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Recipe For A Merry Christmas Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Apr 2, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: If you really want to help others have a merry Christmas, let the Spirit of Christ be incarnated in your flesh, so that your life, acts, and words are used to encourage others.
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Back in the 60's, a movie was made telling the story of a man,
who, like Job, got so discouraged that he wished he had never been
born. His guardian angel granted him his wish, and also the freedom
to go back to his hometown to observe the consequences. Nobody
knew him, of course, not even his own wife and mother , for he had
never lived. He discovered many things had not been done because
he had not lived to do them. Many of the lives he had aided in rough
times had gone astray because he had not been there to give a
helping hand. Many bad influences had grown strong in the
community because he had not been there to prevent them. He then
realized how important one ordinary life can be in it's long range
influence for good. He was so grateful that he was allowed to wake
up, as from a dream, and be alive. His life was full of meaning and
significance after all.
Most all of us would have had the same experience. Most of us
underestimate ourselves and the influence we have on other lives.
Paul did not do this with himself, or any other child of God. He
knew that every believer could, if they would, add to this world the
same kind of joy that Jesus brought when he entered history on that
first Christmas.
Paul, in this passage, holds up the example of Jesus in His
Incarnation as the pattern for all Christians to imitate. He says, that
if the Philippian Christians will imitate Jesus, his joy will be
complete, and he implies their joy and the joy of Jesus would also be
complete. What we have here then, is a first century recipe for a
merry Christmas. All we have to do is mix into the bowl of life those
ingredients that Jesus brought into the world on the first Christmas.
This is the season to be jolly, but we often make it a season of
folly because we spend most of our time conforming to the world,
rather than to Christ. We become so busy getting things ready for
Christmas that we tend to neglect relationships. Jesus did not come
into the world to give us religious jewelry, though it has great value
as being both beautiful and symbolic. He did not come to give us a
holiday and a day of feasting, though it is much appreciated.
No Christian should complain of all the fringe benefits. But He came to
give Himself and His Spirit, and all the fruit of the Spirit. When you
care enough to give the best, you give yourself.
Christmas is a time when God would have us look back at our
roots. As Christians, Paul expects that by focusing on the roots of
Christmas it will help Christians produce the fruits of Christmas.
He expects Christians to look at what Jesus did in the giving of
Himself, which led to the cross, and apply that spirit in their
relationship to others.
The Philippian Church was one of the best churches of the New
Testament. But even there, the problems of disagreement
developed. Chapter 4, verse 2, tells of two women who were in a
state of contention, and this was hurting the unity of the church. A
breakdown in unity is a major problem in the church and in the
family. Paul is offering, in this passage, a recipe that will restore
unity to any group and produce a merry Christmas.
The beauty of this recipe is that all of the ingredients are
available to every believer. You don't have to order them and wait
for them to be imported from some distant land. Another great
value is that each of the ingredients is a gift that does not diminish,
but multiplies when given away. The more you give it away, the
more you have. If I have one pen and I give it to you, I no longer
have a pen, and have been diminished by my giving. But, if I have a
sense of encouragement, comfort, and joy in Christ, and I share that
with you, I have multiplied these values, and by so doing, have even
more myself. It is like an idea. If I share it with you, it is multiplied,
and the idea becomes stronger in my mind by sharing it.
Self-interest, rightly seen, leads us to share our gifts, and thereby
enrich others as we enrich ourselves. In the realm of spiritual values
it is always better to give then to receive, for the giver gains more
than the receiver, just as a teacher gains more than the student.
That is why we should be excited about this recipe for a merry
Christmas. Like any good recipe it can be used the year around.