Word made flesh..

Christmas is just simply wonderful.

The message of Christmas is even more wonderful.  From the breaking of a silence, the end of a long wait, to the arrival of a promise.  There are so many elements in the Christmas story that get me so excited. The first announcement from heaven is brilliant and ignites the birth of not only a new person but a new way.

“Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace among those with whom he is pleased!”

Heaven is speaking loud and clear – there is fresh hope with this announcement especially after 400 years of silence.

Change is in the air. God is promising peace with Him – and we find out later in the script that peace isn’t a state but a person called Jesus. His very name is to save us, Immanuel declaring that God is with us.

Mary has always been the person and storyline I find the most fascinating in the Christmas story.  “Let it be onto me according to your word” has to be the most incredible faith filled words uttered in this scenario.  To simply believe God at His word. I don’t know about you, but I have lots to learn from her childlike faith.

John 1 is that great message that talks about Jesus being the word of God, there at the beginning. His arrival on earth is the simplicity of word being made flesh, a concept becoming a reality, something heavenly becoming something earthly.

Even in that I see the beauty of heaven coming to earth – but where does that start – a word.

My church have been running a series called Hope Awakens this month. I got the privilege of sharing some thoughts with our older teens last week on the whole idea of hope being revelaed.

The basis of what I shared was simply that hope was revealed firstly in a word. A promise was given,  and when there is a promise then there is hope.

I read Kris Vallotton’s blog a few weeks back and was struck by what he said:

Without hope, you can’t have faith……

I’ve really been thinking a lot about the apparent link between a word, a promise, the hope that brings and the faith to see it. This is how heaven comes to earth.

The good old carol Oh Come All Ye Faithful that I have sang for years sealed the message for Christmas again this year “Word of the father, now in flesh appearing”. What a line – that I had not really noticed until Sunday.

That’s the message of Christmas. The word becoming flesh.

I guess it’s the cry and hopeful longing of all of our hearts surely? That we would see in the flesh the word of God come.

I don’t know what you are longing for this Christmas.  Is there a promise that you are waiting on? Is there a hope that your situation could be different? Sometimes I feel like an expert in waiting. I’ve had every emotion imaginable in the waiting. I’m not even going to pretend to know or answer why some of us don’t see the things we feel we’ve been promised. The one thing I’m absolutely certain of is, that He is good, He is faithful, and His promises are always true, even if it doesn’t look like what we thought it would we have to trust his working is only for our good.

All of our hope begins with simply a word. What does HE say about what you’re walking through? That’s the word that matters the most, that’s the word that can change everything.

This is the beginning of hope this is where hope awakens. That we get to know a word, and that word can become reality.

WORD OF THE FATHER, NOW IN FLESH APPEARING

Let’s dare to believe and be confident that we will see His goodness in the land of the living.

My Redeemer lives…

Sunday is here – the day of celebration. As if the sacrifice wasn’t enough – the Great Friday, the biggest expression of love anyone can show a person.  As if we needed more, than to know someone has given up THEIR life for ours. And yet we should know God by now – there is more. There is always more.

It was more than just a sacrificial action of love – the sacrifice served a purpose.

Jesus – the perfect, spotless, blameless one, came as fully God and yet fully man to accomplish one task.  To make a way for people to connect with His father. To take care of “once and for all” (Hebrews10), the very thing that separated God from His people.

He took our sin, He nailed it to a cross.

Colossians 2: 14-15  says “He cancelled the record of the charges against us and took it away by nailing it to the cross.  In this way He disarmed the spiritual rulers and authorities. He shamed them publicly by His victory over them on the cross”

The cross achieved so much more – he was beaten so we could be whole. He was whipped so we could be healed (Isaiah 53 NLT)

So we now have –

1. A love that goes beyond anything we will experience here on earth, sacrificial, a gift, unconditional.

2. A sacrifice that disarms the enemy who is set out to destroy our lives.

3. Our debts paid so we could experience a wholeness – spirit, soul and body.

And then to top it all off and the reason we celebrate today, the final showdown – Jesus who dies on Friday, and achieving so much by his death, walks out of the tomb 3 days later – and it’s more than Him simply being alive again. For Him to be alive – He had to defeat death.  The final hold that the devil had on God’s people – the power of death, and Jesus defeats him in this grand finale to win mankind completely.

Death, where is your sting?

Because God’s children are human beings—made of flesh and blood—the Son also became flesh and blood. For only as a human being could he die, and only by dying could he break the power of the devil, who had  the power of death. Only in this way could he set free all who have lived their lives as slaves to the fear of dying. (Hebrews 2 v 14-15)

So death has no power and Jesus fully alive is why today is so incredibly important. Easter in incredible (chocolate is epic) but this entire thing will always be about Him.

We are forever changed at the cross, and fully alive in God because of the resurrected Jesus.

Happy Easter