The message of Christmas
I'm repeating here a post from 2010 concerning the message of Christmas. May you and yours celebrate this season with joy and in good health.
At Christmas, we celebrate the Incarnation - the stunning miracle by which the eternal Son of God, while not ceasing to be fully God, became fully human in the person of Jesus Christ.
As noted by T.F. Torrance in Incarnation, the person and life of Christ, the Incarnation is a "redeeming event" by which the Son of God assumed "our unholy humanity" with the result being that, "his purity wipes away our impurity, his holiness covers our corruption" (p82).
This association of the Incarnation with our redemption is often overlooked at Christmas; yet it is central to the Christmas story. As T.F. notes, through the Incarnation, God, in the person of Jesus, permanently united our human nature with his divine nature. The result of this union (which includes us in Jesus' birth, life, death, resurrection and ascension), is that humanity is given to share in the righteousness of Jesus: "Not only the negative righteousness in the remission of sins but also a share in the positive righteousness of [Jesus'] obedient and loving life lived in perfect filial relation on earth to the heavenly Father" (p82).
Thus, according to Torrance, our redemption involves not only the forgiveness of sin by sharing in Jesus' death, but also "the filial relation which the Son of God lived out vicariously in our humanity in perfect holiness and love. He achieved... [this redemption] in himself in assuming our human nature into oneness with himself, and on that ground gave us to share in it, so providing us with a fullness in his own obedient sonship from which we may all receive" (p. 82).
Through the Incarnation, all humanity has, in Christ, a relationship with the Father. More precisely, we are given, in Christ, through the Holy Spirit, a share in the Son's own relationship with his Father. Thus with the birth of Jesus, humanity is reborn (born anew, from above) into a new relationship with God. As T.F. notes, "That is the Christian message - the Christmas message" (p. 101).
May we this Christmas hear afresh this message of the redeeming nature of the Incarnation, and in believing (sharing Jesus' own belief), receive what he so graciously has provided - a share in his relationship with God his Father, and now ours.
Note: for two helpful Christianity Today articles on the Incarnation, click here and here.
At Christmas, we celebrate the Incarnation - the stunning miracle by which the eternal Son of God, while not ceasing to be fully God, became fully human in the person of Jesus Christ.
As noted by T.F. Torrance in Incarnation, the person and life of Christ, the Incarnation is a "redeeming event" by which the Son of God assumed "our unholy humanity" with the result being that, "his purity wipes away our impurity, his holiness covers our corruption" (p82).
This association of the Incarnation with our redemption is often overlooked at Christmas; yet it is central to the Christmas story. As T.F. notes, through the Incarnation, God, in the person of Jesus, permanently united our human nature with his divine nature. The result of this union (which includes us in Jesus' birth, life, death, resurrection and ascension), is that humanity is given to share in the righteousness of Jesus: "Not only the negative righteousness in the remission of sins but also a share in the positive righteousness of [Jesus'] obedient and loving life lived in perfect filial relation on earth to the heavenly Father" (p82).
Thus, according to Torrance, our redemption involves not only the forgiveness of sin by sharing in Jesus' death, but also "the filial relation which the Son of God lived out vicariously in our humanity in perfect holiness and love. He achieved... [this redemption] in himself in assuming our human nature into oneness with himself, and on that ground gave us to share in it, so providing us with a fullness in his own obedient sonship from which we may all receive" (p. 82).
Through the Incarnation, all humanity has, in Christ, a relationship with the Father. More precisely, we are given, in Christ, through the Holy Spirit, a share in the Son's own relationship with his Father. Thus with the birth of Jesus, humanity is reborn (born anew, from above) into a new relationship with God. As T.F. notes, "That is the Christian message - the Christmas message" (p. 101).
May we this Christmas hear afresh this message of the redeeming nature of the Incarnation, and in believing (sharing Jesus' own belief), receive what he so graciously has provided - a share in his relationship with God his Father, and now ours.
Note: for two helpful Christianity Today articles on the Incarnation, click here and here.