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Showing posts with the label Why the Nativity?

"Men and women were at war with themselves and with one another."

A thought by David Jeremiah, from his book,  Why the Nativity?: 25 Compelling Reasons We Celebrate the Birth of Jesus  (p. 21). Tyndale House Publishers, Inc.. Kindle Edition.  (Click on the book title to go to Amazon to buy the book.) Sounds a lot like us, doesn't it? Earlier David says, "Imagine this scenario: A world leader plans to send a man on a mission of the utmost urgency. The fate of the world rests upon the success of this operation. So the commander thinks carefully, strategically, about his plan. Nothing can be left to chance; every detail must be carefully considered. "The leader will send only the perfect candidate for his mission. He must decide where to deploy his agent, how to get him there, and what goals should be attempted. And timing means everything. If the mission goes into operation too soon or too late, everything will be lost." He continues, "The ultimate World Leader—the one at the very top of the chain—planned just such a mission. Th

"Most of our facts about the Nativity came through the skills of two men: Luke and Matthew."

  A thought by David Jeremiah, from his book,  Why the Nativity?: 25 Compelling Reasons We Celebrate the Birth of Jesus  (p. 17). Tyndale House Publishers, Inc.. Kindle Edition.  (Click on the book title to go to Amazon to buy the book.) These are two of the first four writers of the New Testament in the Bible. David continues, "These writers wanted to set down the wonderful story of how Jesus first entered our world. Imagine what would have been lost to our understanding and appreciation if someone hadn’t preserved the remarkable events of Bethlehem, of the shepherds and wise men, of the inns and the stable. "Without our accounts of the early life of Jesus, we would know almost nothing about Joseph, the quiet adoptive father who protected the infancy of the Savior of the world. Of course, that was a detail our Lord didn’t want us to miss. So he sent these two men from different backgrounds and with different goals for their narratives." He goes on, "Luke, the physi

"Mary must have gone about her daily chores with a happy heart."

  A thought by David Jeremiah, from his book,  Why the Nativity?: 25 Compelling Reasons We Celebrate the Birth of Jesus  (p. 11). Tyndale House Publishers, Inc.. Kindle Edition.  (Click on the book title to go to Amazon to buy the book.) But something was about to happen. David continues, "These were her final days as a young maiden. "And then, in the midst of routine and readiness, a single supernatural moment shattered the normality of her life. An angel stood before her, as the first chapter of Luke’s Gospel recounts. When did it happen? Perhaps Mary was kneeling beside her bed, attending to prayers, beginning or finishing a day. How frightening the sudden arrival of a heavenly messenger must have been! " 'Greetings, favored woman! The Lord is with you,' Gabriel said—for it was that particular angel, one of the greatest in God’s service (Luke 1:28). Seeing her terror, he assured her there was no reason to fear, for the news he brought was wonderful. God had de

"Heaven could not be poured into the stained vessel that was the earth."

A thought by David Jeremiah, from his book,  Why the Nativity?: 25 Compelling Reasons We Celebrate the Birth of Jesus  (p. 7). Tyndale House Publishers, Inc.. Kindle Edition.  (Click on the book title to go to Amazon to buy the book.) So there had to be a solution for us to be introduced personally to God the Father. David continues, "But there was another way: God himself could make the journey. He could pour his Godhood into flesh and blood and visit the earth as a man himself! He could walk among people as a full-fledged human being in every respect, yet be fully God at the same time. He had sent prophets many times, but now he would do something far more shocking. He would leave the throne of heaven to walk among them—a King in disguise, the Lord of the universe in human scale, the Creator among his creatures." He says, "Then the nature of God would be clear to all. People on earth could see what God was like. They would behold his perfect love and faithfulness, his

"The creations of God were magnificent."

A thought by David Jeremiah, from his book,  Why the Nativity?: 25 Compelling Reasons We Celebrate the Birth of Jesus  (p. 5). Tyndale House Publishers, Inc.. Kindle Edition.  (Click on the book title to go to Amazon to buy the book.) Yes they are. David continues, "He made a universe of unbounded dimensions, measured out in stars and galaxies. Its size was matched by its vast complexity, in the intricate dance of atom and molecule. The range of his artistry—his color, his sound, his silence—reflected the wealth of his power and love." He says, "But God wanted more than worlds, so he created life . He turned to his special world, the earth, and filled it with plants and animals, monstrous and microscopic—a kingdom of moving and breathing and even thinking creatures, all fashioned in wild variety. There were towering, brooding redwood trees that held court for twenty centuries, decorated by mayflies whose lives began and ended within a single day. "But God wanted mor

"Time is a mystery."

A thought by David Jeremiah, from his book, Why the Nativity?: 25 Compelling Reasons We Celebrate the Birth of Jesus (p. 1). Tyndale House Publishers, Inc.. Kindle Edition.  (Click on the book title to go to Amazon to buy the book.) Yes it is but what is David's point? He says, "We live each day immersed in it, so we cannot imagine a life outside of it, looking in. Time marches by us, moment by moment and year by year. It leaves its mark upon us more than we leave our mark upon it." He goes on, "Imagine standing several miles from a great mountain range. You admire the majestic chain from its foothills in the west to the last outcroppings in the east. But if you didn’t have that separation—if you were standing on one of the mountains—you would see only the scenery that was right around you. "God watches over us from outside the straight mountain range that is time. He sees past, present, and future in one unbroken line. And as long as we are travelers through t