Chaplain’s Corner – December 14, 2007

Rev. Rich Hines

Christmas - God Kept His Promises

 

This message is primarily for those who call on the name of Jesus Christ as their own Lord and Savior from sin, and serve as a Chaplain or a gospel minister in a jail, prison or a follow-up ministry such as a rescue mission – in the United States.

 

All Scripture quotes are taken from the New King James Version (NKJV) of the Bible, copyright 1979, 1980, 1982 by Thomas Nelson, Inc.  Used by permission.  All rights reserved.  When quoting a text, any deviation from the NKJV text is placed within parenthesis signs ().  These usually occur as direct translations from the original languages, or as notes from the original setting to help apply the text to today’s culture.

ALL CAPITAL LETTERS are sometimes used to emphasize words in a text, or to make a comment about a biblical text, or to emphasize a statement.

 

I realize many Chaplains leave the Christmas message to someone else to give.  That's all right, as long as they do a good job of thoroughly presenting the gospel message.   If at all possible I think the Chaplain should do the Christmas message, because he is to be the Christian Pastor for inmates.  So if you are planning your Christmas message, you may want to use something from this message or its main point, in that message.

 

As you and the residents of the facility celebrate Christmas, I want to remind you, that among other things the birth of Jesus Christ was a fulfillment of PROMISES GOD MADE.   It's important to differentiate between fulfilled prophecy and fulfilled covenant promises at Christmas.  Both are important, but the latter are more personal. 

 

When Jesus, the Christ was born in Bethlehem of Judea, it fulfilled a 500 year old prediction made in Micah 5:2.  It fulfilled that prophecy.  The fulfillment of predictive prophecy ought to strengthen anyone's confidence that the Bible is in fact, the true word of a true God. 

 

But there's more, there’s the personal side of Christmas as well.  When the angels announced His birth to the shepherds they said: "unto you is born this day in the city of David a Savior, which is Christ the Lord." (Lk. 2:11 KJV)  That was a promise fulfilled.

 

In the popular Christmas Carol, “O Come All Ye Faithful,” there’s a lyric line that says: “Word of the Father, NOW IN FLESH APPEARING.”  That first APPEARING of the Christ, was more than just fulfilled prophecy.  It was also in fulfillment of great and ancient promises that God had made. 

 

The birth of Christ not only signaled the beginning of the fulfillment of the first glimpse of the gospel given in Genesis 3:15, where the Seed of the woman would come to bruise the serpent’s head.  More specifically, it FULFILLED A PROMISE God made more than once, to a man named Abram (who became Abraham).

 

Note this promise in Genesis 12:2, 3 where God said to Abram -

 2 I will make you a great nation; I will bless you and make your name great, and you shall be a blessing.

3 I will bless those who bless you, and I will curse him who curses you; and IN YOU ALL THE FAMILIES OF THE EARTH SHALL BE BLESSED.

 

This text is part of what is known as the Abrahamic Covenant.  The other main part is a promised “land” for the promised nation (Gen. 12:2) to live in. 

 

Key words here in verse 3 and elsewhere, are “IN YOU.”  That’s because the ancients saw themselves as part and parcel of all who came before and after them.  When God said to Abram, “I will bless YOU and make YOUR name great,” He wasn’t ONLY referring to Abram (whom He later renamed Abraham) BUT to the Christ that would come in Abraham’s family.

 

The greatest part of this covenant promise was a Special Descendant, who seminally was IN ABRAHAM.  That Descendant, would be the One that would be the cause of blessing or cursing to all humanity.  When God said “I will bless those that bless you and” … “curse him that curses you,” He wasn’t ONLY talking about the Jewish nation but also about Abraham’s Descendant. That Descendant was Jesus Christ, who was both Man (through Abraham and his descendant, Mary) and fully God at the same time.

 

Again, Christmas is the celebration of the birth of the Christ.  In that birth a part of the Abrahamic covenant was fulfilled.  The fact that on the first Christmas, God kept one of His promises to Abraham (and He will still keep them in a fuller way in the future) OUGHT TO INCREASE OUR FAITH IN THE BIBLE.  It ought to confirm for each of us that it is indeed the unalterable and final true, written word of God that we can fully depend upon.  Beyond that, the Bible in 1 John 3:23, commands us to believe in Christ.

 

Encouraging people from a Jewish background to make sure they had fully trusted in Jesus for salvation from sin, Hebrews 6:13-20 said this to encourage their faith in God’s written promises;

 

13 For when God made a promise to Abraham, because He could swear by no one greater, He swore by Himself,

14 saying “Surely blessing I will bless you, and multiplying I will multiply you.” (a quote from Genesis 22:17)

15 And so, after he had patiently endured, he obtained the promise. (meaning of course the birth of Isaac, the first one of the nation to come from Abraham)

16 For men indeed swear by the greater, and an oath for confirmation is for them the end of all dispute (can be translated ‘contradiction,’ ‘wrangling’ or ‘argument’).                                                                                                                    

This word “Oath” in verse 16, comes from the root word “fence,” or “enclosure.”  Hence this word came to mean that which would restrain a person’s words in keeping them from going beyond, or around what was said or promised.  Hebrews 6 continues -

 

17 Thus God, determining to show more abundantly to the heirs of promise the immutability (the unchangeableness) of His counsel, confirmed it by an oath, (as we shall see in Genesis 15:8-18, and again in Genesis 22:16,17)                                      

18 that by two immutable (unchangeable) things, (God’s promise and His oath) in which it is impossible for God to lie (compare Titus 1:2), we might have strong consolation, who have fled for refuge to lay hold of the hope set before us.

Wow!  What a statement!  To think that God would stoop and condescend to encourage believers, AFTER HE HAD ALREADY PROMISED THEM, by using what’s needed between sinful humans to confirm a promise, that is to CONFIRM His promise WITH AN OATH, is truly remarkable!

 

In verse 17, God did this literally with “overflowing resolve.”  Why?  Verse 18 answers that question when it literally says: “so that we (believers) might have mighty comfort or MIGHTY ENCOURAGEMENT” to believe Him.  The final phrase in verse 18, referring to fleeing “for refuge to lay hold of the hope set before us” - is the Hebrew writer’s way of saying “we who have believed the gospel.”

 

I think it will be helpful to look at what the writer to the Hebrews was talking about when he said God “confirmed” His promise to Abraham with “an oath,” in Genesis 15:8-10 and 15:17, 18.

 

8 And he (Abram) said, “Lord GOD, how shall I know that I will inherit it?" (in context, he meant the land for the great nation and the One that would be a blessing to all the families of the earth)

9 So He (the Lord God) said to him, "Bring Me a three-year-old heifer, a three year old female goat, a three-year old ram, a turtledove and a young pigeon."

10 Then he brought all these to Him and cut them in two, down the middle, and placed each piece opposite the other; but he did not cut the birds in two.

 

You may be thinking, “What in the world?”  In the ancient world when two parties felt they needed to confirm binding promises to each other, this is what they would do.  They would offer sacrifices and then cut the carcasses in two and walk between the severed halves of the dead animals’ bodies.  This was in effect saying our covenant together is made with blood, and if we do not keep it may we become like these sacrifices. 

 

God is altogether righteous and everything He says is reliable - because He is God, yet in an amazing act of condescension, the LORD met Abram on his level and said in effect, "OK, set up the sacrifices of a binding covenant so that we two can walk between the pieces!"

 

But instead, according to verse 12, God put Abram in a deep sleep.  Then, beginning in verse 17, we read:

 

17 And it came to pass, when the sun went down and it was dark, that behold, there appeared a smoking oven and a burning torch (compare this to Exodus 13:21, where the presence of the LORD is described in similar terms – as a  “pillar of cloud” and “pillar of fire”) that passed between those pieces.

 

So, instead of the LORD and Abram walking between the pieces together, the Lord God walked between the severed carcasses BY HIMSELF!  This signified AN UNCONDITIONAL COVENANT.  That means even if some of Abram's descendants proved unfaithful, the LORD would still keep His promise to send a Savior through whom all the world could be blessed with salvation from sin!  Do you see why I say at Christmas, covenant promises were being fulfilled?

 

Now, note how the LORD then gave the covenant promise in the very next verse, Genesis 15:18 -

18 On the same day the LORD made a covenant with Abram, saying" "To your descendants (that word, DESCEANTS, includes Christ) I have given the land, ... ."

 

Next, note Genesis 22:16,17 – a further, later reconfirmation of the covenant with Abraham,

 

16 … “By Myself I have sworn, says the LORD, because you have done this thing, and have not withheld your son, your only son – (an act of complete faith in the LORD)

17 “blessing I will bless you and multiplying I will multiply your descendants (this is what’s quoted from the Greek translation of the Old Testament, in Hebrews 6:14) as the stars of the heaven and as the sand which is on the seashore; and your descendants shall possess the gate of their enemies.

18 “In YOUR SEED (one distinct, Special Descendant) ALL THE NATIONS OF THE EARTH SHALL BE BLESSSED, because (in faith) you have obeyed My voice.”

 

Getting back to the blessed Hebrews 6 passage, the Spirit inspired writer closed his thoughts with a wonderful sentence in verses 19,20.  Note how he used both nautical and temple terms as illustrative of the security in Christ which all believers have.

 

Hebrews 6:19,20 -

19 This hope we have as an anchor of the soul, both sure and steadfast (fixed), and  which enters the Presence behind the veil,                                                               20 where the forerunner has entered for us, even Jesus, having become High Priest forever according to the order of Melchizedek.

 

In explaining this Scripture, first it’s important that people understand Old Testament tabernacle and then temple, worship. 

 

The Holy of Holies, or the Most Holy Place, was where the manifestation of the Presence of God occurred.  It was located BEHIND THE VEIL in the Holy Place.  The closest to it any worshiper could get was the altar of sacrifice outside the front door of the Holy Place.  From that point on the individual believing sinner was represented by a priest in the Holy Place, but never within the veil UNLESS it was through the HIGH PRIEST and that but once a year, on the Day of Atonement.

 

Now consider the nautical illustration.  In stormy weather a ship needs a solid anchor to hold it from being driven out to sea.  If at all possible, it needs the safety of the calm protected harbor.  In the ancient mid-eastern world, when rough or stormy seas made entry into the harbor dangerous, the anchor would be taken into the calmer harbor by a little boat technically called “the FORERUNNER.”

 

The imagery means, Jesus our Forerunner and Great High Priest, takes the anchor of our faith and hope into the very presence of God the Father in heaven and secures us forever.  Because He (Jesus) is the antitype of Melchizedek, a King-Priest who had neither beginning of his days or his death recorded, Jesus alone is eternally, forever High Priest and Sacrifice, for the believer.  He was their sacrifice for sin at the cross.

 

That’s true because at the first Christmas, God kept His promise and sent Him for His people – to eternally save them from their sin.  The birth of the Christ at Christmas was the beginning of the final stage of God’s great promise being realized.  Therefore, it’s only fitting that we should celebrate Christmas with faith, thankfulness and great joy!

 

Rich Hines

Aurora Ministries’ – Minister To Chaplains