DENNIS PATRICK: CHRIST BEFORE CHRISTMAS
The joy of Christmas returns. Things to do. Places to go. Gifts to buy. Few are immune from the Christmas rush as the season marches forward in an unrelenting cadence. Take time, make time, to pause and reflect on the depth of the celebration amid the hustle and bustle. A story, a poem, a song inspires the Christmas spirit.
In our post-modern era as Christianity slowly wanes, a Biblical meaning of Christmas pleads to be told. Browsing through some old Christmas sermons, one in particular registered as representative of times past when people embraced their Christianity more seriously than they do today. Or so it seems. An old volume (1903) titled “Holy-days and Holidays” contained a succinct sermon written in the late 1800s by David Gregg, DD.
His quest? Where was Christ before Christmas? My interpretation? Well, read on.
First, Gregg points to the obvious. In the beginning God, as Elohim, or God-in-Three-Persons, was present. The arrival of Christ in bodily form would occur much later at an appropriate time for a particular reason. From the beginning Christ was seen as a type in the genealogies. He descended from the first family in the Garden of Eden and was in the covenant line forward until His physical birth in Bethlehem. Regarded as the Messiah, He was the unifying principle of the Old Testament.
Events and people of the Old Testament pointed to the coming of Christ as man. Even unpleasant episodes served a purpose. The Old Testament chronicles some of humanity’s darkest deeds. Rape, lust, perversion, murder, greed, theft, and a host of attitudinal offenses comprise an unending list of transgressions. As Gregg emphasizes, these dark incidents reveal the counterpoint, the mercy of God as our Adonai, creating hope for all in despair during trial, tribulation, and turmoil.
Gregg’s second point illustrates that Christ existed through the Old Testament reflected as the ideal man. Christ, the Messiah, embodied sublime perfection. His anticipated arrival made Him real to the Hebrews over hundreds of years. As an ideal man who would someday arrive, Christ was a type reflected by and inspiring the heroes of the Old Testament. Moses the lawgiver was inspired by the foretold coming of the Messiah. He enlightened as He served as a conduit between God and His people.
Gregg makes a final point. Christ was one of three in the Godhead before the existence of space and time. Many people are familiar with the opening of John’s Gospel. “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.” John identified Christ as the Word. By this witness, He was co-eternal with the Father and the Holy Spirit. His existence predates time and creation. Revelation, both general and special, came through Christ. He was the Word.
Gregg presses his case. Throughout Old Testament history Christ communed with men and women. It was He who walked with Adam in the Garden. He had special friends in Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. In the Old Testament He cared for His people just as in the New Testament He watched over the new Church. He appeared as a guest, as a nameless person, and as a wrestling angel. He spoke to his people enveloped in a pillar of cloud by day and fire by night.
Reading through Dr. Gregg’s sermon gives context and imparts a fresh understanding of what Christmas is all about. Amid the hustle and bustle of the season may be found a quiet reassurance that beyond form there is substance.
With Bethlehem as the focal point, the past and future stretch of time affords comprehension to the believer. With a deeper understanding the Christian may embrace Christmas with the significance it deserves. Christ not only came to earth, He enters every person who acknowledges need of Him and welcomes Him. Christ, as God incarnate, in His mercy, came to reconcile to Himself a twisted world, a creation gone astray. That is truly something to celebrate!
Let all doubters grasp at least some respect for why Christians celebrate the season. In our post-modern era where political correctness demands equal time for all beliefs, Christianity is unique for the belief that a merciful God, the Three-in-One, went the extra mile by reaching down in the form of Jesus Christ to reconcile his creation to Himself. All other beliefs require endless striving upward by adherents to justify themselves before their God.
Where was Christ before Christmas? He was always present through the ages. He has been here all along available to all who seek Him.
Merry Christmas to you and yours!
Dennis M. Patrick can be contacted at (JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)