“God made Christmas happen; friends make Christmas beautiful, music makes Christmas festive; giving makes Christmas joyous, love makes Christmas.” William Arthur Ward
According to this year’s data the most played
Christmas song is Mariah Carey’s All I Want for Christmas, followed by
Wham!’s Last Christmas, and Ariana Grande’s Santa Tell Me. Some
top songs make indirect references to the religious aspect of Christmas, but
most stick to love, the weather, or an occasional chestnut. Globally, the most
popular Christmas song to mention Jesus is Boney M.’s Mary’s Boy Child/Oh My
Lord, which comes in at No. 71. It’s followed by Nina Nesbitt’s O Holy
Night at 79 and Josh Groban and Faith Hill performing The First Nöel
at 90.
The presence of Jesus in popular Christmas
music varies widely by country revealing differences in musical taste, holiday
traditions, and the spread of Christianity by missionaries, markets, and
immigration.
Though it’s not the intent of the song, Mariah
Carey’s, All I Want for Christmas is you has the right goal – it’s just
the wrong “you.” Many believe that if they had someone to love or to love them, if they had someone in their life, some “you” then Christmas would be perfect. Experience
demonstrates that a human “you” won’t satisfy. The only “You” that will truly
satisfy our heart’s greatest longings is the YOU who came on that first
Christmas 2,000 years ago, the Lord Jesus Christ.
Two millennia later tragically most of the
world still doesn’t know who that YOU truly is. While Jesus has been acclaimed
as the greatest religious leader to ever live, the most influential person to
have walked on this planet, and unique to the degree that no one can be
compared to Him, the true Jesus is still an unknown. Considering Jesus Christ
merely on the basis of an exemplary life and His superior moral teaching will never
remove the stumbling blocks to Christianity raised by an unbelieving world. The
real test of what one thinks of Jesus revolves around who He claimed to be and
what He accomplished during His brief mission to this world. Without a personal
relationship with Jesus Christ life is an empty stocking.
John Blanchard estimated that, of all of
the people who have ever lived since the dawn of civilization, there have been
about 60 billion people that have walked this planet. Of those 60 billion, only
a handful have made any real, lasting impression or have actually changed the
world. And in that handful, there is One who stands head and shoulders above
all of the others—His name is Jesus. More attention has been given to Him; more
devotion has been given to Him; more criticism has been given to Him; more
adoration has been given to Him; more opposition has been given to this one
person than all of the others combined.
Every
recorded word that He said has been more sifted, analyzed, scrutinized,
debated—every word—than all of the historians and the philosophers and scientists
put together. After 2,000 years, there is never one minute on this earth that
millions are not studying what He said. Here’s a person who lived in a
minuscule, tiny little land two millennia ago; and yet, His birth divides the
centuries—BC and AD; Before Christ and Anno Domini, the year of our Lord. Even
the more modern BCE, which attempts “religious neutrality” and to deny the
impact Christ had on this world, still begins with Christ’s entry into this
world of time and space.
He
never wrote a book and yet, library after library could be filled with the
volumes, the multiplied millions of volumes, which have been written about Jesus.
He never painted a picture, so far as we know; and yet, the world’s greatest
art, the world’s greatest dramas, the world’s greatest music, the world’s
greatest literature has Jesus Christ, Jesus of Nazareth, as its source. He
never raised an army, yet multiplied millions have died for Him. He never
traveled more than fifty miles from His birthplace and yet, His testimony has
gone around, and around, and around the world. He only had a handful of followers
that followed Him in His ministry; and yet, today, over 30% of the world’s
population names His name—the largest such grouping on Earth today—Jesus of
Nazareth. A public ministry of only three short years and yet, here we are,
2,000 years later, saying, “Jesus, Your name is wonderful,” because His
name is. He had no formal education. He didn’t attend a university or seminary yet
thousands of universities, seminaries, colleges, and schools are built in His name.
No one can call himself, herself, educated who does not understand Jesus
Christ. As historian Kenneth Scott Latourette said: “Jesus has had more
effect on the history of mankind than any other of His race who ever existed.”
Who is Jesus? He is many things but the reason that He came was to
be our Savior. There is only one Savior, Jesus Christ (Acts 4:12). In His Son,
God sent the greatest gift for sinners like us. No wonder the Apostle Paul
exclaims, “Thanks be to God for His indescribable gift!” (2 Cor. 9:24).
The
greatest event in all human history is the coming of a Savior from heaven to
earth. Without His coming, there is no meaning to history. Jesus came into the
world to save the world and us from divine destruction.
Why
do we need a Savior? Because we are all guilty sinners. We need a
Savior to take the guilt of our sins and to die our eternal death. That’s why
Jesus died on the cross. All have sinned, including the virgin Mary; we all
need a Savior. The shepherds of Bethlehem represent all sinners. To them, God
announced that He had sent a Savior—His greatest gift to mankind. In Him, we
receive grace and salvation.
A
missionary, Gene Dulin, tells of standing in Austria, looking at a hand-carved
nativity scene. The figures were a bit larger than life-size. It was one of the
most beautiful that he’d ever seen. As he stood contemplating the meaning of
the nativity, a grandmother stopped with her three-year-old grandchild. She
stooped over and began talking with the child. She pointed to Mary, then to
Joseph, and to the baby. Dulin says that while he couldn’t understand her
language, he knew she was telling the story of Jesus to her grandchild. Then
Dulin added, “For 2000 years parents and grandparents have passed on the
story of Jesus. It has changed millions of lives and the whole world.” And
it still does! That’s the gift of the baby in the manger but He didn’t just come
to be born. He was born to die so He could be our Savior. Is He your Savior?
Can
we help you spiritually? Can we help you know Jesus better? Please check out
more resources on our church's web page, Gracechurchwi.org. Or, call us at
262.763.3021. If you'd like to know more about how Jesus can change your life,
I'd love to mail you a copy of how Jesus changed my life in "My
Story." E-mail me at Carson@gracechurchwi.org to request a free copy.
Please include your mailing address.
No comments:
Post a Comment