Good morning!
I hope everyone is having a great Christmas week as we move on to the new year to come. I found an awesome article on the meaning of "God with us" I want to share today. I want to wish everyone a Merry Christmas a blessed upcoming year. Time flies!
By
Dr. Richard P. Bucher
Original article can be found
here
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The Meaning of Immanuel, God with Us
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There is no one in history that has been given more names or titles
than Jesus Christ. If you've read through the Bible carefully then you
know what I mean. Throughout the pages of Holy Writ over 100 names and
titles are given to Jesus. And whether He is called "Bright morning
star, Wonderful Counselor, the Root of Jesse, the Alpha and the Omega,
or the Lamb of God", each of these names and titles is rich with
meaning. They all say something significant about who Jesus is.
However, there is no name more significant than
"Immanuel". This name, which Matthew refers to in his Gospel (Matthew
1:23), was first given to Jesus by the prophet Isaiah 700 years before
His birth (Isaiah 7:14). And this very special Christmas name, as
Matthew tells us, means "God with us." Jesus Christ is Immanuel, "God
with us," and I'd like to share why this is so meaningful at Christmas
time.
I.
The babe born to Mary in a
manger, the infant that the shepherds ran to see, the newborn child
that the Magi traveled hundreds of miles to worship is Immanuel, God
with us. But in what sense is Jesus "God with us?"
Wasn't God always with the human race? Wasn't "God
with us" before Jesus? Yes. In one sense God, the Creator, has always
been "with" His creation. Unlike the false god of the Deists and Theists
and of many evolutionists, who believe in a god who started the world
and then departed far away, the true God has always been with us. About
this He says in Jeremiah 23 "`Am I God who is near,' declares the LORD,
`And not far off? Can a man hide himself in hiding places, so I do not
see him?' declares the LORD. `Do I not fill the heavens and the earth?'
declares the LORD." (Jer. 23:23-24). The God of the Bible, the true
Creator is omnipresent, everywhere at the same time. He fills all of
creation with His presence; every mountain and every molecule; and yet
He is not a part of that creation. He remains Creator distinct from His
creation. And so a God who is everywhere is certainly a God who is with
us.
When Paul preached to the pagans of Lystra (in Acts
14) He reminded them that the true God, the Creator, had always been
with them, giving them witness of Himself by providing them with rains,
fruitful seasons, and giving them food and glad hearts. Thus, God has
always been with His creation in the sense that He, who is everywhere,
has showered all mankind with blessings -- despite their sin.
But with the birth of Jesus Christ in Bethlehem,
Immanuel, "God With Us," takes on a whole new meaning. For in the person
of baby Jesus, God is "with us" not merely to bless us. Nor is He with
us in the sense that He is going to merely work through Jesus to help
us, protect us, and guide us. No-the little Lord Jesus asleep on the hay
is "God with us" because He is God.
What sent the shepherds back to the fields rejoicing,
what made the wise men fall down in wonder in the shadow of that babe,
was the gripping realization that they were in the presence of their
Creator made man.
Years later St. John the Evangelist under the
inspiration of the Spirit would write the perfect commentary on the
Christmas events. "In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with
God, and the Word was God. He was in the beginning with God; and all
things were made through Him and apart from Him nothing was made which
was made...And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us, and we beheld
His glory, glory as of the only begotten of the Father, full of grace
and truth" (John 1:1-3, 14).
The true message of Christmas is one to stagger the
imagination: The Second Person of the Trinity, the only begotten Son of
the Father, the eternal Word, our Creator wills to clothe Himself in our
nature, and to become man, our brother, one of us. God Himself lies in
the manger, completely human, completely Divine.
II.
But allow me to play the
devil's advocate for a moment. So what? So the message of Christmas is
that God is with us in the Person of Baby Jesus. What difference does it
make? Why do we need this Immanuel? Why do we need "God with us?" It is
said that one does not appreciate the cure, unless one first tastes of
the sickness. And such is the case with the true meaning of Christmas.
Why does mankind need "God with us?" First, because
He is not. Listen to what our Creator says in Isaiah 59: "Behold, the
LORD's hand is not so short that it cannot save; Neither is His ear so
dull that it cannot hear. But your iniquities have made a separation
between you and your God, and your sins have hidden His face from you,
so that He does not hear." These words were spoken originally to the
covenant people of Israel, but they apply to all who have sinned against
the Creator.
And the Scriptures pronounce in no uncertain terms
that every human being stands guilty before God--guilty not only of
misdemeanors, but guilty also of untold felonies. In one place it is
written, "If we say we have no sin we deceive ourselves, and the truth
is not in us." (1 John 1:8) And in another place, "The LORD has looked
down from heaven upon the sons of men, to see if there are any who
understand, who seek after God. They have all turned aside; together
they have become corrupt; there is no one who does good, not even one"
(Psalm 14:2-3). And still in another place God says, "For whoever keeps
the whole law and yet stumbles in one point, he has become guilty of it
all" (James 2:10).
Why does the human race need "God with Us?" Because we have separated ourselves far away from Him by our sin.
Why does the human race need "God with Us?" Because
the plain truth is that without "God with us" we human beings are
incomplete at best. For no matter what we in our arrogance like to
imagine about ourselves, we humans are creatures. We did not will
ourselves into existence by our invincible spirit. Nor do we owe our
existence now to our superior intellect and will to survive. These
explanations are quite flattering and are also quite without any
evidence of truth. We human beings are creations: beautiful,
complicated, and intricate creations fashioned by an all-powerful
Creator who has revealed Himself to us as our God. His name is Yahweh.
And He has revealed Himself to us as Three Divine Persons in One Divine
Essence: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. We human beings were created by
this loving Creator in the image of God (Gen. 1:27). This means that we
were created for the express purpose of knowing and loving Him. We were
meant to have the most intimate relationship imaginable with Him. We
were to depend on Him for all things; we were to daily walk in His
light, His love, His joy, His power.
But all this man chose to throw away, and did throw
away, when He rebelled against the Creator by sinning against Him. And
the last six thousand years of man's history has witnessed the restless
creature man trying to find meaning in life apart from the Creator.
St. Augustine's familiar words hit the mark, "For You
have formed us for Yourself, and our hearts are restless until we find
rest in You." The human race needs God, the Creator, because it is built
into the very core of our nature to know Him intimately. Without Him,
we are incomplete, empty, unfulfilled, restless, all because we are
living life contrary to the purpose for which we were made.
When the creature no longer has fellowship with the
Creator, he seeks to find a replacement to make the gnawing emptiness go
away. Some call this "man's drive to succeed", others "finding myself",
and still others refer to it as "self-actualization." But these
restless strivings are the creature trying to fill the void left by the
Absence of the Creator. Some try to make the emptiness go away with
romance and relationships, family and friends; Others throw themselves
completely into a career hoping that will give their life meaning.
Others find themselves almost obsessively buying one thing after the
other, desperately hoping to find fulfillment under the sheer weight of
the new. Sadly, many turn to the dark side of drugs, alcohol, crime, and
other deviant behaviors to drown out the emptiness and lack of meaning
in their lives. We need "God with us" because without Him we are
incomplete.
Why does the human race need "God with us?" Because
the human race is slowly sinking into oblivion. I know that doesn't
square with the signs of hope around the world. But I am speaking from
God's holy perspective.
From God's perspective, the creation which originally
was "very good" is becoming more corrupted all the time. We as a race
are becoming so perverse, so jaded, so violent, that we can't judge
properly anymore. But God has seen the awful wickedness of this world
and He tells us what will befall it and us: "The earth will be
completely laid waste and completely despoiled, for the LORD has spoken
this word...The earth is broken asunder, the earth is split through, the
earth is shaken violently, the earth reels to and fro like a drunkard,
and it totters like a shack, for its transgression is heavy upon it, and
it will fall, never to rise again." (Isaiah 24:3, 19-20). And of all
those who are guilty of sin, God says that at the end of time His holy
angels "will cast them into the furnace of fire, in that place there
will weeping and gnashing of teeth." (Matthew 13:42).
That is why we need "God with us," Jesus Christ, our
Immanuel. Because only He can undo what we have done. Only the One who
created us in the first place can restore us again. Only our Creator can
break down the wall of sin that separates His creatures from Him. Only
He can give their lives the meaning and completeness they were supposed
to have. Only "God with us" can rescue us from the oblivion that we are
heading toward.
III.
And that is what the
eternal Word of God decided to do. For He saw the dire predicament the
human race was in. He saw the ugliness, the brutality, and the violence
that sin bred in man. He saw the emptiness and the restlessness of
creatures in rebellion against their Creator. He saw that death reigned
like a cold-hearted tyrant over His creation. Most of all He saw (with
tears in His eyes) that His creation which had once been so beautiful,
was now marred and vandalized almost beyond repair by corruption and
sin; and that everything was heading for everlasting condemnation.
And so God the Son, sent by the Father, sprang into
action. He knew that according to the Law He had laid down, that man
must die because of their sin. He also was well aware that man could not
be restored to His Creator until the Law was kept perfectly and sin was
done away with. But such was His love for His creation that He did not
want them to die. But to be true to His Law and not be found a liar
someone had to die. Someone whose death would cancel the penalty of sin,
stop corruption, and make all things new again. So the eternal Word
decided to die for His creation. But to do this He must become human.
And thus 2000 years ago, He came, "born of a woman, born under the Law"
(Galatians 4:4). The Word became flesh and became Jesus Christ.
So great was His love for His fallen creation, for
you and for me, that He left His glory to come here. And through His
perfect life and death on the cross He broke down the wall of separation
that our sin had built and reconciled us to Himself; as it is written
"God was in Christ reconciling the world to Himself, not counting their
trespasses against them." (2 Co. 5:19). Through Jesus Christ, Immanuel,
our sins are forgiven and we have fellowship with our Creator again.
Immanuel. In this one
name, everything humankind needs and the entire plan of God's salvation
is subsumed. How blessed we are that Jesus Christ became Immanuel, God
with us.