Christmas - That We Might Have LifeSample

Christmas - That We Might Have Life

DAY 10 OF 12

DAY 10, DEVOTION 10

Jesus' Plans Lighting the Way to Peace

The birth of Jesus was not a happy coincidence of timing, lineage, and personality so that a little boy with just the right heritage could aspire to be a king over a fledging people. “The record of the genealogy of Jesus the Messiah, the son of David [are]… from the deportation to Babylon to the Messiah, fourteen generations” (Mt. 1:1, 17c). No, Matthew’s account reveals that when Jesus came as a baby to Earth, He did not aspire to be a king. He already was the King of all kings, deliberately coming at that time and to that place. Jesus came because all of mankind suffered under the crushing weight of sin as it manifested itself personally and politically.

Our times are not unlike those of Israel’s during the days of Ezekiel, deported by sin to the spiritual desert of a materialistic Babylon. Like Israel then, the world today is in desperate need of a Good Shepherd, a Savior King, to lead us out of our sin and out from under the boot of evil leadership. No, the whole world needs princes and pastors who, like Jesus, seek first to shield the sheep from believing lies, feeding them at great personal cost.

Ezekiel, a prophet during Israel’s exile to Babylon, explains that both the leaders and the people were adrift in a void of darkness. Describing the leaders, God says, “Her princes within her are like wolves tearing the prey, by shedding blood and destroying lives in order to get dishonest gain” (Ez. 22:27). Similarly, “The people of the land have practiced oppression and committed robbery, and they have wronged the poor and needy” (Ez. 22:29a). God through Ezekiel points out that the people’s sin was deserving not only their current exile, but His full wrath. What was it they were doing? They “committed adultery with their idols and even caused their sons whom they bore to Me, to pass through the fire to them as food... For when they had slaughtered their children for their idols, they entered My sanctuary on the same day to profane it” (Ez. 23:37b, 39).

Who could save Israel’s people from being abused by evil leaders? And who could save Israel from themselves? After all, statesmen are products of the people. So it is that God says, “I searched for a man among them… but I found no one” (Ez. 22:30). Sinful leaders unstop the dam of wickedness which cascades upon society, scattering the sheep, making them food to the flooding lusts of the powerful among them. How do evil leaders behave? “Those who are sickly you have not strengthened, the diseased you have not healed, the broken you have not bound up, the scattered you have not brought back, nor have you sought for the lost; but with force and with severity you have dominated them” (Ez. 34:4).

What is God’s solution to the sinful self-exiled and the battered and scattered? Himself. “For thus says the LORD GOD, ‘Behold, I Myself will search for my sheep… As a shepherd cares for his herd in the day when he is among his scattered sheep, so I… will deliver them from all the places to which they were scattered on a cloudy and gloomy day” (Ez. 34: 11-12).

Some people look around and suggest that, worldwide, we are in the midst of a “cloudy and gloomy day.” Sin is on public display. The blind lead the blind. Deceit is everywhere. Morality is antiquated. The solution today is the same as it was 2,000 years ago: Immanuel, God with us, the One “to shine upon those who sit in darkness and the shadow of death, to guide our feet into the way of peace” (Luke 1:79).

We are called to swim upstream, against the cultural tides that keep pulling the world down. We must light the way to peace, for everyone, pointing to the Prince of Peace.

Questions for Reflection

What are examples of how today's cultural leaders around the world are steering us all to a future "Babylon?"

What can you do today to offer peace and life to someone around you?

Father God,

Thank you for sending Jesus to be Immanuel, God with us. We pray for the leaders around the globe to stand up for life, for hope, and for all things moral and true. Give us the courage to make a difference in our communities. May we embrace the One who came to heal the broken-hearted.

Through Jesus, Amen.

Day 9Day 11

About this Plan

Christmas - That We Might Have Life

Christmas is a time of vision, a time to consider the landscape of human life, what it means, and why it’s valuable. The mental image of Christmas is the Nativity, the crude circumstances that surrounded the moment when God reinforced the dignity of Humanity by clothing Himself as a human. But He did not stop there. Christmas brings into focus the only two sacred things in this world—God and People. Christmas is about Life. The Author of Life. Your Life. My Life. And the Life of the world. This 12-day Plan celebrates Life.

More