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We are conditioned for disappointment
from a very young age. Life just doesn’t
always work out the way we want it.
Sometimes it’s because we have a skewed perception of reality, which is
particularly true when we are younger, and other times it’s because reasonable
expectations are genuinely left unmet.
Add to this general feeling of disappointment the reality of broken
dreams and broken promises, and we often, subtly, and slowly develop a
calloused undercurrent of mistrust.
Let’s be real. We have grown up in a culture of mistrust
where promises are made with crossed fingers and contracts have an infinitival
number of exception clauses. The
marriage vow is now a lawyer away from ending, handshakes have been replaced
with documents and signatures, promised inheritances and wills are changed,
promotions are given to the “other guy,” and the price quoted is rarely the final
price charged. Politicians certainly
haven’t helped: “No new taxes,” “I did not have sexual relations with that
woman,” “You can keep your health insurance.”
All this mistrust can easily slip into
our spiritual lives and Christmas is a great time to reassess and re-establish
our trust: not of man, but of God. We
are in a real danger of allowing the disappointments of life to discolor our
understanding of God, versus allowing who God is to rightly enlighten our
disappointments. We must not transfer
the emotions based on our circumstances to God; rather, we must allow a right
perception of God to shape how we respond to our circumstances.
The baby in the manger helps with
this.
Jesus’ birth is the fulfillment of a
promise given in Isaiah 7:14: “Therefore the Lord himself will give you a sign:
The virgin will be with child and will give birth to a son, and will call him
Immanuel.”
This sign the Lord gave was to be a sign
that God would be faithful to his promise to deliver his people from their
enemy. He would deliver them through
Immanuel, which means “God with us.”
Jesus is the reality that God came to mankind and dwelt among us in
order to defeat our ultimate enemies: sin and death.
So, every time we see a nativity scene
and we see that little baby in a manger, every time we see and sing the name
“Immanuel,” we are reminded that while we live in a world of disappointment and
broken promises, we have a God who is faithful.
He will fulfill his Word. He will
do what is right, even at great personal cost.
Let us together renew our hope this
holiday season. For, we can trust him.
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