THE REFORMED WITNESS HOUR"The Only Explanation for Christmas"Rev. Carl Haak(e-mail: Rev. Carl Haak) December 18, 2005; No. 3285 |
Dear
radio friends,
Luke 2 is the Bibles most
detailed account of the birth of our Savior Jesus Christ.
It is very familiar to us. It is the
chapter that is read perhaps more than any other chapter in the Bible. It illustrates that Gods Word never grows
stale. It shows that Gods Word has a
depth that cannot be plumbed. It is a
straightforward, simple story of what simply cannot be comprehended in the human mind or
heart. For it is the message of the wonder of
the incarnation. Eternal God, second person
of the Trinity, made flesh for us sinners.
Mary and Joseph were brought by
the providence of God to the city of Bethlehem, where, in a stable, the eternal Son of God
was born in our flesh in order that He might open for us the door of heaven. Really the whole Bible is written to explain what
happened as it is recorded in Luke 2. The
whole Bible tells us what happened there, why it happened, and the result of it happening. Apart from the explanation of the Bible, you could
never understand what happened in the birth of Jesus Christ. You would have to be like those in Luke 2:18 who,
when they heard these things, wondered at what was told them by the shepherds and passed
on, never understanding in their heart.
The Bible tells us that what
happened was the wonder of Gods grace. What
better verse of Scripture to tell us what the birth of Jesus Christ really was than John
3:16. That is probably the most familiar
verse in the whole Bible. If Luke 2 is the
most familiar chapter, John 3:16 is the most familiar verse. For God so loved the world, that he gave his
only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting
life.
What I would like to do today is
to place John 3:16 over the top of Luke 2 and hear Gods explanation for the birth of
our Lord hear the only explanation for Christmas.
I know that much controversy has
swirled around John 3:16. This verse is one
that has been terribly distorted in the false assumption that the word world
means all men head for head, and it is used to teach that there is a universal
love of God for all men. But that is not the
Bible. Nor is it the verse itself. For the world that is referred to in John 3:16 is
the world that believeth in Him. And the
Bible tells us that those who believe in Him do so because God has elected them and given
them that faith.
But my purpose is not only to
tell you what John 3:16 does not mean, and to defend it over against those who would
distort it. My purpose is to demonstrate that
John 3:16 shows Gods great love for the world; for the church of all ages; for His
church out of every race, nation, and time; for you and for me and for every one who by
His grace is come to believe in Jesus Christ. Never
did the love of God shine so brightly as when the baby Jesus lay in the manger.
Let us listen to the only
explanation for Christmas.
A good explanation always
answers three questions: What happened? Why did it happen?
And what does it mean for us now that it has happened?
What happened? God gave His only begotten Son. That is what happened in the birth of Jesus
Christ.
The virgin Mary had been told
about this when the angel Gabriel appeared to her as she was in the city of Nazareth. After being told that she would have the great
Son Jesus, who would sit upon Davids throne, she asked the question: How can that be, for I know not a man? She was not married. She was a virgin.
The angel Gabriel answered her in Luke 1:35: The
Holy Ghost shall come upon thee, and the power of the Highest shall overshadow (or
envelop) thee: therefore also that holy thing
which shall be born of thee shall be called the Son of God.
What happened? God conceived human life in Marys womb. He overshadowed her. He enveloped her by His hand, and by the power of
His will He impregnated her so that the child, the embryo, within her womb was sinless. It was real human flesh. It was flesh of our flesh and bone of our bone. But He was sinless.
In the words of II Corinthians 5:21, He knew no sin. He was completely, really, truly, fully human,
bearing the traits and the heredity of His mother. Yet,
in the words of Hebrews 7:26, He was holy and undefiled.
But there was more. He was not only a real human being. He was the eternal and natural Son of God. He was the only begotten of the Father. He was the second person of the eternal Trinity,
God the Son, who had now united Himself to the human nature. We think hard.
We ponder. A mystery, a great mystery. Not a myth! But
something real, something true.
In the virgin Mary, in her womb
as she is now with child, is the child called ImmanuelGod with us. Truly a babe, sinless, and truly God of God. Nine months had quickly sped by. Now Mary and Joseph, Mary being great with child,
are brought down to Bethlehem, for God has said that out of Bethlehem shall he come
forth unto me who is to be ruler in Israel. He
said that in Micah 5:2. Bethlehem was the
city of David, which is the house of bread. Out
of the city called the house of bread was to come the Bread of Life.
So, Caesar Augustus, we read in
Luke 2, that great Roman leader, that originator of Pax Romana, that great leader
of men, is used as a pawn in Gods hand. He
decrees a taxing that is the occasion for Joseph and Mary to leave Nazareth and to come to
their hometown in Bethlehem. And since there
was no room for them within the inn, they must lodge in a stable, a grotto, a cave, a
smelly place with manure and spiders a terrible place. In the darkness of the night, in that place where
cows and camels bedded down, Mary went into labor. Did
the birth pangs begin earlier that day as they approached Bethlehem? Probably. She
was great with child we are told. Was hers a
quick delivery? Probably. It might have happened so quickly that Joseph was
not there, for we read in Luke 2:7, She brought forth her firstborn son and she
wrapped him in swaddling clothes and laid him in a manger. No mention is made of Joseph. Perhaps he was not there at that moment. Perhaps the birth came very suddenly indeed.
But this we know. The days were accomplished that she should be
delivered the days that God had determined, the moment that He had determined for
this miracle, for this wonder. Each day, each
hour, each minute had counted down when this wonder of wonders was to be performed. Gods only begotten Son, God of God, second
person, the One before whom angels tremble with joy He now is clothed in human
flesh. And He is held in the arms of a
virgin.
Stop and think. Ever since Adam had sided with the devil and
corrupted himself, every child born and every child born since the birth of Jesus Christ
was born and is born as an enemy of God by nature. But
not this child. In a world of men in whom
there is absolutely no good thing of themselves, this child is now (Heb. 7:26) holy and
undefiled and separate from sinners.
But He is so much more. He is God (Heb. 1), who had created all things and
who by His own hand upholds all things. He is
Himself, as God, uncreated. He is God
everlasting. He God infinite. He is God almighty.
Is He cradled in the arms of His mother, Mary?
Yes. But at the same time He holds
her and all creatures in His hands. John 1: The Word, the eternal Word, who was with God and
who was God, is now made flesh. God gave His
only begotten Son. That is what happened.
Never was there a giving like
this giving. In that word gave is
poured all the wonders of grace. We should
read it this way: God so loved the
world that he gave over his only begotten Son.
He did not loan His Son. He did not
dismiss His Son for a little while with no definite purpose. But He gave Him over, He gave Him up. He consigned Him to a specific place. He sent Him for a clearly chosen purpose. He gave Him over for us. He sent Him into our place, to assume the place of
judgment for our sins.
Let the Bible tell you. In Isaiah 53 we read, God laid on him the
iniquity of us all; surely he hath borne our griefs and carried our sorrows. God gave His Son as the substitute for the sins
of His people. God gave His Son over to the
place that was ours, the place of judgment. Do
you see the sentence of God hanging over you? You
are a guilty sinner. You deserve eternal
execution. God gave His Son over to the
place. That is what happened. That night in the stable in Bethlehem God gave His
Son over to the place in which we would otherwise stand before His justice, so that now
this baby must answer to God for my sins.
You say to me, Pastor,
its Christmas! Must we burden this
Christmas joy, this story, with the baggage of theologysin and guilt and punishment
and Gods holiness and Gods justice?
I am not burdening the story. I am
explaining to you the wonder of it. And if
you want to know what happened in Bethlehem, yes, you need to know these things. If you are to truly be a happy person and to know
the wonder of grace, you need to know these things personally. It is there.
I am not bringing it in. God writes
all over the birth of Jesus Christ. He wrote
it all over the walls of the stable. He wrote
it all over the manger, those wooden slats where hay was placed and licked smooth by
camels tongues. He wrote it all over. He wrote the gospel of sin (my sin) and grace (His
grace).
What was the message that the
angels felt a burden to give to the shepherds? It
was this: And this shall be a sign unto
you: ye shall find the babe wrapped in
swaddling clothes and lying in a manger. This
shall be a sign this shall show you that a Savior has been born. It will be a sign that God had given His Son over
to be wrapped with all of our sins. Did Mary
take the only things that she hadtorn strips of clothand wrap them snuggly
around her new baby to comfort Him and ward off the chill of the night air? Yes, she did.
But that was a sign. It was a sign
that God, who loved His Son with a perfect love, in a moment in time wrapped around His
Son now in the flesh, bundled Him tight with all our sins every last one. The sins of the world, the cosmos. World is literally cosmos. The unity of the elect of God all those
whom the Father graciously had chosen to give to Jesus Christ out of a fallen humanity,
the elect, a vast multitude spanning now some six thousand years. All of their sins and all of the punishment that
those sins would deserve were imputed to Him. How
can we fathom it? How can we fathom it when
we begin to know a little bit about the magnitude of our own sins? Do you see Jesus in the manger by faith? Do you know what happened? The only begotten of the Father, full of grace and
truth, the delight of the Father, was given over to bear our condemnation so that we would
not have to bear it. Angels bowed in silent
praise.
Why did God do that? For God so love the world, that he gave his
only begotten Son. Christmas day is the
celebration of the love of God. Christmas is
the great and everlasting celebration of the unconditional love of God. That is what we must make this day. God found it in His heart to love us, to draw us
to Himself that we might be with Him. God
longed for us with a longing that could not rest until we were brought unto the highest
good. God in love sought us and He found us. He found us under dirt and under the manure and
under the filth of sin! And He loved us and
gave His Son for us.
John 3:16 emphasizes that the
love of God is always expressed. God so loved
the world. That word so does not
mean so much, as to the measure or to the depth of Gods love. But it means like this, in this way. Just as you children use that word so
when you are teaching your friend how to ride a bike or a skateboard, you say, Do it
like so. God showed His love. How? Like
so in this way. God manifested His
love in that He gave His only begotten Son. Gods
love did not remain a feeling locked away in His heart.
It showed itself. We need to remember
that. A husband says, My wife knows I
love her. She ought to know I love her. A father says, My kids know I love them,
they ought to know I love them. God
does not love that way, husband and father. God
does not behave that way. In every action He
takes, He is earnest to show His love.
And, oh, how He demonstrated His
love toward us when He gave His only begotten Son to be born in a stable, to be rejected,
to be forsaken. Anyone who knows the agony of
loneliness, of going down the dark valley of the shadow of death, when even the closest
wife and children must leave you, knows what it is to be forsaken. God loved us this way: He gave His dear Son to be forsaken, to be
forsaken of Himself, for us!
Let me put it as simply as I
can. God gave His Son to our everlasting
hell. Have you sat down and reckoned with the
reality of hell? Those sins deserve
something, those sins that now are wrapped around Gods Son in the flesh. They are our sins.
They deserve something. They deserve
in themselves the unchangeable, pure justice of God in the everlasting flames of hell. But God gave His Son because He loved us
that He might bear that punishment away.
This is the way God expressed
His love. Why did He have to do this? Why did Gods love act this way? Because only His only begotten Son could bear away
our sins. Only God of God can bear the
punishment of God against sin. No other
creature can do this. He had to love us this
way. He had to give His own son. There was no other way. It was the only way. Only God the Son in the flesh can be Savior.
We say, there are lots of ways
to show love. FTD says, Say it with
flowers. Nordstrom will say,
Nothing says it like a diamond. God
says, There is only one way for Me to show My love.
The church, my elect, will perish if I do not give My eternal Son, the only one who
can bear away their sins. This is how
God loved us.
Do you bow in wonder today
before the love of God? The Christmas spirit,
you know, is not the giving of material things. Not
that there is anything necessarily wrong with gifts.
But do not confuse your children. Do
not say, God gave Jesus and we give gifts.
Do not mess them up! Christmas is God
gave Himself. Christmas is the Son of God who
loved me and gave Himself for me. He gave Him
for the world of His good pleasure, for the entire host of His elect. In His love for us, He gave His Son.
Now what does that mean? That whosoever believeth in him should not
perish, but have everlasting life. All
who will believe in Him will not perish! Faith
that gift of God whereby we personally are united to Jesus and embrace Him with our
hearts. Faith that wonderful gift of
God. It is the way whereby we receive this
very gospel that is being expounded to you at this moment, whereby, though we are
worthless sinners and have nothing of ourselves, through faith we become rich.
It was expressed so tenderly by
Mary. We must never sell the virgin Mary
short. We read that Mary kept all these
things (all these words, literally) and pondered them in her heart. She had a lot to ponder, but it was the words she
thought about. Unto you is born this
day a Savior which is Christ the Lord. She
had heard that. She pondered that in her
heart. Shall we?
God so loved the world,
that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but
have everlasting life. Those who do not
believe in this Christ-child will perish. To
perish is not just to die. All will die, of
course. But perish means to fall into
everlasting ruin. It means never to die. It means always dying.
But those who believe in Jesus
shall never die. They have everlasting life. And that is not simply life going on forever and
ever. But it is to know the love of God and
to be with God in glory and to enjoy. It is
right now. It is today. I will not perish.
I have everlasting life through the Christ-child because God so loved me and gave
over His Son to my condemnation so that now, believing in Him, I will not perish but have
everlasting life.
Do you say that? Is that your confession? Oh, praise God.
Then you know what Christmas is all about. You
know the only explanation.
Then there is just one thing
left for us to do. Bow and worship. Today and every day. Every day over and over again. And live because God has so loved us.
Let us pray.
Father, praise be to Thee for
the wonder of Thy love and grace. How good
and how glorious Thou art. O Lord, what Thou
hast given for us! Thou hast given Him. Now, Lord, may this Word enter into our hearts and
may all our joy center in Thee and end in Thee, world without end. Amen.
Last modified: 30-dec-2005