12-12-21 The Dependency of Christmas
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I’ll start with some job interview jokes today - I wonder if they’ll remind
you of an interview you may have had.
● One interviewer asked me why I’d be a good waiter. I said, “Well, I bring a
lot to the table.”
● Interviewer: “I heard you were extremely quick at math.” Me: “Yes, as a
matter of fact I am.” Interviewer: “What’s 14×27?” Me: “49.” Interviewer:
“That’s not even close.” Me: “Yeah, but it was fast.”
● I went for an interview. They said, “Can you perform under pressure?” I
said, “I’m not sure, but I can try Bohemian Rhapsody.”
● I was asked at an interview what my weakness is. I replied, “I’m too
honest.” The interviewer said, “I don’t consider honesty a weakness.” I said,
“I don’t care what you think.”
● Job interviewer: Where do you see yourself in 5 years? Me: I would say my
biggest weakness is listening.
● I just got out of a great interview with an amazing new job. They told me
they were looking for someone responsible! I told them this was perfect,
whenever something went wrong at my old job they always said I was
responsible.
● In my job interview I was asked what some of my good qualities were. I
said, “Well my doctor always calls me patient.”
● The interviewer asked me, “It says here on your resume that you used to be
in the theatre. What made you leave?” I said, “the movie ended”
● At the interview for my new job I was asked, “What would your friends say
are your weaknesses?” “I don’t have any!” I replied. The interviewer seemed
a little surprised and said, “That can’t be true. Everybody has some weak
points.” I said, “Oh no. You got that wrong. I mean I don’t have any
friends.”
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● A priest at the Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris has a job interview with a new
bell ringer.The priest asks, “Why should I hire you?”The applicant responds,
“I have a special talent!”“Oh, and what is this special talent?” asks the
priest.The applicant walks up to the bells and slams his face into the bell.At
first the priest is taken aback, but the sound from the bells is
heavenly!“You’re hired!” he exclaims.The applicant jumps around in
excitement and slips, falling off the side of the belfry to the ground
below.The priest runs downstairs and outside to the sidewalk where the bell
ringer lay dead.A bystander asks, “Who is he?” The priest responds, “I don’t
know his name, but his face sure rings a bell!”1
I wanted to start with these jokes for a few reasons; first, I think they’re
funny. Second, I want to talk about dependence today, and I feel like a job
interview illustrates that well. It’s the idea that we are completely counting on
someone else in order to get something we need. Maybe you’ve been in a situation
where you need a job or else you won’t be able to pay bills. It’s really a vulnerable
position to be in, because you’re literally counting on a person you don’t know to
give you a job.
You’re wanting them to say, “yes, I see the potential in you, I see that you
are willing and able to do well and I’m going to give you money (the ability to
survive) because I see these qualities in you.” It might be a slight exaggeration to
say that you’re totally dependent on the job interviewer, but my point is that it is
actually very vulnerable and humbling to need someone else, or to be totally
dependent on a stranger for your livelihood.
A few weeks ago we talked about the balance between fully depending on
the Holy Spirit to reproduce the life of Jesus in us and through us and growing in
1
20 Hilarious Job Interview Jokes.” laffgaff.com, https://laffgaff.com/job-interview-jokes/.
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disciplines and self-control in order to put the fruit of the Spirit on display in us. In
other words there has to be a balance between counting on the Lord to take care of
things and doing our part to seek Him and grow in His ways. Discipline should
work in concert with dependence, because grace is not opposed to effort, but it is
opposed to earning.2 And this week and next week, I want to talk about discipline
and dependence in the context of Christmas. So we’ll talk about dependence today,
and then next week we’ll talk about disciplines.
Let’s pray before we get started: Father in Heaven, thank you that you are
trustworthy, that we can depend on you no matter what. Thank you for the time we
have together today, I ask you to bless it and bless Your word. Speak to our hearts
today, and give us the strength we need to become weak, to become people who
look to You in our every need. Meet each need represented here today and may you
give us each a new filling of Your Holy Spirit. Father, have Your way in this place,
we give You all the honor, glory, and praise. In Jesus’ Name, amen.
One of the greatest Christmas gifts God ever gave us was the ability to be
totally and completely dependent on someone else for everything we need in life.
Literally, we can depend on God for everything we need as Christians, and that’s
the way God set it up. Some people are dependent on other people instead of God,
we call that “codependency.” That’s not good, because a codependent person is
giving another person a place in their lives that they should be giving to Jesus. God
made us to be independent people (that means we’re self-governing, we’re not
controlled by other people), who are dependent on God. Independent people who
are dependent on God. Why should we be dependent on God? It’s because God is
the only person who is truly good and He is the source of all good things, past,
present, and future.
2
Boa, Kenneth. Conformed to His Image: Biblical and Practical Approaches to Spiritual Formation, P75. Zondervan, 2001.
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Mark 10:18 NKJV “So Jesus said to him, “Why do you call Me good? No
one is good but One, that is, God.”
But my point is that dependence on God is a gift - for one thing, it’s the gift
of ‘not being in charge.’ It’s the gift of not having to be in control, of not having to
know the heart motives of other people, of not needing to stress about this life at
all. It’s a gift to be able to say “that’s above my pay grade.” And it’s a gift because
you don’t have to stress out about all the different aspects of life that go on, and all
the different needs you have and desires you hope for. You don’t have to worry
about it, because you can let Jesus take it and give you exactly what you need
when you need it.
Matthew 6:25-26 NKJV “Therefore I say to you, do not worry about your
life, what you will eat or what you will drink; nor about your body, what you will
put on. Is not life more than food and the body more than clothing? 26 Look at
the birds of the air, for they neither sow nor reap nor gather into barns; yet your
heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not of more value than they?”
Of course you are more valuable than birds! Listen, of all the things in the
world, you are the most valuable thing to God there is. And so am I. Did you know
that I’m God’s favorite? So are you. And dependence on God for everything we
need, both in this life and next, is a gift because He is the one who can provide it
for us! And we receive what we need from God as we are dependent on Him.
Mark 10:15 NKJV “Assuredly, I say to you, whoever does not receive the
kingdom of God as a little child will by no means enter it.” Children are totally
dependent on a parent or guardian to give them what they need. We’ll talk more
about it later, but Jesus demonstrated this at Christmas. He came as a child! He
came to earth in dependency! Now, the ultimate goal of the Christian, life of
course, is to become more like Jesus.
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And we can only become more like Jesus by the power of the Holy Spirit.
We grow by being dependent on God to work on us, to work in us, and to work
through us. Romans 7:6 NLT “But now we have been released from the law, for
we died to it and are no longer captive to its power. Now we can serve God, not in
the old way of obeying the letter of the law, but in the new way of living in the
Spirit.”
In other words, if we live in the Spirit, dependent on Him, His promptings,
His guidance, His life and living water, then we’ll be walking in the new way, in
the way Jesus made for us. That’s the new covenenant. And Paul is saying that if
we keep doing things the old way, working in our flesh, striving to just ‘follow the
rules,’ if we only focus on behavior modification and our performance all the time,
the Christian life just won't work. And it doesn’t work because legalism, or a
works-based mentality just makes us more dependent on ourselves and less
dependent on the Holy Spirit. We were released from that old law of depending on
ourselves, which just showed us how much we fail and how much we need a
Savior.
So now that we are under the new covenant, now that we have accepted
Jesus as our Lord and Savior (and if you’ve never done that and you would like to,
please talk to someone you feel comfortable with after service today), it’s very
important that we develop a conscious sense of dependence on the Holy Spirit’s
power in all that we do.3 And we develop that sense of dependence as we invite
God into each moment. The Bible calls it walking in the Spirit, or walking
dependent on the Holy Spirit. Galatians 5:16 AMPC “But I say, walk and live
[habitually] in the [Holy] Spirit [responsive to and controlled and guided by
the Spirit]; then you will certainly not gratify the cravings and desires of the
flesh (of human nature without God).”
3
Boa, Kenneth. Conformed to His Image: Biblical and Practical Approaches to Spiritual Formation, P76. Zondervan, 2001.
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You know, if we’re not careful, this verse can actually make us go back into
striving, back into legalism, back into the old humanistic ways of christian
behavior modification. Why? Because the thought process is: “yes, I know I’ve
been messing up, I know I’m not quite hitting the mark, I know what I should be,
but I’m not there yet. I need to try harder, but this time I’ll ask the Holy Spirit to
bless my efforts - then I’ll have a better result.” That “striving to become
dependent on the Holy Spirit” is the opposite of what God is trying to get us to do
here. God wants you to know that it’s not about trying harder, being better, or
working more.
It’s about becoming more dependent on Jesus, His love, His cross, His grace,
and His blood. It’s about growing in grace - realizing that because of God’s
kindness and love to you and me, He pours out His favor on us without limit so
that we can live a life that works, a life that helps push back the darkness and
brings hope and healing to hearts that don’t feel like they can go on anymore. And
so the Bible says that we need to grow in grace! Because as we grow in
dependence on Jesus, as we grow to act more like Jesus, we actually need more
and more grace to sustain us, to keep us going in that direction, to keep humble, at
peace, and at rest, especially as spiritual warfare starts to take place. 2 Peter 3:18
NKJV but grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.
To Him be the glory both now and forever. Amen.
And so growing in grace is how we walk in the Spirit, not our old fleshly
desires. When Paul tells us to, “walk by the Spirit,” He is talking about learning to
be radically dependent on the Holy Spirit’s power day by day, not on our own
strength! Zechariah 4:6 NKJV So he answered and said to me: “This is the word
of the Lord to Zerubbabel: ‘Not by might nor by power, but by My Spirit,’ Says
the Lord of hosts.” In other words we don’t trust in ourselves or our own power, to
grow us, we trust the Holy Spirit.
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But I want to go back to Galatians for now: Galatians 5:16 AMPC “But I
say, walk and live [habitually] in the [Holy] Spirit [responsive to and controlled
and guided by the Spirit]; then you will certainly not gratify the cravings and
desires of the flesh (of human nature without God).” The word “walk” in the
Greek does mean physically walking. As we walk around in life we want to do it
trusting God. I guess that makes some sense. But the word ‘walk’ here really has
more to do with ‘making progress,’ ‘taking opportunities,” and ‘being occupied
with something.’
I like that. If we walk by the Spirit, (or in the Spirit), it means we’re totally
occupied by the Spirit. Have you ever been so focused on some task you were
doing that you tuned everything else out? It’s kind of like that - God wants us so
focused on Him, on who He is, on His love, His grace, His power, and His new life
that Jesus Himself overflows out of us. And when that happens consistently, we
tend to forget about the things of the flesh because they just look so dingy and pale.
We want to be ‘occupied’ by (or with) the spirit, and ‘unoccupied’ by the flesh. I
hope that makes sense.
And so Paul is speaking to both dependency on God and growth in discipline
(which we’ll talk about next week). He says that the law, or the rules, never had
any power to control people’s fleshly, evil impulses. And he goes on to say that we
shouldn’t use our new freedom, our new dependence on the fact that God did the
big job of saving us and bringing us into His family, as an excuse to fulfill the lusts
of the flesh. Since the Holy Spirit brings freedom and liberty, the flesh can only
return us to bondage.4
And so that’s why Paul says, “ok, we have trouble controlling ourselves. So
accept the gift of God and be controlled by the Holy Spirit.” To walk in the Spirit is
to be controlled by the Spirit!
4
Hayford, Jack W. The Hayford Bible Handbook, P375. Edited by Jack W. Hayford, Thomas Nelson Incorporated, 2004.
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And it can be difficult to be controlled by the Spirit, or dependent on God,
sometimes. It’s something we have to learn. Or I guess you could say we have to
unlearn our dependence on ourselves. You see, babies are born dependent. They
are totally dependent in every way on their caretakers. And we have to learn how
to be dependent on Jesus in the same way a newborn is dependent on it’s mother or
a caretaker. Remember how Jesus said we have to become like little children to
enter the kingdom of God? Children (in this case, babies) are totally dependent!
The point is that as we walk in the Spirit, we grow in dependency on the
Spirit. The word ‘walk’ here in Galatians is a general word and refers to life in its
totality. In other words it’s everything we go through, how we live in a general
sense as a process, as a journey. The word is used again in Galatians 5:25 NKJV
“If we live in the Spirit, let us also walk in the Spirit.” This time, it’s not general,
but it’s referring specifically to each step we take in our daily lives.
In other words, walking in the Spirit means we invite Him into every
moment. It’s the moment by moment realization that God loves us, He’s with us,
He’s for us, and He’s going to give us grace as we talk to our spouse, mercy as we
go to our work, and favor as we try to do His will. Just like Jesus walked in total
dependence on His Father, walking in the Spirit, we also need to learn how to do it,
too. John 14:10 NLT “Don’t you believe that I am in the Father and the Father
is in me? The words I speak are not my own, but my Father who lives in me does
his work through me.” Jesus is saying that He is dependent on the Father to tell
Him what to say and do; and then Jesus responds, He listens to what the Father
says and He does it. You see, We were never meant to create life or be in charge of
it, to work things up in our flesh, or to have to carry the weight of our own
salvation and sanctification.
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We were meant to simply receive Christ’s salvation and new life, and then to
display it, to let it shine, to show off His new life in us.5
What does all of this have to do with Christmas? Well, first, it’s a gift to be
dependent on someone else in this life, especially when that person is the creator of
the universe, is the origin of all good things, and has our best interests in mind all
the time. If life works in a terribly dysfunctional way when we depend on
ourselves and the human race, it’s going to work a whole lot better if we depend on
God instead. Romans 5:15 MSG “If death got the upper hand through one
man’s wrongdoing, can you imagine the breathtaking recovery life makes,
absolute life, in those who grasp with both hands this wildly extravagant life-gift,
this grand setting-everything-right, that the one man Jesus Christ provides?”
In other words, the coming of Jesus Christ into the world is an extravagant
life-gift to us! It’s Jesus who makes everything right, and it’s His Holy Spirit
living in us that helps us get on the pathway to recovery from our sinful nature. It’s
amazing! And we don’t have to worry about putting everything right; Jesus will
take care of that. It’s a gift. Now, ultimately Jesus will set the whole world right
when He comes again. But as we’re dependent on Him, He starts setting things
right by setting us right, by helping us understand the depths of His love, the
wonders of His grace, and the richness of His mercy.
When Jesus Christ came into the world, the first thing He did was model
dependency. He came into the world as a child, as a baby. Who is more dependent
than a baby? Luke 2:7 NKJV “And she brought forth her firstborn Son, and
wrapped Him in swaddling cloths, and laid Him in a manger, because there was
no room for them in the inn.” Don’t miss this part of the Christmas story - Jesus is
totally dependent on people. He has no control over His circumstances.
5
Boa, Kenneth. Conformed to His Image: Biblical and Practical Approaches to Spiritual Formation, P76. Zondervan, 2001.
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The Bible says Jesus is the Son of God and the Son of Man; that means that
He was fully God and fully human. And as a tiny human, He did what all the other
tiny humans do and became fully dependent on the grace of God, on the Holy
Spirit, on God using people to meet His physical needs. Jesus needed people to
wrap Him in blankets, He needed people to find Him a bed, and He needed people
to take care of Him.
Don’t miss this next point either; the starting point for following Jesus, the
starting point for our relationship with God and the very nature of our walk with
Christ is radical dependency on Him. It lies in letting go of control and in
embracing being controlled by the Holy Spirit. It’s coming to the point where we
say and fully believe, “God, I can’t do this life without You. I need You, and I give
up my control for Yours.”
Jesus didn’t come to earth the first time as a conquering King over all,
though He will do that when He comes back. The first time He came, He came in
total dependence in every sense as a little child who didn’t even have a room to
sleep in. Jesus modeled dependence on the Holy Spirit because that's how He
wanted us to walk, too! That’s why he said, “Truly I tell you, unless you change
and become like little children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven.”
Matthew 18:3 NIV.
He meant that just like children, we need to be totally dependent on our
Father to take care of things, to tell us what to do, to protect us, to provide for us,
and bring us love, care, compassion, and favor. And it’s this child-like dependence
on God that opens the door for a dynamic Christian life, which is really just life as
it ought to be, life that works.
And we see the theme of dependence on the Holy Spirit a lot in the
Christmas story. Mary was dependent on the Holy Spirit to conceive Jesus. Mary
was a virgin, and the only way she was going to have a baby was by God Himself.
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The virgin birth is a miracle that’s never been heard of either before or since. It was
God coming to earth in human form. Matthew 1:18 NKJV “Now the birth of
Jesus Christ was as follows: After His mother Mary was betrothed to Joseph,
before they came together, she was found with child of the Holy Spirit.” The
human race can’t depend on themselves to bring the Savior forth, we have to be
dependent on God to do it. We’re totally dependent on the Holy Spirit to do the
work.
The entire Christian faith is actually dependent on the fact that Jesus was
born of God, on this fact. You see, if Jesus was only born of man, then He would
have inherited man’s fallen nature, He would not have been infinite, He could not
have been the “only begotten,” and He would not have fulfilled the requirements of
the Law and the Old Covenant sacrificial system.6 But Jesus was born of God, and
so He is God, and He is a perfect, acceptable sacrifice for our sins, fulfilling all of
the law perfectly.
For the rest of our time, let’s just quickly run through some other references
to dependence on God in the Christmas story. Mary was dependent on God to
speak to Joseph so He wouldn’t reject her as his wife. Matthew 1:19 NKJV “Then
Joseph her husband, being a just man, and not wanting to make her a public
example, was minded to put her away secretly. 20 But while he thought about
these things, behold, an angel of the Lord appeared to him in a dream, saying,
“Joseph, son of David, do not be afraid to take to you Mary your wife, for that
which is conceived in her is of the Holy Spirit.” Joseph was also dependent on
God to tell Him to take Mary as a wife and then later to get out of Bethlehem and
go to Egypt.
The wise men were dependent on God to find Jesus so they could worship
Him.
6
Duffield, Guy P. Foundations of Pentecostal Theology (Revised & Updated) Volume 1, P79. Foursquare Media, 2016.
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Matthew 2:1-2 NKJV Now after Jesus was born in Bethlehem of Judea in
the days of Herod the king, behold, wise men from the East came to Jerusalem, 2
saying, “Where is He who has been born King of the Jews? For we have seen
His star in the East and have come to worship Him.” They were looking at the
stars to determine where the newborn King would be. No human had any control
over where the stars were placed - they just had to wait for God to do it.
Simeon was dependent on God to get to see the Savior, the Messiah before
his death. Luke 2:25-32 NKJV And behold, there was a man in Jerusalem whose
name was Simeon, and this man was just and devout, waiting for the
Consolation of Israel, and the Holy Spirit was upon him. 26 And it had been
revealed to him by the Holy Spirit that he would not see death before he had seen
the Lord’s Christ. 27 So he came by the Spirit into the temple. And when the
parents brought in the Child Jesus, to do for Him according to the custom of the
law, 28 he took Him up in his arms and blessed God and said: 29“Lord, now You
are letting Your servant depart in peace, According to Your word; 30 For my eyes
have seen Your salvation 31 Which You have prepared before the face of all
peoples, 32 A light to bring revelation to the Gentiles, And the glory of Your
people Israel.”
I hope you’re starting to see the pattern here with me. My point is that it’s
only by radical dependence on the Holy Spirit that we grow, that we have fruit, that
we minister to others, and that we’re accepted by God. The conclusion of the
Christmas story shows us what will happen in us as we grow in dependence on the
Lord. Luke 2:40 NKJV “And the Child grew and became strong in spirit, filled
with wisdom; and the grace of God was upon Him.”
This scripture sums up what dependence on God does. It makes you grow, it
makes you stronger in your spirit, you will be filled with the Spirit of wisdom (the
Holy Spirit), and you’ll daily walk in God’s grace.
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It's not good behavior or right choices that make us grow spiritually; it’s by
becoming more and more dependent on the Holy Spirit. As we are more dependent
on Him, we’ll make better choices, and our behavior will also become more godly,
but those things are by-products of dependency on Jesus.
And so as we close, I want to pull up Psalm 9:10 NKJV “And those who
know Your name will put their trust in You; For You, Lord, have not forsaken
those who seek You.” Jesus’ Name, Immanuel, means “God with Us.” I want you
to know that whatever you may be facing today, no matter what area of your life
you may need to be dependent on God today, that Jesus Christ fulfilled in the flesh
the promise of Immanuel, the promise God made to never leave you and never
forsake you.
Let this promise of Christmas grip your soul today - if you will choose to
simply come to God and say, “I am totally dependent on You, Lord, for you are the
Creator, the Giver of Life and all good things,” then God will point to His promise
fulfilled by Jesus Christ to never leave you and never forsake you. This isn’t just an
ethereal, intellectual, spiritual promise, this is a promise fulfilled in flesh and
blood, God Himself coming to be with you and me. And even though Jesus
ascended back into heaven after His physical time on earth was over, He sent the
Holy Spirit so that we would never again have to live without His presence,
without His provision, without His Person.
Take this promise fully to yourself today no matter what you’re going
through; Hebrews 13:5 AMP He has said, “I will never [under any
circumstances] desert you [nor give you up nor leave you without support, nor
will I in any degree leave you helpless], nor will I forsake or let you down or
relax My hold on you [assuredly not]!” Let’s read it again!
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It’s the promise of hope, of answered prayer, of new life, new joy, and new
peace as we let go of our need for control and choose to fully depend on the Holy
Spirit, and to walk in His ways.
And as a point of practicality, I will add that all that’s necessary to be
dependent on Him is to simply give Him our moments. Jesus, give me grace as I go
to work today. Father, help me as I talk on the phone with this person. Lord, give
me compassion and love as I relate to my spouse; Jesus, come into my moments
and control them as I keep my eyes focused on You!
And as you do grow in the dependence of Christmas, as you learn to walk in
the Spirit, you’ll find that God is completely dependable. In other words He won’t
ever let you down. Never. 1 Corinthians 1:8-9 NLT “He will keep you strong to
the end so that you will be free from all blame on the day when our Lord Jesus
Christ returns. 9 God will do this, for he is faithful to do what he says, and he
has invited you into partnership with his Son, Jesus Christ our Lord.” God is
faithful to do what He says. He is trustworthy, He is loving, and He is kind. Amen.
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