Saturday 24 December 2011

The Greatest Love of all....

I was a big Whitney Houston fan in the 80's and her now classic hit was 'The Greatest Love of All', the song ends with the lyrics 'the greatest love of all is learning to love yourself'. That is not the greatest love of all, in fact loving ourselves is easy for us. The greatest love of all is this: while we were yet sinners Christ died for us. 
It's the holiday season when amidst all the frenzy of shopping and Santa there is a manger scene where cattle, shepherds and Magi surround a helpless baby who is placed in a manger. (but not a Santa)
John's gospel tells us nothing of this, that is left to Matthew and Luke, for John, Christmas starts earlier not in Mid September like it does in the West these days, but in Eternity past. John tells us that this helpless looking baby is none other than the Word who created all things in the beginning. The Word who was with God and is Himself God. The Son who is very God of very God, whom the myriads of Angels adored, and the Father delighted in,  the darling of Heaven humbled Himself and became a helpless baby. As one song writer put it, 'The hands that created the world, made the hands that was now holding Him'. Or as John put it 'The Word became flesh, and dwelt among us, and we saw His glory, glory as of the only begotten of the Father, full of grace and truth'.
Christmas confronts us with the fact that while we do love ourselves we by our nature are unlovely and we stand in need of saving and in need of forgiveness. Yet we are utterly helpless to change and transform ourselves and utterly helpless to change our standing before a holy God. Christmas confronts us with a baby who was born to reconcile sinners to Himself to offer us forgiveness by coming to trust in the one who laid down His life for guilty sinners. Christmas points inevitably to Easter and the manger points inevitably to the cross!

As you celebrate Christmas may you come to delight in not only the greatest love of all but the greatest gift of all that is forgiveness from God.

Merry Christmas!
Stephen <><

2 comments:

Dan said...

"Christmas points inevitably to Easter and the manger points inevitably to the cross!"

Hey Stephen, that is excellently put. I love that! Yet don't you find it strange that we seem to neglect Easter? I know there is the old statement that 'we live out Easter everyday', but this can surely be said of Christmas too?

It seems very strange that Christmas is a time when Churches really push out the doors and have special services and nativity plays, (not that i'm saying we should have "Golgotha plays").

In fact i think i will blog on this. Great post again!

Stephen said...

Christmas points inevitably to Easter is very true of the shops where they have their unsold Christmas items next to the chocolate eggs. :-)
I think we need to make the most of the opportunities that are presented to us at Christmas and on Good Friday and Resurrection Sunday.

God Bless bro
Stephen <><