-
The Season For Seeing Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Apr 8, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: God made the message of Christmas a visual message to appeal to the eyes. Christmas from day one has always been a season for seeing. By His coming into the world Jesus changed how men see reality. He changed how man sees God and history, and how he sees the role of man and the goal of God.
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5
- Next
Mr. and Mrs. Nudelman were on a 50th wedding anniversary trip to Paris where they
visited the Louvre. As they slowly walked past the masterpieces of the ages, Mrs. Nudelman
stopped in front of a huge Renaissance painting called, The Child In The Manger. As she
stood there, Mr Nudelman asked her why she looked so puzzled. "Don't you know what the
scene is about?" "Certainly I know what the scene shows, but I can't figure something out".
He asked, "what's to figure out?" She responded, "Here is a family living in a stable with
animals, the floor is dirt, covered with straw, and the little baby is almost naked: How could
they afford to have their picture painted?"
People do not see the same thing just because they are looking at the same thing. This is
especially true when people look at the nativity scene. A mother was explaining the scene to
her young daughter. "See, next to the manger there is a man, and his name is Joseph, and in
the manger there is a little baby, the baby Jesus, and the woman in the picture is reaching
over to pick up the child. Now who do you think she is?" The girl thought for awhile, and
then she said, "the baby-sitter." Everyone is conditioned by their own experience to see
different things in the Christmas scene. The eyes play a major role in seeing the details of
Christmas.
The shepherds were not sleeping, but were watching their flocks by night, and thus they
were wide awake with their eyes searching the darkness for any threat to their sheep. God
honored their caring eyes with a sight that has never been equaled. The Angel of the Lord
appeared to them, and their first response was that of terror. The radical brightness of
God's glory filled them with fear. The angel had to assure them that what they were seeing
was not a threat, but a blessing. He told them of a sign to look for; a baby wrapped in cloth
and lying in a manger. Their eyes were to be their guide to the gift of God.
Then a great company of angels appeared, filling both their eyes with glory and their ears
with praise. Their response was, let's go to Bethlehem and see. Seeing is believing, can be a
valid motto, and it was for them, for they had received a message that only the eyes could
confirm. They had to see the sign. And when they did, verse 17 says, "Having seen Him they
spread the word", and verse 20 says, "They praised God for all they had heard and seen."
The shepherds became the first eye-witnesses of the Christmas story.
The story of the wise men follows the same theme. They were not sheep watchers they
were star watchers in the night. God also bore witness to them through their eyes. They saw
the Star of Bethlehem and knew it was a sign of wonder, and that God had sent a great king
into the world. They too followed their eyes to the Christ child, and became part of the
Christmas scene, and the first eye-witnesses to the Gentile world.
The point of all of this is, God made the message of Christmas a visual message to appeal
to the eyes. Christmas from day one has always been a season for seeing. By His coming
into the world Jesus changed how men see reality. He changed how man sees God and
history, and how he sees the role of man and the goal of God. In the first stanza of a
Christmas hymn, I expressed it this way-
Before Jesus came to earth
God just seemed so far away.
But now because of His birth,
He's here with us on life's way.
Everything is different now,
Since the Lord came into view.
Before Jesus, now we bow,
For He's made everything new.
This is seen in the fact that Christmas is the season of the most radical visual changes in
the church and the culture. There is no other time of the year when we decorate the church
and see the whole community put up lights, trees and decorations. What is this massive
visual change of the environment? It is a witness to the eye-witness nature of the Christmas
message.
The message of Christmas is, the invisible God became visible, and the eyes of man beheld
Him in the flesh. The love of God became visible in a life that could be seen. The goodness
of God was no longer only a message to the ears, but now it was a message to the eyes of
man. Again, I said it in a chorus,
God you just didn't mean maybe
When you said this world you love.