As Christmas approaches it seems that multitudes are on a spending spree: presents, Christmas trees, food and wine, cakes and puddings, turkeys and trimmings… So many people seem to be looking forward to a great family get-together and such joyous festivities should certainly not be disparaged. However, Christmas is not “all about” these things. Christmas certainly has its reasons for festive celebration but we need to remember exactly what Christmas really is “all about”.
While many Xmas cards wish us “Happy Holidays”, they seem to totally overlook the real meaning of Christmas. What is Christmas all about? It is the enthusiastic and wondering commemoration of the greatest event that has ever taken place since the original “Big Bang”! For that little baby boy, wrapped in cloths and laid in a manger, was none other than a totally unique incarnation of the one and only Creator God. The infinite Deity was clothed with human flesh, lying there helpless, totally dependent on his mother’s care. What wondrous lowliness in the majestic Lord of all!
This baby was Jesus: at Christmas we celebrate the beginning of the life-history of the greatest human being who ever lived – the one whose coming made a more beneficial impact on the history of the world than any number of other people.
This baby was conceived by a miracle: a work of God accomplished his unique conception without the sexual union of two parents. The young mother-to-be, Mary, received the divine message that she would become pregnant with a son who “will be great and will be called the Son of the Most High”; he would “reign on the throne of his ancestor David”, as a king “whose kingdom shall have no end”. On hearing that announcement Mary was baffled and astonished, asking: “How will this be, since I am a virgin?” (Luke 1.31-35)
The answer given to her by the heavenly messenger foretold the miraculous intervention of God’s Holy Spirit so that “the child that will be born will be called holy – the Son of God”.
In other words, here, on this unique occasion, the Son of God who was with the Father in eternity, was now clothed with human flesh, a historic human being, subject to the limitations of time and space. He was to grow up in the home of Joseph and Mary until the day when he was to be revealed to Israel and to begin his public ministry of teaching and working miracles, curing the sick and even raising the dead on three occasions.
Joseph, who was pledged to be married to Mary, also received a divine communication: “the Lord appeared to him in a dream” saying that this unique baby conceived in her is “from the Holy Spirit… You shall call his name Jesus” he was told, “for he will save his people from their sins” (Matthew 1.20-21).
This is what we celebrate. The world needed a Saviour and, very humbly, in the town of Bethlehem, about 2,028 years ago, the Saviour of the World was born.
Many great Christmas carols celebrate the big event: “He came down to earth from heaven, who is God and Lord of all”; yet “how silently, how silently the wondrous gift was given!” “Veiled in flesh the Godhead see: hail the incarnate deity! Pleased as man with man to dwell, Jesus our Emmanuel” – which means, “God with us”. God came into the world, demonstrating that he exists! He came to save us from our sins.
That is what Christmas is all about.
Clive Every-Clayton
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