As she made her way along the road, she wondered about the sense of it all. Although she had agreed she still couldn’t understand why.
She lived in a poor country that was occupied by a foreign army. Violence was never far away and often during the night you would hear soldiers entering the home of neighbours looking for the patriots they had called terrorists. Even as she made the trip with her husband, she was shocked with the conditions that lay outside the small village they called home.
The poverty she saw on her travels was an eye opener for a young woman who had never wanted for food. Her family was not wealthy by any stretch of the imagination, but her hard-working father had always provided the food and shelter the family needed.
Occasionally she would see lepers in the distance. Scorned by society and pushed far away from those they loved, and there were the beggars who lined the busier sections of road. Men and women who couldn’t see or couldn’t walk, dependent on the kindness or pity of strangers just to survive.
On their journey she even saw a crucifixion. She had heard about the horrors of the executions the Romans performed, but to see those victims left hanging on the primitive crosses was horrible. So much despair and sadness, could anything ever change the way her world was?
She wished that there was something she could do to make a difference.
It wasn’t that many months ago that her life had been simple. Engaged to be married, she dreamt of the life that lay ahead of her, and this wasn’t it. An angel had appeared to her one night with a story that she could hardly believe. She was told that she would have a child, a son. And she knew that wasn’t to be, after all she had never been with a man, had not even held the hand of her fiancé because it just wasn’t done. And now she was being told that she would be a mother.
The messenger explained that it would be a miracle. That the Father of her child would be God himself and the child would be the Son of God. In fact, He would be God.
What could she do? She knew that she was a virgin and if she became pregnant then what the angel had said must be true.
She believed him, but would anyone believe her? How could she explain this to her parents, her friends? What would she say to the man she was engaged to? “Hi Joseph, guess what? I’m pregnant, but don’t worry I’ve been faithful, God’s the Father.” Joseph might just be a carpenter, but he certainly wasn’t a stupid carpenter.
Why did God choose her? As a matter of fact why did God have to do this? Come as a child to this cruel and hostile world. I’m sure that question would surface time and time again as she raised this child, she would call Jesus.
The question is still valid 2000 years later, people still ask: Why did he come?
Well probably if you asked people those who had an answer would tell you He Came So We Could Have Eternal Life
After all it is recorded in the Bible in John 3:16 “For this is how God loved the world: He gave his one and only Son, so that everyone who believes in him will not perish but have eternal life.”
Throughout history humans have sought to reconcile themselves with God and they haven’t been able to do it. I don’t have to go through the plan of salvation here; you already know it. You understand that we really don’t deserve to go to heaven and that in our own power and through our own efforts there isn’t anything we can do that will make us worthy of eternal life.
And so, into the picture steps Jesus Christ, God himself and he offered himself up as a sacrifice, paying a debt that he didn’t owe because we couldn’t pay it.
Jesus came to do what we couldn’t do, and that is to restore our relationship with God.
You understand at this point in history, right now, on December 24th, 2025, that everything that has to be done for you to go to heaven has already been done. All that is missing is for your acceptance of that fact.
And so, your salvation now depends on your accepting his gift of grace, because God has already done his part.
And all he’s asking of you at this point is for you to respond.
And so, most of us, probably not all of us, but most of us have opened that gift, the gift of eternal life.
But it’s not the only reason he came. There is another gift that’s waiting for us, and we can choose to open it, or we can leave it wrapped and ignore it. The gift has been given but it’s up to us to accept it.
2) He Came So We Could Have Abundant Life You see, Jesus didn’t just come so we could have eternal life. If the only reason we get saved is to gain eternity, then the day we embraced that salvation we would go to heaven. Think how much easier that would be. Saved would mean safe.
Once we accepted Christ as our Saviour all our troubles would be over. One minute we’d be on earth with all of its problems and all of its pain and the next minute we’d be in heaven with no pain no sorrow and no loss.
But that wasn’t the plan. Jesus didn’t just come and live and die so we could live in heaven he came so we could live on earth. John 10:10 Jesus said I have come that they may have life, and that they may have it more abundantly. (NKJV) And that promise is as real today as it was when Jesus made it 2000 years ago. And it wasn’t just a promise for those listening to his words that day; it was a promise for every person who has ever called upon his name.
The word that is used for abundantly here literally means full to the point of overflowing. That’s the life that Jesus wants us to have.
A life full of living. Life is meant to be lived to the full, to be enjoyed and to make an impact. It was Helen Keller who said, “Life is either a daring adventure or nothing at all.”
And the life that Jesus offers will make a difference not only to us but to those around us.
When Jesus was searching for similes to describe what our lives were to be like he said that we would be the salt of the earth and the light of the world. Both are elements that change their environment. Once you’ve added salt to something you know there is salt in it. And if you’ve ever been on a sodium reduced diet you know how bland food can be without salt. Jesus left us here to flavour the world to make a difference with our lives.
And throughout history Christians have done exactly that.
I’m not saying that all the positive contributions made to society in the past 2000 years have been made by Christians but a good majority of them have.
We hear people talk about the crusades and abuses that have happened in the name of Christ, but very seldom do we hear society as a whole acknowledge the contributions that the church has made.
It was the church who established hospitals, and orphanages, it was the church that reached out to the outcasts of society with shelters for lepers and the poor.
It was the church that started schools and universities.
Where would the hungry of the world be without groups like World Vision, World Hope, Compassion International and Samaritan’s Purse? Dead!
Because for all the criticism of the church we are making a difference. Or at least we should be.
The second thing that Christ told believers that they ought to be is light. And light is provided for two reasons 1) for illumination and 2) for direction. The life that we are living is supposed to illuminate this world and point people to Jesus.
And if we are being light then we will annoy some people because the dark doesn’t look too bad until a little light disturbs it. And have you noticed just how little light it takes to chase away the darkness? A single candle can destroy the darkness in the darkest room.
And Christ came that we could live a life that makes a difference. But there’s still a third gift waiting to be unwrapped. Now some people opened the first two and they are content; they aren’t really interested in what is in the third package. I think they know what’s in it, but they’d prefer not to open the gift.
3) He Came So We Could Live a Holy Life Now up to this point everyone has been with me because those are nice things. Everyone one wants to have eternal life and most of us like the concept of making a difference in the world around us but how many of us want to live a Holy Life? As a matter of fact, what images come to mind when I use the word holy, do you immediately think of Mother Theresa or John Wesley or one of the writers of the Gospels?
When I say holy do “you” come to mind?
You should because we are called to live a holy life listen to 2 Timothy 1:9 For God saved us and called us to live a holy life. He did this, not because we deserved it, but because that was his plan from before the beginning of time—to show us his grace through Christ Jesus.
And in Colossians 3:12 Paul writes Colossians 3:12 Since God chose you to be the holy people he loves, you must clothe yourselves with tenderhearted mercy, kindness, humility, gentleness, and patience.
But what does it mean to be holy? The Wesleyan Church, which we are a part of, has historically and traditionally been called a holiness church, but does that mean anything? When I tell you that you are supposed to be “holy people” do you cringe or bristle?
Do you wonder how you can live an abundant life and at the same time live a holy life? Does your definition of holiness automatically eliminate any enjoyment you might get out of life, does it mean you can’t have any fun?
When I pastored the Wesleyan Church in Truro, I was fresh out of Bible College and one of my best friends in the church was a man in his late sixties, which seemed quite old then but doesn’t seem all that old now. And he would ask me, “When are you going to preach about not going to movies or dances or playing cards?” Is that what leading a holy life is about? The things we don’t do?
One day as Jesus was teaching a religious leader came to him and asked what the greatest commandment was in Jesus’ opinion. Jesus’ reply is given in Mark 12:30 And you must love the Lord your God with all your heart, all your soul, all your mind, and all your strength.’
You see holiness isn’t about rules it’s about relationship, our relationship with God. Are there things in your life that stand in the way of your relationship with God?
Chuck Colson in his book Loving God makes this statement “Holiness is the everyday business of every Christian. It evidences itself in the decisions we make and the things we do, hour by hour, day by day.”
Or simply put, holiness is wholeness, the whole of Christ in the whole of your life. But how do we know what decisions to make, what things to do? Well, we do have the book. And the short answer is to ask ourselves would what I’m doing honour God?
When I became a Christian my dad offered me a couple of pieces of advice, one of them was this, “All kinds of people will have all kinds of suggestions for what you can do and can’t do as a Christian. Here’s a simple guideline, ask yourself: would I do this with Jesus?”
You might be saying “Denn, Holiness is not externals, let’s not become legalists”
I’m not talking about become legalists I’m talking about pleasing God, about loving God with all your soul, all your mind, and all your strength.
Socrates wasn’t a preacher, but he hit the nail on the head when he said “It is not living that is important, but living rightly”
And no, it’s not easy to lead a holy life, if it was everybody would be doing it. But it is what God is looking for his children to do. And a holy lifestyle isn’t cultivated by what you don’t do, it’s cultivated by what you do.
It’s as you spend more time with God in prayer and spend more time reading his word that you know what pleases him and what doesn’t, as you become more like Christ you won’t have to ask yourself, “what would Jesus do?” because you’ll just know.
So where are you at? Which of the gifts that Jesus came to give have you unwrapped?
I hope everyone here has opened the gift of eternal life. But that isn’t enough you also need to open the gift of abundant life and make a difference in the world around you. And finally, don’t forget to open the gift of a holy life a life that glorifies and brings pleasure to God.
He’s already given you the gifts, now it’s up to you to unwrap them.