Well has it not gone quick? It is Christmas day. No more chocolate in the advent calendar, which means no more hope is on the way, well that is this series. Of course, hope on the way always happens. Hope you enjoyed the series as much I did writing it.
Today there is no
book club as everyone is having far too much fun with his or her family.
Therefore, Elizabeth decided to write her last email for this series.
Time off work, a
year-end bonus, receiving gifts on your wish list... none of those things are
bad in themselves. But you can get all of those things without Christmas. So,
they can't be the ultimate reason you need Christmas, right?
Maybe you're on the
opposite side of the spectrum: you don’t think you need Christmas at all. The
decorating, awkward family gatherings, shopping, and traveling add so much
stress. Or maybe Christmas makes you feel incredibly lonely. You’d love to
sleep straight through Christmas and wake up just in time to ring in the New
Year.
What both these
mindsets have in common is that they each focus on things that are ancillary to
the true significance of why Christmas happened and why we celebrate it.
Why do we really
need Christmas? What does Christmas do for us, and how should Christmas affect
us?
The answer, you may
be surprised to know, does not lie first in the Christmas stories of the
gospels. The reason we need Christmas goes back to when it was originally
announced, in Genesis chapter 3.
Our Need for Christmas in Genesis 3
The third chapter
of Genesis is the sad account of how the human race fell into sin. Adam and
Eve, having been tempted by the serpent, desired to “be like God” (3:5), and
therefore they ate from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. It is
interesting that, after the sevenfold refrain of “God saw that it was good” in
Genesis chapter 1, that here “the woman saw that the tree was good” (3:6). She
has taken the prerogative of the Creator and determined what the creation is
good for. She, and Adam with her, has attempted to dethrone God and make herself
like God.
The results are
tragic. Adam and Eve, expecting illumination, immediately experience
humiliation, seeing their nakedness. They fear God’s presence, and throw each
other under the bus to avoid his wrath. The serpent, Eve, and Adam are cursed.
Death enters the world. They are forbidden from entering God’s paradise.
Despite the
darkness that shrouded that day, one beam of hope shone through – and this is
where we come back to the topic of Christmas.
God promised that a
special child would be born, who would defeat the serpent: “I will put enmity
between you [i.e., the serpent] and the woman, and between your offspring and
her offspring; he shall bruise your head, and you shall bruise his heel”
(Genesis 3:15). God promises that someone among Eve’s offspring will win the
ultimate victory over the serpent.
The promise of this
offspring is fulfilled in Jesus.
Are you a sinner?
Then you need Christmas.
This quick
exploration into Genesis 3 reveals the real reason we need Christmas. This
holiday of holidays doesn’t exist because we need vacations, presents, and
extra church services. Christmas exists because we have sinned.
If Genesis chapter
3 didn’t happen we wouldn’t need Christmas. If we had a pure, true relationship
with God, we wouldn’t need Christmas. If mankind had trusted God to determine
what is good and evil, we wouldn’t need Christmas.
But because Genesis
3 did happen, and because rebellion against God happens in our hearts every
day, we need Christmas desperately. Matthew, in his account of Christ’s birth,
wrote, “She will bear a son, and you shall call his name Jesus, for he will
save his people from their sins” (Matthew 1:21). We needed God to intervene in
our lives, and that is exactly what God the Father did by sending God the Son
to be born of a virgin by the power of God the Holy Spirit. This is what
Christmas is all about.
Why This Changes the Way We Celebrate Christmas?
Coming back to the
purpose of Christmas makes celebrating the holiday a reminder of why Jesus
came, not only that he came. This should change the way we celebrate Christmas.
We celebrate being rescued from certain condemnation. We are amazed that God
would extend his grace to rebels like us. We are again by mystified at Jesus,
Immanuel, God with us.
Focusing primarily
on the stuff that comes along with Christmas—lights, songs, shopping,
etc.—completely misses the point. Those things can be great when viewed in
their proper, secondary place, but when they become our focus, they
inappropriately determine our view of the Christmas season, whether that be
positive or negative.
Let’s be
intentional in remembering why it is we need Christmas in the first place. Then
we’ll be truly merry over the fact that Jesus came to save us from our sins.
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