We are a
fallen race.
The bible
explains that Adam and Eve, after being created by God, were placed in the
Garden of Eden. In that Garden, there were all sorts of plants, with enough
variety to satisfy any person.
Also, there
was the tree of life, and then the tree of the knowledge of good and evil.
For reasons
that are beyond our understanding, God placed that tree there with a simple
warning, don’t eat that fruit, or you will die.
Sadly,
after being tempted, both Adam and Eve ate of the fruit and they died.
Before they
died, they had children, and each generation has died off, up to the present,
which includes us.
The
sinfulness that erupted with the eating of that fruit has been passed on to
every generation. That is why we all sin, even when we are young. I’ve watched
my children, my grandchildren, and myself. We start sinning at a very young
age. Deliberate acts, biting snatching, hurting.
We need to
teach our children to obey, for some reason, we don’t need to teach them to
disobey.
This is
called original sin.
Baby brown
snakes may be cute, but when they grow up, they are poisonous.
Tiger cubs
are cute, but even when they are raised in human care they can unpredictably
kill, even their owners.
Baby humans
are cute, but when they grow up they sin, some sooner than others. Most murders
occur within family members.
If we are
to have true fellowship with our maker, the creator of heaven and earth, then
this problem of sin must be dealt with.
Over the
years and centuries, people of faith rose up, Abel, Seth, Noah, Abraham, Isaac,
Jacob, Joseph, Moses, David, the prophets.
These and
others were great people, who served God and our world in outstanding ways, yet
they all were sinners, and in and of themselves, they could not undo the curse
that came on us in the Garden.
To do that
we needed someone special, really special.
That person
had to be, themselves, without sin, and without a desire to sin, like no one
ever before him, or after him. They then would have to be willing to take on
the sin of every other person in the whole world, willingly, even though they
themselves were innocent.
This
person, to represent humanity, had to be a human, a true human, fully human.
Like a repeat Adam, but before the sin, and able to withstand every temptation.
The way I
am describing this, is like someone trying to solve a problem of logic, like a
mystery game, but in an emergency, you do what has to be done, ready or not.
You do what you decided to train in and be ready for.
Jesus was
not an answer to a dilemma of morals vs saving humanity. Jesus was not the
missing puzzle piece that God finally worked out in order to sort out the
world.
When Adam
and Eve bowed to the temptation and took the fruit, God was not caught by surprise.
Yes, he was sad, and upset, maybe like when a parent finds out that their child
is using drugs, even though everything they’ve been taught from childhood is
not to use drugs,
But God was
invested in Adam and Eve and all of creation, with his whole being. So
invested, that he would give up his one and only dear son, allowing the
heavenly fellowship to be interrupted by our selfish, stupid sin.
The
incarnation is the term we give to God becoming man.
Jesus was
always with God, was always God, as we read from the Gospel of John, but at
that moment when the Holy Spirit overshadowed Mary, God became flesh, a
helpless embryo, needing human sustenance and human care. That embryo was truly
human, but was not fallen. He was wonderfully pure, without sin, and without
desire for sin, as all of us should be.
The word
became flesh and dwelt among us.
This is the
incarnation, this is Jesus, this is Christmas.
The grace
of God appeared.
If you
watch some of those restoration shows, sometimes people will spend amasing
amounts of money to restore say an old motorbike, or toy car or something to
being like brand new, or sometimes, better thatn it may have ever been, and the
money they spend seems like a total waste, except to the owner of that toy or
motorbike.
Grace is
the goodness and willingness of God to do something effective, no matter how
expensive, to fix our inability to have fellowship with him.
Grace is
God’s willingness to not just overlook our sin, but fill the deep and painful
hole in the middle of our hearts, that the explosion of sin causes.
Grace is
Gods willingness to tie up all the loose and smelly ends that we deliberately
forget to do, not really having the abilty or desire, in our weak attempts to
be godly.
Grace is
God’s willingness to visit the ugliest, most repulsive prisons that are home to
angry criminals intent on destroying anything good. His willingness to send an
innocent child into the midst of a politically and religiously corrupt nation.
Grace is
God’s immense and unrelenting love made into a man, Jesus. And God’s grace
appeared at that very first Christmas.
Jesus came
as an infant, helpless but pure, able to pass the tests that Adam and Eve
miserably failed, and willing to take on our humanity and sinfulness and bear
it on a cross until every sin and every sinner is fully judged, sentenced, and
the punishment complete.
Jesus is
the cure to the disease we didn’t believe we had contracted. The hereditary
disease of rebellion against God.
He came
into the world willingly, and gave his life willingly, rising from death
powerfully, ascending to heaven, gloriously, and promising to return
irrefutably as King of Kings and Lord of Lords.
For the
grace of God has appeared that offers salvation to all people. It teaches us to
say “No” to ungodliness and worldly passions, and to live self-controlled,
upright and godly lives in this present age, while we wait for the blessed
hope—the appearing of the glory of our great God and Savior, Jesus Christ, who
gave himself for us to redeem us from all wickedness and to purify for himself
a people that are his very own, eager to do what is good.
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