God, born in a
manger?
I don’t suppose anyone can ever fathom
what it means for God to be born in a manger. How does one explain the Almighty
stooping to become a tiny infant? Our minds cannot begin to understand what was
involved in God becoming a man. We will never comprehend why He who was
infinitely rich would become poor, assume a human nature, and enter into a
world He knew would reject Him and kill Him.
Nor can anyone explain how God could
become a baby. Yet He did. Without forsaking His divine nature or diminishing
His deity in any sense, He was born into our world as a tiny infant. How can
both things be true?
Humanity and Deity
For nearly two thousand years, debate has
been raging about who Jesus really is. Some say He is one of many gods, a created
being, a high angel, a good teacher, a prophet, and so on. The common thread of
all such theories is that they make Jesus less than God.
But let the Bible speak for itself. John’s
gospel begins with a clear statement that Jesus is God: “In the beginning
was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was in the
beginning with God. All things were made through Him, and without Him nothing
was made that was made,” John 1. 1-3. Who is “the Word” spoken of in these
verses? John 1. 14 removes any doubt: “And the Word became flesh and dwelt
among us, and we beheld His glory, the glory as of the only begotten of the
Father, full of grace and truth”.
The biblical evidence is overwhelming that
this child in the manger was the incarnation of God. For one thing, He was
omniscient (knew all things). John 2. 24-25 says that, “But Jesus did not
commit Himself to them, because He knew all men, and had no need that anyone
should testify of man, for He knew what was in man.” Nathanael was shocked
to discover that Jesus knew all about him before they ever met. It was enough
to persuade him that Jesus was the Messiah, John 1. 48-50. John 4 describes
Jesus’ meeting with a Samaritan woman at Jacob’s well. He knew everything about
her, John 4. 17-19, 29, which was to shock her to the core of her being.
Jesus also did the works of God, saying, “Believe
Me that I am in the Father and the Father in Me, or else believe Me for the
sake of the works themselves,” John 14. 11. Jesus’ works are convincing
proof that He is God. He began His miraculous ministry with a simple act—He
created wine at a wedding in Cana, John 2. 1-11. Only God can create. Moreover,
He healed people who were hopelessly ill. He gave a blind man eyes. He opened
ears that had never heard. He restored withered limbs. He created enough fish
and bread to feed thousands. He raised the dead simply by a command.
This child was God
Why would God become a man and be born in
such a lowly manner and let men treat Him the way they did?
“It was the Father’s good pleasure . .
. through Him to reconcile all things to Himself, having made peace through the
blood of His cross” (Colossians 1:19-20). He did it to make peace between
God and humanity. All of us have sinned, and we sin repeatedly: “There is
none righteous, not even one,” Rom. 3.10. “All have sinned and fall short of
the glory of God,” Rom. 3. 23. God hates sin and must respond with His
wrath. He is a righteous judge who “is angry with the wicked every
day,” Ps. 7.11. Humanity reacts with
more hatred, rebellion, or indifference toward God: “There is no fear of God
before their eyes,” Rom. 3. 18. The only possible response of a holy God to
our sin is more than we can bear, for “the wages of sin is death,” Rom. 6.
23.
Only Jesus, because He alone is both God
and man, could ever resolve the conflict. He takes the hand of a repentant,
yielding sinner and the outstretched hand of a holy yet loving God, and He
joins the two. He can forgive our sins, reconcile us to God, and thus make “peace
through the blood of His cross,” Col. 1. 20. And God is not reluctant for
that to occur; rather it is the very reason He sent Christ into the world.
God is justifiably angry with our sin. Yet
He loves us enough that He gave His own Son to live on earth, die on a cross,
suffering the full weight of God’s wrath, which should have been our lot. He
paid the penalty for sin and can bring peace between us and God. It could not
have been done any other way.
Will you hear
the voice of God in His word, the Bible and trust His Son, Jesus, for
salvation. My prayer is that you will.
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