This document provides an overview of a book titled "Christmas with Dr. Luke" which contains 15 chapters exploring various subjects related to the birth of Christ as described in Luke's Gospel. Each chapter is based on a passage from Luke 2 and focuses on a different Christmas-related topic such as the angelic anthem, Christmas animals, the approachable God, and more. The introduction provides background on Luke's Gospel and why he is considered the primary source of information about Jesus' birth. It encourages readers to explore each independent chapter to treasure more about what God did on the first Christmas.
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Christmas with dr luke
1. CHRISTMAS
WITH
DR. LUKE
BY
GLENN PEASE
TABLE OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
CHAPTER 1 AN ATMOSPHERE OF AMAZEMENT based on Luke 2:8-20
CHAPTER 2 THE ANGELIC ANTHEM based on Luke 2:8-14
CHAPTER 3 CHRISTMAS ANIMALS based on Luke 2:1-20
CHAPTER 4 THE APPROACHABLE GOD based on Luke 2:8-20
CHAPTER 5 CHRISTMAS BABIES based on Luke 2:1-20
CHAPTER 6 THE COMPLEXITY OF CHRISTMAS based on Luke 1:26-45
CHAPTER 7 CHRISTMAS IS CONTAGIOUS based on Luke 2:8-20
CHAPTER 8 THE ENJOYMENT OF GOD based on Luke 2:8-20
CHAPTER 9 A SAVIOR IS BORN based on Luke 2:1-20
CHAPTER 10 THE SEASON FOR SEEING based on Luke 2:8-20
CHAPTER 11 THE SIGHTS OF CHRISTMAS based on Luke 2:8-20
CHAPTER 12 CHRISTMAS SILENCE AND SONG based on Luke 2:8-20
CHAPTER 13 CHRISTMAS STUFF based on Luke 2:1-20
CHAPTER 14 CHRISTMAS TRIVIA based on Luke 2:1-14
CHAPTER 15 THE WONDER OF CHRISTMAS Based on Luke 2:1-20
INTRODUCTION
Dr. Luke is our primary source of information about the
birth of Christ. Without his research and his Gospel we would
know very little about the family and the background of our Lord.
In this series of fifteen chapters we will explore the subjects
that Dr. Luke calls to our attention. Some of them may seem
2. trivial, but when it comes to the greatest story ever told,
nothing is too small to consider as a valid subject for study.
Each chapter is independent of the others. If you have an
interest in a particular topic you can go directly to that
chapter.
Thanks to Dr Luke, you will see that the Christmas message
is one that covers a lot of territory, and is filled with human
interest topics. My hope is that by reading these chapters you
will come to treasure more than ever what God did for us on that
first Christmas.
CHAPTER ONE
1. AN ATMOSPHERE OF AMAZEMENT based on Luke
2:8-20
Human beings love to be amazed and filled with wonder. That is why they travel the
world over to see the 7 wonders of the world and the million and more lesser wonders of God
and man. That is why the constant craving for special effects in spectacular movies that take
us out of dullsville into a world of wonder.
The amazing is always popular. Back near the turn of the century, Hodji Ali made his
fortune by being amazing. In full view of the audience he would swallow peach pits, pennies,
rhinestone rings, watermelon seeds and a whole series of small objects. Then he would bring
up specific items at the request of the audience. Like the great fish in the book of Jonah, he
could vomit for a profit {prophet}.
That was merely a warm up. While his assistant set up a miniature castle, Ali drank a
gallon of water and then a pint of kerosene. The drum would begin to roll and he would spit
out the kerosene in a six foot arc across the stage, setting the castle on fire. Then with the
flames shooting high into the air, he would spit up the water and extinguish the blaze. The
people loved it, for it was amazing, and people love to be amazed.
That is what the Christmas season is all about. It is about being amazed. The whole
world, in shopping centers, is changed to convey a sense of amazement. The lights and
decorations and colors are all changed to convey a sense of wonder. We are expected to
respond, how wonderful, how beautiful, how amazing it all is! The world and the church
cooperate once a year in an all out effort to create an atmosphere of amazement.
It is very Biblical to do so, for that is the spirit that characterized the first Christmas.
After the shepherds had gone through the wonder-filled experience of hearing the angels
and seeing the Christ-child for themselves, they spread the word, and we read in verse 18,
"And all who heard it were amazed at what the shepherds said to them."
Amazement has three different levels very much like the three levels of heaven. There is
the atmospheric heaven of the birds and the clouds. There is the astronomical heaven of
sun, moon and stars. There is the angelic heaven of all the heavenly hosts and the Trinity.
Human amazement begins on the highest level as the shepherds are confronted by the
3. wonder of the angels. But then the shepherds have to go back to tending their sheep, and
day by day the wonder of it all would begin to fade. The challenge for them and for us is to
keep the wonder alive and on the highest level. Let's look at the three stages of amazement,
for just being aware of them will help us.
I. THE RESPONSE OF AMAZEMENT.
This is the first and highest level where we are confronted by the mysterious and
marvelous and feel a sense of awe. Georgia Adams conveys a common experience of
amazement in her poem Evening Awe.
I am filled with awesome wonder
on moonlit, starlit nights;
Speechlessly I stand engrossed in
Such an array of sights.
Like a rich black velvet curtain
The sky hangs silently-
Studded with millions of diamonds
Shining so brilliantly.
Among the myriads of stars
Flung into outer space,
The dipper so majestically
Appears to take its place.
Each whirling, twirling planet spins
Within its orbit there;
The silvery moon hangs deftly
Suspended in mid-air!
Ah yes, the spacious firmament
In silent witness stands
To prove God holds this universe
Within His sovereign hands!
-Georgia B. Adams
We have all been amazed at some time by gazing up into the sky. The wise men were more
amazed that usual when they saw the Star of Bethlehem. In that state of wonder they were
willing to give up a good chunk of their life to follow that star to the Christ-child. When they
arrived they no doubt had the emotions of those who sing, "I stand amazed in the presence
of Jesus the Nazarene."
We see an atmosphere of amazement everywhere in the New Testament when people
confronted Jesus. When Mary and Joseph found Jesus as a young boy in the temple talking
with the scholars, they were amazed. When Jesus began to teach, the people were amazed at
His authority. When He began to cast our evil spirits, they were amazed at His power.
When He healed people, they were amazed and they praised God. When He stilled the storm
His disciples were completely amazed. The point is, there was an atmosphere of amazement
that surrounded Jesus and His ministry, and we read in Mark 9:15, "As soon as all the
people saw Jesus, they were overwhelmed with wonder and ran to greet Him." The response
4. of amazement was the normal response of men when they had an encounter with Christ. The
next level we want to consider is-
II. THE RETREAT OF AMAZEMENT.
This second stage is a lower level and is the inevitable direction we must go. Just as Jesus
did not permit Peter to build his three tabernacles on the Mt. of Transfiguration, and stay in
that elevated atmosphere of amazement, so He does not permit anyone to go through life in
perpetual wonder. The disciples were often amazed at Jesus, but after living with Him for
some time, they went from being, sometimes awe-filled, to being sometimes, awful. They
fought and bickered over issues of pride, and lost the sense of honor it was just to be in His
presence.
Judas retreated so far from the glory of his first response that he lost the light altogether.
But nobody escapes the detour off the super highway of amazement. That is just the way
God made us. The thing that amazes me is how fast we can retreat from the atmosphere of
amazement. Some years back, my parents visited us and we took them down town to see the
sights. It was new to all of us as we saw the flowing water and trees, and all sorts of plants
inside a modern building. It was truly amazing. But years later when we returned to
hopefully again be amazed, the novelty was gone. It was a boring journey for the atmosphere
of amazement had vanished. I experienced the retreat of amazement.
Amazement thrives on surprise and the unexpected. It has a hard time surviving in an
atmosphere where all is known. I enjoyed the amazing surprises of the movie, Raiders Of
The Lost Ark. But when I watched the film again on television, I was no longer surprised by
the unknown, and I lost a great deal of amazement.
Earl Stanley Gardner tells of the fascinating experience of a traffic officer who was
patrolling the highway one hot summer day. He found a place in the shade to pull over and
observe the traffic
highway one hot summer day. He found a place in the shade to pull over and observe the
traffic. He saw a car which was acting strange, as a driver drove slowly along a creek road
leading to the highway. He got his binoculars out, and to his surprise, he recognized
the driver as his next door neighbor. He observed him stop the car, and get a bag out of the
trunk, and lay it in the shade by the stream. He then got back into the car and left.
The officer was curious, and drove to the spot, and checked it out. He discovered a mother
cat and six kittens. He quickly picked them up and drove with his siren blaring at high speed
to his neighbors house. He ran around the back of the house and put the cats on his porch.
He never told his neighbor what had happened, but delighted in hearing him tell others of
the impossible story of how his cat and six kittens beat him home, when he drove off to
abandon them. His neighbor lived in perpetual amazement at finding these cats purring in
the sunlight on his back porch. The point is, had the officer told him what had happened, the
amazement would retreat rapidly into oblivion. It was kept alive by the mystery of the
unknown
Children are amazed at the commonplace because to them it is the unknown. They love it
for they enjoy wonder. A little boy was asked when his birthday was and he said he didn't
know. When he was asked why he didn't ask his parents he said, "because I want it to be a
surprise." Children long to be surprised and amazed, and it is a mistake to tell them they are
silly. You can bring about the eclipse of wonder and the retreat of amazement by forcing a
child to move to rapidly out of the world of play and fantasy into the world of work and
reality. The retreat of amazement is sure enough without provoking it prematurely.
We need to recognize the reality of the retreat of amazement, so we can work at
5. counteracting it. Christmas and communion have this is common-they are events which we
repeat so often that they can lose their sense of wonder. They focus on the two great events
of our faith-the birth and the death of Jesus. They are the beginning and the end of Him who
is the Alpha and the Omega, the beginning and the end. Because there is a retreat of
amazement at these events of wonder, we need to look at the third stage-
III. THE RENEWAL OF AMAZEMENT.
The key to wonder is to recognize that we only know in part, and we see through a glass
darkly. There is so much more to the familiar than what we know. We lose our sense of
wonder because we think there is nothing new. The childlike mind says there is always
something new. When I read Dr. Paul Brand's book, In His Image, I realized how little I
knew about the wonders of the human body, and the fantastic intricate mechanism by which
we live and breathe and have our being. We take it for granted, but there are few things in
this universe more filled with wonder than this body we live in. After reading that book, I
recognized just how true an insight St. Augustine had, when he wrote,"People travel to
wonder at the height of mountains, at the huge waves of the sea, at the long courses of the
rivers, at the vast compass of the ocean, at the circular motion of the stars; and they pass by
themselves without wondering."
The value of having children around at Christmas time is that they help you keep wonder
alive. We need, not only the Christ-child in the center of Christmas, but we need other
children around the circumference of Christmas, for without child like wonder you lose a lot
of what Christmas is all about. Kenneth Wilson wrote, "Take the wonder out of Christmas,
and you take a star not only out of the skies but out of eyes. Take away the soft edges of
wonder, and you wind up only with hard questions. Take away the angels, and you have to
start looking for the angles. Whatever else Christmas is, it is wonders response to something
bigger than life. Sometimes-and Christmas is one of the best times-the secret is not explain,
explain, but enjoy, enjoy."
That is what it means to be childlike. The shepherds were adults, but they came in
childlike wonder to behold the baby in a manger. The wise men were adults, but they came
in childlike wonder to bow before the Christ-child. I see three ways to get on the road that
leads to a renewal of amazement.
1. Research-both shepherds and wise men said let's go see. If you set out to see more and
never be content with what you know, you can renew your sense of wonder.
2. Retelling-like the shepherds, share the message of Christmas with others. Just to get a
child to see the wonder of it all will rekindle your own childlike amazement.
3 Remembering-the reason Jesus said to do this in remembrance of me is because He knew
the rejuvenating power of memory. We have all found old pictures that brought back the
emotions of the past. The past is never over, for by remembering it you can relive it in the
present.
The wonder of Christmas is that God would send His Son into the world as a infant. We
say you don't send a boy to do a man's job, but God did, and the wonder of it is that the boy
got the job done. He did what all of history failed to do. He reconciled God and man.
Gambling men would have put their money on Herod or Caesar, and big armies, and big
budgets to solve the world's problems with evil. But God used a baby to win this war of the
ages.
In Alex Haley's book, Roots, there is a scene where the slave Kunta Kinte drives his
master to the big plantation house. He parked the buggy, and settled down to wait. He
heard the music of the white folks as they danced, but then he heard other music coming
6. from the slave quarters. He got out of the buggy and went to the cabin, and there he found a
man playing African music. He remembered hearing this music as a child. The man had
come from his section of Africa, and they talked of home and the past. That night when he
got back to his cabin, he laid on the floor and wept, for he almost forgot who he was and
where he was from. The music had rekindled his memory, and he was restored to an attitude
of amazement concerning his roots. So, when we come to Christmas, we are to look back and
remember what God did for us through this baby he sent into the world. We are to
remember that it was by means of this child that we gained the right to become children of
God. We are to make Christmas a time of the year when we enter into an atmosphere of
amazement.
CHAPTER TWO
2. THE ANGELIC ANTHEM based on Luke 2:8-14
Louis Pasteur, the French chemist, was the first to suspect that man's major enemies were
invisible. He advanced the theory that all disease is caused by microscopic organisms called
germs. His theory was challenged because some diseases like rabies produced no germs. He
concluded that these particular germs were just too small to be seen by the microscopes of
that day. In other words, he was saying some invisible things are more invisible than others.
Thirty years later the Dutch botanist, Martinus Beijerinck, filtered out all the germs from
a diseased tobacco plant's juices, and yet the juice still produced the disease in a healthy
plant. He called this disease-causing liquid a virus, from the Latin word for poison. This
term eventually came to designate these smaller than germs trouble makers.
In 1931, bacteriologist determined that these viruses were smaller than the smallest cells.
They are so small they are on the borderline between something and nothing. Yet these
invisible realities have become one of the biggest issues of modern times. Science, the media,
the medical world and the masses all believe in the reality of these invisible creatures. You
would have a hard time finding a person who is skeptical about the reality of the virus. Yet
we live in an age where millions are skeptical about the reality of angels.
The small and invisible are acceptable, but the big and invisible are too much to swallow
for the doubter. It is too great a paradox to be large and still not be detectable to the senses
of man. It makes sense to be hidden in minuteness, but to be hidden in hughness is illogical.
And so, the non-believer writes off the whole world of the supernatural, which includes God
and His angels. Modern man is not necessarily happy with this choice, however. Norman
Gary in one of his novels says, "you got rid of God and isn't it funny, something is still
missing."
There are many Christians who also feel uneasy about angels. They have a strange malady
of angelophobia-the fear of angels. They are embarrassed by angels. But Christmas forces
angels on us, and there is no escape from them. They are in stores, on cards, on trees, on
TV, in songs, and most of all, in God's revelation of the Christmas story. Amidst this
awesome avalanche of angels we are forced to acknowledge them, and somehow assimilate
them into our world view. We want to look at the angels and the Christmas story, and see
just how relevant they are to the Christmas story, and thus to God's plan of salvation. The
first thing we want to focus on is-
7. I. THE ANGELS APPEARANCE.
Verse 9 says, an angel of the Lord appeared to them. You can find a lot of places where
an angel of the Lord appears in the Bible, but you will have a hard time finding a text where
the angel of the Lord is joined by a great company of the heavenly host. Angels usually
operate alone. They are messengers, and like human messengers they are loners. The
messengers of ancient history were usually runners who ran alone, and not in a group. The
pony express did not send out a group of riders, but each covered his territory alone. When
God sent His messengers from heaven, one was a great plenty to get the job done. But here
on the first Christmas we see a very unusual event. The angel of the Lord is not left to sing a
solo, but is backed up by the greatest angelic choir that ever appeared on earth.
John heard this choir in heaven where they were praising God on their own turf. But
never had anyone ever heard this angelic choir on earth. Heaven's music is breaking
through the barrier between time and eternity, and men on earth are hearing heaven's
sound. The only other record of their performing was at creation. There were no humans in
existence to hear them at that time. So their singing at Christmas is a once in a history
exclusive performance.
If some great singing group stopped their tour bus on a country road to sing for a few
cow-hands in the field, that event would make big news. Famous singing groups just don't do
such things. But here is the greatest singing group in all the universe making their first
earthly appearance, not at Herod's castle, not in the temple, not in Rome, but in a field
outside tiny Bethlehem. There audience was not the dignitaries of the nation, but a handful
of lowly shepherds.
The real wonder is that they appeared at all. The fact that they did makes it clear that
from God's point of view the birth of His Son was the greatest event in human history. This
angelic anthem was a guarantee that this would be the most celebrated birthday the world
had ever seen. There presence is just another factor in making this a one of a kind event.
Jesus was a one of a kind baby, born to a one of a kind mother, for a one of a kind plan of
salvation. It is fitting that the angels would at His birth make a one of a kind appearance.
Some say the angels are not relevant. They remind me of Whately who wrote about what
he heard at the Grand Canyon, "Turning away from the sun set serenade of gorgeous colors
bouncing off the Grand Canyon, a young woman said disdainfully to her companion, it just
isn't relevant." Whately had to agree that from a strictly survival point of view the sun set
and the Grand Canyon are not relevant. Violets and Orchids and most of the beauty of
creation are not relevant to survival. But man does not live by bread alone. There is more to
life than food and clothing and money in the bank if that is what you mean by relevant.
Man has more than a body to feed. He has a mind and a soul, and he needs a diet that
nourishes the whole man. He needs mystery for the mind, and wonder for the soul, and this
is where the angels become relevant. Their presence in Christmas guarantees that it will
never lose it's wonder, for they add the supernatural touch. There is not much about
Christmas that is wondrous if you just look at the earthly scene. Stables are not known for
their aesthetic value. The whole scene is very commonplace and earthly. If it was not for the
appearance of the angels, the only sign of heavenly involvement in this story would be the
star. They were the only living supernatural beings involved in the story. They keep it in the
realm of wonder.
One of my granddaughters favorite songs is Twinkle Twinkle Little Star. Some day she
will be able to sing the more scientific version-
Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star
8. I don't wonder what you are.
What you are I know quite well
And your component parts can tell.
That loss of wonder will never happen with angels, because we can never analyze angels
adequately. They will be, until eternity, a source of mystery and wonder. That is their role
in God's plan. They keep Christmas a day of mystery and wonder forever. There was a
good reason why God chose this event for the greatest angelic choir ever. Albert Einstein
once remarked that, " the most beautiful thing we can experience is the mysterious. It is the
source of all true art and science. He to whom this emotion is a stranger, who can no longer
pause to wonder, and stand wrapped in awe, is as good as dead: His eyes are closed." The
appearance of the angels in the Christmas story assure us that there will always be wonder
connected with this awesome event.
Dr. Luke tells us there were a multitude of the heavenly host. This was one of his favorite
words. He used it 23 times. All other New Testament writers only used it 7 times altogether.
He is making it clear that this was no trio or even a sextet- this was a great multitude of
angels. He was trying to make an impression here. It was his style. He wants us to get a sense
of the staggering involvement of heaven in this earthly event.
Angels and archangels gathered there
Cherubim and Seraphim thronged the air.
This never happened before, and will not likely ever happen again on earth. This was the
greatest angelic appearance of all time. And because it is so, it helps to make Christmas the
greatest time of wonder and celebration. Next, lets look at -
II. THE ANGEL'S ADORATION.
The song of the angels sets the tone for all others who come on the stage of the Christmas
drama. The angels adore Christ, and so we see the shepherds also adore Christ, and so do
the wise men. To adore is to worship with intense devotion. Adoration is the key ingredient in
the atmosphere of Christmas. The angels add wonder, but they also lead the way in worship
as well. There is no need to wonder about what Jesus most wants for His birthday. There is
no gift we can give better than what the angels gave that first Christmas-adoration.
We may not have treasures of glory or gold,
Or perfumes to pour at His feet,
But, oh, if we knew of the worth of the Christ,
We would give Him our homage complete!
Our cherished desires we would open anew
And yield Him our hearts and our all;
As incense we'd offer our praises to Him,
Adoring, before Him would fall!
The Savior is worthy of all we can give,
Whatever our coffers may hold;
Oh, may we then pour out our treasures to Him
And worship as they did of old!
These angels do not even need salvation, for they are not lost, yet they are praising God
for His gift as if they were part of the redeemed. This tells us a lot about how angels feel
9. about man. Unlike the unseen virus which only has an interest in man's destruction, these
unseen beings care about man and his salvation. They are not jealous that God has given His
very best for man. They do not have envy, and fight the plan of God to populate heaven with
these fallen beings. Instead, they sing as never before, with pure adoration of the love of
God.
Angels are our friends, and they are on the side of light against darkness. We are not
alone in this universe. There are a vast host of intelligent un-fallen beings who care about
our salvation, and lead the way in praising God for providing us with a Savior. If you want
the true Christmas spirit, then listen to the angels. The very essence of Christmas is
adoration. We do not know what Christmas is until we feel the need to praise God. To sing
glory to God in the highest with the angels is where it is at. This means we need to have
received God's gift, and taken His Son as our Savior. Only those who have done so can know
the true spirit of adoration.
Giving and being generous, and having a great time in spreading cheer and happiness are
all virtues, and we do not want to knock them, but we need to see they fall short of the real
spirit of Christmas. They are side effects of adoration. If you do not start where the angels
started your Christmas can never be what God intended. We need to think-Glory to God. We
need to feel-Glory to God. We need to sing-Glory to God. Horatius Bonar wrote-
1.
Glory be to Him who loved us
Washed us from each sinful stain;
Glory be to Him who made us
Priests and kings with Him to reign;
Glory, worship, laud, and blessing
To the Lamb who once was slain.
"Glory, worship, laud, and blessing"-
Thus the choir triumphant sings;
"Honour, riches, power, dominion"-
Thus its praise creation brings;
Thou art worthy, Thou are worthy,
Lord of lords and King of kings.
Glory to the King of angels,
Glory to the Church's King,
Glory to the King of nations,
Heaven and earth His praises sing;
Glory ever and for ever
To the King of Glory bring.
Christmas means salvation to man, but it means Glory to God, and it is never complete
unless God gets adoration. If you want to give God the very best you can give, then follow the
angels and give Him adoration. We need songs to adequately express adoration. Love songs
are so popular because love needs music for its highest expression. The loving heart needs a
poem and a tune. Love needs to be sung. That is what adoration is. It is love expressed in a
song. Phillips Brooks wrote long ago-
The earth has grown cold with its burden of care
But at Christmas it always is young,
The heart of the jewel burns lustrus and fair;
And its soul full of music breaks forth on the air,
10. When the song of the angels is sung.
If the heavenly host sang as never before, and they were not even saved by the Savior they
sang of, how much more ought we, who are saved by Him, be filled with songs of adoration?
Let us remember that the appearance of the angels tells us Christmas is the greatest day of
wonder in history. The adoration of the angels tells us, the best we can give to God in
response to His gift to us, is the gift of worship and praise. Let us learn from these invisible
friends that a true celebration of Christmas will involve wonder and worship. This is the
message of the angelic anthem.
CHAPTER THREE
3. CHRISTMAS ANIMALS based on Luke 2:1-20
The angels, the shepherds, and the wise men, along with Mary and Joseph, dominate
the scene around the Christ-child, who gave the world the gift of Christmas. But animals
also play a role in the greatest story ever told. Being dumb, they could not sing of it or talk
of it, and the result is their silence leaves them the most neglected creatures connected with
the Incarnation. We usually look at the astronomical witness of the star, or the angelic
witness of the heavenly host, but we seldom to never notice the animal witness to the advent
of Christ.
There is no escaping the facts, however. In His birth our Lord Jesus identified with the
animal kingdom. He was born in a stable meant for the shelter of animals. He was laid in a
manger meant for the feeding of animals. The first sounds baby Jesus heard could have
been the sound of animals. He was first announced to the shepherds whose whole life
revolved around the care, feeding, and protection of animals. The wise men, who
represented the Gentile world, made their journey to worship Him on animals. They were
likely camels, although horses were not impossible. Mary likely made it to Bethlehem riding
on a donkey. Later in His life, Jesus was in a context where He related both to the angels and
animals. Mark 1:13 says, "He was with the wild animals, and angels attended Him." This
was during His forty days in the wilderness. Angels and animals have this in common, they
are both servants of God and man. They are both a part of the Christmas story.
The result of all these facts is a world of Christian art and poetry full of Christmas
animals. The famous nativity scenes through the ages include the ox, donkey, sheep, camels,
and often the dove. One of our most famous Christmas hymns, Away In A Manger, says,
"The cattle are lowing the poor baby wakes but little Lord Jesus no crying He makes."
The emphasis on animals in the birth scene is not part of our contemporary life-style
because the majority of people no longer live with animals. Back in the 12th century when
everybody had a daily contact with their farm animals, they sang songs that stressed the role
of the friendly beast in Christmas. They sang,
Jesus our brother kind and good
Was humbly born in a stable rude
And the friendly beasts around Him stood.
This song, sung over 800 years ago by Christians, reveals just how carefully they had
thought through the role of animals in the Christmas story. They had each animal tell of
what they contributed-
11. Thus every beast by some good spell
In the stable dark was glad to tell
Of the gift He gave Immanuel.
I said the donkey shaggy and brown
Carried his mother uphill and down
I carried her safely to Bethlehem town.
I said the cow all white and red
Gave her my manger for His bed.
I gave Him my hay to pillow His head.
I said the sheep with curly horn
Gave Him my wool for His blanket warm.
He wore my coat on Christmas morn.
I said the dove, from the rafters high,
I cooed Him to sleep that He should not cry.
We cooed Him to sleep, my mate and I.
I said the camel yellow and black
Over the desert upon my back.
I brought Him a gift in the wise man's pack.
All of this may seem superficial and sentimental to us as city people, but keep in mind God
did not send His angels to announce Christ's birth to city people. He sent them to people
who lived daily in relationship to animals. The Bible world was a very animal oriented
world.
I think it is safe to say, every great leader of Israel, male or female, had a life strongly
involved with the animal kingdom. Look at just a few highlights.
1. Adam and Eve dwelt in a perfect relationship with animals, and Adam even named them
all.
2. All of the Patriarchs had animals for their wealth, and the story of their lives could not be
told without reference to the animal kingdom.
3. M oses was a shepherd when God met him at the burning bush.
4. David was a shepherd when called to be the king of Israel.
5. Job was an owner of great herds of animals.
6. M ost of the prophets used animal imagery constantly, to convey their message.
7. John the Baptist lived with the animals, wore camel skins, and ate locust.
The list could be greatly expanded, but the point is Bible people were animal lovers. You
would have a hard time finding any Bible hero who was not an animal lover. E.F.
Schumacker went so far as to make this claim, "There have been no sages or holy men in our
or anybody else's history who were cruel to animals or who looked upon them as nothing but
utilities, and innumerable are the legends and stories which link sanctity as well as happiness
with a loving kindness toward lower creatures."
Therefore, it follows that the greatest King of Israel, the promised Messiah, the Son of
David, the Seed of Abraham, the fulfillment of all Old Testament prophecy, should also be in
some way connected with the animal kingdom. No where do we see this connection stronger
than in the Christmas story. Jesus was the only great person in Israel, as far as we know, to
be actually born among the animals. Most would agree with John R. Rice who said, "It is
unthinkable that any detail of the birth of Christ could fail to have a universal meaning for
the race." The animal atmosphere is an example.
There are millions of stuffed animals given as gifts to children every year at Christmas.
12. This is more appropriate than we realize. Every major holiday has some animal associated
with it for symbolic reasons. The turkey for Thanksgiving; the rabbit for Easter; the donkey
for Palm Sunday; the eagle for July 4th. But for Christmas there is no single animal to
symbolize it, for the whole animal kingdom is involved. Any animal can be a Christmas
animal.
There is an old English wood-cut printed in London in 1631, which illustrates an ancient
legend of how even the dumb animals spoke on that Holy Night. In the center of the picture
is the Babe with Joseph and M ary, the angels above singing, and the cock crows-Christ is
born. The raven in a tree asks-when? The crow replies-this night. The ox cries out-where,
where? The sheep near the manger bleats-Bethlehem. It is not meant to be believed that
animals talk, but to convey the idea that animals were involved in Christmas.
Much of the symbolism of the Bible is from the animal kingdom. The Bible is a literary
zoo. I counted 61 different creatures that could be studied. There are more animals in the
Bible than you will find in some zoos. The more we get away from the animal kingdom the
more difficult it is to understand many parts of the word of God. If you took all the
references to animals out of the Bible you would eliminate more of God's word than you can
imagine. A big chunk of the Christmas story is also lost if you remove all references to
animals.
The secular world has added a lot of animals to Christmas. The twelve days of Christmas
are full of creatures. A partridge in a pear tree; two turtle doves; three French hens; four
calling birds; six geese a laying and seven swans a swimming. Our secular culture has raised
up one animal that has gained a great deal of popularity and that is Rudolf the red nosed
reindeer. He has relevance because he plays the role the camels played in the New
Testament story. They got the wise men to Christ with their gifts, and Rudolf gets Santa to
the children with his gifts. It is a story of an animal that is a blessing to man.
Animals are such a blessing to man in the Bible that when the Christ-child grew up He
took upon Himself the names of these animals. The two most outstanding being the Lion and
the Lamb. These two names bring out the two positive characteristics of animals in their
relationship to man, and help us see the relevance of the animals of Christmas. The lion
represents sovereign service, and the lamb represents sacrificial service. Jesus came to
serve and to sacrifice Himself for us. He humbled Himself to be born with the animals
because He fulfilled the purpose of the animal kingdom in relationship to mankind in two
ways we want to consider in more depth. First let's look at animals and-
I. THEIR SERVICE.
We have already noted that in our secular Christmas, Santa would be a helpless
pedestrian without his reindeer. It does not take to great an imagination to see how Rudolf
can be a symbol of the Christ who alone had the light, in this dark world, to lead men to
receive the gift of salvation. Santa could not deliver his gifts without animal service. The
New Testament has another parallel with Rudolf in the donkey Jesus rode on Palm Sunday.
He could not have fulfilled the prophecy of the Messiah without the service of this animal.
There are some amazing stories of how animals have served men at Christmas.
Jim Stacy was the local postmaster in Calico, California. He picked up a stray dog one
day and took him on his rounds. After years of this, Stacy fell ill and was unable to work.
But Darsey, his dog, knew the route so well he was able to do the job. Stacy fashioned a
harness with double saddlebags and from 1883 to 1886, Darsey the dog delivered the
Christmas mail.
In the British post office cats have been on the payroll for over a century. As late as 1953
13. the assistant post master general assured the House of Commons that female cats were
getting the same wages and benefits as male cats. They provide a major service to man by
assuring that he gets his mail. Before they hired cats the mice destroyed a lot of mail. In
1868 they began the hiring of cats, and the problem has been solved, and people have been
getting their mail un-chewed ever since.
In our own country the famous Pony Express would have been impossible without the
service of ponies. In the book of Esther all the Jews are saved by the service of animals in
carrying a message to all the lands. Paul's life was spared by means of horses.
History is filled with examples of how animals provide man with service that is vital to his
comfort and progress. John said of Jesus, "Behold the Lamb of God who takes away the sin
of the world." That was his greatest service to mankind. He was also the Lion of the tribe of
Judah. As such, he provided the service of a protector. The Lion, as king of the jungle, was
used all through history as the symbol of protection. Huge statues of lions sat before the
palaces of kings, and other important government buildings. The figures of 12 lions lined
the steps leading to Solomon throne in addition to the two lions standing beside his armrests.
God is represented by the lion, and Israel is, and Jesus is.
In one of the great prophetic messages of the Bible pointing to the Christ-child there is a
strong emphasis on the effects He will have on the animal kingdom. In Isaiah 11 we read of
the shoot that will come from the stump of Jesse. This descendant of David will be a
righteous judge among people, but listen to what he accomplishes in the animal kingdom in
verses 11 thru 9- "The wolf will live with the lamb, the leopard will lie down with the goat,
the calf and the lion and the yearling together: and a little child will lead them. The cow will
feed with the bear, their young will lie down together, and the lion will eat straw like the ox.
The infant will play near the hole of the cobra, and the young child put his hand into the
vipers nest. They will neither harm nor destroy on all my holy mountain, for the earth will
be full of the knowledge of the Lord as the waters cover the sea."
The Christmas scene of baby Jesus and the friendly animals surrounding Him is symbolic
of what this baby will do for animals and men in reconciling them, and making them one
family. Animals were hurt by man's sin, and they suffer in a fallen world. Christmas and the
Incarnation mark the beginning of their restoration as well as our own. As the Lion of the
tribe of Judah He came to save the animal kingdom from the fall, and all of the evil and
suffering it has led to for animals.
Paul makes it clear that the salvation Christ brought is not exclusive to man, but covers
all creation. Isaac Watts was a great animal lover and in his famous Christmas hymn, Joy
To The World, makes it clear that animals are in on the joy. In the third stanza he writes,
"He came to make His blessings flow far as the curse is found, far as the curse is found, far
as, far as the curse is found." In other words, He came to bless the animal kingdom as well
as man, for they too are under the curse. In Romans 8:20-23, Paul writes, "For the creation
was subject to frustration, not by it's own choice, but by the will of the one who subjected it
in hope that the creation itself will be liberated from its bondage to decay and brought into
the glorious freedom of the children of God. We know that the whole creation has been
groaning as in the pains of childbirth right up to the present time. Not only so, but we
ourselves, who have the first fruits of the Spirit, groan inwardly as we wait eagerly for our
adoption as sons, the redemption of our bodies."
Paul is saying that we are already saved in the inner man, but the part of us which is
animal, the body, is not yet redeemed. We wait as does the whole animal kingdom for that
final and complete salvation that saves the animal kingdom including our animal nature-the
14. body. When this happens the whole of physical creation will also be redeemed. This means
that for all eternity animals will be our friends and our servants. Horse lovers will be
delighted to note that even before eternity the horse is one of heaven's greatest servants.
The horse pulled the chariot that swept down and took Elijah into heaven. The book of
Revelation pictures Jesus riding His white horse to victory. Call it symbolic if you wish, but
there is no way to escape the Biblical teaching that the literal animal kingdom will share in
the salvation that Christ brought to this earth. Animal lover's often go to extremes, and I
have heard of some who will not even eat animal crackers, but extremes ought not to block
our minds to the Biblical truth about the positive relationship of man and animals.
In the middle ages there was a popular story that has become a modern day movie-
Androcles And The Lion. Androcles was a runaway slave who met a lion limping with a
thorn in it's paw. He pulled the thorn out. Later he was captured and sentenced to fight
lion's in the arena. The lion loosed on him was none other than the one he had helped. The
lion recognized him, and in gratitude licked Androcles in the face, and then protected him
from the other lions. The Emperor was so impressed by this miracle he pardoned Androcles
and gave him his freedom. Saved by a lion! All of us are so saved from the lion who goes
about seeking whom he may devour by the Lion of the tribe of Judah. He will also save the
animal kingdom from this lion, and man and beast will live in peace, and be of service to
God. The second theme we want to consider about animals is-
II. THEIR SACRIFICE.
Animals have to die for us to live. It is their greatest service to man that they die for his
life and pleasure. The first animals on record who died, did so to provide Adam and Eve
with clothing. Their sacrifice was necessary because of man's sin. Millions of animals have
died since in sacrifice for man's sin. Jesus is called the Lamb of God because He did, once
and for all, what sheep had been doing all through history-dieing as a sacrifice for sin. The
Passover lamb was sacrificed, and the people of Israel were spared by it's shed blood. Jesus
became our Passover Lamb, and made it possible by His sacrifice for all to escape the
judgment of God.
Now we no longer need sheep or any other animal for sacrifice. People in Bible times had
to raise spotless and pure animals as part of their spiritual life of obedience to God. But
Jesus made this unnecessary. Then the modern industrial revolution made animals
unnecessary in many areas of life. The result is we have lost touch with the significance of
the animal world. Yet everyday our lives are dependent on the sacrifice of animals-not only
the fish, fowl and barnyard creatures, but the multitude of minute animal creatures that
make our bodies function properly. Even the strongest vegetarian would be shocked if he
realized how many tiny animals he consumes everyday in his water and his vegetables. No
vegetarian would be alive today without the sacrifice of animals.
Sometimes even the animals not intended for human food are crucial for man's survival.
When the German's surrounded Paris to starve them out in the Franco-Prussian War, the
zoo became a food supply, and the people ate the kangaroo, the wolf, the camel and the
elephant. The same thing happened to the London zoo in World War II. People were even
eating giraffe cutlets. The furred, the finny, and the feathered all went into the frying pan
for the salvation of man. M an saved the animal kingdom when Noah built the ark, and so it
is fitting that the animal kingdom would often be the salvation of man.
We live in a culture where the humane society plays a major role, and where the animal
kingdom is treated with high respect. There are also animal hospitals everywhere in any
large city. Walt Disney contributed to this greatly by making animal creatures very popular
15. and person-like. C.S.Lewis has been to the Christian world what Disney was to the secular
world. His series of Narnia books exalts the animal kingdom. The land of Narnia is under
the rule of Aslan, the Christlike Lion. He created it out of nothing and thus we see the lion
represents God. All of the animals think and talk and are raised to the human level.
In all his works Lewis pictures the animal kingdom as ideal, and then man comes along
and makes a mess of it by his evil. Man brought down the animal kingdom and they had to
suffer with him. But they are destined to be friends and rise again to the level of peace and
oneness. In other words, the goal of God is a happy ending for man and animals together.
Lewis pictures the universal chorus of praise in heaven as being, not of voices only, but of
purrs, grunts and squeals of delight from the animal kingdom as they join man in this song
of eternal thanksgiving.
When Martin Luther read Romans 8:21 about the creation itself being liberated from its
bondage, he looked at his little dog and said, "Ja! Thou too shalt have a little golden tail!"
The world of poetry is filled with such sentiments.
I do not know the future ways,
I can but dimly see,
Just what within that Unseen Land
There is of bird or tree:
But could that heaven my heaven be
If there were not some woodland friends
To meet with Christ and me?
The shepherds who went that first Christmas to see the Christ-child no doubt felt this way
about their lambs. We forget that the lamb was often to the Jew what the dog is in our
culture-the family pet. People have always loved their pets on a level close to children.
When God saves families in the Bible, He saves their animals with them.
1. In the ark God saved animals as well as people. The promise He gave was to the animals
as well as men. Read it and see for yourself.
2. In the Exodus animals were included in the greatest deliverance of Israel.
3. In the deliverance of Nineveh, because of their repentance, God made it a point that He
had compassion not only on the children but on the animals.
4. God gave the Sabbath to save man from self-imposed slavery and He made it clear that
animals were also to get that day of rest.
The whole plan of God is summed up by David in Psalm 36:5-6, "Your love, O Lord,
reaches to the heavens, your faithfulness to the skies. Your righteousness is like the mighty
mountains, your justice like the great deep. O Lord, you preserve both man and beast."
When Saul Kane is converted in a country drinking house, a very unlikely place, John
Masefield in, The Everlasting Mercy, has him say a very unusual thing to describe what
happened to him.
I did not think, I did not strive,
The deep peace burnt my me alive;
The bolted door had broken in,
I knew that I had done with sin.
I knew that Christ had given me birth
To brother all the souls on earth,
And every bird and every beast
Should share the crumbs broke at the feast.
16. From Eden to eternity animals are partners with men. When God saw that it was good
after He had created the animal kingdom, He loved and enjoyed what He had made. He has
no intention of letting the sin of Satan and the fall of man rob Him of an eternity of enjoying
the animal kingdom. They will be a part of the new heaven and the new earth for the
pleasure of God and man. That is why Jesus humbled Himself to be identified with them as
well as with man in the Incarnation. Thus we are to look upon the Christmas animals, not as
mere incidental props but as a very real part of the plan of God. We will begin a taste of the
eternity God has planned if we learn to love, even in time, the Christmas animals.
CHAPTER FOUR
4. THE APPROACHABLE GOD based on Luke 2:8-
20
Lucy is expounding on the meaning of Christmas and she says, "this is the time of the
year that we show kindness and good will, when we accept others and welcome them into our
home." Charlie Brown says, "why can't we be kind and accepting all through the year and
not just at Christmas?" Lucy looks at him and says, " what are you, some kind of religious
fanatic?" That is the way many people feel about those who would want to be a Christian
even after Christmas.
There is something unreal about the Christmas spirit that only lasts till the lights and
tinsel are put back into the attic. A seasonal Christian who reveals some kind of religious
interest at Christmas only is not a real Christian.
It is not fanaticism but normal Christian living to have the Christmas spirit all year long.
One of the problems with the Christmas season is that people feel they have to try and cram
too much Christian living into too small a segment of time. David Grayson said, "I
sometimes think we expect too much of Christmas day. We try to crowd into it the long
arrears of kindliness and humanity of the whole year. As for me, I like to take my Christmas
a little at a time, all through the year." There is no magic in December 25 that cannot be
experienced any other day on which you decide to honor the gift of God, and praise Him for
the Lord Jesus.
The real fanatic is the one who thinks you can get your religious devotion done at
Christmas-who thinks thanking and praising God is a minor part-time commitment that can
be gotten out of the way through a special event or two. The gift of God is unreal to one with
such a mind. It is not just the tree, but the whole of Christmas is artificial to those who do
not treasure the gift of God everyday of the year.
In the comic strip "Tiger", two little boys are talking and the one says, "We got an
artificial tree this year." The other boy asked,"Doesn't it bother you?" He replied, "No, not
as long as the presents are real!" That is to be the Christians attitude. Everything can be
artificial and superficial, but he or she will still have the Christmas spirit because God's
Present is real. Ray Philllips said, "Christmas is real. It's the rest of the year that is a myth."
If the gift of God is real then all of life is made real by this ultimate reality in Christ. The
poet put it beautifully-
17. Yet more and more we know Thee real,
And marvel more and more to see
Thine infinite Reality.
Reality, reality,
Lord Jesus Christ Thou art to me!
My glorious king, my Lord, my God,
Life is too short for half the laud,
For half the debt of praise I owe,
For this blest knowledge that "I know
The reality of Jesus Christ,"-
Unmeasured blessing, gift unpriced!
Will I not praise Thee when I see
In the long noon of Eternity
Unveiled, Thy "Bright reality"?
In the popular children's story, The Valveteen Rabbit, by M argery Williams, the rabbit
asks the toy horse that was so bald in patches because of hundreds of hours of being held and
rubbed, "what is real"? The horse replies-"Real isn't how you are made. It’s a thing that
happens to you. When a child loves you for a long time, not just to play with, but really loves
you, then you become real". For some, the baby Jesus is just another toy they play with. Its
fun, but they never really come to love the gift of God. But for those who do, Jesus is a gift
that is loved and treasured not just at Christmas, but every day. He is real and not just a
seasonal plaything. The poet says it so well-
Lets have Christmas every day
The gladness and the heartfelt mirth,
Good will towards men and peace on earth;
The simple joy of giving things
To gain the joy that giving brings.
The practicing of what we preach
In word and deed, in thought and speech.
Lets have Christmas every day-
Its wrong to wait the weary year
to bring some fellow creature cheer.
We should adopt the better plan
Of doing good whenever we can.
But do it now, next Christmas may
Not come at all-Let's live today!
If the Christmas gift if real to you, then the Christmas spirit will be real to you every day.
This was the spirit of the shepherds. As soon as the angels were gone they said lets go see this
thing that has happened. These men did not know it was Christmas for the holiday did not
yet exist. It was just another day, but one of great excitement now. They did not say to
themselves, we have seen the supernatural-angels have spoken to us- we will be famous. They
did not run to reporters to try and get on the front page or discuss what memorial they
should erect in memory of this encounter. Their field never became anything but a field for
they had a proper focus on what was real.
Many a place where people have seen visions become places where people build temples,
and others make pilgrimages to worship there. But this is all a dealing with the unreal. The
18. angels did not come to them to make themselves objects of worship, or to make the place a
sacred spot of worship. They came to point the shepherds to Jesus. This was also the job of
the Star of Bethlehem. It was to lead the wise men, not to worship the stars or anything in
heaven, but to worship the Christ-child. The star and the angels were only means to point
men to the Real, which was Christ. If the angels would have moved the shepherds to go to the
library to study up on angels, and if the star would have moved the wise men to study
astronomy deeper, they would have failed to achieve their purpose. Their one and only
purpose was to move men to meet their Savior. They were great successes because that is
precisely what they accomplished. John Erskine wrote,
Out of the midnight sky a great dawn broke,
And a voice singing flooded us with song.
In David's city was he born, it sang,
A Savior, Christ the Lord. Then while I sat
Shivering with the thrill of that great cry,
A mighty choir a thousandfold more sweet
Suddenly sang, Glory to God, and Peace-
Peace on earth; my heart, almost unnerved.
By that swift loveliness, would hardly beat.
Speechless we waited till the accustomed night
Gave us no promise of sweet surprise;
Then scrambling to our feet, without a word
We started through the fields to find the Child.
To find the Child-that was the goal. Anything that takes us off the path that leads to
Christ is not part of God's plan. The job of the angels and the star was finished when the
shepherds and the wise men bowed before the Christ-child. The shepherds were the most
unique people in all of history in that they were the only people to receive a direct message
from God about the birth of His Son. The wise men got an indirect message by means of the
star. We want to look closer at the shepherds, and the sights they saw, and the song they
sang. Consider first-
I. THE SIGHTS THEY SAW.
. First of all lets see them as the sight-seeing champions of the Christmas story. Their job
was to watch their sheep, and so they were used to seeing things at night. They would see
sheep that began to wander, the prowling wolf, the thief in the night who would seek to build
his flock at their expense. Watching was their life, and this night they saw more than human
eyes have ever seen. These lowly shepherds were the most blest of all men in history as far as
getting in on the sights of Christmas.
They saw The Angel of the Lord.
They saw the Glory of the Lord.
They saw the Heavenly Host.
They saw the sign of the baby lying in a manger.
They saw Mary and Joseph.
They saw people amazed when they told their story.
For variety, intensity and quality, there is no record of anyone who can match the
shepherds in their experience of the sights and sounds of Christmas. They left their sheep to
go see the Lamb of God, and as far as we know, they were the only people besides Joseph and
19. Mary to see the Christ-child in the manger.
They were not terrified of this child, as they were when they were confronted by the
angels, even though He was the King of the angels. His glory was veiled in flesh and was non-threatening.
That is why God entered history as a baby. No one can see God and live, but
God in the flesh can be seen safely. God came down to our level where He could be seen and
approached. In the Old Testament God was not approachable. Even in the temple only the
high priest could approach God, and then just once a year.
The baby in Bethlehem changed the relationship of God and man. The lowly shepherds
who were totally unfit to approach God in the temple, are now invited to come into the
presence of God in the flesh, and to worship Him. They are to come with joy, and not with
fear and trembling. They were the first to see this amazing reality that Christmas is about
God making Himself approachable. Deity has always been frightening for man. The majesty
and power of God are an overload for man's emotional system. But Christmas changed all
that.
The reason we need to focus on the Christ-child over and over again every year, is to keep
us from losing sight of the truth of the Incarnation. Jesus is no longer a baby, but Lord of all
at the right hand of God. He is in a state of glory and majesty that makes men fall in fear
before His presence, as John did when he saw Jesus in heaven. We need to be reminded over
and over that this is the same Jesus who was the babe in Bethlehem. The babe of Bethlehem
is the perpetual sign that God is always the approachable God.
People will go out of their way to approach a baby. You can be a total stranger but people
will talk to you if you have a baby. Nobody moves to the other side of the mall when they see
you coming with a baby. Instead, they move closer to try and see. A baby draws and attracts
people. A baby is approachable, and this is the message of Christmas to all people about
God. He is not to be feared and avoided. He is to be approached in faith for He cares
enough about man to have given His very best-Himself.
The simple shepherds were the first to see the sign of God's approachability. The wise
men eventually came as well, and so all men of all classes are welcome to approach God.
Jews and Gentiles, poor and rich, simple and learned, all have this in common, they can
come to God with the same sense of peace that you have in approaching a baby. The peace
on earth the angels were singing about was not the peace of lack of war. It was the peace of
heart and mind that men can have in approaching God. Christmas marks the celebration of
the beginning of man's being able to come to God in peace knowing that He is approachable.
He is not God above us, and beyond us, but He is God with us.
How do you describe the Hallelujah Chorus to a deaf man? How do you convey the
majesty of the Grand Canyon to a blind man? How do you help a man who has lost his sense
of smell grasp the fragrance of the orange blossom festival? This was God's problem-How
do you as an infinite God communicate to finite man that you love him and that you are
approachable? The answer is the sight the shepherds saw-the babe of Bethlehem. Not only
was Jesus a baby to make it clear that God is approachable, but he was born in stable for the
same reason. It was not an accident that Jesus was not born in the inn. Had He been born
inside He would have been an insider, and unapproachable by the outsider like the
shepherds. If there would have been room in the inn for Jesus there would have been no
room for the shepherds in the Christmas story. But Jesus was born in a place where He was
totally approachable. They did not have to get an appointment. He was right out in the open
in public territory. He was not like all the other Kings of history where you would have to
have a special invitation to approach him. Jesus was approachable to even these lowly
20. shepherds.
They saw God and did not die, but lived on a higher level of peace and joy ever after. If
like these shepherds we too can see the sign and what it signifies-God with us-God
approachable, then we too can have the profound peace and joy they had that first
Christmas. Now let's go from the sights they saw to-
II. THE SONG THEY SANG.
The shepherds were like our early western cowboys. They sat out under the stars and
sang songs. David was a shepherd, and he sang many of his songs out under the stars,
possibly even in that same field the shepherds were in. The point is, shepherds were often
good singers, and these particular shepherds had a theme to sing about as never before.
They echoed the angelic anthem as they glorified and praised God. They no doubt sang
about this event for years to come. All we know is that the shepherds song was the beginning
of Christian hymnology. Millions of songs have been composed since to praise God for the
giving of His Son.
What is a Christmas song? It is simply a means by which we express our enjoyment of
God. Do you think the shepherds enjoyed their experience of seeing the Christ-child? Of
course they did, and they passed on that enjoyment to others by expressing it in praise.
J. B. Phillips tells of an exciting evening in a youth center in London. The youth were
cheering and singing, and after awhile he suggested they spend some time in worship. One of
the youth said, "we don't know what you really mean by worship." Phillips responded, "It's
three cheers for God." We cheer our school, and we say three cheers for the red white and
blue. We cheer for what we enjoy and what we are thankful for. So why not songs of praise
as three cheers for God? God is an enjoyable God, and He is so because He is the
approachable God. This is the good news of Christmas, and wise are those who take
advantage of this reality. Jesus said, "I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life, no man comes
to the Father but by me." God gave us His Son so we could have a way to come to Him. If we
take God's gift of Jesus, and trust Him as our Savior, we have found the path of Life that
leads us to the approachable God.
CHAPTER FIVE
5. CHRISTMAS BABIES based on Luke 2:1-20
Elenor Cicok had a three year old daughter who developed an emotional block and ceased
to talk. She never said a word, not even mama when she wanted her mother. It was a terrible
ordeal as she went month after month in silence. Her mother taught her about God and
prayer, and read to her about Jesus. Her favorite picture in the book was of Mary holding
baby Jesus.
After two years of this, one day just before Christmas she was walking past the church
with Vicki, and she took her in. There was the Virgin Mary and the child. The girl suddenly
broke her silence and said, "Look! Baby Jesus!"
Babies have a way of opening up voices that otherwise are silent. Go walking through a
mall with a baby and total strangers will come up to you and talk about the baby. They would
never dream of approaching you without the baby present. Babies break down walls like
21. nothing else. Babies may not talk, but they motivate more talk than most anyone. The
Christmas baby is no exception. He has probably stimulated more words than any thousand
babies ever born.
Not all talk of babies is positive. Someone asked little Tommy, " how do you like your new
baby sister?" "She is all right," he said, "but there's a lot of things we needed more." There
was nothing man needed more on that first Christmas, however, than the baby Jesus. He was
the first born so he did not stimulate any of the jealousy problems that often come with a
later child. Johnny said,"sure there are no favorites in this family! If I bite my fingernails I
get a rap on the knuckles, but if baby eats her whole foot they think its cute." Jesus did not
have this sort of thing, but he did have to contend with Herod who had no room in his heart
for babies announced as the King of Israel. He so despised this infant king that he killed all
the infants in Bethlehem that could have been him. He marred that first Christmas with
tragedy because of his anti-baby attitude.
We do have to give Herod credit for one thing, he knew the potential of a baby. He was
not so naive as to think a baby is nothing to worry about. He recognized that a baby can be a
serious threat because babies represent the future, a future that will be changed because of
them. Herod, by his hostility to a baby, bore witness to the reality of baby power. When God
wants to change history He starts with a baby. That is why the Bible is so full of begats.
Somebody is always having a baby, and that meant a new chapter in God's plan.
For four hundred years Israel was enslaved in Egypt. Then baby Moses was born, and
that marked the beginning of a radical change for God's people. Their deliverance began
with the deliverance of this one baby. Moses had to be saved to become the savior of his
people.
So in the New Testament story, the deliverance of all men began with the deliverance of
the baby of Bethlehem. He had to be saved from Herod to become the Savior of the world.
Save a baby and you may be saving a family, a race, a nation, or a whole world. Baby power
is a major factor in all of history.
In 1809, Napoleon was the master of Europe and all eyes were on him. But the future
really belonged to the babies born that year. That was the year for the birth of Lincoln,
Gladstone, Tennyson, Poe, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Cyrus McCormick, Chopin and
Mendelssohn. These babies gave the world a creative future that outweighed all the damage
done by Napoleon. Europe was thinking of battles, but it was the babies that would change
the future. The decisive battles are all forgotten except to a few historians, but the decisive
babies are remembered by millions.
Wise men recognize the baby power in history. Socrates said, "Could I climb to the
highest place in Athens, I would lift my voice and proclaim: 'fellow citizens, why do ye turn
and scrape every stone to gather wealth and take so little care of your children, to whom one
day you must relinquish it all?'" He was wise enough to see the obvious. The people of God
in the Old Testament could see it as well for their hope of salvation hinged on babies.
God's very first command to Adam and Eve was in Genesis 1:28 where he says they are be
fruitful and multiply so as to fill the earth and subdue it. In other words, by means of babies
man would conquer the rest of creation. When they sinned and fell God did not change His
plan for it remained baby centered. We read in Genesis 3:15 that the offspring of Eve would
ever be in conflict with the offspring of Satan, and that Eve's would crush the head of
Satan's. The very first promise of salvation was centered in a baby. Baby power has always
been the hope of man because that is how God intends to save man. God confirms this again
by His promise to Abraham that by his seed all the families of the earth will be blessed. The
22. reason Christmas is a universal celebration is because it celebrates the birth of the baby that
fulfills that promise. The Baby of Bethlehem is the central focus of the entire universe, and
the entire plan of salvation.
This explains the reason for the child saving stories of the Old Testament. God had to
spare Isaac for the sake of His promise. God had to spare the seed of David for the sake of
His promise. David had many sons but they were all killed by family in-fighting. Only one
child was left by the name of Joash. The house of David hung by the single thread of one
little baby boy, but one was enough. By means of that baby God kept the line going to fulfill
the promise in the baby boy of Bethlehem.
Plutarch's story of Themistacles has him saying of his own little baby at his mother's
breast, "That child is master of the world!" His friend asked, "How can that be?"
Themistacles answers, "The Athenians are masters of the Greeks; the Greeks are masters of
the world; I am master of the Athenians; my wife is the master of me; and this little child is
the master of his mother. Therefore, this child is the master of the whole world!" If this was
true of that baby, how much more was it true of the Babe of Bethlehem who made the world,
and now had come into His world to redeem it? Someone described Christmas as the story of
a baby going after a lost ball to make it his own. Jesus came into this world to retrieve the
ball he made. It was His by right of creation, but now He was going to make it His by right of
redemption.
But why come as a baby? Why not as a grown man riding in from the desert on a white
stallion to take over the government of His people? This baby business seems so slow. Why
mess with years of immaturity and the need to grow? God could have taken a short cut and
skipped all this baby stuff. But instead, this baby stuff becomes the dominant theme of
Christmas. Dr. Luke makes the two long introductory chapters of his Gospel, baby centered.
They are detailed accounts of the birth of John the Baptist and Jesus. Matthew, likewise ,
devoted the first two chapters of his Gospel to the babies of the ages, and to the birth story of
Jesus and the wise men. Christmas is baby oriented. We have more detail about the
babyhood of Jesus than any other period of his life until his public ministry began. Let's look
at how Dr. Luke is baby centered in two ways. First look at his emphasis on-
I. BABY CENTERED COMMUNICATION
By this I mean baby talk and talk about babies in his first two chapters. Dr. Luke even
tells us about pre-natal communication. It sounds too spectacular to be true, but it is
confirmed by modern studies to be a reality. In Luke 1:41-44, we read of how Elizabeth tells
Mary that as soon as she greeted her the baby in her womb was so affected by the sound that
he leaped in her womb for joy. Can babies be affected by sounds outside the womb? Do they
receive some kind of communication from their external environment? Two Japanese
scientists, Ando and Hattori, did a study with two groups of infants. The first group spent
their prenatal months near the Osaka airport while the second group lived in a quiet
neighborhood. Babies from both groups were delivered at a hospital located under the flight
pattern. Those babies that grew up in their mother where the plane noises were common
were five times more likely to sleep through the sounds of the planes overhead. But those
babies that did not live near the airport would wake up screaming about 50% of the time
when the planes flew over. They demonstrated that the fetus does hear and adapt to the
sounds of its environment.
Anthony De Casper, at the Univ. of North Carolina, did elaborate studies that showed
babies even develop a preference for certain sounds before they are born. He devised a
nipple attached to an audiocassette player. If the baby sucked in a pattern of long sucks one
23. tape would play and if the baby took short sucks the other tape would play. The baby could
choose the sounds it would hear. One tape played the mother's voice and the other tape
played a strange woman's voice. Believe it or not, new born babies soon learn which method
of sucking gave them the mother's voice, and that became their choice.
He asked 16 pregnant women to read the book, The Cat In The Hat, twice a day to their
unborn fetus for the last six and a half weeks before birth. Then shortly after birth these
babies were given the sucking test with their mother's voice on both tapes. But on one she is
reading The Cat In The Hat. On the other she is reading another child's poem. The babies
consistently preferred The Cat In The Hat.
The point is, babies do hear in their mother's womb, and they are affected by what they
hear. All that Dr. Luke records about the environment of John and Jesus in their mother's
womb is not irrelevant. He tells us of two expectant mother's who gave each other joy and
comfort, and of an environment of song with Mary and Zechariah praising God. An
atmosphere like this has a definite impact on babies in their mother's womb. The Bible
would support the idea that it is never too soon to start influencing your baby by positive
communication.
But all of this is pre-Christmas communication. On that first Christmas the Angel of the
Lord was the first to speak a baby centered message. He said to the shepherds, "today in the
town of David a Saviour has been born to you." I checked other translations and sure
enough this baby is said to have been born to them. The RSV puts it even stronger, "for to
you is born this day in the city of David a Savior." Now we know the Christ-child was born
to Mary, but the angels message makes us wonder just whose baby was it? The angel of the
Lord seems to be communicating that this baby is born to all who need a Savior. And if this
is the case, every sinner who has ever lived and who ever will, has had a baby born to them.
The shepherds were all males, yet they had a baby born to them.
There is no other baby in the history of humanity that is anything like this baby of
Bethlehem. If He is everybody's baby, then the whole human race becomes potentially one
family again in this baby. All were one in Adam, but that oneness was shattered, and the race
became scattered and divided. But now in this baby, born to all, the only universal baby in
history, all men become one again, and are related to the degree to which they relate to this
baby. This baby becomes the basis for all men to be one family again. Anyone who receives
this child as being born to them becomes a part of the family of God. This is baby power to
the highest degree.
Jennifer Forsthoffer needed a bone marrow transplant to stay alive. Neither parent had
the right tissue, and so all depended on the birth of another child. Seven months later
Jennifer's brother Eric was born. He became the youngest donor in U.S. history. That new
born baby became her savior. What Eric was to Jennifer, baby Jesus was to the whole
human race. The salvation of man depended upon a perfect sacrifice for sin. The baby of
Bethlehem was the only baby ever born who could supply that need, and be our Savior.
This is a great tool for witnessing. You can ask any person if they have ever had a baby
born to them. If they say yes, you can ask if it made them related to every family on earth.
When they question your sanity you can share how the baby of Bethlehem does just that
when we receive Him as God's Gift to us. If they say no, you can point out again that the
Babe of Bethlehem was born to all who need a Savior-to all who know they have sin they
cannot conquer and wipe away-to all who face death with no assurance they can live forever.
The Gospel can be communicated in such a baby centered way, and this is wonderful for
almost everybody loves a baby. When they can see what the Christmas baby means to them,
24. they can be moved to open their hearts and give Him room.
The value of baby centered communication is that it stimulates curiosity. Everybody
wants to see the new baby. When the shepherds heard of the baby born in Bethlehem, their
response was, lets go see, and they hurried off to see the baby. A baby is a wondrous thing.
The miracle of birth is a miracle that science cannot erode. That is why a baby is such a
great tool to led men to God. A baby forces men to be in touch with the mystery of life. The
poet put it-
The wonderment
in a small child's eyes,
The ageless awe
in the Christmas skies;
The nameless joy
that fills the air,
The throngs that kneel
in praise and prayer...
These are the things
that make us know
That men may come
and men may go,
But none will
ever find a way
To banish Christ
from Christmas Day...
For with each child
there's born again
A Mystery that baffles men.
There have been billions of people who have lived on this planet. Millions never became
toddlers. Millions never became teens or young singles. Millions never became middle aged
or old. The one thing they all have had in common is that they were all babies. Babyhood is
the most universal characteristic of mankind, and God's Son, the Savior of mankind, was
also a baby.
So tiny, soft and crying,
He hardly looked the part,
Of one sent by God Almighty
To change the human heart.
The wise men did not come to see a star, they came to see a baby. Nobody is truly wise
nor do they grasp the essence of Christmas until they see it is histories greatest example of
baby power. Next, let's look at-
II. BABY CENTERED CELEBRATION.
When people have a baby we congratulate them. They feel rewarded for their long wait,
and they express their joy in some form of celebration. We have already noted that the first
person to celebrate the Incarnation was John the Baptist. He leaped for joy even in his
mother's womb. Mary soon got into the spirit and was singing, "My soul praises the Lord
and my spirit rejoices in God my Savior." Then when Jesus was born the angels joined in
the celebration, and we read in verses 13 and 14, "Suddenly a great company of the heavenly
hosts appeared with the angel, praising God and saying Glory to God in the highest." There
was celebration in heaven over this unique baby.
25. Then when the shepherds checked it out and found the baby, verse 20 says, "The
shepherds returned, glorifying and praising God for all the things they had heard and seen."
Every being who saw the baby of Bethlehem was soon in a state of celebration. Today this
celebration circles the entire globe.
Babies can touch people that may not be touched by anything else. Nancy Bingham, in
Oklahoma, just ran into her neighbors house to make a phone call. While she was there she
saw her car being driven away. Her baby was in the back seat sleeping. She was frantic, and
then things even got worse. The news came on that Wolf Marker, the outlaw, had just
escaped from the local prison. She screamed in despair for she feared she would never see
her baby again. She and her husband had waited ten years for this baby. Nobody every
prayed harder for a child, and now it was taken from them. The county roads were
swarming with police, and neighbors were looking for the escaped convict.
Nancy just wept and prayed for hours, and as darkness fell, so did her hope. But then she
heard a sound on the front porch. She ran to the door, and when she opened it there was her
baby with this note attached, "I'm sorry, I didn't know your baby was in the car." This
hardened criminal had risked getting caught to bring back her baby. She was so touched by
his being touched by her baby, she began to hope he would get away. He didn't, but he
revealed that even bad guys can be moved to compassion by a baby. Not all bad guys are as
bad as Herod. Some cannot bear to hurt a baby. God made Christmas baby centered
because baby power touches almost every human heart. Helen Steiner Rice put it-
God sent the little Christ Child
So man might understand
"That a little child shall lead them"
To that unknown "Promised Land". . .
For God in His great wisdom
Knew that men would rise to power
And forget His Holy Precepts
In their great triumphal hour. . .
He knew that they would question
And doubt the Holy Birth
And turn their time and talents
To the pleasures of this earth. . .
But every new discovery
Is an open avenue
To more and greater mysteries,
And man's search is never through. . .
For man can never fathom
The mysteries of the Lord.
Or understand His promise
Of a heavenly reward. . .
For no one but a little Child
With simple Faith and Love
Can lead man's straying footsteps
To higher Realms Above!
Christmas is a baby centered celebration because God used a baby to bring us back into
26. fellowship with Himself. Molly Brooks wrote,
Christmas is love
tugging men back to God
with the powerful clasp of a
tiny hand
reaching out from a bed
of straw.
Jesus is the only person in history who chose to be a baby. No other baby ever had a
choice. This tells us just how important the baby centeredness of Christmas is to Him. The
message of Christmas is not that the angels came; that the shepherds came, or that the wise
men came, but that the baby came. The baby that would make it possible for all men to
become a part of the family of God, has come into the world. Thank God for this Christmas
baby. "To those who receive Him, to them He gave the right to be called the children of
God." Take Jesus as your Saviour and you have eternal life as part of God's family. That is
the ultimate in baby power, and it can be yours through this Christmas baby.
CHAPTER SIX
6. THE COMPLEXITY OF CHRISTMAS based on
Luke 1:26-45
Approaching the Christmas season in 1972, Fred Putman decided to have a evening in
front of a cozy fire. He used two boxes of matches, one pint of started fluid, and the Sunday
addition of the New York Times, and still could not get the fireplace burning. Bent on
romance by fire-light, he decided to drive to the Hideaway Lodge in the nearby mountains.
As they approached this fireplace equipped paradise, he through his lit cigarette out the car
window and started a forest fire. It devastated 382 acres of timber, and burned the
Hideaway Lodge to cinders. Thus he demonstrated one of the finer points of M urphy's Law,
which is, if several things can go wrong the one that will go wrong is the one that will do the
most damage.
I am sure that Joseph and Mary felt their lives were being controlled at times by
Murphy's Law. They had a series of things go wrong and it seemed like there was no end to
their bad luck. First of all, Mary was pregnant out of wedlock. Today this is still high on the
stress list, but back then it was high on the death list. You could be stoned for this back then.
The Angel of the Lord helped them get through this crisis, but then they got hit with
government red tape and had to go to Bethlehem just as Mary was due to deliver her child.
But this was not the last straw. When they got there the town was so crowded there was no
room in the inn. Joseph didn't burn it down, but the end result was the same. They had no
place to stay, and were forced to camp out with the animals in a stable.
Life had dealt them with one major inconvenience after another, and they must have
wondered if God had made another deal with Satan, like the one he made concerning Job.
They must have felt like they were on Lucifer lane. This would be an especially tempting
conclusion when they heard Herod was out to kill their baby, and they had to flee to Egypt to
save him.
27. When the Savior of the world has to be saved, and his parents have to be uprooted and
live like exiled criminals, then you begin to see what Murphy's Law is all about. It is about a
fallen world where nothing is guaranteed to go smooth. Even the plan of God to save the
world has to work it's way through the maze where Murphy's Law can strike at any time. If
you long for a trouble free life, you are in the wrong world-that is the next time around with
a new heaven and a new earth. But the only way to get to that one is to get through this one.
Even God's own Son could not escape the reality of a fallen world.
The point is, nobody is picking on you when-
1. Your leak proof seals leak.
2. You need tools to get a child proof cap off your medicine bottle.
3. The day after your warranty runs out, your appliance ceases to work.
4. The tool you drop while working on your car rolls under the car to the exact center.
5. The repairman will never have seen a model quite like yours before.
6. If you keep something because you may need it, you never need it.
7. If you throw it away you will soon need it.
8. Your best made Christmas plans can fall apart and your dream gift become a nightmare.
The bright and shiny and fully assembled toy you see on display in the store is an illusion.
What you actually buy is a box of parts, some of which are already pre-broken. Tom
Mullen, in his book Birthdays, Holidays And Other Disasters, gives us one man's perspective
on Christmas toys-
The box will come equipped with a complete set of directions so simple that any
Ph.D. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology could follow them in a year-if he
had
a crew of men to help and a psychiatrist standing by.
In short, for those gifted few who, as the saying goes, are
"handy about the house," putting things together under
the pressure of Christmas expectation is less than a traumatic experience.
To many of us, however, who cannot hang
pictures straight or dismantle an electric razor for cleaning,
the entire situation breeds inferiority feelings that make
Charlie Brown seem like an egomaniac.
Thus, our children feel neglected because they have a
wagon which has one wheel that refuses to turn. We broil
our hamburgers on a grill so wobbly that burning coals roll
from side to side. Our sons end up playing with dolls
because the jungle gym we purchased is lopsided,
undoubtedly due to the fact that we used a hammer to pound
the "short uprights" over the "long uprights" when, according
to the directions, one was to "slip easily over the other"!
He goes on to deal with batteries not included, toys that won't work, stores that are closed
and other tales of woe that are nearly endless. The measure of misery around a Merry
Christmas because of things that go wrong is vast. The more complex our world gets the
more things there are to go wrong. The complexity of Christmas is the result of the
complexity of life. It is not just Christmas, but all of life that is complex.
Joseph and Mary had a lot of complexity surrounding the birth of Jesus. They had to flee
28. to Egypt for several years. How they paid their taxes is beyond me. How they left a
forwarding address which Herod could not trace is beyond me. Maybe they didn't pay their
taxes and had an awful debt when they returned. Nobody knows about the hardships and
burdens they carried. All we know for sure is life was hard for them. They were exiled and
away from all their family and friends. The first birthday of Jesus was in Egypt with none of
their family to celebrate with them. They were not at home for Christmas which has become
a major objective in our culture. One of the secular songs popular at this season says,
Oh, there's no place like home for the holidays,
For no matter how far away you roam,
If you want to be happy in a million ways,
For the holidays you can't beat home sweet home.
The paradox is that the birth of the one who made this universal family tradition so
precious was born away from home, and His birth forced His parents to be away from home
for several years. We often see the first Christmas though rose colored glasses tinted by
centuries of tradition. But the plain facts are that Mary and Joseph had a very difficult time
with all the events surrounding that first Christmas. The goal of all this complexity is to
make it possible for all men to get home to God where they can dwell forever in the Father's
house. But meanwhile, to get to that end, everyone involved had to leave home.
1. Jesus had to leave His Father's throne and kingly crown. He did not get back home for 33
years.
2. Joseph and Mary left Nazareth and did not get back for several years.
3. The wise men left home in response to the star and did not get back for many months.
Their was complexity in many lives that first Christmas, but lets focus in on that which
Mary had to endure. First lets just note-
I. HER COMPLEXITY
When the angel Gabriel came to her it says in verse 29 that she was greatly troubled. This
is the only place this Greek word is used in the New Testament. It means to trouble
thoroughly. Many people are troubled, but only Mary is said to be troubled from her head to
her toes. The angel responded to her by telling her not to be afraid for she had found favor
with God. He knew she would be afraid, and needed assurance that he was there with good
news.
When he told her she was to have a child she was confused and asked how it was possible
since she was a virgin. He assured her that nothing was impossible with God and that she
would conceive by the Holy Spirit. He surprised her with the news that Elizabeth was also
having a child. God was breaking into history by means of the two most unlikely women. One
was beyond child-bearing years, and the other was not yet ready to bear a child. God chose
the too old and the too young to change history. God loves the challenge of complexity, and
will use people for his purpose that nobody else would choose. Everyone is a potential tool in
God's plan. It was complex for Mary but we see next
II. HER CONFORMITY.
Mary responded to a very complex situation with a spirit of submission. She did not
demand a detailed theological or medical explanation of just how an old lady and a virgin
were going to have children. She dealt with complexity by acknowledging that all things are
possible with God, and she just put herself in His hands. Her willingness to, by simple faith,
conform to God's will is, no doubt, why she was chosen by God to be the mother of His Son
None would dare to criticize Mary if she would have shed tears of fear and frustration. If
she would have said to Joseph, " I don't know how much more of this I can take! Now we
29. have to flee to Egypt to save our child and not be able to take him back to our families. Our
life is uprooted and chaotic and I am a nervous wreck." If she ever felt that way it would be
understandable, but we have no record of any such negative emotions. All that is recorded of
Mary shows only her noble spirit of conformity to the will of God. She said only, "May it be
to me as you have said."
A Christian travelling by plane told of taking off in the rain. It was dark and dreary, but
as the plane climbed it broke through the clouds and into the dazzling light of the sun. One of
the passengers said, "I suppose every day is a sunny day if we can only get enough altitude."
Mary was able to do this, and rise above the complexity of her situation and conform to the
will of God knowing that He would accomplish His purpose if she would just conform and
obey.
Then, we see another way she coped with the complexity. Let's consider-
III. HER COMMUNITY.
Mary did not bear the burden alone, but she hurried off to Elizabeth where she had a
trusted person to share with who was also a part of God's plan. God does not expect us to be
loners in the complex issues of life. Even the Lone Ranger had his Tonto, and Robinson
Crusoe had his Friday. God expects everyone to have a community of at least one person to
share with. God Himself is a community of Father, Son and Holy Spirit. It is the essence of
His nature to be a community of communicating Persons. God is never alone for He is by
definition a community. We are Godlike when we have another person we can share with as
we deal with life's complexities.
Even in the Trappist Monastery, where they are not allowed to talk, there is an exception
on Christmas. They can talk all day that day for this is a day of communication, and for the
building up of community. There is a need for community all the time for most people, for in
this fallen world we tend to feel lonely and insecure. Christmas often magnifies this
insecurity for many. Ben Kenshaw wrote in his book, Plain Bread, about his insecurity. He
wrote,
I can remember going to bed and lying there with my eyes wide
open for what seemed like hours. I was actually afraid to go
to sleep for fear I might die before Christmas morning came.
"Now you just watch," I said to myself. "You just watch me
die tonight. All those good things are going to happen tomorrow
on Christmas and I'll die and miss everything."
I didn't, of course, and it turned out to be a very good Christmas.
But the struggle between feelings of security and a developing
inferiority complex were all underway. The sense of stress and
turmoil had been planted by some alien hand. As they grew, they
struggled constantly to crowd out the warmth and love so often
demonstrated by my mom and dad. Looking back, I have no
doubt whatsoever that they loved me, and I can only remember
one argument between the two of them. Yet, being a human in a
fallen world, I had a hard time holding onto the feeling of being loved.
His testimony must reflect the feelings of millions of children. We need constant
reassurance that we are loved by God and by others and that we are an accepted part of the
community. We are broken to some degree, and are like the world of toys, and we do not
function the way we ought to. We need community to function at our best.
You will notice that Mary did not sing her song of praise alone, but rather, when she was
30. with Elizabeth. In fact, all of the Christmas songs of the N.T. were sung in community. The
angels sang in the presence of one another and the shepherds. The song of Zechariah was a
public praise before his neighbors. And Mary and Elizabeth both were filled with the spirit
of praise in the company of each other. Even John the Baptist, as a fetus, leaped for joy in his
mother's womb in the presence of Jesus in his mother's womb. Singing and praise is a
community experience usually. It is in the fellowship of the body that we most often feel like
singing the praises of God. This is effective in helping us cope with the complexities of
Christmas and all of life.
Christians, be joyful, and praise your salvation,
Sing for today your Redeemer is born.
Cease to be fearful, forget lamentation,
Haste with thanksgiving to greet this glad morn!
Come, let us worship, and fall down before Him,
Let us with voices united adore Him.
Mary coped successfully with the complexity of that first Christmas by means of
conformity to heaven and community on earth. May God help us to do likewise as we
approach Christmas. The complexity of life and Christmas is offset by the simplicity of
God's plan of salvation. By simply trusting Jesus as Saviour we can have eternal life and
enjoy forever being in the family of God. Take God's simple offer of life in Jesus, and escape
all the long range effects of the complexity of Christmas.
CHAPTER SEVEN
7. CHRISTMAS IS CONTAGIOUS based on Luke
2:8-20
Celestine Sibley tells of her father saying to her mother one grayish December morning,
"the lumber business is going badly. It looks like a poor Christmas this year." She cried
out, "A poor Christmas-shame on you! There is no such thing as a poor Christmas! Times
can be hard and people poor but Christmas stands by itself as glorious and unmatched by
anything else in history."
Here was a woman who had an enthusiasm for Christmas for she saw it as a celebration of
good news that all the bad news in the world could not alter. A poor Christmas was a
contradiction in terms. You might just as well speak of a poor ocean, a poor moon, a poor
sun, or a poor galaxy. There are some things you just can't diminish, and Christmas is one
of them.
Christmas is a celebration of a glorious event that all the powers of hell cannot make not
to have been. It is to late for a poor Christmas to ever be. The spirit of Christmas has
spread around the world. Ever since that night the angels infected the shepherds with this
spirit, it has been contagious. We usually connect the word contagious with disease and the
spreading of germs from one person to another. But if you look the word up in the
dictionary you discover it applies to positive things too. Enthusiasm can be contagious, and
praise can be contagious. The communication of any influence to the mind or heart can be
31. become contagious.
This is what we see happening on the first Christmas. Visitors from another world
brought something into earth's atmosphere. It is a good thing angels came before the age of
science. Scientist worry about alien contamination. When moon rocks were brought back to
earth they were worried they could contain some organism that could spread diseases for
which we had no cure. They kept these rocks isolated until they were thoroughly checked
out. They wanted no alien germs on our planet.
Can you imagine what they would have expected these Christmas angels to go through if
they put rocks through such restrictions. They would have insisted that they stay in some
sort of angelic delousing chamber before they were permitted to communicate with men.
The risks would be enormous that these beings could spread something that would radically
alter the human race. The fact is, they did just that. These angels were contagious with the
good news of great joy. This spirit broke through the barrier between heaven and earth and
infected the shepherds. They were instantly cured of their fear, and filled with enthusiasm to
see the announced child in Bethlehem. Verse 17 says, "When they had seen Him, they
spread the word concerning what had been told them about this child." What they had was
contagious, and they began to spread it to everyone with whom they had contact.
Before the first Christmas day had ended the world had an epidemic on its hands, for the
Christmas spirit was contagious. It was spread by mouth from one person to another. If
you were a carrier you could give it to a lot of people very quickly.
Satan and many of his mad scientists have tried to prevent the spread of this contagious
spirit. They have labored hard to find a cure, but to no avail. The Christmas contagion has
leaped all boundaries and spread into all the world. A single carrier of the Christmas spirit
can infect unlimited numbers of people.
The guidepost, some years back, told the story of an American family in France. The
parents and three sons were having a perfectly awful time. There car broke down, their
hotel was a dump, and they had to walk in the rain to a drab little joint for dinner. The wife
ordered a meal in French and got something she didn't want. The husband called her stupid
and their attitudes matched the negative atmosphere. A French couple at the next table were
not exactly helping. The father slapped one of his children and started him crying. A
German couple on the other side were obviously arguing even though they could not
understand a word they were saying.
The only happy person in the place was an American sailor who sat by himself writing a
letter. An old French flower woman came in and tried to sell flowers at each table, but no
one was in the mood for flowers. She sat down and ordered a bowl of soup. "Can you
imagine," she said to the waiter, "I haven't sold a flower all day so it's soup for me on
Christmas Eve." They all sat there in heavy silence, never dreaming that there was a
contagious spirit about to invade their lives.
The American sailor finished his meal and walked over to the flower woman. He said,
"Merry Christmas. I want two of your little courages. How much are they?" She said,
"One franc apiece." He said, "I'll take two", and he handed her a twenty franc note. "I'll
get change", she said. And he said, "Don't bother, it is my Christmas present to you." Then
he came over to the table of the American family and gave the wife one of the courages. He
pressed the other into his letter and said, " Merry Christmas everybody", as he walked out
into the night. The atmosphere in that restaurant exploded with the Christmas spirit. The
old flower woman began to dance and wave her twenty franc note. She invited the piano
player to join her for a feast. He began to play happy music and the customers all joined in