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Christmas Traveler: Why the Nativity is About the Cross

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Manage episode 280550481 series 2517976
Content provided by John Koessler. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by John Koessler or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
In this year of COVID-19, the governor of my state has asked everyone to stay home for Christmas. To be honest, it feels strange. For many, Christmas is a time for traveling. The same was true of the first Christmas. The Gospel narratives of Christ's birth are crowded with travelers. Zechariah, the priest, travels to Jerusalem to burn incense before the Lord and is struck with dumb surprise when the angel announces that he and his wife Elizabeth would have a son in their old age. Mary travels too, heading for the hills to visit her relative, Elizabeth. Then to Bethlehem with Joseph to give birth to the miracle child conceived by the Holy Spirit. Shepherds hurry into the night, leaving their flock behind to find the babe wrapped in cloths and lying in a manger. Magi travel from the east by caravan to lay their gifts before the newborn king of the Jews, while Joseph and Mary flee to Egypt to escape King Herod's wrath. Everybody in the Christmas story, it seems, is on the road.Yet of all the travelers in the Christmas narrative, none comes as far as Jesus. His is a journey that is measured not in miles but position. "Out of the ivory palaces, into a world of woe," an old hymn says. The opening of John's Gospel clarifies that the change was even more profound than the hymn-writer imagines. "The Word became flesh and made his dwelling among us," John declares (John 1:14). The theologians describe this in literal terms as the incarnation, the enfleshing of the Word of God. At the incarnation, Jesus Christ took a human nature to Himself without ceasing to be divine.If the theologians express the literal sense of John's theology with this language, the 17th-century poet Richard Crashaw captures John's lyrical warmth when he writes,Welcome, all Wonders in one sight!Eternity shut in a span.Summer to winter, day in night,Heaven in earth, and God in man.The poet's phrase "eternity shut in a span" measures the distance between heaven's throne and Bethlehem's manger. There was both an addition and a subtraction in the incarnation. Jesus took to Himself a human nature that He previously did not possess. The babe of Bethlehem was a real infant, as helpless and dependent as any other. At that moment, the creator of all things became both actor and the one acted upon. The eternal Word was conceived by God, born of a virgin, and laid in a manger. The Son of God became the child of Mary. By this act, Jesus laid aside something as well. In Philippians 2:7 the apostle Paul says that Jesus, who was God by nature, "made Himself nothing" at the incarnation. The Greek text says that Christ "emptied" Himself.We should not see this as an abdication. Jesus did not cease to be divine when He took on flesh and blood. Instead, this was more of a refusal. He refused to cling to the rights and prerogatives that belonged to Him because of His divinity. As one translation of Philippians 2:6 puts it, Jesus did not consider equality with God "something to be used to his own advantage." When He was made in human likeness, Jesus took up the nature of a servant. Paul's language in these verses is deliberate. Confinement to human form was more than a symbolic statement for Jesus. True humanity was essential for the specific task that Jesus came to perform. When Jesus was "found in appearance as a man, he humbled himself by becoming obedient to death—even death on a cross!" (Phil. 2:8). Jesus took on flesh so that He could die.That death is the linchpin of the theology of the incarnation. Remove it, and the story of Christ's nativity becomes immeasurably reduced, as d

Dr. John Koessler is an award-winning writer and retired faculty emeritus of Moody Bible Institute. John writes the Practical Theology column for Today in the Word and a monthly column on prayer for Mature Living. He is the author of 16 books. His latest book , When God is Silent, is published by Lexham Press. You can learn more about John at https://www.johnkoessler.com.

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87 episodes

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Manage episode 280550481 series 2517976
Content provided by John Koessler. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by John Koessler or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
In this year of COVID-19, the governor of my state has asked everyone to stay home for Christmas. To be honest, it feels strange. For many, Christmas is a time for traveling. The same was true of the first Christmas. The Gospel narratives of Christ's birth are crowded with travelers. Zechariah, the priest, travels to Jerusalem to burn incense before the Lord and is struck with dumb surprise when the angel announces that he and his wife Elizabeth would have a son in their old age. Mary travels too, heading for the hills to visit her relative, Elizabeth. Then to Bethlehem with Joseph to give birth to the miracle child conceived by the Holy Spirit. Shepherds hurry into the night, leaving their flock behind to find the babe wrapped in cloths and lying in a manger. Magi travel from the east by caravan to lay their gifts before the newborn king of the Jews, while Joseph and Mary flee to Egypt to escape King Herod's wrath. Everybody in the Christmas story, it seems, is on the road.Yet of all the travelers in the Christmas narrative, none comes as far as Jesus. His is a journey that is measured not in miles but position. "Out of the ivory palaces, into a world of woe," an old hymn says. The opening of John's Gospel clarifies that the change was even more profound than the hymn-writer imagines. "The Word became flesh and made his dwelling among us," John declares (John 1:14). The theologians describe this in literal terms as the incarnation, the enfleshing of the Word of God. At the incarnation, Jesus Christ took a human nature to Himself without ceasing to be divine.If the theologians express the literal sense of John's theology with this language, the 17th-century poet Richard Crashaw captures John's lyrical warmth when he writes,Welcome, all Wonders in one sight!Eternity shut in a span.Summer to winter, day in night,Heaven in earth, and God in man.The poet's phrase "eternity shut in a span" measures the distance between heaven's throne and Bethlehem's manger. There was both an addition and a subtraction in the incarnation. Jesus took to Himself a human nature that He previously did not possess. The babe of Bethlehem was a real infant, as helpless and dependent as any other. At that moment, the creator of all things became both actor and the one acted upon. The eternal Word was conceived by God, born of a virgin, and laid in a manger. The Son of God became the child of Mary. By this act, Jesus laid aside something as well. In Philippians 2:7 the apostle Paul says that Jesus, who was God by nature, "made Himself nothing" at the incarnation. The Greek text says that Christ "emptied" Himself.We should not see this as an abdication. Jesus did not cease to be divine when He took on flesh and blood. Instead, this was more of a refusal. He refused to cling to the rights and prerogatives that belonged to Him because of His divinity. As one translation of Philippians 2:6 puts it, Jesus did not consider equality with God "something to be used to his own advantage." When He was made in human likeness, Jesus took up the nature of a servant. Paul's language in these verses is deliberate. Confinement to human form was more than a symbolic statement for Jesus. True humanity was essential for the specific task that Jesus came to perform. When Jesus was "found in appearance as a man, he humbled himself by becoming obedient to death—even death on a cross!" (Phil. 2:8). Jesus took on flesh so that He could die.That death is the linchpin of the theology of the incarnation. Remove it, and the story of Christ's nativity becomes immeasurably reduced, as d

Dr. John Koessler is an award-winning writer and retired faculty emeritus of Moody Bible Institute. John writes the Practical Theology column for Today in the Word and a monthly column on prayer for Mature Living. He is the author of 16 books. His latest book , When God is Silent, is published by Lexham Press. You can learn more about John at https://www.johnkoessler.com.

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