Here is the audio recording of today’s message from the church, a Christmas message from Isaiah. The message is 29 minutes long, and is in English and Romanian. Hope you enjoy it and that it enriches your heart’s celebration of the birth of our Savior Jesus Christ.
Category: The Gospel
God is With Us

“Therefore the Lord Himself will give you a sign.
Behold, the virgin shall conceive and bear a Son,
and shall call His name Immanuel.”
–Isaiah 7:14
Immanuel, as you may know, means “God with us.” When we understand the meaning of that Christmas promise, made by prophecy from God centuries before Christ came, then we begin to understand why Christmas is something to celebrate.
Without understanding the name’s meaning, some have thought that the special thing about the virgin birth was the virgin herself. They have the impression that she might even be worthy of worship or someone close enough to the throne of God to intercede for them there when they pray. But this first announcement God made of the virgin birth long before it happened shows us that it wouldn’t be the virgin that should be noticed. The sign of the virgin birth was that the child would be “Immanuel” – “God with us.” That’s what is so special about this event. The Child would have no human father, because while He would be a person like us, He wouldn’t be just a person. He would be God. God, Who had come to be with us. To be one of us. To be for us.
And when that Child was born, truly it was “good news of great joy, which shall be to all people,” as the angel promised the shepherds. Because if God is with us, out of that truth flow solutions to every problem. God is with us. That is good news!
It’s especially good news for the person whose loneliness is magnified at Christmas. God Himself is with us who know Christ.
It’s good news to the sinner, who fears the judgment and condemnation his life has earned. God is with us. And for us. And He loves us enough to come to us, live with us, die for us, and rise again to life to save us.
It’s good news to the agnostic, who wonders if God is really there, and if He really desires involvement in our lives.
It’s good news to the hurting and the oppressed, to know that God will take up their cause as a strong Defender.
It’s good news to those who mourn the loss of loved ones, knowing that the God of eternity is with us, and will reunite us with those to whom we had to say goodbye.
It’s good news to those who have an aching emptiness because they haven’t found a fulfilling purpose in life—to know that they were created with a purpose and that the Creator is with them to find it.
Even better news–If you have received Christ, then God is not just with you, but in you. He was with Herod, the Pharisees, and other religious leaders, but they rejected Him, so He was not in them.
By faith, you can have God with you, and living in you, giving you new life and life eternal. Don’t miss that great Christmas miracle. Because this God, the Savior, Who is with us, is Wonderful, Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, and the Prince of Peace. In each of those things, He is a truly wonderful Gift. “For God so loved the world, that He gave His only Son, so that whoever believes on Him would not be destroyed, but have everlasting life.”
The God Vaccine

“These people honor Me with their lips, but their hearts are far from Me. They worship Me in vain; their teachings are but rules taught by men.”
–Matthew 15:8-9
In the last several weeks, you may have gone to get a flu shot, to vaccinate yourself against getting the flu this season. It’s interesting how they make a flu vaccine, and how it works. You see, the flu vaccine is essentially an altered strand of the previous year’s flu virus.
When this harmless strand is injected into your body, it triggers your immune system, in effect training it to know what to look for, so that when you are exposed to the flu virus this year, your body will recognize and reject it before it infects you. In simplest terms, the flu shot gives you a little bit of something that looks to your body like the flu, in order to keep you from getting the real thing.
But did you know that in this season of the year, there’s another thing people are unwittingly “vaccinated” against? Unfortunately, they’re being vaccinated against an “infection” they need to have in order to live.
Here’s how it happens: They go to church and celebrate Christmas. They take communion and sing carols about the birth of Christ. They watch Christmas plays and listen to messages about the Christ child. They give and receive presents and cards. They pray with great sincerity about “peace on Earth.” They shake hands with people, smiling and wishing them a “Merry Christmas and Happy New Year.” They don’t realize they’re injecting themselves with that little bit of something that looks like a relationship with God that keeps them from getting the real thing.
Jesus warned against that kind of worship that people are so prone to at Christmas and Easter. He warned us that God isn’t impressed by lips that sing His praises if they come from a heart He hasn’t been allowed to utterly change.
My friends, you don’t want to get a “God vaccine” this Christmas. Don’t let mere religion immunize you against a relationship with Jesus Christ. Get the real thing, if you haven’t already. Get a relationship with God, that guarantees you eternal life with Him in heaven.
It’s not about going through the motions of religion, at Christmastime or anytime. Following traditions and teachings of mere men is worshiping God in vain, Jesus said. In vain. Worthless. Of no value. Such worship will gain you absolutely nothing for eternity.
The Good News of Christmas, though, is that it doesn’t have to be that way; because “the real thing” is God’s Christmas gift to you. And this gift is not like the “free gifts” the world offers, where you get something for “free, when you buy . . . .” I’m talking about a real gift that is truly free: The gift of salvation from your sins and everlasting joy in heaven. It costs you nothing, because Jesus has already paid for it so that He could give it to you. The blood He shed on the cross is your gift certificate, purchasing your eternal peace with a holy God.
The first “Christmas tree” ever was cut down, and its boards were made into a cross. On it, Jesus, the perfect Son of God, hung and bled and died for only one reason. It wasn’t to set an example for you. It wasn’t to inspire you. It wasn’t to found a religion for you to follow. It was to completely pay the debt you owe God for breaking His perfect laws.
Jesus absorbed all of the punishment you deserve for your sins, and rose again from the dead to give you eternal life. All you must do is believe that, and you will be saved.
Redeem your “gift certificate” from Christ today, right where you are. Tell Jesus you know you have sinned against Him. Tell Him you believe that He died in your place, being punished for your sins. Ask Him for forgiveness of your sins. Tell Him you’re trusting Him to give you now the gift of eternal life in heaven.
If you do that, then you can truly celebrate Christmas, with a new heart, given to you by Christ Himself. You will no longer be vaccinated from the truth that sets you free. You’ll have the real thing. And you’ll wonder how you made it through so many Christmases without it.
Whiter Christmas

Purge me with hyssop, and I shall be clean;
Wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow.
–Psalm 51:7
Experiencing a whiter-than-snow Christmas isn’t just something you have to dream about.
Snow is the purest, brightest, whitest substance that exists. Anything else you would call “white” could be held up next to clean snow, and you’d have to call it “off white.” But God’s word tells us that when a dirty, dark sinner comes under the blood of Christ, God washes him even whiter than snow.
That’s how complete God’s cleansing is. It makes us whiter than the whitest. Purer than the purest. Cleaner than the cleanest things we can imagine. And that’s what we who truly celebrate Christmas from the heart have experienced.
What’s more, this is not just a surface cleaning, not just a whitewashing of the outside that leaves the inside dirty. God’s cleansing of the repentant heart is a “purging with hyssop.” Purging is complete cleansing of our souls from the inside out. When we trust in Christ, God digs deep, cleansing us to the core.
The hyssop branch was used in Old Testament times to sprinkle the altar with blood, thus purifying it. And on the cross, Jesus drank from a sponge lifted to Him on a hyssop branch. The Purest of the pure consumed our sinfulness, so that He could give us pure living water to drink and be cleansed. He who knew no sin became sin for us and our sin was crucified with Him.
Now, we who knew no righteousness have become righteousness by drinking of the cup from which flows His precious blood, that washes away all of our sin. We who were so sinful that God in His holiness was unable to look upon us have now become purer than freshly-fallen snow, glistening in the unsurpassed light of Christ’s eyes that shine upon us. As we reflect His light, we are made so spiritually bright that the sinful eyes of the unregenerated world can hardly bear to look upon us without squinting.
When we first trusted in Christ alone to save us, our hearts were baptized clean by the living water of the Word of God and the purifying fire of the Holy Spirit. The sepulchers of our carnal bodies became temples of the Holy Spirit, and now we are forever inhabited by God Himself. We are no longer ashamed, for “all who look to Him are radiant.”
Brothers and sisters, rejoice in this greatest of all miracles this Christmas, and share it with others. (When someone you know celebrates that you are having a white Christmas this year where you live, or bemoaning the fact that you aren’t, use it as an opportunity to tell them why your heart is full this Christmas regardless of the weather.)
And as the new year begins, dwell and walk each day in this greatest of all joys: The joy of being so deeply purged and cleansed that even a God of unmatched holiness finds you flawless, and wants to use your life to bring others to Him also.

A Romanian Christmas Gospel Tract
Povestea lui Bruce –
găsindu-L pe Dumnezeul Personal
Cine este Dumnezeul meu? am întrebat. Aveam 14 ani. Cine este El? Nimeni nu mi-a răspuns, Însă m-am întrebat iar gândindu-mă – aici este biserica lui Dumnezeu şi aici este Dumnezeul despre care învăţăm la şcoală. Însă cine este Dumnezeul meu?
Nici un răspuns nu a venit din cerul îngheţat de iarnă în timp ce mergeam spre casă. Şi se părea că nimeni nu ştia răspunsul. Duminica trecută avusesem curajul de a-l întreba pe dascăl la biserică. Mi-a zâmbit larg şi mi-a zis că deja fusesem învăţat tot ce puteam şti despre Dumnezeu de către biserică. Învăţasem teologie şi religie, însă vroiam să-L cunosc pe Dumnezeu.
Tatăl meu prefera ca eu să nu mă gândesc la aşa ceva. Se uita la mine cu ochii lui albaştri şi imi zicea că pierd şi timpul meu şi al lui. Şi poate că asta făceam, mă gândeam. Nu părea să existe un Dumnezeu de cunoscut în afară de Dumnezeul feroce despre care se vorbea la biserică. Mă gândeam–acest vânt îngheţat ce-mi taie faţa este vântul Lui.
Dar de ce m-am născut? Mă gândeam. Sunt slab, miop, neîndemânatic şi ciudat. Nici măcar nu pot să joc fotbal. Când mi se pasează mingea, mă loveşte şi toţi râd de mine. Am simţit o greutate rece în stomac, la fel ca atunci când mănânci îngheţată prea repede.
Cu cât mă gândeam mai mult, judecata şi pedeapsa lui Dumnezeu păreau uşor de imaginat: pământul deschizându-se şi oamenii fiind traşi în iadul focului veşnic, iar Isus venind cu armata Lui de îngeri strălucitori şi puternici, înarmaţi cu săbii pentru a distruge întreaga creaţie datorită păcătoşeniei sale.
Mă înspăimânta să mă gândesc la Dumnezeu. Uneori când îmi pierdeam cumpătul îmi dădeam seama că făceam ceva rău şi mă gândeam: oh, Doamne, voi fi judecat.
Am început să citesc Biblia în Evanghelia după Ioan şi lucrurile au început să fie diferite. Isus nu era deloc aşa cum îmi fusese descris. Sau Îl confundam pe Isus cu Dumnezeul de care mi-era frică? În Ioan, oriunde mergea Isus, oamenii erau iubiţi şi schimbaţi de către El şi întotdeauna în mai bine. El îi iubea pe oameni cu toate că nu meritau. Şi cu toate că păcatele lor îi făceau să merite iadul, dacă îşi puneau credinţa în El, El le ierta păcatele şi le promitea viaţa veşnică.
Mă gândeam la prietenii mei cu care am mers la biserică. Am mers la biserică împreună cu ei toată viaţa mea. Îi ştiam. Ştiam că nu se schimbaseră. Nici unul dintre noi nu se schimbase. Cu toate că se vorbea mult despre schimbare. Ascultam dascălii zicând: “Trebuie să te schimbi pentru că Dumnezeu va condamna pământul şi pe păcătoşi.” Ştiam că nu eram suficient de bun pentru Dumnezeu, însă doream să-L cunosc – şi nu ştiam că El dorea să mă cunoască, să mă iubească şi să mă ierte. Aşa că mă simţeam pierdut. Atunci am citit în Biblie despre Isus, care “a venit să caute şi să-i mântuiască pe cei pierduţi.” Acest verset m-a şocat şi mi-a trimis un fior rece prin tot corpul. Ştiam dreptatea lui Dumnezeu, că El mă va judeca pe baza impurităţilor mele – însă iată aici un verset care spune că Isus a venit să mântuiască pe păcătos.
Însă cum mă va mântui? Un verset pe care l-am citit în Romani a început să prindă înţeles în mintea mea. Spunea că voi fi mântuit prin credinţă – punându-mi credinţa în Isus.
Asta-I tot? m-am gândit. Doar să cred? Nu trebuie să fac ceva măreţ? Nu ar trebui să duc o viaţă perfectă? Aceasta era ideea pe care o aveam de la biserica mea.
Apoi m-am simţit îmboldit să-I vorbesc lui Cristos. Bineînţeles că mă mai rugasem, doar formal în biserică, cu cuvintele pe care ei m-au învăţat să le spun. Însă de data asta era diferit. M-am aşezat pe pat şi am început să vorbesc cu Isus. A fost o simplă convorbire, însă a fost prima oară când am comunicat într-adevăr cu El.
“Doamne Isuse, am citit despre cum i-ai schimbat pe toţi cei de lângă tine. Vreau să fiu schimbat. Vreau pace şi împlinire şi să fiu eliberat de temerile mele. Mi-e teamă de Tine. Tu ştii că nici de mine nu-mi place. Totul este stricat în jurul meu. Şi înlăuntrul meu. Dar te rog, Dumnezeule… nu ştiu cum vei putea face ceva în mine. Dar te rog, Isuse, lasă-mă să Te cunosc. Fă-mă nou.”
Şi atunci am ştiut că am fost mântuit.
Bruce a putut experimenta aceste lucruri cu Dumnezeu şi avea o relaţie veşnică împreună cu El datorită a ceea ce Isus a făcut pentru el, pentru mine şi pentru tine. Din cauza păcatului noi suntem separaţi de Dumnezeu şi merităm să fim condamnaţi pentru toată veşnicia. Probabil că la fel ca şi Bruce, ai realizat că eşti un păcătos, aşa cum zice Biblia, Şi când vei sta în faţa lui Dumnezeu la sfârşitul acestei vieţi vei fi judecat şi condamnat. Biblia este clară că asta merităm. Însă ne învaţă de asemenea că Dumnezeu ne iubeşte atât de mult încât a făcut o cale pentru noi ca să avem păcatele iertate pentru a nu trebui să fim pedepsiţi în iad, ci pentru a putea merge în rai să fim împreună cu El şi să experimentăm o fericire veşnică.
Isus nu a păcătuit niciodată astfel încât a căpătat răsplata vieţii veşnice în rai în locul nostru. Apoi Cristos a murit pe cruce pentru noi şi a înviat din morţi.
Când Biblia spune că El a murit pentru păcatele tale, aceasta înseamnă că Isus a luat asupra Lui păcatul tău, ca şi cum El ar fi comis acest păcat; apoi L-a lăsat pe Dumnezeu Tatăl să-L pedepsească în locul tău pentru fiecare lucru rău pe care l-ai făcut sau rostit. El a luat această pedeapsă ca tu să nu fii nevoit.
Acum, crezând acest mesaj şi punându-ţi credinţa doar în Isus Cristos poţi fi mântuit de păcate, iertat şi poţi avea viaţa veşnică în rai. Însă nu trebuie să îţi pui credinţa în faptele bune pe care le-ai făcut sau în ceea ce biserica sau liderii religioşi au făcut pentru tine, ca de exemplu botezul. Trebuie să-ţi pui credinţa doar în Isus Cristos ca singura cale către cer. El este singurul care îţi poate ierta păcatele pentru că El este Cel care a dus o viaţă perfectă şi apoi a luat pedeapsa pe care o meritai pe cruce.
Şi trebuie să iei o decizie acum în această viaţă. Ori îţi pui credinţa în Isus Cristos să te mântuiască şi să-ţi dea viaţa veşnică, ori îţi pui credinţa în faptele tale bune sau în biserica ta şi apoi vei muri în păcatele tale. Dacă vei muri în păcatele tale, nu vei fi iertat, ci vei fi pedepsit pentru totdeauna. Însă pentru că Dumnezeu te iubeşte, El nu vrea să te pedepsească, ci să te ierte.
Nu vrei, ca şi Bruce, să-L laşi să facă acest lucru astăzi? Vorbeşte cu Isus în cuvintele tale. Spune-I că tu crezi că ai păcătuit împotriva Lui şi că meriţi să fii pedepsit. Spune-I că tu crezi că El te iubeşte şi că a murit pentru tine şi a înviat din morţi. Spune-I ca te încredinţezi Lui să te mântuiască, să te ierte, să te schimbe şi să-ţi dea viaţă veşnică împreună cu El. Apoi mulţumeşte-I pentru ce a făcut pentru tine.
Vrei să ştii mai multe despre o viaţă nouă în Isus Cristos? Contactează-ne astăzi. Crăciun Fericit ţie şi familiei taleşi Dumnezeu să te binecuvânteze cu o credinţă adevărată şi o relaţie cu Dumnezeul personal prin Fiul Său, Isus Cristos.
http://harul.freetzi.com/
Absolute Proof of God

The painting pictured above hangs on a wall in our home. And I have something surprising to tell you about it: No one ever painted it. It just came into existence by itself. There was no paint, no canvass, and most importantly, no painter. No one conceived the idea of what would be in the picture, and no one ever performed the action of making it. One day, the painting wasn’t, and over much time, somehow, it was.
Do you believe me?
Of course you don’t. Because what I have just told you is beyond ridiculous. You are absolutely certain that what I told you is a lie, and you are absolutely correct to be certain of that conclusion. Because you can see that the painting exists. And you know that means there was a painter. You see, this painting’s existence is not just evidence that there might have been a painter. It is absolute, undeniable proof that there was a painter. It would take a lunatic to believe that this painting might not have had a painter. Because that idea is infinitely foolish.
Likewise, you and the universe in which you live are not just evidence that there might be an intelligent Designer and Creator. They are absolute, undeniable proof that there is a Creator. Those who say they are sure God isn’t there are defending a belief system that is intellectually untenable. The non-existence of God is not even a possibility. In those moments when you doubt His existence, you are not being intellectual, and not following where the scientific evidence leads. You’re just having an emotional response to something inside of you that struggles with issues of who God is.
Maybe it’s your bad experiences with religion, which wouldn’t be surprising, because there is a lot more bad religion than good in the world. Or maybe it is your personal life, and how it hasn’t gone the way a god of your liking would have let it go. Or maybe it’s something else.
But whatever you choose to believe about God, you can be certain of this: He is there, and He is real. There simply isn’t any other possibility. Our existence is absolute proof that we were made, not just evidence that we might have been made. It would be foolish to believe those who have told you otherwise.
Once you have established for yourself the certainty that there is a God, because there simply cannot be any other logical explanation for your existence, then you have to begin a search for finding who He is, and why He made you. Millions have found the Bible a reliable source of the answers to those all-important questions, and many of those who know the Bible best will suggest you begin with the New Testament’s gospel of John
Christmas myths
It’s almost Christmas. How well do you know the biblical story of what you’ll be celebrating? If you’re like many of us, probably not as well as you think. For example, if you had to tell the story right now, without looking anything up, would your telling of it include angels singing God’s praises before the shepherds in the field? Would any or all of these singing angels be female? Would they be flying in the sky? How about 3 kings joining the shepherds at the manger scene? Would there be a star in the sky shining a light down on the manger to guide these kings all the way to Bethlehem?
Because these things aren’t what happened. Nor are a lot more of what you’ve seen each year in your church’s Christmas program or sung about when you went a-caroling. It’s just the way we’ve told and retold the story of the Nativity, because it has become traditional to include considerable embellishment, and sometimes to even get the facts dead wrong. Don’t think so? In a moment, we’ll open our Bibles, and see.
The first time I realized how much we’ve fable-ized the story of the birth of Christ was when I was a teenager. There had been a drama at our church in which a child had met Mary and Joseph in Bethlehem, told them there wasn’t room at the inn, and helped them find the stable. Two women in the church were talking afterward, and they were upset at the perceived inaccuracy. You see, having seen many other Christmas dramas, the two ladies were certain and adamant that it was the innkeeper who had turned Mary and Joseph away–after they unsuccessfully pleaded with him for a room–telling them to go to a stable out back instead.
But if you know the Biblical account well, you already know that both the program with the kid and the renditions with an innkeeper are just dramatic license. The only thing the Bible says about it is that the baby was born and laid in a manger, because there wasn’t room at the inn. No more details. Maybe there were dozens of people without a place to stay wandering the streets when Mary and Joseph arrived. Maybe there was just a “no vancancy” sign on the front door and Joseph just improvised the best he could by taking his wife to a stable somewhere. And maybe there weren’t any animals in the stable when Mary gave birth to her Son. (If I’d been Joseph, I would have put them outside–wouldn’t you?) Who knows? But my point here is how easy it is for people to take the way they had heard the story and assume it is true, instead of reading the Bible and seeing what it really says.
Let’s look, then, just for fun, at the Christmas story, and see where we’re traditionally right, and where we’re traditionally wrong.
The biggie is probably the singing angels. I mean, everyone knows the angels sang, right? All of our songs at Christmas refer to it. And if we went to a Christmas program where the angels (all male) were only talking when the words, “Glory to God in the Highest, and on earth, peace, goodwill to men” came out of their mouths, we would feel cheated out of some good music. But read Luke 2. You’ll find that’s exactly what happened. The angels weren’t singing, but speaking. By the way, there is, in fact, no passage in the New Testament that ever refers to an angelic choir or to an angel singing. (That’s also true in Revelation 4, for example, with the angels saying together, not singing, “Holy, Holy, Holy, is the Lord God of Hosts, Who was, and is, and is to come.”)
And guess what. Our common way of telling the angels and shepherds scene isn’t just off base on the part about songs. For example, these particular angels were like men standing on the ground with the shepherds, not apparently winged creatures that flew in the sky above them. And our impression of the angels as cutesy, pretty little things is wrong. When the first angel stood there next to the shepherds, he was fearsome. They were terrified. He had to admonish them not to worry, because he was there to give them good news.
What about the 3 kings following a star to the stable and meeting the shepherds there to worship the baby Jesus together? Never happened. In fact, it’s wrong in several ways. First, they weren’t kings. They were what the Bible calls “wise men” who were practitioners of eastern religions and astrology. “Wise men” like Daniel had served with during the Old Testament Babylonian and Persian empires. Daniel’s writings about the coming King, in which Daniel even predicted how many years it would be before the Messiah came, had these wise men ready to look for Him when God gave them a star in the sky, to which they always looked for guidance anyway, to bring them there. (The biblical account also has God guiding them with dreams—the same way He had dealt with the leaders of their ancestors in Daniel’s day.)
Anyway, according to the Bible, these “three wise men,” –OOOPS. There weren’t likely 3 of them. If you read the account in Matthew 2, which does not tell us how many were in their company, you’ll actually get the impression the group was larger. The number 3 was probably inserted by the carol-writers because the Bible lists 3 gifts that the group presented to Jesus as an act of worship.
So these wise men didn’t follow a star to the manger in Bethlehem. They didn’t even know the baby was in Bethlehem. (Daniel hadn’t told them that detail.) And the star didn’t “lead them” to Israel to begin with. It just appeared in the sky as a sign for them that the King of the Jews they had read about had been born. (They already knew from Daniel’s prophecies that the time was getting close, because 33 years later that King would enter Jerusalem.)
So the wise men saw the star telling them Christ was born, and they went to Jerusalem to look for Him. In Jerusalem, they told King Herod, “We saw His star in the east and came to worship Him.” They asked Herod where He was. Herod, since he had not been wise enough to be waiting for the Messiah, knew nothing about how to answer their question. He called upon people who would know. They said the OT prophecies predicted that this baby would be born in Bethlehem. So the wise men set out for Bethlehem to “search” for Christ there. When they got to Bethlehem, they were filled with joy when they saw the star appear again. Then it guided them to where Jesus was. No longer in the stable, though. It wasn’t still the night of Jesus’ birth. The shepherds were long gone, and Mary and Joseph had found a house to live in with their baby boy.
Well, it can be fun to look at the Biblical account of Christ’s birth, and just to see where we’ve had misconceptions about it. This week, take the Bible passages yourself, and read them fresh and new. Perhaps you’ll find other ways that you had the story wrong in your mind. (I found one thing like that just this morning myself.) Read the story like you hadn’t heard it before. Picture it as something new. And worship the Christ child with new vibrancy. You’ll find the story is actually quite interesting and exciting just the way it really happened. It needs no embellishment.
Then, consider the importance of getting the story right when we tell it, through words, songs, or dramas. Christmas gives us the opportunity to proclaim the gospel to many people who other times of the year aren’t listening to Christians. Let’s not forfeit that opportunity by turning our telling of the tale into fables and myths. Let’s tell the story the way it really happened—starting and ending with the word of God—so that He can move by His power to create faith in the hearts of those who hear.
Maybe now you’re thinking, “Yeah, there are inaccuracies to what we’re saying to people in our Christmas programs, but what does it really hurt? The little details don’t matter much anyway.” But before you brush these issues aside with those thoughts, consider this: Inaccuracies in our doctrine can lead to real threats to faith.
There is, after all, one other Christmas myth, that you might not believe if you’re from an evangelical church, but it did great and lasting harm to those who accepted it—even though it seems to them to be an inaccuracy just as harmless.
They came up with the idea of presenting Mary as a woman who perpetually remained a virgin. Now, of course, this is an obvious myth, because the Bible clearly states that Joseph didn’t know Mary in a physically intimate way until Jesus was born—not that he never did. (Matt. 1:25) And all four gospels give us the detail that Mary and Joseph had several subsequent children the old-fashioned way. (At least six more kids after Jesus.)
But telling this to people who believe in the perpetual virginity, I’ve more than once seen them react with anger because they felt I was taking the beauty out of the story for them. To them, Mary staying a virgin for life means that she was something special and wonderful and virtuous—when actually it wouldn’t have been virtuous of her to never sleep with her husband. They look up to her and find Christmas to be more fun when they think of her in this way.
I’ve encountered the same reaction from evangelicals who feel I’m stealing something beautiful from their story if I tell them the angels didn’t sing or that we’re putting the wise men at the wrong time and place. But how much more beautiful, really, is the real story that we’re missing by our mis-telling! When we realize how God was bringing the wise men–gentiles like us–to worship the Christ child when King Herod wanted to kill Him? Or when it dawns on us that angels don’t sing, but that we as human beings created in God’s image can have a beautiful and unique relationship with our Creator that angels long to know—a relationship of redemption that calls us alone among His creation to the glorious privilege of worshiping Him with singing!
You see, we lose something when we mis-tell the Christmas story. And we need to realize that our misconceptions about the biblical account have consequences for the people we are mis-teaching. Just like it did for those who had what they thought was a harmless myth of Mary’s perpetual virginity. It did great harm. No longer was the virgin conceiving a child a sign that the child was great and that His Father was God, not man. This woman’s virginity instead became a false sign to them of her specialness. Eventually this resulted in their reverence and awe for her, not her Son. They came to call her not just the mother of His humanity, but the “mother of God.” They prayed to her and sought to come to God through her, imploring her to “pray for us, sinners, now and in the hour of our deaths.” Millions of people worldwide are missing out on salvation and eternal life because they find that beauty in her, and seek to come to God through her, thus not finding the only way, truth, and life, through whom we can come to the Father.
But my whole point here is that they aren’t the only ones making that mistake. Our telling of the Christmas story might be precious to us, as we watch our little girls with silver wings and halos run across the stage the Sunday night before Christmas, singing about a baby who supposedly didn’t cry. But that message is just as false as Santa Claus. And it lacks the power to save. An atheist relative who comes to church with us doesn’t have his heart challenged by the word of God to have faith that comes by hearing it. Instead it reinforces for him the idea that this stuff about Jesus is just a cute, but unbelievable story. Because the story we told him is just that.
Instead, let’s preach the word. And let the unbelievers who come in to celebrate Christmas with us hear the truth. They can be saved, if we’ll just put away the Christmas myths of our childhood, and let the word of God speak to their hearts.
God fulfilled His eternal plan, making Himself into a man like us, so He could live a perfect life in our place, and die on the cross, absorbing the punishment for our sins, and then rise again to be our Savior, giving all of us who believe eternal life and a relationship with Him. Now that’s a story worth telling, in song, drama, and spoken words.
Note: I originally wrote this article last Christmas, but am reposting it to my blog this year, since it is still relevant.
Don’t go along to get along
After last night’s home fellowship study in Galatians, I began to feel some self-doubt, wondering if I have of late perhaps been too hard on apostate priests coming in the name of Christ and misleading people with a false gospel replacing God’s grace with religious works for justification.
God answered today during my personal devotional time in the book of Titus, which says in chapter one: “For an overseer, as God’s steward, must be above reproach…. He must hold firm to the trustworthy word as taught, so that he may be able to give instruction in sound doctrine and also to rebuke those who contradict it. For there are many who are insubordinate, empty talkers and deceivers, especially those of the circumcision party. They must be silenced, since they are upsetting whole families by teaching for shameful gain what they ought not to teach…. Therefore rebuke them sharply, that they may be sound in the faith, not devoting themselves to Jewish myths and the commands of men who turn away from the truth.”
A thought on the gospel
The gospel is all about God’s completion of all the work and our receiving His work’s benefits by our faith alone. It is all about God rescuing us, not about Him just providing a way for us to rescue ourselves. Overemphasis on the “turn from your sins” message takes the glory away from Christ that He so completely earned on the cross. That leads to boasting in the flesh, and “far be it from me that I should boast except in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ.” (Galatians 6:14)
I wouldn’t sign it
There’s a “Manhattan Declaration” being promoted in the US right now that is being signed by well-intentioned Christians. I just want to let you know why I wouldn’t. I am pro-life and believe in the sanctity of life and of real marriage and of the right of religious freedom. But read the whole thing–it also requires signees to agree that Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox leaders are, like us, followers of the Lord Jesus Christ.
It’s not politically correct to say so, and even less politically correct to write so, but it is nevertheless an unavoidable, although unfortunate, truth, to say that those churches for the most part are not followers of Jesus Christ. They follow the traditions of men and “another gospel, which is really not another.”
So, yes, I’m pro-life and pro-heterosexual marriage and pro-freedom. But even more than that, I’m pro-Jesus and pro-gospel. And I won’t compromise those core principles in an attempt to advance the principles of the right to life and liberty that flow out of those core principles.
There is no fellowship between darkness and light. Those who are not on their way to heaven for all eternity are not our brothers here on the earth, and it simply wouldn’t be true to pretend they are so, even though it causes offense to point out that truth sometimes.
If you believe I am wrong, go stand for the truths of the gospel in a place where the religious landscape is controlled by the Vatican or by Eastern orthodoxy. I’ve done both, and can assure you that it will result in shunning and persecution when you stand for the truth that salvation is by faith alone in Christ alone. I appreciate the pro-life stands of those churches, but being pro-life doesn’t save people from sins. Faith in Jesus, who died for our sins and rose again does.
Another weakness in the declaration from the born-again believer’s standpoint — it specifically calls on “unbelievers” to stand against abortion and gay marriage as foundational principles. That simply isn’t the message our Lord has commissioned us to give “unbelievers.” We’re not called to tell the lost world to “be good,” but to implore them to “believe the gospel” and “be reconciled unto God.” We are His ambassadors for this purpose.
Nonsense about God
I have a file on my computer that I call “Nonsense About God” a collection of unbiblical silly things people who don’t know God say about Him, that I keep just to make myself laugh and also to examine what the human nature expects a God they make in their own image to be. This helps me preach the true gospel in a way that the misled can understand. The facebook application “On this day, God wants you to know…” is going to quickly overflow my “nonsense about God” file, because each day it has a new thought about God that is ridiculous. For example, here is one from this week, “God wants you to know that the answers are within you. You’re chasing in the wrong field. What you are looking for is inside of you, not ‘out there’. Take a few days off to become quiet and look within, and you will find it.”
The benefits of being “narrow”
“While this truth may be familiar to you, may we emphasize it again. A holy God has the right to determine the basis upon which sinners come into His presence. God has determined that no one can find forgiveness of sins and be accepted of Him unless he receives Jesus Christ as his own Savior and trusts Him alone for salvation. To offer God anything other than the death of Jesus Christ as the basis of salvation is to offer a man-made religion. It is a ‘broad way,’ no matter what form it takes, that leads eventually to destruction. One must approach God through the gate He has opened. That gate is His crucified Son, the Lord Jesus Christ. ‘Enter in at that narrow gate.'” –Dr. J. Dwight Pentecost, in his book Design for Living
Amen to every last word of that.