What is Christmas to me?
It's not a historically correct birthday of Jesus. It's not, in many cases, even a celebration of that day. But what is Christmas to me? I'll answer that with another question I've asked before in a message I preached on this very thing. What is
Christmas?
When I consider this question, I can't help but be drawn back to the lives of three men in the Old Testament: Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. What stands out about these three men more than anything to me, is that God made each of them promises - and He kept them.
Take Abraham for example. Here's a fellow that worshipped the moon, and was most likely even a priest in that cult. God, by no merit of Abraham's whatsoever, calls him out of Ur of the Chaldees,
doesn't tell him where He's calling him too, only that He will show this land to him when he gets there. But He does tell him why:
And I will make of you a great nation, and I will bless you and make your name great, so that you will be a blessing. I will bless those who bless you, and him who dishonors you I will curse, and in you all the families of the earth shall be blessed."
Genesis 12:2-3
All of this, and Abraham goes. We have issues with believing God will meet our financial needs, and this fellow up and leaves everything,
believing he should obey, but
not yet believing the God he was obeying (Genesis 15:6)!
What's more, when he does finally believe (a belief that was counted unto him as righteousness), it's only after 15 or so years of silence, waiting for the first son by which this promise would be fulfilled. That's right! He
had no son by which this promise was to be fulfilled! Add on top of that, Abraham was 100 years old, and his wife was 90! The odds were stacked in his favor for disbelieving, yet he believed - and was rewarded with the birth of Isaac! God gave him the son through which His promises would be fulfilled. God kept His word to Abraham.
Then take Isaac. God makes the same promise to him as He made to his father Abraham:
I will multiply your offspring as the stars of heaven and will give to your offspring all these lands. And in your offspring all the nations of the earth shall be blessed, because Abraham obeyed my voice and kept my charge, my commandments, my statutes, and my laws.
Genesis 26:4-5
Isaac had learned a life of belief from his father, who was called "the friend of God." But he had to put his belief in God's promise to him as well. Afterall, it wasn't until he was 60 that Esau and Jacob were born. But he too struggled, and he too believed God. And again, God gave
him the son through which His promise would be kept, the younger son Jacob. God kept His word to Isaac as well as Abraham.
Then consider Jacob. Here's a guy who is by his very name a cheat. He cheated Esau out of his birthright and his blessing, both of which were granted to him by God to begin with! He
didn't believe God. Instead he fled from Esau at the bequest of his parents, and made a bargain with God:
...If God will be with me and will keep me in this way that I go, and will give me bread to eat and clothing to wear, so that I come again to my father's house in peace, then the LORD shall be my God, and this stone, which I have set up for a pillar, shall be God's house. And of all that you give me I will give a full tenth to you.
Genesis 28:20-22
If God will bless and keep me
then He will be my God. What pride! What arrogance! What utter disbelief! And yet, what does God do for Jacob? He prospers him, blesses him and brings him again to the land his children would one day inherit. And along the way, Jacob meets a man that he wrestles with the night through, knowing that it was the Lord. In truth, he knew it was God, and wanted a blessing. I also tend to think that for the first time in his life Jacob realized
God, and when he got a hold of Him, he wasn't about to let go. God blessed him, changed his name, and made him the same promise He'd made his fathers prior:
And God said to him, "I am God Almighty: be fruitful and multiply. A nation and a company of nations shall come from you, and kings shall come from your own body. The land that I gave to Abraham and Isaac I will give to you, and I will give the land to your offspring after you."
Genesis 35:11-12
Jacob, now called Israel, had come full circle. He believed God, and God promised him a nation and a land. God gave him 10 sons through which His promise would be fulfilled. God kept His word to Jacob. But what I find most interesting about each of these promises, is that
none of these men lived to see those promises come to fruition! Yet
each of them believed.
TO BE CONTINUED...