THE INCARNATE CHRIST FOR ALL HUMANITY
We may never fully apprehend the mystery of the
incarnation. While God the Father lovingly
acted for us, God the Son graciously acted with us as Emmanuel.
(Matthew 1:23) In the words of the Protestant
reformer, Martin Luther, “The mystery of the humanity of Christ, that He sunk
Himself into our flesh, is beyond all human understanding.” Unquestionably, He loves us with everlasting
and unfathomable love.
Jesus Christ entered this earthly plain with manifest humility
and love, with the express intent of redeeming fallen humanity. As such, the King of Kings was fully content with a modest stable at
His birth – so we would have a mansion when we die.
He never
appeared as a Messiah solely sent for the empowered or elite, those whom we customarily
equate with fortune and fame. Rather, He
came to compassionately minister to the lost and dispossessed, to set the
captives free, to liberate people of every culture and color.
I
love what one of my ministry mentors, the late Dr. E.V. Hill, said concerning this. When questioned about the racial heritage of
Jesus, due to the fact that He is depicted in Eurocentric paintings as Caucasian,
Dr. Hill wisely responded:: “I don’t know anything about a white Jesus. I know about Christ, a Savior named Jesus. I don’t know what color He is. He was born in the brown Middle East; He fled
to black Africa; and He was in Heaven before the gospel came to white Europe. So, I don't know what color He is. I do know one thing: If you bow at the altar
with color on your mind, you’ll get up with color on your mind. So go back again, and keep going back until
you no longer look at His color, but at His greatness and His power to
save!"
Indeed,
Christ liberates us from the inbred indoctrinations of prejudice, discrimination
and racial animus. According to Luke, the
physician-apostle, “He has made from one blood every nation of men to dwell on
all the face of the earth.” (Acts 17:26)
Therefore, our celebration of the birth of Christ should be the most
unifying moment of our year. And since the
Word declares that Heaven will include persons “of every kindred, and tongue,
and people, and nation,” wouldn’t it seem both logical and imperative that we learn
to live together respectfully and amicably here?
Sisters and brothers, be
continually blessed, and please (above all else) MAKE SURE YOU ARE READY TO
MEET OUR SOON COMING KING. Maranatha!
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