THE REAL REASON
... FOR CELEBRATING CHRISTMAS

Christmas is
celebrated once a year all over the world. It
is not celebrated by Christians only. Non-Christians,
people of other faiths, even people of no faith at
all, also celebrate it. In some countries, it is celebrated
nationally. In some others, it is celebrated as a national
holiday. It is quite correct to describe Christmas
as an inter-faith, international celebration.
But
while it has become a worldwide, universal celebration,
there are many all over the world who neither know
its real reason nor the one in whose name it is celebrated.
This
article seeks to explain the real reason behind
the event and to help point to the one whose birth more
than two thousand years ago is the real reason for the
celebration.
There
is indeed a real reason behind Christmas celebration.
The Scripture is trite in this regard.
First ~ Christmas
is a time of real good news. When the angel
first brokered the news of the birth which has come to
be celebrated as Christmas, he described it as good news
(Lk. 2:10-12). According to him, the good news was that
a Saviour was born to the world (Lk. 2:10-12). The Saviour’s
birth which we now celebrate as Christmas is good news
indeed (Lk. 2:10-12). Christmas is therefore a day of
good news, that the world has one who is her Saviour
(Lk. 2:10-12). Therefore, as we celebrate Christmas,
we must never forget the good news behind the celebration.
Second ~ Christmas
is a time when God fulfilled His promise to send the
Messiah to redeem the world. This promise is
stated in several ways in the Scripture (see Gen. 3:15;
Is. 7:14; Is. 9:6-7). According to the Scripture, the
birth of Jesus which the world celebrates as Christmas
actually fulfils a messianic promise that God had made
(see Matt. 1:22-23). As we celebrate Christmas all over
the nations today, we should remember that we are actually
celebrating the fulfillment of God’s messianic
promise. In other words, we are really celebrating the
arrival of the world’s promised Messiah more than
two thousand years ago. This means that Christmas is
nothing but a messianic celebration. The messiah is already
available. To lose sight of this in our Christmas celebrations
is to celebrate meaninglessly
Third ~ Christmas
is a time to celebrate God’s love. By the
birth of Jesus, God demonstrated His love for fallen humanity
(see Jn. 3:16; cf. Rom. 5:8). This love is both universal
and unconditional (Jn. 3:16; cf. Lk. 2:10-11). This love
must be received to justify God giving it (see Jn. 6:40).
When received, this love results in everlasting life (Jn.
3:16). Christmas celebrations must therefore remind us
of the birth of God’s love more than two thousand
years ago. It must also remind us that not only that love
but its result is still available to all mankind today.
To celebrate Christmas properly today we must take due
account of God’s love which is still available to
every human being right from the first Christmas celebration
more than two thousand years ago.
Fourth ~ Christmas
is a time to remember the salvation of mankind. The
Saviour of the world was born during the first Christmas
more than two thousand years ago (see Lk. 2:10-12; Matt.
1:21). After years of expectation, the birth of Jesus at
that time marked the birth of Salvation for mankind (Lk.
2:10-12; Matt. 1:21). Therefore, Christmas celebrations today
ought to be celebrations of God’s salvation for mankind.
It ought to be a celebration of the saved. Wherever Christmas
is celebrated today, it is important to remember that Salvation
is available for all mankind as a result of the first Christmas
event which took place in Bethlehem more than two thousand
years ago.
Fifth ~ Christmas
is a time of celebrating God’s reconciliation with His
estranged children. The fall of man (Gen. 3:1-19)
brought enmity between God and humanity. The birth of Jesus
more than two thousand years ago made reconciliation between
God and mankind not only possible but real. Christmas is therefore
a time to celebrate the peace that now exists between God and
mankind through Jesus Christ. Whenever and wherever we celebrate
Christmas, we must never forget that real peace is now readily
available to human beings through Jesus Christ (see Jn. 14:27).
Sixth ~ Christmas
is a time of a new order, a new way of life. The birth of Jesus
more than two thousand years ago, which the whole world celebrates
every year, formally ended the old order of sin and evil (see
Matt. 1:29; Jn. 1:29) and introduced the new order of righteousness
(see 2Cor. 5:17). Christmas celebrations all over the world today
ought to be characterized by the reign of righteousness which
the first Christmas in Judea more than two thousand years ago
signified. When we overlook the need for the reign of righteousness
even while we celebrate Christmas today, such celebrations are
at best improper.
...NEXT ~ The
final REAL reason
for celebrating Christmas!
A
Scripture Based Devotional for Overcomers
Click on the links below and start each day
with teachings and prayers:
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