And that repeated rhetorical
question is puzzling to a child’s undeveloped sense of artistry. “What
child is this?” It’s Jesus, of course. Why do we keep asking that when we all
know the answer?
Nails, Spear Shall
Pierce Him Through
But many of us eventually grew
out of our childish disillusionment with the carol. For some, it’s even become
a favorite. Especially those steeping their minds in the Scriptures. It’s that
powerful couplet in the second verse sounding a note too neglected during the
holidays.
Nails, spear shall pierce him
through,
The Cross be borne for me, for you.
The Cross be borne for me, for you.
“But this is Christmas,” someone
objects. “Lent has its turn each spring; let Advent have its own spot in
December. Don’t crowd out the joy and jingle with such death and violence.
Let’s not have Lent and his cross upstage Advent and her manger.”
As comfortable as it might be to
parse out our celebrations and keep our holiday sentimentals in their own
clearly labeled boxes, we cannot keep Bethlehem and Golgotha apart without
losing what Christmas really is. There’s a place for focusing on the stable,
the shepherds, and the wonder of the incarnation, but to appreciate the depth
of what is happening here, we must keep Calvary’s hill on the horizon.
This Is No Circus
Act
If we quarantine Jesus’s birth
from his death and resurrection, we cut out the heart of what’s so dazzling
about Christmas. This shockingly spectacular event — God becoming man, full
divinity and full humanity joined in one person — doesn’t just captivate our
attention, but captures us for this God-man. We are involved. It is our
rescue in view. In the words of the old creed, this incarnation is “for us
and for our salvation.”
Christmas is a stunning show.
The almighty Ancient of Days is born a frail and fragile babe. But this is not
some marvel we watch from a distance, nameless faces in a sea of disconnected
spectators. We’re not mere fanatics of the hero, but known and loved by him.
And his heroics are not for our entertainment, but our everlasting joy.
At Christmas, we’re not
restricted to the upper deck, kept to the bleachers, tucked behind a barrier,
but brought onto the field, onto the team of the superstar, given a jersey. The
astonishing ontological feat he accomplishes in his incarnation is not a circus
act for whomever, but an act of love for us.
Born
to Bear the Cross
From the very beginning, from
Bethlehem and before, Jerusalem’s tree and empty tomb linger in the distance
and give meaning to every angel song and magi gift. And not as history’s most
mindboggling magic trick — truly dead and then alive again — but as purposive,
effective, and designed explicitly for those who receive him.
He didn’t come to be applauded
by myriads of unknown onlookers, but “to seek and to save the lost” (Luke 19:10).
The incarnation is no marquee act at a variety show; he “came into the world to
save sinners” (1 Timothy 1:15). He came “not to be served but to serve,
and to give his life as a ransom for many” (Mark 10:45).
The eternal Son of God became man not to garner a posse of impressive friends,
but to redeem a broken bride — “not to call the righteous, but sinners” (Matthew 9:23).
“The reason the Son of God
appeared,” says the apostle John, “was to destroy the works of the devil” (1 John 3:8)
— and in particular to free his people from the clutches of Satan. Since we,
his people, “share in flesh and blood, he himself likewise partook of the same
things, that through death he might destroy the one who has the power of death,
that is the devil, and deliver all those who through fear of death were subject
to lifelong slavery” (Hebrews
2:14–15).
For
Our Sake
“When the fullness of time had
come,” says Paul, “God sent forth his Son, born of woman . . . so that we might
receive adoption as sons” (Galatians
4:4–5).
He came to make us intimate family, not faraway fanboys.
He didn’t come to collect on
autographs, books, singles, or cameos. “Though he was rich, yet for your sake
he become poor, so that you by his poverty might become rich” (2 Corinthians
8:9). For your sake. It is the “for your sake” that a little Lent
brings to our Advent. And even better when it’s a lot.
We stand in awe during this
Christmas season, not just because the Word became flesh (John 1:14),
but because from his fullness we receive such grace (John 1:16).
We marvel not just because he is both God and man, but because he is so
precisely for us.
Taken from a recent posts from
David Mathis:
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