“Do not be afraid. I bring you good news of great joy that will be for
all the people. Today in the town of David
a Savior has been born to you; he is Christ the Lord.” – Luke 2:10-11
For many of
us, the Book of Luke gives our favorite account of Jesus’ birth. And if you’ve
ever watched “A Charlie Brown Christmas,” you probably remember that it’s
Linus’s favorite too.
One of the reasons that we love Luke’s account of Jesus’ birth is because he documents many extraordinary details that no other gospel writer includes. Only Luke mentions the Angel Gabriel announcing Jesus’ birth to Mary; the decree from Caesar Augustus; and all of those classic images of the manger and the shepherds and the angels in the fields. And no matter how many times we hear it, it never gets old.
One of the reasons that we love Luke’s account of Jesus’ birth is because he documents many extraordinary details that no other gospel writer includes. Only Luke mentions the Angel Gabriel announcing Jesus’ birth to Mary; the decree from Caesar Augustus; and all of those classic images of the manger and the shepherds and the angels in the fields. And no matter how many times we hear it, it never gets old.
Now, there
are many reasons why I love Luke’s account of Jesus’ birth. But one of the best
is that it reveals that Jesus didn’t come for the wealthy or the famous or the
most talented people of the world. He came first and foremost for the
forgotten, for the helpless and for the nobodies. And that brings me hope that
Jesus came for me too.
1. Jesus came for the old and washed-up. Unlike Matthew, Mark and John, Luke records the details of John the Baptist’s birth (Luke 1:5-25). And since God sent John to prepare the way for Jesus’ coming, these details are an important part of Luke’s Christmas story. But when you get down to it, John was basically born to a pair of old fogeys: Zechariah and Elizabeth. The Bible tells us in verse 7, “They had no children, because
In first century
2. Jesus came for the young and
unimportant. Now,
let’s look at Mary: a young girl who was single, had no kids—and worse still,
she lived in the podunk little town of Nazareth .
The truth is, Mary had almost no social status. So imagine how shocked she must
have been when the Angel Gabriel appeared and spoke to her in verse 28:
“Greetings, you who are highly favored! The Lord is with you.” Mary was
floored. She must have started looking over her shoulder to see who the angel
was really talking to. She may have
even wondered if she was the butt of a cruel joke, because nobody—absolutely
nobody—viewed her as “highly favored.” Nobody, that is, except for God.
Jesus came
for the young and for the unimportant. That’s just as true today as it was back
then. If you are a teenager or a young adult, Jesus came for you. You’re never
too young or unimportant for Jesus to care about. And you’re never too young or
unimportant for God to use in wonderful ways for His glory. Now don’t you forget
it, you young whipper snappers!
3. Jesus came for the dirty and despised. Think about it: Of all the people on Planet Earth that God could have announced Jesus’ birth to, he announced it first to shepherds. What a weird thing for God to do! Sheep are very dirty animals, so shepherds were considered ceremonially unclean. They weren’t allowed to be a part of any Jewish synagogue. They weren’t even counted in the census. It’s as if they weren’t even viewed as fully human. Yet God sent his angels to announce Jesus’ birth to a group of these smelly, dirty, despised shepherds. Why would God do that?
Well, the
messenger angel answers that question in verses 10 and 11: “Do not be afraid. I
bring you good news of great joy that will be for ALL the people. Today in the
town of David a
Savior has been born to you; he is Christ the Lord.” Isn’t that something?
Jesus is good news for every person.
Jesus is a Savior for every man and woman, even the ones the world thinks stink
to high heaven. Even the ones the world considers “not worth counting.”
Luke wanted
the message of Christmas to be loud and clear: Jesus Christ came for those who
are at the bottom of the social pecking order. Jesus came for the nobodies. He
didn’t come for those who are on mountaintops but instead for those who are in
the valleys, those who are ignored, those who are overlooked, those who are
broken, those who are dirty, and those who are despised. And that includes you
and me. Jesus came for you and me.
THAT’S why
we celebrate his birth. THAT’S simply Christmas.
Dane Davis is the Pastor of First Christian Church in Victorville. For
more information, visit www.fccvv.com. Join us for our message series, “Simply Christmas,” Sunday at 10
a.m., and for our Christmas Eve Service Sunday night at 7 pm.
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