then God would not really have been one of us. God’s choice was to share
the full human experience from birth to death.
In the Christmas story God sends mankind a message. What
is that message? It speaks of a gift that He had for us. The story tells us
that God is the giver of the gift. The capability of the giver usually gauges
the value of the gift. We would expect God to give the ultimate in gifts, and
He did. The Bible says: “He spared not
his own son, but delivered him up for us all” (Romans 8:32).
The motive of God’s gift was love. “God so loved.” Christmas tells us that God loves us. Jesus said to
the Samaritan woman, “If thou knewest the
gift of God, and who it is that saith to thee…” (John 3:10). The whole
world is the receiver of God’s gift. “God so loved the world that He gave…”
Most gifts are labeled for a certain individual, but God plays no favorites: “God is no respecter of persons.” God’s
gift is for everyone.
The Christmas story speaks of the value of the gift that
He gave. Sacrificial gifts are the expression of genuine love. God generously,
lovingly, and sacrificially gave His only begotten son as the atonement for our
sins. The Bible tells us in Romans 5:8: “But
God commendeth His love toward us, in that, while we were yet sinners, Christ
died for us”, this is what Christmas is all about. The Word of God tells us
that one soul is worth more than the whole world. It is impossible for us to
estimate the value of the gift that God gave.
When God gave His gift He made it personal, to you and
me. I am convinced that Christ would have died on the cross if I had been the
only sinner on the earth. We think in terms of mass communication and mass
production, but God deals on the scale of the individual. In John 3:16 you can
write your name over the “whosoever”,
for that means you. What a glorious thought at Christmas, that God loves us as
individuals! He is interested in you as an individual. In this age with all its
emptiness, loneliness, anguish, guilt, suffering, and bereavement, it is a
thrilling thing to know that God is concerned for every person everywhere.
A gift is not a gift unless it is accepted. Ownership is
conditional upon acceptance. That is why the Word of God says: “that whosoever believeth in Him should not
perish.” God does not force His gift on us, but He asks us to receive by
faith His gift.
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