Tag: christmas

  • CHRISTMAS: FIRST ADVENT [Part 2 of 2]


    A CHRISTIAN MESSAGE

    Pastor, Journalist, Author


    THIS IS THE MEANING OF CHRISTMAS.

    Our Lord’s First Advent. His first arrival in human life as Himself human. There were prior appearances as Christophanies, but never before had He come as man. Fully man and fully God. 

    We cannot understand how He could do that, but He could because He is God.

    PART 2. THE MEANING

    This birth of our Lord was a downpayment on the future promise of Paradise Restored after sin cost us Paradise Lost. 

    Jesus would preach the Gospel – “The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand. Repent, and believe in the gospel.” Repent! The Kingdom of God is at hand. Me. I AM the Kingdom of God. I AM here. Therefore, you repent.

    That’s a beautiful message, and we who believe entrust our very salvation and future in Paradise to the truth of that message; yet most men and women in His time and even today reject the Message, want nothing to do with it because He is interfering with their sin, and men and women love their sin. We love our sin.

    That’s still the Gospel message that we are called to carry on, to urge those we meet to repent before the time is fulfilled, that the kingdom of God is at hand. Repent, and believe. Tell them what God has done for you.

    He then lived a sinless life and died an ignoble death on the cross, having been beaten and lashed so that the Bible says He no longer looked human. 

    After dying, He rose from the dead, taught for 40 days and nights, then was ascended in glory to sit next to the Father and to send the Holy Spirit to lead us and guide us, which took place 10 days later. 

    Before leaving the Earth, He commissioned us to carry on His ministry – of preaching, forgiving, healing, baptizing – all in His name.

    Through all of this, a tension was building, is building still. Faster and faster this tension builds. Can you see it? Can you feel it? Do you hear the sound of something approaching? Is there not a whisper that says, “Hold on, folks, this is not the end. There is more, much more, coming.”

    As glorious as the First Advent was, all of history is building for the crescendo, and that will be the Second Advent, the Second Coming of Jesus, when the whole world will recognize Him as the Jewish Messiah – Yeshua HaMachiach

    Figure 3. The day will come when all mankind worships Jesus as King of kings and Lord of lords, the Christ and Jewish Messiah.

    In that moment, the Bible tells us, every knee will bow before Him, and every tongue will confess that He is the Lord of lords and the King of kings.

    In that moment, the Bible tells us, the whole world will recognize and acknowledge that Jesus was, is, and forever more will be the Christ, the Messiah.

    No longer just a Babe in the manger. You see, that was just the beginning.

    PART 3. SECOND ADVENT

    DO YOURSELF A BIG FAVOR. Work your way through the three Bible passages below and see if you find anything discordant with the Christmas message.

    [HINT: Although they are familiar passages read at Christmas time, they largely reference the Second Advent, not the First Advent.]

    The Spirit of the Lord GOD [is] upon Me, Because the LORD has anointed Me To preach good tidings to the poor; He has sent Me to heal the brokenhearted, To proclaim liberty to the captives, And the opening of the prison to [those who are] bound; To proclaim the acceptable year of the LORD, And the day of vengeance of our God; To comfort all who mourn, To console those who mourn in Zion, To give them beauty for ashes, The oil of joy for mourning, The garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness; That they may be called trees of righteousness, The planting of the LORD, that He may be glorified.” – Isaiah 61:1-3 NKJV

    “For unto us a Child is born, Unto us a Son is given; And the government will be upon His shoulder. And His name will be called Wonderful, Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace. Of the increase of [His] government and peace [There will be] no end, Upon the throne of David and over His kingdom, To order it and establish it with judgment and justice From that time forward, even forever. The zeal of the LORD of hosts will perform this. – Isaiah 9:6-7 NKJV

    “Then the angel said to her, “Do not be afraid, Mary, for you have found favor with God. And behold, you will conceive in your womb and bring forth a Son, and shall call His name JESUS. He will be great, and will be called the Son of the Highest; and the Lord God will give Him the throne of His father David. And He will reign over the house of Jacob forever, and of His kingdom there will be no end.””- Luke 1:30-33 NKJV


    THE REAL JOY OF CHRISTMAS for many evangelical Christians – and certainly it is for my wife and me – is the promise of the Second Advent, of Christ’s return. At that time, He will establish His forever Kingdom, the one prophesied by Isaiah 750 years before Christ was born – 750 years before Christmas – 750 years before the Babe in the Manger.

    If you worked your way through the three Bible passages above, you’ll see something that most churches glide over. The passages do not focus on Christ’s first coming but His second, not His coming as a sacrificial lamb but His coming as a conquering king.

    When Jesus spoke in the Temple, He stopped His reading of the prophet Isaiah in the middle of the sentence – at the comma

    That hasn’t occurred yet, but it will. Just as sure as we know the Babe in the manger was fulfillment of biblical prophecy, we know His next arrival also will fulfill biblical prophecy. 

    PART 4. FINAL WORDS

    THAT BRINGS US TO OUR MOST IMPORTANT QUESTION: SO WHAT?

    All of that is well and good, but what does any of it have to do with me and my life?

    Good question. Here’s the answer: All of us are called to make a decision. We have to decide if we are willing to accept the gift that Jesus is offering us.

    Are you ready for the Messiah to return? He will catch us up in the air _ either as the dead in Christ who will rise first or as we who remain _ in the great Harpazo – “to snatch away” – the Rapture.

    Unless you are born again, or reborn – know Jesus Christ as your personal Lord and Savior – all of this will be done without you. You will be resurrected, but the Bible tells us it will be after the Tribulation and Millennium are over, when God holds court for the unsaved, called the White Throne Judgment. 

    Do you know for certain that you are saved and that you will spend eternity in Heaven with God? If you are not sure, let’s change that now. Just repeat after me:

    If you prayed that prayer and were sincere, then welcome to the Kingdom of God! 

    If you have come to know the Lord before this, then rejoice for those who now have joined us.

    This is the meaning of Christmas. It is more than the celebration of a baby’s first cry in the dark but the celebration of forgiveness, of God’s mercy and kindness, and of restored fellowship with the Creator. 

    This is the fulfillment of the protoevangelium. Let us resolve together never again to let Christmas be just a warm smile for a squirming infant but to recognize with deep humility and gratitude that Almighty God humbled Himself for our sake to redeem us. 

    His journey was planned in eternity past, but the execution of His salvation plan began at Christmas 2,000 years ago. 

    Our job is to believe and to carry the message forward. 

    You see, Christmas was just the beginning.


    CLOSING PRAYER & BENEDICTION

    LORD, WE THANK YOU for this Christmas season, when we who believe Jesus is the Son of God praise You for this incredible gift, that when our first parents sinned in the Garden of Eden, You proclaimed the First Gospel and vowed to reclaim us in fellowship through the birth, death, and resurrection of Your only Son, the Second Person of the Trinity, and that You promised to send the Holy Spirit, the Third Person of the Trinity, to come and live in our hearts.

    Now, as we enter our Mission Field, go with us in front of us to lead, beside us to encourage, and behind us to protect, and may we be the Salt and Light that our Lord assured us we are.

    In Jesus’ Name we pray, and we all say, “Praise God; Praise the Lord.” AMEN

  • CHRISTMAS: THE FIRST ADVENT


    A CHRISTIAN MESSAGE

    Pastor, Journalist, Author


    Call to Worship

    Psalm 150:1-6 NKJV

    Praise the LORD! 

    Praise God in His sanctuary; Praise Him in His mighty firmament! Praise Him for His mighty acts; Praise Him according to His excellent greatness!

    Praise Him with the sound of the trumpet; Praise Him with the lute and harp! Praise Him with the timbrel and dance; Praise Him with stringed instruments and flutes!

    Praise Him with loud cymbals; Praise Him with clashing cymbals! Let everything that has breath praise the LORD.

    Praise the LORD!


    PREAMBLE

    • Christmas is God’s promise to restore man’s fellowship with God, in loving response to man’s sin, fulfilled in Christ’s humble birth, which is “The First Advent.” 
    • This act of perfect obedience by our Lord Jesus points us to redemption in the present, and in the future His glorious return, which is “The Second Advent,” when He will reign forever.
    • We make the point in this message that the world might love the Baby Jesus, “asleep in the manger, no crying He makes,” yet this Child grew up and changed the world, and if we keep Him in the manger, we miss the significance of His birth.
    • His life was so consequential,
      • He divided history into “before” and “after.”
      • Countless lives have been saved, with more to come. [God knows the exact number, and He will send His Son to redeem the church when the full number of Gentiles will have come in.]
      • His birth, and the celebration around it, is the single most riveting event that ties believers together around the world. Although His resurrection and ascension [ Easter and Pentecost] are more important theologically, His birth [Christmas] is what best captures our imaginations.
    • No other life throughout history has had such an impact on the world. … but if we hold Him as a Child in the manger and do not acknowledge His ministry, His miracles, His teaching, His beating, and His death on the Cross, followed by His burial, His resurrection, and His ascension back into Heaven — unless we acknowledge all of that — we will have missed the whole point of Christmas — God’s promise of redemption.

    This, then, is the First Advent or Coming of our Lord.

    • Christ’s infanthood was merely the beginning. 
    • With that being said, let’s join in prayer and then go to the beginning …


    PART 1. THE BEGINNING


    THE BEGINNING OF CHRISTMAS. God promised us a Messiah in Genesis 3 when Adam and Eve – our first parents – were still in the Garden of Eden.

    God had forbidden man to eat from one tree – the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil – but Eve was deceived by the Serpent, and Adam was disobedient to God’s directive.

    God placed a curse on the Serpent, on Eve, and on Adam. Then He kicked them out of the Garden. Why? Because He did not want them to eat from the Tree of Life, also in the Garden, and inherit eternal life in their fallen state. 

    FIGURE 1. Our first parents, created in God’s image and placed in Paradise, exercised their free will by disobeying God.

    He wanted to redeem them first. Seen on one hand as a punishment for their disobedience, the act also is an act of divine grace, setting Adam and Eve apart for redemption. So, the Protoevangelium. The First Gospel message. God told Satan that He would bruise the Messiah’s heel (crucifixion), but the Messiah would bruise his head.

    When we swing over to the New Testament and the familiar story of the Messiah’s birth found in Luke 2, we see the further humble sacrifice our Lord made in agreeing to come to earth as the atonement for our sins. Listen to this:

    Matthew and Luke recount the birth of Jesus, the Christ Child.

    We learn a more detailed and robust reading of the event when we combine the two evangelists’ testimonies. 

    Whereas Matthew recounts the event as the fulfillment of Jewish prophecy – He was the Messiah, after all – Luke gives us a human presentation with Shepherds and Wise Men, with Mary and Joseph and Gabriel (God’s special messenger).

    It’s always intrigued me that Mary and Joseph could not find lodging in Bethlehem, either among family or, as a last resort, one of the inns, given that hospitality was an accepted virtue in the Near East at that time.

    Do you suppose it had anything to do with the shame of unmarried Mary’s obvious pregnancy? 

    Knock. Knock.

    Slam. Slam. Slam. One door after another. One judgmental voice after another. One cross look after another.

    The humblest birth possible for the most august baby ever born. The Lord of lords and King of kings was born to redeem mankind, and mankind, even from the beginning, shut the door in His face.

    We love to celebrate the Baby Jesus because “no crying He makes.” He’s harmless there. He’s not preaching to us there. He’s not challenging us there. He’s just a precious little baby wrapped in swaddling clothes and placed in a manger, no crib for His bed. 

    Still to come would be His growing up years, with the births of His half-siblings – four boys and several girls – His hanging out at the Temple at the age of 12, discoursing with the rabbis, holding their attention with His questions and His pronouncements. They were astonished with how much this young man knew about Scripture. (Well, He did write the book!)

    Still to come would be His calling from the Father, His baptism from John, His 40 days and nights in the wilderness enduring hunger, thirst, exhaustion, and temptation. 

    Figure 2. Jesus battled temptation, hunger, thirst, and sleeplessness for 40 days and 40 nights.

    Still to come would be His calling of disciples – the First Apostles – who would walk with Him for three years and, all but one of them, carry on His ministry. 

    Still to come would be His coming out party at the Temple in Capernaum, where He told the congregation of His first Advent from a reading in Isaiah, when the reading stopped with a comma. … [More on that in Part 2]

    And then the congregation tried to stone Him to death … because He stopped at the comma and sat down, proclaiming that He had come to fulfill that prophecy. The congregation knew only God could fulfill that prophecy, but they would not accept that this man was God.

    Still to come would be the Sermon on the Mount, the most exquisite, insightful, erudite sermon ever given in which Jesus would:

    STILL TO COME WOULD BE …

    THREE YEARS OF WANDERING ABOUT, healing the sick and afflicted, teaching the Lord’s Good News message, contending with the Pharisees, scribes, and other Jewish leaders, overturning the merchants’ tables in the Temple’s courts (“My Father’s house shall be called a House of Prayer, but you have turned it into a den of thieves.” “Zeal for my father’s house will consume me.” – Isaiah 56:7; Psalm 69:9, Matthew 21:13; John 2:17). All prophesied in the Scriptures; all fulfilled by Jesus. 

    GIVING SIGHT TO A BLIND MAN, causing the deaf and mute to hear and speak, and leading a lame man to pick up his mat and skip and jump into the worship service.

    RAISING A WIDOW’S SON FROM THE DEAD, healing a woman bleeding for 12 years, raising a 12-year-old girl from the dead, restoring a woman caught in adultery, revealing Himself as the Messiah to a Samaritan woman at the well, and curing Mary Magdalene of her many demons.

    THE WOMEN. Did you notice how many of our Lord’s miracles were done to elevate, restore, and heal women? 

    STILL TO COME WAS … PASSION WEEK, with Jesus riding a mule into Jerusalem, knowing the week would end with His execution on the Cross, yet He did so for our sakes, and He did so willingly.

    You see, the Protoevangelium from Genesis 3 pointed directly to this week. The serpent would bruise His heel, but the Messiah would bruise the serpent’s head. (Romans 16 says He would crush Satan’s head.) Satan would suffer defeat at the very moment he thought was his crowning victory.

    Yes, we love to see the Baby Jesus lying in His mother’s arms, His father holding a staff and standing watch nearby, the cattle munching straw and hay, flooding the floor with waste.

    As you focus on that Manger scene do you feel a sense of the humiliation, the mundaneness, the unspeakable commonness of this scene, of our introduction to Christmas? What a come down from the glories of His divinity in Heaven to His humanity lying in an animals’ feeding trough, dependent on an unmarried teenage mother and a shell-shocked father for His very survival.

    Later, He would slog through the mud and muck of ancient Israel, basically wearing a bathrobe and bedroom slippers.

    I would not want to exchange the comforts of my home and my life for that life; yet He willingly sacrificed comforts and joy that far exceed our imagination to live in the most trying of circumstances … and He did so willingly for us, with His heart filled with love for us. 

    Remember, the Bible says He saw the multitude and had “compassion” on them. (Matt. 9:36)

    We love singing the Christmas Carols. Oh, they speak of such joy! Such happiness! Such peace! Such promise!

    STILL TO COME WAS THE FUTURE, as we see the message of Christmas play out in human history, as the Christ Child grows into manhood and begins His three-year ministry – healing, exhorting, condemning, encouraging, coaxing — culminating in His crucifixion, death, burial, resurrection, and ascension back to Heaven.

    STILL TO COME … but it started in the Manger.