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Merry Christmas Everyone!
As we gather this evening, my prayer is that the words of my mouth and the meditations of all our hearts rise up to meet God in this night of our Savior’s birth.
This Advent, in the season of waiting and watching, we have been taking a journey through the prophecies of Isaiah about the coming of the Messiah, Immanuel or “God With Us”, hence the title of our series…as we end that journey tonight, it is not really an ending but rather the beginning of the greatest story ever told.
I also pray that you have heard this story with fresh ears and an open heart.
You see, while Advent is a time of waiting, we are also to be preparing ourselves for what is to come when Jesus returns.
With that being said, let’s jump into what we heard from Isaiah for this evening...
Jesus Christ’s birth is prophesied in the OT
As we have discovered over the last four weeks, Isaiah wrote quite a bit about the birth of Christ.
The interesting part of that is that Isaiah wrote these words a little more than 700 years before the actual birth of Christ.
Many scholars believe that Isaiah might have believed that he and his contemporaries were going to see the birth for themselves.
In hindsight, which is always 20/20, we know that Isaiah did not see this come to pass but that does not make the fact that he wrote, what we now know as Christmas Eve, about this night nearly a century before it actually happened.
The prophecy of a virgin’s son
The prophecy concerning his birthplace
What Isaiah has given us over these last four weeks are some aspects of God’s character embodied and brought into our world and lives in Jesus: hope, love, joy, and peace.
Which has brought us to the Christmas story for tonight.
This story is a powerful story, filled with wonder and miracles and very real life.
Jesus coming to earth is the most wonderful gift of all eternity.
As we have walked through various parts of the Christmas story these past four weeks, we have explored the intersection of God with Us in the lives of real people who played a role in His arrival.
And we have seen that as Jesus brought hope, love, joy, and peace into the lives of everyone in those stories in very real ways and we will discover that He will do the same for us today.
“Bethlehem Ephrathah” is the village where David grew up (“the town of David”).
Retracing our steps...
In our time together now, let’s briefly trace our way through portions of this Christmas story again, highlighting all that it means that God is with us.
The first aspect of God we talked about was hope…we used the idea that Jesus brings hope into the world.
There is this really great story at the beginning of the Gospel of Luke that we often gloss over.
However, when Luke retells the Story of Zechariah and Elizabeth, we gain hope because he was an elderly couple who could not have a child of their own.
Yet, God tells Zechariah that he and Elizabeth would have a child and this was a bright spark of hope- and who could not see the hope in their story?
See also ;
Then we traced our through Isaiah to learn that God With Us brings love into the world.
Isaiah foretold of a time when enemies would become friends, wars would cease, and all would find a way to get along.
Isaiah used imagery of a lion and a lamb would lie together that the bear would eat grass like a sheep, and a child would lead them all.
And a child has certainly given us more hope and love than could ever be imagined.
You know, one of my all-time favorite Christmas movies is “How the Grinch Stole Christmas”.
I think every year I watch it at least a dozen times…just now I watch it when no one else is around because my family has gotten sick of seeing it on the TV.
But one of the reasons I love that movie so much is that it reminds me of this story from Isaiah.
A child teaches someone what it means to love and because of the child, the Grinch’s heart grows three sizes.
A child’s love can warm even the hardest of hearts.
It is love that reminds us that God is always with us.
Jesus Christ’s incarnation
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On our journey into God’s joy, we listened to our children tell us a story of today’s world, where we are often too busy to take time to really enjoy what Christmas is all about.
They reminded us that it is not about what we do, how much we buy, or how much we give presents to others or ourselves as the case may be, but rather it is about what we can do to bring joy into someone else’s life.
Christmas is about a child born to bring joy to the parents who raised him.
And the great thing about sharing joy with others is that it is extremely contagious…just walk around with a smile on your face someday…while some will look at you funny, ultimately, others will catch your joy and begin spreading it to others.
See also ; ; ; ;
This past Sunday, we encountered what it means to have God’s ultimate peace.
This peace is not the Utopian kind of peace that we often think of but rather about having the peace that only God can give us.
The interesting part of this peace is that it is the peace of shalom, a concept deeply ingrained in the understanding of the ancient Jews.
Even more than an absence of fighting, this shalom peace was a fullness of safety, completeness, and wholeness.
This was the peace of restoration with God.
It is the peace that settles our souls deeply.
It is the calm acceptance that “it is well with my soul” no matter what swirls and storms around me.
Because God is with us, this is the peace that is available for us.
And it is the peace we celebrate today.
It is also the peace in Advent that keeps us looking forward—when Jesus returns one day, He will heal all that’s been broken and restore God’s complete kingdom of shalom.
Yes, then there will be the absence of war and hatred, but even that type of peace will be an extension of the wholeness that He will establish.
The circumstances of Jesus Christ’s birth
Because God is with us, this is the peace that is available for us.
And it is the peace we celebrate today.
It is also the peace in Advent that keeps us looking forward—when Jesus returns one day, He will heal all that’s been broken and restore God’s complete kingdom of shalom.
Yes, then there will be the absence of war and hatred, but even that type of peace will be an extension of the wholeness that He will establish.
An angel informs Mary that she is to be the mother of the Messiah
And so that brings us to the center of it all, Jesus…Isaiah writes this for us to contemplate this evening...
Mary responds in praise
See also
So tonight as we contemplate what it means to have God with Us in this day and age…take these words into your hearts.
Isaiah describes Jesus as a wonderful counselor, mighty God, everlasting, and the prince of peace.
In these words we hear echoes of each of the themes of Advent and yet so much more.
Jesus was foretold by many of the Prophets in our Bibles but Isaiah is the one who is given to us to highlight what it means to live with one another in the light of Christ.
Jesus came into the world to give us hope, love, joy, and peace and so much more.
Jesus brings the world back into relationship with God, not the other way around.
Jesus is the embodiment of God here on Earth, God with Us, so that we could identify with the one who gave us all that we are.
An angel explains to Joseph why Mary’s baby is so special
Jesus came into the world to give us hope, love, joy, and peace and so much more.
We have all heard the story of Jesus’ birth and yet tonight, I am hoping that you have heard it anew, in a new and inviting way and that when you leave this night, that you take the hope of Christmas, the Love of God
The birth of Jesus Christ takes place
We have all heard the story of Jesus’ birth and yet tonight, I am hoping that you have heard it anew, in a new and inviting way and that when you leave this night, that you take the hope of Christmas, the Love of God, the joy of celebrating the birth of a child, and the peace of knowing that no matter where you go, God is With Us, always!
Amen.
Angels announce Jesus Christ’s birth to some shepherds
See also
The Magi search for Jesus Christ’s birthplace and Herod tries to kill him
These events could have taken place at any time in Jesus Christ’s first two years.
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