Friday, December 25, 2009

Merry Christmas

“And the Grinch, with his Grinch-feet ice cold in the snow, stood puzzling and puzzling, how could it be so? It came without ribbons. It came without tags. It came without packages, boxes or bags. And he puzzled and puzzled ’till his puzzler was sore. Then the Grinch thought of something he hadn’t before. What if Christmas, he thought, doesn’t come from a store. What if Christmas, perhaps, means a little bit more.” - Dr. Seuss

“Behold, the virgin shall conceive and bear a son, and they shall call his name Immanuel [meaning God with us]” -Matthew 1:23

There was only one Christmas in all of eternity, the rest have been anniversaries of our Saviors’ Birth.

Have a wonderful Christmas!

-C

Sunday, December 20, 2009

Santa Clause or Jesus Christ?

Last year, stores and schools could not say "Merry Christmas," rather, they were instructed to say "Happy Holidays." This year, stores and schools are permitted to say "Merry Christmas" so long as they push the lies of Santa Clause onto their customers and students.


My little sister started Kindergarten last fall. She has not experienced much worldly influences in her life up until this point. The public schools (or 'government schools') are pushing Santa Clause so much, they are confusing thousands of young children. Secular people, and Christian's alike, are replacing Jesus Christ for Santa Clause; a jolly fat man who knows whether children have been naughty or nice, can be everywhere at one time (on Christmas Eve), eats way to many cookies, and brings joy to the world through his 'good works.'


Christians are doing a wrong to their children by lying about Santa Clause's existence. Plain and simple. Parents buying into the secular worldview's trap are taking the Christ out of Christmas!


How can we truly celebrate Christmas if we take Christ's birth out of it?


The answer is quite simple: We can not. It is not feasible for a true Christian to feed the lies of Santa Clause to their children while they attempt to celebrate Jesus Christ's birth. Without Christ, there is no Christmas!


Here is a really good article that further explains my rambled thoughts:


Wintertime Worship: Santa Claus or Jesus Christ?
by Roger Patterson, AiG [Answers in Genesis]–U.S. December 15, 200

As I drive through my neighborhood in December, I am confronted with giants dancing on my neighbors’ lawns. A 6-foot-tall Scooby-Doo sways in the breeze donning a red knit cap. An inflatable carousel that wouldn’t fit in my living room spins a snowman, a reindeer, and an elf in an endless circuit. Santa can be seen in plastic light-up form, inflated fabric, plywood silhouette, and various other renditions—including catching a bass on a large fishing pole. Oh! Look! That yard has a manger scene surrounded by reindeer and candy canes and soldiers and snowmen and . . . you get the point.

If you brought someone from Russia to my neighborhood, what would they infer from the inflated and illuminated army? I sincerely doubt that it would convey the message of the Creator entering His creation to redeem it from the curse of sin. The manger scenes might raise a question, and the lit cross with the message “A Savior Is Born” would surely draw the visitor’s attention (that’s my yard). But these are certainly lost among the troop formations. So, is this season about celebrating dancing snowmen and blinking lights or a Savior and the hope He brings?

Sadly, our culture has shifted its focus to the dazzling lights and away from a dazzling Savior. Commercialism has swallowed whatever Christmas used to be before it was this. Battles are fought over the very name of the holiday, and Santa Claus is embraced more freely than the infant Jesus.1 Santa is an icon in modern culture, and his image is used to sell everything from soda to sports cars. How is a Christian to view Santa in light of the true meaning of Christmas?

Santa’s Origins

As with many things in our culture, Santa has his beginnings in a Christian past. As the legends have it, the concept of Santa is rooted in the real Nicholas, Bishop of Myra, dating to the fourth century. Nicholas inherited a large amount of money and used much of his fortune to help the poor. Nicholas gave freely to meet the needs of people around him, fulfilling the commands of Christ to aid the poor.

After his death, the Catholic Church recognized him as a saint—hence the common American usage of St. Nick as a substitute for Santa. The red clothing is likely founded in the red robes worn by bishops. The white beard and other trappings (e.g., reindeer, sleighs, elves, etc.) are likely adopted from various cultural influences being mingled together over the centuries. If you study the celebration of Santa (a.k.a., St. Nick, Kris Kringle, Father Christmas, and Sinterklauss) around the world, the similarities are obvious, as shoes are substituted for stockings and the North Pole for the mountains of Lapland.

Santa Abuse

The mythical Santa is clearly founded in a man who honored Christ with his life and his possessions. Nicholas gave freely of his riches to benefit those who were less fortunate than himself. This is clearly a fundamental Christian principle, as we see care for the poor proclaimed throughout Scripture (e.g., James 2:1–17).

Is that the same idea we see in the Santa celebrated today? The popular song extols children to stop shouting, pouting, and crying in order to earn Santa’s favor and his gifts. This is clearly not the attitude that we see in the biblically motivated actions of the original St. Nick—and a far cry from a biblical attitude of raising children in the fear and admonition of the Lord.

I have personally overheard mothers using gifts from Santa to manipulate their children into behaving in a way that pleases the parent at the time. Such manipulation is entirely unbiblical. As Christians, we should discipline our children for sinful behavior because it is an offense against God, not because it is inconvenient or embarrassing for us. Using gifts from a mythical figure can only serve to promote a form of moralism that is alien to the gospel of Jesus Christ. If our actions are done to earn rewards for ourselves, are we not acting selfishly? This is not an attitude we should seek to instill in our children.

Our motivation for being obedient to God’s commands should be out of an attitude of gratitude for the grace He has shown us. The gospel speaks of God’s work in forgiving us of our sins—not because of the righteous acts which we have done, but because of what Christ did on the Cross for us (Titus 3:4–7). Nothing that we can do can make us righteous before God or make us deserving of His good gifts.

For by grace you have been saved through faith, and that not of yourselves; it is the gift of God, not of works, lest anyone should boast. For we are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand that we should walk in them. (Ephesians 2:8–10)

Does the promotion of Santa lead to an exaltation of Christ? Since the two bring competing messages, I would suggest the answer is no. As Christ continues to be marginalized by society, our goal should be to magnify Him in our homes that our children would be impressed with His kindness to us shown on the Cross. This is the message the original St. Nicholas would have communicated.

Mommy, Is There Really a Santa?

A Christian parent must thoughtfully consider that Scripture is full of commands against deceiving others (e.g., Exodus 20:16; Psalm 101:7; Ephesians 4:25; 1 Peter 2:1–3). Persistently proclaiming the existence of a man in a sleigh with flying reindeer as fact can only lead to deceit. Please understand that I am not saying there is no place for imagination, but the level of emphasis on Santa appears to cross the line. The active teaching of Santa as a real person who performs real miracles to reward children for acting a certain way, in full knowledge that he is a myth, can only be described as deceit.

Any parent who teaches their children much of what is popular about Santa knows that they will eventually learn that it was all a lie. Lying is a sin and cannot be justified on biblical grounds. Have we bowed to cultural pressures to have our children conform to the ways of the world, or do we celebrate Santa so that Christ can be exalted? Rather than dealing with the root of sin against God, who is the definition of “good,” the “goodness” promoted by Santa finds its roots in the humanistic philosophy of behavior modification.

As children grow, they will undoubtedly begin to hear others speaking of the mythical nature of Santa. They will ask and will expect an answer from the parents they have trusted. Since some may not wish to totally skirt the issue of Santa Clause (and it is difficult to do anyway), consider how it is possible to allow children to learn about the real St. Nicholas—and maybe even share in some of the fun of make-believe—while remaining honest with your children.

Glory Robber?

If Santa has taken the glory from Christ in your family’s celebration of Christmas, maybe it is time to seriously consider changing the emphasis. I understand that these are matters of conscience in many ways and that sincere followers of Christ will come to different conclusions. What I would ask is that you examine your decisions in light of what Scripture teaches. If our conscience convicts us of sin in our hearts, we can bring that to God in repentance and know that He will freely forgive us because of what Christ has done.

This is the message which we have heard from Him and declare to you, that God is light and in Him is no darkness at all. If we say that we have fellowship with Him, and walk in darkness, we lie and do not practice the truth. But if we walk in the light as He is in the light, we have fellowship with one another, and the blood of Jesus Christ His Son cleanses us from all sin. If we say that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us. If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness. If we say that we have not sinned, we make Him a liar, and His word is not in us. (1 John 1:5–10)

Rather than offering a platform to chastise those with views contrary to this article, I hope you will think and pray about how to bring Christ the worship He is due during this season when we recognize His incarnation. Let us all make the Word of God the authority in our decisions about celebrating this, and every, holiday—giving God the glory He alone deserves.


Hope that you enjoyed this article as much as I did!

-C

P.S. Here is a direct link to the article above:

http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/2009/12/15/wintertime-worship-santa-jesus

Friday, December 18, 2009

Joseph's Role

Here is an thought: Had Joseph done what he wanted to do initially, quietly divorce Mary, we all would have gone to hell. We often forget how crucial Joseph's role was to the Christmas story. If Joseph divorced Mary, as he intended, the baby Jesus would have been murdered by King Herod's men. Though Joseph did not know it, he played a tremendous part in our salvation. Here is a good article I found explaining Joseph's role:

Abba, Joseph!
by Russell D. Moore

Jesus' earthly father is introduced to us against the backdrop of King Herod's murderous tantrum. The Gospel tells us that Herod learns from some travelling stargazers that the foreseen birth of the royal son of David is here; the end of the ages has touched down in Bethlehem of Judea. Herod outsources scholars to pore over ancient scrolls, not in order to submit to them in faith, but to see how to circumvent the new king.

Herod is troubled — and all Jerusalem with him — and this trouble enacts itself in murderous rage. What Herod does not know, however, is that as he fumes before his consultants and commands that all the male children be executed, he is actually playing a role that has already been played.

Herod is a new Pharaoh.

When Pharaoh saw the people of Israel being fruitful and multiplying — experiencing exactly what God promised, "I will surely bless you, and I will surely multiply your offspring" (Gen 22:17) — he sees it as a curse. Why? Because Pharaoh sees himself as god and the expansion of the people of God is a threat to his own kingship. This expansion threatens Pharaoh's plans, and he murders infants to stop it. Herod does the same thing.

Herod comes face to face with Jesus, and his response is murder. The presence of Jesus brings about the kind of rage among those who are threatened by Jesus' kingship.

Herod and Pharaoh rage against Jesus in particular, but babies in general. Throughout the whole panorama of Scripture, when it is the Christ versus the self, babies are always caught in the crossfire. The Egyptian Nile heaves with infant corpses, as do the garbage heaps of Judea. Moses warns against the giving of infants to Molech (Lev 18:21). The Prophets speak against those who come against the people with babies in their wombs (Hos 13:16). History is riddled with the corpses of babies, again and again and again.

As Herod rages against the babies, he is not the central actor in this drama. Years later, Jesus will show his disciple John a picture of a woman giving birth to "a male child, one who will rule all the nations with a rod of iron" (Rev 12:5). Crouching before the woman's birth canal is a dragon — the Serpent of old — who seeks to "devour" the baby (Rev 12:4). Ever since, Jesus shows us, the dragon is furiously making war on the woman and her offspring (Rev 12:17). The ancient beast wants that baby.

Isn't this obvious, not only in Scripture and in the tradition of the church, but in the history of the world around us? Isn't there a persistent hostility towards life, and particularly towards children? This is not accidental.

In the warfare of the Nativity narrative, the Bible gives us an unlikely demon-wrestler: a day-laborer from the hick town of Galilee of Nazareth. Joseph doesn't see the full scope of the cosmic import of what's happening: One rarely does. He simply does what he's told. He stands against the dark rage against life. He cares for his child.

This is not incidental. It is part of a strategy from before recorded history began. It's about God's purposes in Christ.

The last presidential election uncovered just how flimsily some American evangelicals and Catholics hold to our advocacy for the life of infants. I left the room, nauseous, when I heard a major evangelical biblical scholar telling an audience that abortion is "not a transcendent issue," the same day he announced he was endorsing the candidacy of an abortion-rights supporter for President of the United States. The same week I was told of several evangelical churches sponsoring a forum on Christian political ethics, assuring their hearers that they weren't "single issue evangelicals," that political decisions could be made apart from whether the candidate is "pro-life" or "pro-choice."

These evangelicals — and their Roman Catholic colleagues — tell us we ought to be willing to support and vote for candidates who will support legalized abortion because we resonate with them on other issues. "After all, abortion has been going on so long, and it still hasn't been stopped."

Some believe it evangelistic to speak to people while silencing or blunting a witness about the life of children so that they can reach them with the gospel and bring them in line with all these other issues later. We've heard this before, in the late 1960s and early 1970s from a pastor with (then) cool hair in a powder-blue leisure suit. Just replace the word "abortion" with the word "divorce." And how did that work out?

The stakes here are quite high, and the stakes are not, at root, political. The sword given to the state in Romans 13 is to be wielded, to be sure, but wielded against "evildoers." What are we doing when we vote to wield that sword, as many did in the last election, through the taxpayer-funded assault on the innocent?

The Walk of Faith Images a Father's Care

Joseph is the first human face to which our Lord would have said, "Abba." In the Nativity narrative, God shows us in Joseph what it means to image the Fatherhood of God. Through divine revelation, Joseph is called to provide for and protect Mary and the child, by taking them for a while into Egypt, away from Herod's sword. Once again, Joseph steps into a story that has played out before.

Matthew says that as Joseph's flight to Egypt it is to fulfill the ancient word, "Out of Egypt I have called my son" (Matt 2:15; Hos 11:1). Some have noted with puzzlement that the text referenced from Hosea is not about a future event at all, but about something lost past. It speaks of Israel being brought to Egypt and then being delivered from there during the Exodus.

And that's exactly right. This, too, is precisely Matthew's point.

Israel's deliverance out of Egypt is a copy in advance of what God is doing with Jesus Christ. Israel is in danger of starving to death. And God provides for Israel by putting them in a sojourn for a time in Egypt where they can be fed and provided for. God puts one of their brothers in a position where he is able to look out for his people, saying that he will care for them and their little ones (Gen 47:23-24).

And this man's name is Joseph.

Hundreds of years later God uses another Joseph to take this child into Egypt until the threat of the sword is over. God then compares Joseph's protection to his own fatherly protection and deliverance of Israel.

Yes, we must insist that a just government recognize the personhood of unborn children, but that is not enough. We must insist that just economic systems not crush abandoned mothers beneath it, but that's not enough. The protection and provision Joseph images is personal and familial.

This is the kind of fatherhood our Father God displays — a fighting Fatherhood. This Fatherhood rips open seas, drowns armies, and feeds children.

When Joseph becomes the father of Jesus, he does so in a counter-cultural act that, again, is easy for us to miss. Joseph must have seemed insane, and must have wondered if he were. When his betrothed comes to him and say, "I am pregnant," Joseph's response is not, "Well, it's beginning to look a lot like Christmas." He is humiliated publicly and privately. But he obeys, and believes the incredible.

Had Joseph done what he wanted to do initially, quietly divorce this woman, everything could have been different for him. He could have lived to an old age as a father of his village, revered by everyone. He might have wondered every now and then what happened to the woman he put away. He might have mourned the fact that her baby was executed by Herod's marauders.

He would have lived a good life, died a good death — and he would have gone to hell. We all would have, without the salvation of the world in Christ, a salvation story in which Joseph plays a critical part.

Instead, Joseph probably ended his life with his neighbors saying, "Joseph, he's the one who got into trouble with that young woman way back when. What a shame." But instead of seeking praise at his funeral, Joseph does something unusual: He protects the orphans and the widows; he sees the task of fatherhood as more important than the self.

This is about human parenting, to be sure. Scripture speaks repeatedly to the ways in which human fathers picture — or distort — the image of the Father in the eyes of their children. But this walk of faith is not only for those who are parents. For there must be evident too in all the people of God a demonstration of the same thing that Joseph is asked to do — to walk in the kind of faith that protects and provides, that nourishes and cherishes.

The Walk of Faith Heralds a Kingdom's Dawn

Matthew tells us that the slaughter of the innocents fulfills what was spoken by the prophet Jeremiah, "a voice was heard in Ramah" (Matt 2:18; Jer 31:15). Ramah was the exit station for the people of Israel as they were being taken out into captivity in Babylon. This imagery text calls forward the sound of the wails of women who have lost their children.

But this is not a word of despair. Even the quoted prophecy from Jeremiah comes from a passage that says, "There is hope for your future," for "the time is coming ... when I will make a new covenant ... not like the covenant I made with your forefathers" (Jer 31:17,31-32).

Even in the midst of all this tragedy and murderous rage, in the midst of all these corpses, there is a light that is coming out of Galilee. Joseph returns home, and God directs him toward Nazareth so that it will be fulfilled that he, Jesus, will be a Nazarene (Matt 2:23). Out of Galilee, a light breaks forth for the nations.

The moaning and anguish present in Ramah is comforted in Nazareth. And life is better than death precisely because we worship a man who is an ex-corpse, a former fetus, who is now standing as the ruler of the entire universe. And he's not dead anymore.

What we must have is a church in which the gospel we give is the kind of gospel that leads people out of death and despair and toward the kind of life that is found in confessing a name — a name that was first spoken with human lips by a day-laborer in Nazareth, "Jesus is Lord."

If we follow this kind of pure and undefiled religion, it doesn't mean we will be shrill. It doesn't mean we will be culture-warriors. It doesn't mean we'll be belligerent. It will mean that we will have churches that are so strikingly different, that maybe in 10 or 15 years the most odd and counter-cultural thing a lost person may hear in your church is not, "Amen," but is instead the sounds of babies crying in the nursery.

And hearing the oddness of that sound, when they look around at the place in which all of the Lord Jesus' brothers and sisters are welcomed, protected, and loved, the place in which the lies of a murderous and appetite-driven dragon are denied, the stranger in our midst might say, "What is the sound of all these cries?"

And maybe we'll be able to say with our forefather Joseph, "That's the sound of life. That's the sound of love. That's the sound of the gospel."

Copyright 2009 Focus on the Family. All rights reserved. International copyright secured. A previous version of this article appeared in the March 2009 issue of Touchstone magazine. This article was published on Boundless.org on December 18, 2009.

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Challenging Conformity

The Birth of Jesus Foretold
In the sixth month, God sent the angel Gabriel to Nazareth, a town in Galilee, to a virgin pledged to be married to a man named Joseph, a descendant of David. The virgin's name was Mary. The angel went to her and said, "Greetings, you who are highly favored! The Lord is with you."

Mary was greatly troubled at his words and wondered what kind of greeting this might be. But the angel said to her, "Do not be afraid, Mary, you have found favor with God. You will be with child and give birth to a son, and you are to give him the name Jesus. He will be great and will be called the Son of the Most High. The Lord God will give him the throne of his father David, and he will reign over the house of Jacob forever; his kingdom will never end."

"How will this be," Mary asked the angel, "since I am a virgin?"

The angel answered, "The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you. So the holy one to be born will be called the Son of God. Even Elizabeth your relative is going to have a child in her old age, and she who was said to be barren is in her sixth month. For nothing is impossible with God."

"I am the Lord's servant," Mary answered. "May it be to me as you have said." Then the angel left her.

Luke 1: 26-38

It often seems like most images of teenagers going against culture, against conformity, an against the way the world thinks should be run, seem to be negative. We keep seeing news stories of teenage killers, about violent rebels, about hackers who send out viruses. I think that is why I like the Christmas story so much: a teenage girl accepts a challenge to go against the grain, despite the risks, and do something powerful ad positive.


Think about it, this young woman (we do not know how old she is, somewhere between fourteen and eighteen seems likely though) is engaged, but not married, and she is from a poor rural family. She picks up the challenge this angel messanger from God tosses her and accepts the pregnancy. She will give birth to a son who will eventually turn the status quo of the "way things are done" on its head.

So looking at modern day Christmas, we celebrate Mary's courage and willingness to be apart of change.

-C

Saturday, December 12, 2009

Sigh of Relief

*aaahhhhhhh*

Finals are over.
ACT is complete.
Month off school.

*sigh of relief*

I just want to share with you this quote from Passion and Purity by Elisabeth Elliot. This was my fourth time reading Passion and Purity. If you have not read it- put it at the top of your reading list. Every time I read P&P I gain more knowledge. Elliot is an amazing author. She is one of my heroes.

The following quote is what struck me the most this time through:
"We need to learn to live by the supernatural. Ordinary fare will not fill the emptiness in our hearts...How else will we learn to eat it, if we are never hungry? How educate our tastes for heavenly things if we are surfeited with earthly?...My heart was saying, "Lord, take away this longing, or give me that for which I long.' The Lord was answering, 'I must teach you to long for something better.'...God knew that giving me Jim when I wanted him would not provide the far more important training I needed for things to come. It was in learning to eat that Living Bread, sufficient always for one day at a time, that I was taught and disciplined and prepared for later things." (p. 112-113)

How often I look to so many other things than God for satisfaction and fulfillment. Elisabeth struggled with it, like any of us do, but she knew He is all we need and He will bring things to pass in our lives when He chooses.

-C

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Musings On My Life

Have you ever felt like your heart was literally torn out of your chest and you dont know how to get it back? And you dont know how to stop the pain?

Until, finally, you offer your pain to the Lord and He takes the severe aching away. Things finally start to get better.

My life is like that right now. I am still recovering but God took away my severe pain, and I finally got my heart back.

-C