A
Classic Holiness Sermon
The Message of the Manger:
A Christmas Sermon
by Dr. J. B. Chapman
The following sermon was written by Dr. J. B. Chapman. He
served as pastor, college president, and editor of the Herald of Holiness.
In 1928 he was elected General Superintendent in the Church of the Nazarene
and continued in that office until his death in 1947.
“And she brought forth her firstborn son, and wrapped
him in swaddling clothes, and laid him in a manger”
(Luke 2:7).
Every occurrence in the history of our world must take its
place both as to date and as to importance from its relationship to the
coming of Jesus Christ to be the Saviour of men, for that coming of His
is the central date and the most important event that has ever taken place
on this earth.
The birth of Jesus Christ was the principal subject of prophecy
among God’s chosen people for hundreds of years before the event
came to pass, and in these prophecies the minute descriptions were given
of the place where He should be born, of the manner of His birth and of
the times in which He should make His appearance. A Jewish Christian was
telling one of his own race of the treasure he had found in Jesus, and
was answering questions concerning Christ’s miraculous conception
and virgin birth. At last, no longer able to face the zeal of the Christian,
the unconverted one said, “Then if another should be born of a virgin
as this one was, would you believe him also to be the Christ”? But
the Christian answered, “Yes, if he were so born.” But this
was said, of course, with the full knowledge that another could never
be the subject of prophecy and of miraculous appearance as Jesus was.
Anyone is safe to offer to believe on one who is “so born.”
About the manger cradle of the newborn Christ gathered all
the joys and hopes of the race of man. But for the fact that Jesus Christ
espoused our cause, the human race would no doubt have perished with the
sin of Adam. The manger was involved in the first promise of redemption,
“The seed of the woman shall bruise the serpent’s head”
(Genesis 3:15). The manger was involved in the commandment to Noah to
build an ark for the saving of his house, and for the replenishment of
the new world. The manger was involved in the call of Abraham from Ur
of the Chaldees, and in the preservation of the family and the nation
which sprang from him amidst the lights and shadows of fifteen centuries.
The manger was involved in the authenticity of the genealogical tables
which connected Adam and Abraham with David, Joseph, Mary and Jesus. In
fact the manger was involved in every promise of a Saviour, Deliverer,
Prophet, Priest and King which cheered the hearts of God’s ancient
people and gave them hope for a golden day to come.
But as the manger was fulfillment of the hopes of those
who lived in the days that preceded it, it is also the basis for the realities,
the most blessed realities, of those who have lived since. Suppose we
should wake up some morning to find that there are no Bibles, no church
buildings, no Christian homes, no ideals of brotherly love in all the
world. We have these things now, and take them for granted. But they are
all ours because of the manger birth. But for the manger birth, we should
have sorrow, but no joy. We should have death, but no hope of resurrection.
We should have sin, but no pardon and cleansing from sin. Surely we should
hasten with the shepherds at this Christmas time to the manger crib of
our newborn King, and there in joy and gratitude we should bring our offerings
of gold and incense and myrrh.
Jesus is described as “God manifested in the flesh,”
and as the “Word of God.” The manger, therefore, has a message
of many phases. Let us think of some of those phases today:
1. The manger speaks to us of the faithfulness of God. God
had promised to send a Saviour and Deliverer. The fulfillment of that
promise was long delayed, and many difficulties had arisen to hinder its
fulfillment. In the case of many, “hope long deferred made the heart
sick.” But God did not forget, and His wisdom and power found a
way. After that first promise, there was a flood. Then the post-flood
world sank down in the pit of idolatry, the chosen family “went
down into Egypt,” the chosen nation was dislodged from its promised
land, the chosen people of God made captives and scattered among the nations,
the faithful keepers of the law became Pharisees, the Roman eagle replaced
the lion of Judah on the banners of world power and the hopes of good
men descended to low ebb. But suddenly there appeared a heavenly evangel
to announce, “Unto you is born this day in the city of David a Saviour,
which is Christ the Lord.”
The manger speaks to the troubled in heart today and assures
them that God has not forgotten, and that what He has promised He is able
also to perform. The mountains may move into the midst of the sea, and
the nations of the earth may rise and fall, but God’s word is sure,
and they are safe who put their trust in Him.
2. The manger speaks of the knowledge of God. Prophecy is
just history written in advance, and there are no prophecies so plain,
and yet so unlikely of fulfillment as those relating to the birth of Christ.
To fulfill the conditions described by the prophecies, all the currents
of world trends had to converge upon an insignificant nation, upon a small
town in that nation—upon a stable in that little town—and
upon a poor transient family in that stable. The decree of the Emperor
regarding the method of enrollment for taxes must be brought to bear upon
these homely subjects. Earnest men from the days of Abraham down longed
for the coming of Christ; but the times were not right. The time must
wait until the Greeks could make their fine language the language of the
world. It must wait until Roman conquests could bring about an era of
world peace. It must wait until the scattered Jews could build their synagogues
in all the lands whither they were scattered that there might be a nucleus
for the gospel in all the world. It must wait until men had exhausted
their resources for religion that they might be ready for the real Priest.
It must wait until men had drained their genius for politics that they
might welcome earth’s true King. It must wait for an age of intellectual
prominence, since the gospel must go out in word as well as in power.
It must wait until means of travel had come to a point of apparent perfection
that permitted gospel evangels to “go everywhere preaching the word.”
The knowledge of God foresaw this time as coming in the days of Caesar
Augustus, and His wisdom awaited that period and chose it for His purpose.
Surely we today can trust to the knowledge and wisdom of
the God who could wait two thousand years to order the first Christmas
carol, and yet who could bring about that scheduled occurrence without
delay—when the time was fully come. The things we can do and should
do we should not postpone, but we should not suppose God has forgotten
when He seems to delay. In the midst of the mazes of our lives, God has
a plan in us and for us. God is not only master of the telescope and of
the stars, He is also master of the microscopes and of the molecules.
He not only has a plan for the world and for the nations of the world;
He has detailed blueprints for your life and mine. The plan is not always
apparent. At times it may seem we are about lost in the mazes, but the
manger assures us that God is watching from the shadows and that He will
bring us out in His own time and in His own better way.
3. The manger brings us a message of the love of God. It
is well that the angels shall sing the praises of their Creator, and we
may sing that song too. It is well that men of earth shall remember God
as their preserver, and in this sentiment we join most heartily, but the
manger message is a song of redemption. We may not be sure of all the
motives connected with our creation and preservation, but we know that
the motive of redemption was pure love. “God so loved the world
that he gave his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should
not perish but have everlasting life” (John 3:16).
Man’s sin brought his ruin and the ruin of man’s
world. All the penalty for sin was deserved, and there was no claim for
pity or just demand for help. It was love that moved God to woo and win
His lost and erring child. Jesus told the story in the Parable of the
Vineyard (Luke 20:9-16). God sent His angels and His prophets, and last
of all, He sent His Son. This sending of His Son was the climax of love’s
reach. “He spared not his Son,” in His deep desire to save
that which was lost.
Sometimes we turn to the other side and try to ferret out
the reason for God’s infinite search for man in an analysis of man’s
dignity and value. But we can never find full justification for the great
sacrifice there, for however precious we may discern immortal man to be,
the necessity of his standing over against the infinite Christ makes him
pale into insignificance, and we must again take refuge in the simple,
and yet ample, explanation that God so loved that He gave His only begotten
Son.
Poets have tried to describe the love of God in terms of
the high heavens and the deep, deep sea. They have employed all men of
earth as scribes, all stalks of earth as quills, the far-reaching sky
as a scroll and the ocean as an inkwell, and yet at the conclusion they
have backed away to say, “Nor could the scroll contain the whole,
though stretched from sky to sky.” There is only one place where
there is adequate expression of the love wherewith God loved and does
now love us, and that is in the gift of His Son for our redemption. This
gift makes all other gifts but shadows, for in this gift all other gifts
are included.
4. The message of the manger is a message of salvation.
On the even of His birth the angel said, “Thou shalt call his name
JESUS; for he shall save his people from their sins” (Matthew 1:21).
The message of salvation is:
a. A message of forgiveness of sins. The sense of guilt
is universal among men who have reached the age of responsibility. Wherever
men attempt to pray, their sins and iniquities separate them from God,
and they draw back with the conviction that their prayers are not acceptable.
The heathen attempt to appease their gods with gifts and sacrifices, and
men everywhere offer their good works in atonement for their evil hearts
of doubt and disobedience.
But the Christians of the world, in one of the sentences
of the Apostles’ Creed, say, “I believe in the forgiveness
of sins.” Now sin is against God only. Sin against men is distinguished
in being called crime, and if we believe in the forgiveness of sins, we
believe that God forgives sins. Such a statement means little unless we
mean by it, “I believe God has forgiven my sins.” How can
anyone come to such a faith as this? Why, he comes to it because he has
confidence in the message of the manger. Jesus came expressly to save
His people from their sins. The manger message does not bring consolation
to those who continue in their sins, for it does not promise to save in
sin. It expressly promises to save from sin. The manger message promises
that those who quit their sins and believe on the Lord Jesus Christ shall
find mercy and pardon. “Let the wicked forsake his way, and the
unrighteous man his thoughts; and let him return unto the Lord, and he
will have mercy upon him; and to our God, for he will abundantly pardon”
(Isaiah 55:7).
How continuously irritating and tormenting is the sense
of guilt! But how blessed and assuring is the sense of pardon that comes
to the truly penitent through faith in our Lord Jesus Christ! And this
is not to be just the recollection of a crisis once reached and passed.
It is to be a continuous assurance. Not only the sins committed before
conversion and baptism, but all the sins of the past, right up to the
present hour are to be forgiven. Let none of us tarry under the burden
of sin. Come today in genuine contrition and faith and let Jesus Christ
make the slate clean right up to this very hour. The devil is the accuser
of the brethren and delights in tormenting good people with the charge
that their conversion is made invalid by their more recent sins. Let us
not argue the case with him. Let us come today, this Christmas Day, and
trust for such a supplemental pardon as shall make us clear of guilt from
the first of our responsible days to this glad hour.
b. The message of the manger is a message of regeneration
and of new life. “We know that we have passed from death unto life,
because we love the brethren” (I John 3:14). That is a fine sentiment
in the Christmas carol which asks that Christ be born in our hearts. This
is the spiritual counterpart of the Bethlehem birth. It is not enough
that we should go up to Bethlehem and glory in the wonderful birth that
took place there. Christ must now be formed in our hearts the hope of
glory.
If we are unable to fully understand the mystery of the
new life of God within the heart, let this be no deterrent to faith in
its reality. All life is a mystery. Those who work in physical laboratories
never find the germ of life. They know life by its manifestations, just
as Jesus said we may know the spiritual life. “The wind bloweth
where it listeth, and thou hearest the sound thereof, but canst not tell
whence it cometh, and whither it goeth: so is every one that is born of
the Spirit” (John 3:8).
To the candid observer there is no better evidence of the
reality of the Christian experience than that of the changed lives of
those who profess that experience. This outward change in conduct is not
the life itself; but it is, like the sound of the wind, evidence of the
life within. The world of doubt and infidelity can furnish no such examples
of changed lives as Christianity shows in its John Newtons, Jerry McAuleys
and Bud Robinsons. In such men one cannot actually see the new life, but
he can see its effects in the altered conversation and conduct, and he
has every reason to believe that the causes of the changes are what the
men themselves claim they are.
But for us individually the new life is subjective. “I
know He Lives for He lives within my heart.” This is the testimony
of one who has passed from death unto life and has the witness of the
Holy Spirit that the work is done. The Holy Spirit bears witness with
the human spirit, bringing what for want of a better name, we call “feeling.”
That word feeling has been debased by its having been interpreted as emotionalism—extreme
emotionalism—but this is no fault of the word itself, and it is
no good reason for us to abandon it while waiting for a term that bears
no objectionable feature. We do “feel” the stirrings of the
new life within. There is a witness that is dependable. Real born again
people are justified in saying, “I know I have the new life within
me,” and, being a born again Christian myself, I do acclaim the
glad news that I know the new life of God is in my heart today. To God
be all the praise and glory!
c. The message of the manger is a message of cleansing from
all outward and inward sin. “For this purpose the Son of God was
manifested that he might destroy the work of the devil” (I John
3:8). The sins which we have committed, which bring guilt to our consciences
and for which we must seek forgiveness are our own works. But back of
our sinful works is a sinful nature which we have because we are members
of a fallen race. This sinful nature is not a deed; it is a state. It
is not our work; it is the work of the devil. It cannot be pardoned; it
must be cleansed. The condition for its removal by divine grace is not
repentance, but committal. Still the message of the manger covers this
deep-seated need, for the Son of God was manifested to do this very thing.
The message of the manger is a message of full salvation.
Sometimes those who hold that Jesus Christ can and will deliver from all
outward and inward sin are called extremists. If the name is applicable,
it is not altogether a slander, for such extremists are extremists for
Christ, and that is much more complimentary than being extremists for
the devil and sin. Perhaps there is no escape from being an extremist,
for either Christ can and will save from all sin or else He cannot or
will not do so. In choosing either of these propositions one stands forth
as either an extremist for holiness or an extremist for sin.
But let there be no rounding of the corners. The message
of the manger is a message of full deliverance. Jesus came to save His
people from their sins and to destroy the works of the devil out of our
hearts, and He can and will do that which He came to do. There is full
salvation in Christ. There is no sin so dark but that Jesus Christ can
and will save from its guilt and power. There is no defilement so clinging
but that Jesus Christ can cleanse it away and make our hearts whiter than
snow.
In many lands snow has a special meaning at Christmas. Those
who have lived in such lands, even though transported to the tropics,
still sing of a “White Christmas.” Let us sing today of a
white Christmas by trusting Christ to cleanse away all the dross and defilement
from our hearts that there may be nothing left in them that is contrary
to His will and nature. “Purge me with hyssop, and I shall be clean;
wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow.”
d. The message of the manger is a message promising divine
fullness. There never was and never will be another incarnation, but there
is for all God’s children a Spirit-filled life. The incoming and
the indwelling of the Holy Spirit in the human heart is in the nature
of the “Heart of the Gospel.” The history of our holy religion
is true and wonderful. The doctrines of our holy religion commend themselves
to the intelligence of men. Christian ethical standards are the highest
known in the world. The sacraments of the Christian religion are simple
and beautiful beyond all comparison. But the real heart of Christianity
is the indwelling of the Holy Spirit in the believer’s heart. He
dwells within to cleanse and keep. He dwells within to comfort and guide.
He dwells within to uplift and enable.
The echo of the announcement, “Christ is born,”
is that joyful word, “The Comforter has come.” Jesus offered
as a test to those who claimed to love Him the requirement that they keep
His commandments. We are all glad for the Christmas season, and if pressed,
we would, I think, all claim that we love Jesus. Well, His pressing commandment
was that His people should not depart from Jerusalem until they were endued
with power from on high. Now there is no better way for us to attest the
love we have for Christ than by our insisting on that divine intimacy
that comes only to those who “walk in the Spirit.”
e. The message of the manger is a message of peace and good
will toward men. Perhaps the announcement meant that God offers peace
and good will to men, and let us glory in that phase of the message this
morning. “Therefore being justified by faith, we have peace with
God through our Lord Jesus Christ” (Romans 5:1). “And the
peace of God, which passeth all understanding, shall keep your hearts
and minds through Christ Jesus” (Phil. 4:7). “And the very
God of peace sanctify you wholly; and I pray God your whole spirit and
soul and body be preserved blameless unto the coming of our Lord Jesus
Christ” (1 Thessalonians 5:23).
But let us also come to the subject of peace and good will
as it bears upon us as followers of the Prince of Peace at this blessed
Christmastide. The basis of true Christian peace and good will is love
in the heart. Christ commands His people to love one another, and it is
promised that the manifestation of this love shall be evidence to “all
men” that these are His disciples. Sometimes people draw back a
little from the suggestion that we are to love God’s people more
than we love others. But love is adapted to its objects. We are to love
God only with the supreme love of worship. We are to love our fellow Christians
with the love of trusting, confident fellowship. We are to love all men
with the love which honors the good in them and pities the evil in them.
But all this love is the love upon which peace and good will can rest.
It is a love which doeth no ill to our neighbors, and which prays for
their highest good always.
Apart from our relation and standing with God, nothing is
worthy of such concern with us as our relationship with our fellow men.
The world of inanimate nature beneath us may be but an empire of indifference
with us, but the world of mankind should be of great concern. Booker T.
Washington declared he would not permit any man to so drag him down as
to make him hate him. We perhaps may be able to put this saying into positive
form and declare we will love men for whom Christ died, no matter what
their treatment of us may be.
f. Finally, this salvation message from the manger is a
message of hope for final victory and glory. Jesus, as the Son of God,
came down very low in the valley when He became flesh and dwelt among
us, but the promise is that He shall come again in glory and in power.
He was rich in heaven, but for our sake He became poor by coming down
to the earthly estate. His very humiliation is prophecy of His coming
glory. He is coming back to this world in which He was once a stranger.
When He comes the second time He will come as universal King and Lord.
We who love Him rejoice in the prospect of His high exaltation.
Connected with the hope of His second coming is the hope
that with that coming all things will become new. At that time the nations
will beat their swords into plowshares and their spears into pruning hooks,
and learn war no more. Through the Babe of Bethlehem this earth of ours
is to become a place of peace and safety. The lion shall eat straw like
the ox, the wolf and the lamb shall became fast friends, a little child
shall play about the den of the cockatrice without danger, and nothing
shall hurt or destroy in all God’s holy mountain. Hail that blessed
day!
Once more we have gathered about the manger crib of our
incarnate Lord at Christmastide, and from that manger we have heard a
voice that speaketh louder than words, “Let us give the more earnest
heed to the things which we have heard, lest at any time we should let
them slip” (Hebrews 2:1).
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