Condensed narrative of my Sunday School lesson for Christmas Sunday 2012
Galatians 4:4-5 But when the fullness of the
time had come, God sent forth His Son, born of a woman, born under the law, to
redeem those who were under the law, that we might receive the adoption as sons.
But when the
fullness of the time had come...(or, “when the set time had fully come…)
That phrase literally means “at the appointed time. God is sovereign even in every detail of history because He is the author of history. And, because He transcends time, even the future is as though it were past.
Jesus came at just the exact point in
time and place in history that God had determined before He created the world.
Another similar
phrase in Hebrews 9:27 tells us that it is appointed
for men to die. We tend to forget
that our days are numbered and our death will occur at the exact appointed time
in the precise manner that God has determined. We live like we have control or can prolong our lives
through diet, exercise, and medicine.
But God is sovereign and He has set the appointed time of our deaths.
Jesus’ birth
was precisely on time. The arrival
of the Savior in a dirty feeding trough in a strange town was no accident. He came on schedule in the precise
place and time and circumstances as God ordained and foretold in prophetic
scripture.
Jesus’ did not
need the convenience or help of modern technology to do His Father’s will. God was fully aware of all the
inconveniences and the schemes of Satan to destroy His Son. In fact, He orchestrated them to bring
about His plan His way on His schedule.
The set time was fully come. The apostle Paul assures us that the time
was precisely right.
God sent forth
His Son…
This phrase
declares the deity of Christ. He
was not just a good man, a prophet, a religious leader, a teacher, a martyr, or
a role model.
Jesus asked
Peter, “Who do you say that I am?”
Peter answered,
“You are the Christ, the Son of the living God.” (Matt.16:15-16)
When Thomas saw
Jesus after His resurrection, he cried out, “My Lord and my God!” (John 20:28).
The mystery of
the Christmas story is that the baby conceived in Mary’s womb, and humbly born
in a stable in Bethlehem, was God in human
flesh. We are reminded at least once a month, by
our pastor in our communion services, that “the Lord took a body so that He
could give a body.”
It has been said that when we finally get to heaven and we see God face
to face, we will be looking at the face of Jesus Christ. In the classic modern Christmas carol
that point profoundly emphasized in the question, “Mary did you know that when you’ve kissed your little baby,
then you’ve kissed the face of God?”
Born of a
woman…
While the phrase,
“God sent his Son” affirms the divine nature of Jesus Christ, this phrase,
“born of a woman” affirms that he was also fully and completely human.
From scripture
we understand that He grew, He hungered and thirsted, He tired, He felt real
physical pain, He experienced grief and loneliness. He cried. He is fully God and fully man at the
same time.
Jesus is the God-man. At no time did He give up any part of His divine
nature. All the time He was
physically alive on earth in human flesh, He remained in complete control over
His creation.
Theologians
call that the hypostatic union shich means that He
has the nature of deity and the nature of humanity. But He is not two persons,
nor is He divided.
Born under the
law…
In his letter
to the Romans, Paul tells us that all human beings are in one sense or another
“under the law.” That is to say that we are not at liberty to decide what is
morally right or wrong. Jews in
Paul’s time had the revealed law of God written in the Torah. And all other peoples (the
Gentiles) had a sense of God’s law written on their hearts. Even atheists have a self-governing
sense of morality; something we often call “conscience”.
In either case
– whether under the written Law of God or under conscience – each and every
human being has failed to follow that law and therefore we suffer condemnation
and fear before God.
The reformers
called that Total Depravity. Its
not that every person is totally bad but that every person ever conceived has
an inherited sin nature. And we
are all caught in a continuous cycle of knowing what is right and failing to do it. We are all guilty sinners by birth, by
choice, and by practice and there is no excuse.
And that guilt results
in a kind of slavery. In verse 3,
preceding this text, Paul calls it bondage (or slavery) under
the elements (or the spiritual forces) of the world.“
And from that
slavery we need to be redeemed – a word that means freed from slavery,
especially freed by means of someone paying a price.
But the good
news is that there is one exception to the total human experience of failure
before “the law.” Scripture affirms that in His humanity Jesus Christ was like
us in every way, except without sin
(Hebrews 4:15). That is
because, although He was born of a woman, He was also the Son of God (the
God-Man).
He is,
therefore, uniquely fit to be our redeemer, being both divine and human.
To redeem those
who were under the law…
Jesus did not
come to earth in human flesh primarily to teach or work miracles. In His own Words He said that He came “…to
seek and to save that which was lost.” (Luke 19:10).
Referring to
himself as “the Son of Man,” he says, “For even the
Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give his life as a
ransom for many.” (Mark 10:45-46).
Notice that
last phrase. He came “…to give
his life as a ransom for many. “
What can we say
really happened on Christmas day? Well,
without trying to sound trite, I think the answer to that question is, “Easter.” The birth of Jesus is meaningless and
irrelevant without His death, burial, and resurrection.
It’s like the
nursery rhyme, “Mary had a little lamb,” That’s the Christmas part of the rhyme
but the verse continues, “ It’s fleece was white as snow.” And that is the Easter part of the rhyme;
The Lamb of God would be the pure, spotless, and only acceptable sacrifice for
the sins of many.
A Savior was
born in Bethlehem for the express purpose of redeeming His people by the deliberate and voluntary
sacrifice of his life on the cross at Calvary. His death
was in view at His birth. That is
why God ordained that He should be swaddled in burial cloths and that is why
one of the gifts of the magi was myrrh; a kind of embalming fluid. He was born to die.
It was all part
of His divine plan that started “when the set time had fully come.”
…that we might
receive the adoption as sons.
Herein is the
true purpose of the Christmas story.
His life,
death, and resurrection were for the purpose of setting
captives free to be adopted as “sons” and “daughters” of God.
Jesus is the only
incarnate Son of God. But through
Him, every one of those He redeems becomes a child of God by “adoption”.
“He
came to His own, and His own did not receive Him. But
as many as received Him, to them He gave the right to become children of God.”
(John 1:11-12)
"The
claim that Christianity makes for Christmas is that at a particular time and
place God came to be with us Himself.
When Quirinius was governor of Syria, in a town called Bethlehem, a
child was born who, beyond the power of anyone to account for, was the high and
lofty One made low and helpless. The One who inhabits eternity comes to dwell in
time. The One whom none can look upon and live is delivered in a stable under
the soft, indifferent gaze of cattle. The Father of all mercies puts Himself at
our mercy."
Frederick Buechner
Filling the World, He Lies In a Manger,
Maker of the sun,
He is made under the sun.
In the Father he remains,
From his mother he goes forth.
Creator of heaven and earth,
He was born on earth under heaven.
Unspeakably wise,
He is wisely speechless.
Filling the world,
He lies in a manger.
Ruler of the stars,
He nurses at his mother's bosom.
He is both great in the nature of God,
and small in the form of a servant.
Maker of the sun,
He is made under the sun.
In the Father he remains,
From his mother he goes forth.
Creator of heaven and earth,
He was born on earth under heaven.
Unspeakably wise,
He is wisely speechless.
Filling the world,
He lies in a manger.
Ruler of the stars,
He nurses at his mother's bosom.
He is both great in the nature of God,
and small in the form of a servant.
Saint Augustine of Hippo (354-430)
God’s
greatest gift was not the birth of a little baby in a manger; it was the
sacrificial death of His own Son on the cross of Calvary.
Merry Christmas

