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“What are you getting me for Christmas?”

Dec 18th, 2007 by admin | 0

Luke 2:6-7

Christmas is a time of gift giving. What are the real gifts God gives through the Christmas story?

In the midst of today’s uncertainties, in the midst of troubles and trials, we have come again to Christmas. Here again God sends God’s most Christmas bellsmiraculous and unexpected gift: Jesus.

Christmas is not only a time of remembering what gifts we should give in Christ’s name to those we love. It is also a time of remembering the gift God gave in our names and for our sakes—the gift of Christ. What are some of God’s gifts that come to us through the Christmas story?

The first Christmas gift is the gift of Jesus, the light of the world. God began the custom of giving. James 1:17 asserts, “Every generous act of giving, with every perfect gift, is from above, coming down from the Father of lights.”So the first Christmas gift given is the gift from God. His present is Jesus, the light of the world. Jesus is the light that shines in the darkness of our lives. For the light of the world, the gift of the Father of Lights, is Jesus. John 1:4-5 proclaims, “In Him was life, and the life was the light of all people. The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness did not overcome it.”Our Christmas decorations of lights, whether they be electric bulbs on our tree or candles on our table, remind us of the gift of the Creator—the light of the world. The incarnation of God in a Baby is the gospel’s affirmation of the invasion into human darkness of the light of the world.

The second Christmas gift is the gift of Mary and Joseph. Their present was obedient preparation.God had prepared Mary, and Mary had prepared Joseph Mary and Jesusfor the birth of the Christ Child. Because their hearts were open and obedient to God’s will and call, it was their arms that God chose to embrace and cuddle the Christ Child. It was their hands that God chose to wrap the Infant Jesus in swaddling clothes to keep Him safe.

The third Christmas gift is the gift of the shepherds. They brought to the Christ Child a very precious present—the gift of wonder.The first people to see Jesus were simple, smelly, uneducated men who were occupied with daily tasks, but were not preoccupied with temporal things. Wonder touched their hearts and minds when they heard the angel. They arose and went to Bethlehem bearing their gift of wonder.Unlike the Magi, who came with regal gifts, the shepherds probably came empty-handed. These simple men of the fields hurried to Bethlehem with nothing but their wonder to give. Their hands were empty, but their hearts were full of awe.It is our sense of wonder and awe in the face of God’s glorious gift of Christ that emboldens us to follow in the shepherds’ footsteps and proclaim the good news that Christ has come into our world. Thankfully the gift of wonder is contagious. In the words of Luke, those who heard the shepherds “wondered at those things which were told them by the shepherds” (2:18 KJV).

The fourth Christmas gift is the gift of the wise men—the gift of excellence.Contrary to what you see in paintings, the wise men did not come to Jesus’ birthplace. They arrived late, after Mary and Joseph had brought Jesus home to Nazareth. These magi, or wise men, brought the child Jesus the most treasured gifts of their day—gold, frankincense and myrrh. They offered the gift of excellence, not what was left over after other obligations had been performed.Their gifts demonstrated that it is the best of our talents and our treasures that every wise man and woman will offer to Christ.

Finally, the fifth Christmas gift is the gift of the baby Jesus Himself, the gift of joy.Over and over again in the gospel accounts of Christmas, you come across the word “joy.” It is in the angelic announcement: “Fear not: for behold, I bring you good tidings of great joy, which shall be to all people” (Luke 2:10 KJV).

To a world crying out in all its confusion, pain and perversion for salvation, the Baby Jesus brought the gift of good news, and with it, joy. In the “worst of times,” this tiny Shepherds at the Mangerbaby offered the best of truth. In the worst of times, God does the best of things. That’s a message we need to both hear and tell in the trying times in which we live.

In Christ, we have been gifted with the pathway to God, the route to fulfillment in life, the light which shines to illumine our steps toward God. Teilhard de Chardin asserted that “If we have faith, then everything about us begins to gleam.” The gift of the Baby Jesus was this gift of gleaming truth.

As you open presents from those you love, remember that the greatest presents of Christmas are not physical, but spiritual. In all your celebrations take this journey to Bethlehem and share these spiritual gifts of light, obedient preparation, wonder, excellence and the joy of truth. Amen.

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