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Thursday, January 1, 2015

Brown's Daily Word 1/1/15

Merry Christmas and a very blessed New Year 2015.  It has been a very bright day here in New York today.  I went to bed last night and woke up just before the iconic Ball Fall in Times Square, New York City.  Praise the Lord for this new year.  It is written in the Word of God that "He makes all things new".  It has been a splendid and spectacular day.  Alice and I walked this afternoon, under the warm and winter sun, in the cool wind, of New York.  I watched some of the parade from California.  Best of all this year, as every year, belongs to Jesus.  He is the Lord of history.  Praise the Lord we get to to the new year through Christmas. 
 

    We often greet each other saying, "Merry Christmas"  The etymological meaning of Merry is "Mighty"  We should greet each other saying, "Mighty Christmas".  Indeed, our Lord God who is mighty and magnificent yet always merciful is upon the Throne.  Yet, He is with us, "Emmanuel, God with us."  It is written, "The Word became flesh and dwelt amongst us".  Eugene Petersen in The Message paraphrases this verse, "The Word became flesh and blood, and moved into the neighborhood" (John 1:14).


    Two young men on a battlefield in World War II made it to the safety of a foxhole amid enemy fire.  As they looked out before them across the battlefield they perceived the horror of dead and dying men, twisted barbed wire, the earth scarred with deep holes left by cannon fire.  Some men were lifeless, others crying out for help.  Finally one of the men cried: "Where in the world is God?"  As they continued to watch and listen they soon noticed two medics, identified by the red cross on their arms and their helmets, carefully making their way across the perilous scene.  As they watched, the medics stopped and began to load a wounded soldier onto their stretcher.  Once loaded they began to work their way to safety.  As the scene unfolded before them, the other soldier now boldly answered the honest, but piercing question of his friend, saying, "There is God!  There is God!"



    When Jesus became a man He came to show us God.  He came in the midst of the loneliness and the horror of a world gone mad.  Despite the chaos and confusion Jesus announced that God is here.  God is here in Christ.  Christ has come among us to show us who God is and what God is. . . Jesus.  In the act of becoming human He identified with our pain, sadness, and loneliness.  He brought to us His peace and His joy.  Indeed, He brought to us the wonderful gift of reconciliation.  He broke the power of darkness.  He rules with truth and grace.  He is our Eternal Contemporary.  He takes our pain, our sorrow, and even our sin upon Himself.  He transcends it all and gives to us salvation, eternal life, and everlasting joy.



    Joseph Damien was a nineteenth-century missionary who ministered to people with leprosy on the island of Molokai, Hawaii.  Those suffering with that dread disease grew to love him and revered the sacrificial life he lived out before them.  One morning before Damien was to lead daily worship he was pouring some hot water into a cup when the water swirled out and fell onto his bare foot.  It took him a moment to realize that he had not felt any sensation.  Gripped by the sudden fear of what this could mean, he poured more hot water on the same spot.  There was no feeling whatsoever.  Damien immediately knew what had happened.  As he walked tearfully to deliver his sermon, no one at first noticed the difference in his opening line.  He normally began every sermon with, "My fellow believers", but this morning he began with, "My fellow lepers."



    In a greater measure Jesus came into this world knowing what it would cost Him.  He bore in His pure being the marks of evil, that we might be pure.  He bore in His sinless soul the weight of sin, so that we could be forgiven.  He bore in His manly frame the hurt and pain of injustice, that we might be understood.  God is here understanding our hurt and identifying with our pain.  He feels.  He hurts.  He cries.  He came, He saw, and He has conquered.  "The kingdoms of this world have become the kingdom of our God and of His Christ and He shall reign for ever and ever.  Jesus became a man so God becomes touchable, approachable and reachable.



    Max Lucado wrote, '"Just call Me Jesus,' you can almost hear Him say.  He was the kind of fellow you'd invite to watch the Rams- Giants game at your house.  He'd wrestle on the floor with your kids, doze on your couch and cook steaks on your grill.  He'd laugh at your jokes and tell a few of His own.  And when you spoke, He'd listen to you as if He had all the time in eternity."  In the words of John Wesley, "The best of all, Jesus is with us".

 

    Therefore, my beloved brethren, be ye steadfast, immovable, always abounding in the work of the Lord, forasmuch as ye know that your labor is not in vain in the Lord. (1 Corinthians 15:58)




When the song of the angels is stilled,
When the star in the sky is gone,
When the kings and princes are home,
When the shepherds are back with their flock,
The work of Christmas begins:

To find the lost,
To heal the broken,
To feed the hungry,
To release the prisoner,
To rebuild the nations,
To bring peace among brothers,
To make music in the heart.





1 comment:

Nikki (Sarah) said...

happy new year guys...all of you.