Thinking
about Christmas this season I imagined this heavenly scenario:
I
think my favorite verse in the whole Christmas story is, “For nothing
is impossible with God.” (Luke 1:37).
These are Gabriel’s last words to Mary. Nothing is impossible with God. Not
even restoration after the separation we caused with that first crunch of the
apple. Only He can heal all the hurt, disease, bloodshed that it has caused on
earth ever since. And He uses the most unlikely folks as part of His plans.
The Christmas story is full of people
the world (including us) would have never chosen. An old priest with decades
worth of an unanswered prayer – a request he struggles to believe God is able
to fulfill after so many years of silence. Can you relate? Do you have an
answered prayer from long ago? God might be saying “that’s not my best for
you.” Or like with this doubting priest He might be saying, “not yet”.
Then there is a young Jewish girl on
the fringes of society and living under Roman oppression. And when God does
work a miracle through her the circumstances are hardly what she or we would
have chosen. Have you ever answered God’s call and then had things turn out
drastically differently than you imagined? Mary could relate! But she was truly
right in the middle of God’s will for her and the most important miracle ever. And yet I imagine a cave miles from home was hardly the birth center she imagined.
And then there are those blue-collar
missionaries. A rough group of men tending sheep that were likely used for
sacrifice in the temple. Sheep on land that king David had used to shepherd
centuries before (1 Sam. 17:15). Shepherd’s told of the
Ultimate Good Shepherd and Lamb for sacrifice to come. It’s hard to miss the
foreshadowing here and this part of the story is packed with meaning for us to
discover. I don’t know about you, but I’m a pretty unlikely candidate to carry
His message of hope, and yet like the shepherds He uses people like you and me.
These are the characters that God uses
to write His story of redemption. And in
each of their lives we can identify, we can find courage and we can hope. If He used them, He can use us.
I’m reading through Revelation this month
and thinking about Jesus’ return to earth to finish what He started so many
centuries ago.
“To him who
loves us and has freed us from our sins by his blood and made us a kingdom ,
priests to his God and Father, to him be glory and dominion forever and ever.
Amen. Behold he is coming with the clouds and every eye will see him, even
those who pierced him, and all tribes of earth will wail on account of him.
Even so. Amen. I am the Alpha an dhte Omega, says the Lord God, who is and who
was and who is to come, the Almighty.” (Rev. 1:5-7)
This
is Who we worship. This is what we live for. This is why we labor. This is Who
we celebrate this season and Who we wait expectantly to return. In the midst of
unanswered prayers, unexpected difficult circumstances and unlikely callings,
lets take a few minutes to remember He is with us through it all and praise and
thank God that He came and He is coming again. Because Nothing is impossible
with God.
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