Miraculous Births: Samson

Miraculous Births  •  Sermon  •  Submitted   •  Presented
0 ratings
· 4 views

Through the promise of the birth of Samson, we are given a foretaste of the salvation that will come through Christ.

Notes
Transcript
Introduction
We are officially in the Christmas season.
I love this time of year.
But 55 years in, there’s not much that’s surprising about it anymore.
It was fun with as a small kid
and it was fun with small kids;
you get to live out the newness of it through them.
But for myself, Christmas is pretty familiar.
There’s not much that’s unexpected.
I’m probably going to get some clothes.
I usually tell my wife basically what I want.
and cash is king!
Don’t get me wrong.
I love Christmas.
But people say familiarity breeds contempt.
And I guess as I’ve grown familiar with Christmas,
I understand why some people have a hard time with Christmas.
The traditions are getting stale.
There’s not much to look forward to.
And all the festivities and decorations do little to hide the pain of real life.
Even while the dancing and festivities of the Macy’s parade is going on in one channel,
the next channel shows all the scandal, abuse, and horrors of the world.
And so all the trappings, lights, and events of Christmas
end up seeming like a thin coat of paint over a broken rundown world.
And before long, that paint will be washed away.
Is that all Christmas is?
Are there any surprises left for cynical, hurting people like us?
Well, God has always acted in surprising ways to save his people,
and one of the ways he does that is through miraculous births.
When all is dark, when hope is gone, a baby is born.
Christmas is all about God accomplishing the unexpected,
the astonishing, the unthinkable in order to save his people.
If this is how God has always acted,
then maybe even in a broken and messed up world as ours,
God still has something surprising to show us in his Word today.
Before I read Judges 13, let me give a bit of context.
Up to this point, the people of Israel have been rescued from slavery in Egypt,
they have been constituted as a nation belonging to God,
and now, according to God’s promises,
he has settled them into the land of Canaan, the Promised Land.
But when we come to the Book of Judges,
we hear the story of what happened
after that first generation of leaders died.
Though they had led the people in settling in the land,
Israel did not yet have full possession of it.
They had not fully driven out the Canaanites.
And so, their final command was that Israel was
to continue in obedience to God in conquering the land.
Each tribe had been assigned their territory
and they were to possess it.
And the rest of the Book of Judges
is basically about Israel’s failure to carry out that command.
Instead of going to war, the Israelites got comfortable.
They began mingling with the surrounding nations,
adopting their horrific customs of child sacrifice
and worshiping their pagan gods.
As a result, God would hand the people of Israel over to their enemies
and they would be oppressed.
But then the people would realize their sin and cry out in repentance,
and God in his mercy would raise up a deliverer, a Judge,
who would defeat their enemies, bringing in a time of peace
until the next time the people rebelled.
This pattern of sin, oppression, repentance, deliverance, and peace
is repeated at least six times throughout the Book of Judges.
And yet as we move along the Book,
the cycle seems to be spiraling downward,
Israel becomes more and more like the nations around them,
and their judges are shown to be deeply flawed.
Which brings us to Judges 13,
the last of the judges highlighted for us in the story.
Judges 13 CSB
The Israelites again did what was evil in the Lord’s sight, so the Lord handed them over to the Philistines forty years. There was a certain man from Zorah, from the family of Dan, whose name was Manoah; his wife was unable to conceive and had no children. The angel of the Lord appeared to the woman and said to her, “Although you are unable to conceive and have no children, you will conceive and give birth to a son. Now please be careful not to drink wine or beer, or to eat anything unclean; for indeed, you will conceive and give birth to a son. You must never cut his hair, because the boy will be a Nazirite to God from birth, and he will begin to save Israel from the power of the Philistines.” Then the woman went and told her husband, “A man of God came to me. He looked like the awe-inspiring angel of God. I didn’t ask him where he came from, and he didn’t tell me his name. He said to me, ‘You will conceive and give birth to a son. Therefore, do not drink wine or beer, and do not eat anything unclean, because the boy will be a Nazirite to God from birth until the day of his death.’ ” Manoah prayed to the Lord and said, “Please, Lord, let the man of God you sent come again to us and teach us what we should do for the boy who will be born.” God listened to Manoah, and the angel of God came again to the woman. She was sitting in the field, and her husband, Manoah, was not with her. 10 The woman ran quickly to her husband and told him, “The man who came to me the other day has just come back!” 11 So Manoah got up and followed his wife. When he came to the man, he asked, “Are you the man who spoke to my wife?” “I am,” he said. 12 Then Manoah asked, “When your words come true, what will be the boy’s responsibilities and work?” 13 The angel of the Lord answered Manoah, “Your wife needs to do everything I told her. 14 She must not eat anything that comes from the grapevine or drink wine or beer. And she must not eat anything unclean. Your wife must do everything I have commanded her.” 15 “Please stay here,” Manoah told him, “and we will prepare a young goat for you.” 16 The angel of the Lord said to him, “If I stay, I won’t eat your food. But if you want to prepare a burnt offering, offer it to the Lord.” (Manoah did not know he was the angel of the Lord.) 17 Then Manoah said to him, “What is your name, so that we may honor you when your words come true?” 18 “Why do you ask my name,” the angel of the Lord asked him, “since it is beyond understanding?” 19 Manoah took a young goat and a grain offering and offered them on a rock to the Lord, who did something miraculous while Manoah and his wife were watching. 20 When the flame went up from the altar to the sky, the angel of the Lord went up in its flame. When Manoah and his wife saw this, they fell facedown on the ground. 21 The angel of the Lord did not appear again to Manoah and his wife. Then Manoah realized that it was the angel of the Lord. 22 “We’re certainly going to die,” he said to his wife, “because we have seen God!” 23 But his wife said to him, “If the Lord had intended to kill us, he wouldn’t have accepted the burnt offering and the grain offering from us, and he would not have shown us all these things or spoken to us like this.” 24 So the woman gave birth to a son and named him Samson. The boy grew, and the Lord blessed him. 25 Then the Spirit of the Lord began to stir him in the Camp of Dan, between Zorah and Eshtaol.
Let’s consider this story by looking at the main characters involved.
There are three characters to look at
and see how God saves
an undeserving people
using an unlikely couple
through his Spirit-filled warrior.

God Saves an Undeserving People

So first, let’s consider how God saves an undeserving people.
Because by chapter 13 of Judges, we are at the bottom of the spiral.
Once again, verse 1 opens with the Israelites doing evil in the eyes of the Lord,
and so the Lord delivers them over to the Philistines.
The Philistines had come from the sea
and settled along the coast of the Mediterranean
around the time Israel entered the land;
they established themselves firmly in the land.
The Philistines were so successful that the Israelite tribe next to them,
the tribe of Dan, basically abdicated their task.
You can read in Joshua 19 and Judges 18,
how Dan had such a hard time driving out the Canaanites in their territory
that a large group of them basically left their allotted territory
and resettled themselves way to the north,
leaving a much smaller group to fend for themselves.
By the time we get to Judges 13,
the Philistines are in control,
and Israel is living under Philistine oppression for 40 years,
which is far longer than any of the oppressions in the previous stories.
And notice something else.
Whereas in all the previous stories,
the people of Israel cried out to God for help,
here the Israelites don’t even cry out anymore.
No, the picture that we get of Israel is that
they have grown quite accustomed to the oppression of the Philistines.
This was part of the judgment of God.
Israel did evil in the eyes of the Lord,
“so the Lord delivered them into the hands of the Philistines.”
The worst part of that oppression
was that Israel no longer cared that they were being oppressed.
The most severe judgment that God can bring
is when he gives us over to our sin,
then we actually kind of like it.
And as a result,
Israel is in danger of losing their identity as the people of God,
and eventually being totally consumed.
As they intermarried, as they adopted their worship,
their gods, their customs,
all of God’s promises to bring salvation to the nations
through the descendants of Abraham were in danger of being lost.
Is this the condition that we live in today?
For those that don’t know, I am a Lord of the Rings fan.
The basic story is this evil power that wants to rule the world
And does it through a power invested in a ring
The heroes of the story are charged
With destroying that ring.
The ring is a ring of power, great power
and the ring actually represents sin in the life of the believer
It’s a distraction.
One of the characters named Sméagol or Gollum
Has kept this ring for hundreds of years
He keeps it around him
And one point loses the ring and doesn’t even know it.
It is his precious.
We see what the ring is capable of doing
This isn’t an instant transformation
The power of the ring works over time
To transform the ring bearer into something horrible.
The ring bearer however, never realizes they are actually being transformed
Even physically, mentally, emotionally transformed.
They simply change over time.
Is there any evil in this world that you are content with or at least willing to tolerate?
What sins in your own life have you made peace with?
Got any pet sins?
Those that have changed you over time?
Those you could hold in your hand and call “my precious?”
Sins that over time harden your heart?
The truth is, all of us are like the Israelites;
we have been hardened toward sin;
we have grown accustomed to it.
Desensitized toward it.
Do you know what that’s like?
Have you ever nursed a secret sin,
a lust, an inappropriate relationship, an addiction?
As long as we keep it a secret, we may “know” it’s wrong,
but we can get over it pretty quickly.
It’s amazing how hard our consciences can get.
We have an amazing ability to compartmentalize our lives:
The man who nurses a secret, dark addiction
and at the same time dares teach his friends about how to fight that addiction.
The woman who complains about her neighbor’s slander,
even while prayer gossiping about her to all her friends.
The church harbors prejudice and unforgiveness,
even while we praise God and take the Lord’s Supper.
Perhaps at one point our consciences were struck by this.
But in our secrecy, in our hypocrisy,
our hearts harden, and we move on.
But if you’ve ever been so blessed,
remember how it felt that time you got caught?
When you were found out and all your sin was exposed?
How your heart felt like it was going to beat out of your chest?
And you felt like it was all over?
And for the first time with everyone else looking in,
you saw just how ugly, awful, and wicked your sin was?
And as painful as that was,
in God’s mercy, that was a moment of clarity.
You had awakened to the devastation of your sin.
And in that moment,
someone spoke the hope of the gospel to you
and that you cried out to God for mercy.
Here’s the point:
No matter who you are this morning,
we are those who need to cry out to God for help.
This is the discipline of confession.
This is what Israel failed to do.
Whether you’ve been caught or not,
we are those in bondage to sin.
And confession is how we fight against a hard heart.
Cry out to God for help.
Ask him to show you your sin.
Pray that he would give you a sensitive Spirit to sin.
And confess your sins to God. The apostle John writes:
1 John 1:8–9 CSB
8 If we say, “We have no sin,” we are deceiving ourselves, and the truth is not in us. 9 If we confess our sins, he is faithful and righteous to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.
Friends, this is our condition this morning.
We are those who have rebelled against God,
who have been hardened by sin,
who are being oppressed by evil from within and from without,
and we don’t even know it. What is our hope?
Well, it’s right here:
God brings about his judgment,
and then he sets about saving his people from that judgment.
Yes, we are utterly undeserving.
But God’s grace is greater than our sin.
God’s grace is greater than our stupidity.
The God who delivered the Israelites over to the Philistines
will now deliver them from the Philistines.
Aren’t you glad that God’s help
is not limited merely to what you know to ask for?
God brings to us a salvation
that is beyond what we even know to ask.
The God who judges is also the God who saves.
So if you feel your undeservedness, then listen up!
There is hope here for you.
God saves an undeserving people,
and He does it by

Using an Unlikely Couple

Manoah and his wife are an unlikely couple for God to use in delivering his people.
We see in verse 2 that they are from the tribe of Dan,
that tribe which basically had abdicated their responsibility.
And clearly, this is not a family of warriors.
Manoah seems to be a simple farmer.
And to his obscurity, we can also add an impossibility.
They are barren and childless.
Manoah’s wife was sterile, the text says.
How long did Manoah and his wife live with that heartache?
How often must they have prayed for a child?
In that society, to be without children would have been shameful
and produced great insecurity for the future.
But this is not the last time we’re going to encounter
a couple unable to have children in this sermon series.
It seems God has a special place for the barren.
Why? Because it’s through them
that he is going to show that salvation comes entirely from Him.
It’s this couple’s barrenness that makes them particularly useful to God!
And so, the angel of the Lord appears to this couple.
A quick aside.
Who is this angel of the Lord?
Manoah’s wife describes him as a man of God in verse 6,
but clearly there’s also something supernatural about him.
There certainly are situations when the Old Testament speaks
of messengers and angels sent from God for service.
But here, it seems that this angel is himself divine.
In verse 18, he doesn’t reveal his name
because it is wonderful, beyond understanding.
In verse 19, the narrator refers to the angel as the Lord.
This isn’t the first time where God himself appears
to speak to his people and to carry out his purposes.
Despite Israel’s sinfulness,
God’s presence remained with his people.
And if this is the pre-incarnate Christ,
did he think of the day when he himself
would be born miraculously to an obscure couple?
But for now, the angel of the Lord has come to bring Manoah’s wife a message.
Though she is barren, God is going to work a miracle in her womb,
and she is going to have a son!
And this son is going to be a Nazirite from birth.
You can read about that in Numbers 6,
but the Nazirite vow was basically a way for men and women (not priests)
to devote a period of their lives to God.
When they did so, they had to abstain from wine and other alcoholic drinks.
They had to avoid contact with anything ceremonially unclean.
Even if a family member died,
they could not come in contact with the dead body.
And the sign of their devotion was their hair.
They could not cut their hair
for as long as they were under the Nazirite vow.
This was a way for any man or woman
to enter into a period of consecrated service to God.
What does that mean to be consecrated?
Well, it means that they are now set apart to be used by God,
to be devoted for his service.
It’s like your fine china.
Your fine china has been set apart for special occasions.
You don’t use your fine china as a water bowl for your dog
or to hold your composting.
People under the Nazirite vow functioned the same way.
They were devoting themselves to God,
for a special service to God,
and they were marked out from everybody else
by those three characteristics.
And what would be the service that this boy would render to God?
Judges 13:5 CSB
5 and he will begin to save Israel from the power of the Philistines.”
Though the rest of the tribe had fled up north,
this boy would be a warrior and alone he would fight for his people.
Well, in the rest of the story, we see a number of interesting exchanges.
Manoah’s wife tells her husband about what happened,
but Manoah is not content with that.
He’s got questions too.
And so he prays asking for this “man of God” to come again.
And God in his patience comes again,
but he appears to Manoah’s wife again, so she has to go get him.
Well, Manoah comes at the angel of the Lord with his questions,
but the angel basically repeats the same directions.
Maybe Manoah was expecting more,
like “Make sure your son signs up for tae kwon do classes
or learns under this great warrior”—
but there’s nothing like that.
No, this boy will be great because of God.
And therefore, the only instructions worth repeating
are the same ones as before.
This is the full extent of his instructions for their parenting!
Manoah’s wife is to avoid alcoholic drink and eating anything unclean.
He repeats, “She must do everything I have commanded her.”
If Manoah has any part to play in this,
it’s supporting his wife and
helping her fulfill those commands during her pregnancy.
Well, Manoah invites the angel to have a meal with them,
but the angel doesn’t accept his hospitality.
He’s not here to receive Manoah’s favors but to accomplish his mission.
So instead, he accepts a burnt offering from Manoah,
and at that point, he reveals his identity
as he ascends to heaven in the flame of the offering.
This was the Lord himself.
And once Manoah realizes this, he despairs,
because no man can see God and live.
But his wife is the voice of reason.
Let me pause for a moment and say this
If God has spoken to you,
then this is a sign of his favor, not his judgment.
Whenever you have a chance to hear God’s Word,
know that God means to do you good, not evil.
It's hard to know exactly what was going on with Manoah.
It might be that he was doubtful about what his wife told him
and needed to see for himself.
Or it could be that he was fretful
and felt like he needed more assurance.
Or it could be that he was just a simple farmer with lots of questions.
Whatever it was, this is clear:
God is patient.
And he has no problem using someone as unlikely as Manoah.
Throughout the Book of Judges,
God is using unlikely heroes.
A left-handed man.
A prophetess.
A fearful warrior.
An illegitimate son.
And now, he will use a simple barren couple
to bring about one of the greatest warriors Israel has ever known.
So I wonder: What is it that you think makes you stand out to God?
What is it that you think makes you particularly useful to God?
Your hardworking discipline?
Your clean record?
Your academic degrees?
Your financial investments?
Your good looks and cultural hipness?
Okay, God can use those things.
But you know what?
When he does so, you’re going to be tempted to take credit for them.
Not only that, but people are going to see that and say,
“Of course God would use you. That makes sense.”
But, if this passage is any indication,
God loves to use the unlikely, the weak, the limited.
God loves to put to shame the wisdom and strength of the world.
Because it is in our weaknesses
that he shows himself to be so obviously great.
So where are the areas you feel lacking?
Social skills? Communication?
Maybe you’re limited by your sickness?
Maybe the sins of your past continue to haunt you?
These things, which you feel like limit your ability to serve God,
are actually opportunities for God
to demonstrate his great power through you.
The idea is not that we would ever become proud or happy about our weaknesses,
no, but that we would own them.
That we would not hide them away before God
but that we would entrust them to God,
knowing that his grace is sufficient
and his power is made perfect in our weakness.
And realize that God using you may not be glamorous.
Samson would go on to be a mighty warrior.
But God’s role for Manoah and his wife
was to bear a son and watch their diet.
Not very glamorous but crucial in God’s redemptive plan.
So yes, Charles Spurgeon, the 19th-century preacher,
preached to millions and thousands were converted under his ministry.
But it was an unknown, untrained Primitive Methodist deacon
who could barely get through his sermon who was used by God
to convert Charles Spurgeon.
You might not be a Charles Spurgeon.
But you might be that unknown deacon.
Or you might the one who disciples the deacon
who then is used by God to convert Spurgeon.
We just don’t know how God will use us.
But don’t underestimate God’s power.
You may be someone
who has served God with the prime of their lives,
and so many of you have done amazing things for the Lord.
But brothers and sisters, could it be that God is not done with you yet?
Could it be that as you face the trials and losses of old age,
that you are even more useful to God than when you were healthy?
Might God have saved the most important work
for you to do in this season of your life?
For all of us who struggle with sickness, with pain, with loneliness,
with monotony, with depression, and countless other hardships;
even as you labor to get through the day,
realize that this is not a wasted season of your life.
God means to use you in the midst of all those difficulties
to reveal the truth and power of the gospel.
You’ve prayed for an open door
to share the gospel with those around you.
Well, here it is!
People are going to be curious about your faith not as you prosper
but as you struggle and persevere in faith.
And we have to remember this as a church.
Sure, there was a day when we were packing out buildings
and hundreds were regularly showing up.
But we live in a very different time, and in God’s providence,
we are smaller.
Could it be that we are now just small and insignificant enough
so that God might want to use us?
Might God use even us to see a gospel-preaching
church planted on distant islands for the first time in human history?
Or might God have an important role for us to play
in the Hispanic outreaches of Rocky Point?
I’m not saying it will be glorious or easy.
But if God uses us, it will be important.
Which means our job then is simply to be faithful.
Manoah had all kinds of questions,
but what he needed to know, God had already revealed.
And what he needed to do
is simply to trust and follow those commands.
Faith doesn’t have to know everything about everything.
Faith needs to know what it is that God has revealed
and then faithfully carry out what is in front of you.
But be encouraged by how patient God was with Manoah!
In verse 9, God hears Manoah’s prayers and he makes time to meet with him,
even though there’s nothing new to say.
Friends, in the midst of your weakness,
God is patient with you.
So don’t be afraid to go to God in prayer.
Don’t be afraid to ask your questions,
to come to him with your requests.
If you want to be used by God, then you must pray.
Of course, God may answer your prayers in ways you did not expect.
This was certainly true for Manoah.
But prayer was never about getting God to do what we want him to do.
Prayer was never about getting God
to conform to our narrow purposes.
No, prayer is how we go to God,
how we entrust our hopes and dreams to him,
and how we align ourselves to his plan and his purposes.
This is how we pray in faith:
by entrusting our career, our family, our church,
our future into God’s hands,
trusting that they are all a part of his grand narrative of redemption.
Certainly, this was what Manoah and wife were left with.
Can you imagine them the next morning?
The angel of the Lord is gone,
but they can’t go back to business as usual.
Nothing has changed,
but given what the angel has told them, everything is now different!
Their work and their lives have new meaning.
Every meal matters.
As the baby is conceived in her womb,
Manoah and his wife understand
that they are participating in something bigger than themselves.
They need to be careful to follow the angel’s directions.
God’s plan of redemption carries on,
even through this unlikely couple.
So it is with all the unlikely people that God will ever use, even us.
God Saves
an undeserving people
using an unlikely couple
through His Spirit Filled warrior

Through His Spirit-filled Warrior

Just as God promised, we see in verse 24-25
Judges 13:24–25 CSB
24 So the woman gave birth to a son and named him Samson. The boy grew, and the Lord blessed him. 25 Then the Spirit of the Lord began to stir him in the Camp of Dan, between Zorah and Eshtaol.
Here in the territory of Dan, Samson is born.
While many of his kinsmen have fled,
he remains and he grows up and God’s favor rests on him.
And from an early age, he must have stood out.
We know from the subsequent narrative
Samson maintains his Nazirite vow.
Samson’s Nazirite vow set him apart from the Canaanite culture,
marking him as distinct.
And the Spirit of the Lord begins to stir in Samson during these years.
The author doesn’t give us any details as to what that meant.
What exploits did Samson have as a teenager?
Was he fighting lions and bears like David as a young shepherd?
Whatever it was,
God was preparing him to be a deliverer, a savior for Israel.
But remember in verse 5 what the angel says:
“he will begin the deliverance of Israel from the hands of the Philistines.”
Not that he will accomplish, but he will begin.
If you know the story of Samson,
you’ll know that actually Samson never delivered Israel from the Philistines.
Though he single-handedly killed thousands of Philistines throughout his life,
even sacrificing his life in the end,
the Philistines still remained in power.
But by his power, Samson would stir up Philistines to war against Israel,
and Israel against the Philistines.
God would preserve the identity of his people through Samson.
And it would not be much longer
before God would bring another Spirit-filled king
who would finally defeat these Philistines.
Friends, in Samson, we see a picture of the salvation that we need.
We don’t need more tips and steps for saving ourselves.
We need a Savior.
We need someone to come do for us what we cannot do for ourselves.
God’s saving act here points to the ultimate salvation
that he would one day bring through Jesus Christ.
If you are not a Christian, this is what we want you to walk away with.
This is what this story and the entire Bible is about.
We are those who live under a far greater enemy than any army or king.
Our oppression is far worse than any physical bondage.
Because we all live under the bondage of sin, death, and Satan.
We are those who are blind and enslaved to our rebellion and sin,
so that for all our self-righteousness,
we actually are quite comfortable with sin.
And for that, we are all deserving of God’s judgment.
But here’s the Good News:
God sent us a Savior even greater than Samson, Jesus of Nazareth.
Born miraculously of a virgin to two unlikely parents,
filled with the Spirit of God, and yet, unlike Samson,
Jesus was perfect: without sin, marked by perfect love,
bringing healing to the sick and afflicted,
and speaking words of truth.
Alone amidst all humanity,
here was one who did not rebel against God and did not give way to sin.
And yet at the end of his life,
this Savior was betrayed by those he loved,
he was mocked and tortured by his enemies,
and he was nailed to a cross.
And there on the cross, Jesus sacrificed his life for sinners,
bearing the judgment of their sins upon himself and dying in their place.
But the amazing news is that by that death,
Jesus did not just begin our salvation,
but he accomplished it.
He finished it.
We know this because three days later,
Jesus rose from the dead triumphant over sin and death.
Before his disciples, before hundreds of eyewitnesses,
he revealed himself to be totally triumphant over sin, death, and Satan.
And now he calls sinners like you and me
to turn away from our sin, to trust in his victory and to follow him to eternal life.
Oh friend, aren’t you tired of the evil and brokenness of this world?
Aren’t you tired of being robbed and lied to
and condemned by your sin and by Satan?
Aren’t you sick of the fear of death?
Oh friend, there is a Savior for you.
“But you don’t know the stuff I’ve done.
You don’t know how messed up my life is now
and how much junk I’m hiding.”
That’s true, but I’m not calling you to clean your life up.
Notice, God didn’t send a savior
only when Israel had finally gotten its act together
and had an army all ready to fight.
No, God sent them a savior while they were happily at peace with their enemies.
And it’s that savior who delivers them.
So it is with Jesus.
He’s not waiting for you to clean yourself up.
No, he went out alone and accomplished your salvation.
Romans 5:8 CSB
8 But God proves his own love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us.
Now he calls you to stop living for sin and to place your hope in him.
Conclusion
Friend, this is what Christmas is all about.
Why not take the time this Christmas season to know more about this Savior?
This is the perspective we need to be reminded of during Christmas.
It feels like we live in this broken, rundown world
and Christmas is this veneer of festivities that we put over our lives for a season,
which all gets washed away in January
or whenever you take down your Christmas tree.
And before we know it,
we are back into the grind of our painful lives.
But that’s not what Christmas is.
Christmas is that time of year
when we are reminded of the truth
that God has sent to his people the true Savior of the world.
And with his coming, a new age has dawned.
God is undoing all that is wrong and broken
with this world and with us.
Christmas is the reality which defines our world,
even more than all the brokenness and suffering around us.
Yes, there is injustice;
yes, there is sin;
yes, there is sickness and even death.
But with the arrival of Jesus, those things are on the run.
Their days are numbered.
They will not have the final say.
But Jesus, in all his infinite goodness and love, will reign.
And like Manoah and his wife, we bank on the promises of God,
knowing that God has sent us a Savior
and that God means to use us to proclaim his wonders.
And though it seems that nothing has changed, we know better.
We know that everything has changed.
God’s promises are true.
Our lives are now forever charged with meaning and purpose.
So brothers and sisters, take heart!
Do not abandon your post.
Do not give way to despair.
Persevere in following the Savior.
Because a new day has dawned.
Let’s walk in the light of his salvation.
Related Media
See more
Related Sermons
See more
Earn an accredited degree from Redemption Seminary with Logos.