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The People Who Missed Christmas
Contributed by Michael Blitz on Dec 25, 2024 (message contributor)
Summary: We look at 3 types of People who miss Christmas from Luke 2 and Matthew 2, the Busy, the Indifferent, and those who won't accept anyone but themselves on the throne of their lives
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People who Missed Christmas (based on a message by Freddy Fritz here on SermonCentral)
Good EVENING!! And I am glad to see you here. For our meditation, I want to talk about the many people who missed Christmas, not just the service. The idea, of course, is then to see how this reflects to ourselves.
Now everyone with eyes has seen Christmas everywhere since Halloween. But many only pay attention to Christmas because our surroundings say it is the thing to do but ignore the reality of what this day celebrates.
John MacArthur in a sermon mentioned he saw a news story featuring interviews where people offered their opinions on Christmas. Some said Christmas is about Family. Others, it’s a “magical” time for children.
Some said Christmas was a time to celebrate love for one another, some said it was all about the spirit of giving. Some talked about getting time off school or even better, paid time off work. But not one person mentioned that God was born in human flesh.
And that was the main thing that people missed back then as well as today.
Like today, people were busy, consumed with all kinds of things—some important, some not, depends who you ask. But so many missed this great event of history, God born as Man. Looking at why they missed, we see how so many today can miss, and even we ourselves can miss if we let the world distract us.
The first person who missed Christmas was the one we call the Innkeeper. When Mary, who was already into labor, and Joseph came into town, they came to a place, an inn, or maybe a hostile or family home. But the point was, there was no guest room for the couple, and the soon to be born Savior of the World.
It was census time in Bethlehem, and the city was bulging with visitors from all over the country, as all descendants of David were expected to go there. They were put in the stable, because the Innkeeper was too busy to even try to find anyone else to help. The Innkeeper missed Christmas, and the Messiah’s birth, because he was too busy.
There are many today like that Innkeeper. They are consumed with activity—not necessarily sinful activity, but things that keep us busy. Working, shopping, social media, games and other things that compete for attention. And in the clutter of activity, people don’t set aside time for God. And honestly, if you don’t put God in first, He doesn’t fit in with all those other things.
Second, the CITIES of Bethlehem and Jerusalem also missed Christmas.
If you didn’t know, Jerusalem was closer to Bethlehem than we are to Brigantine. Except that Jerusalem was up a hill as well.
When no one in either city paid attention, God picked a group of shepherds to hear the news of Jesus’ birth. Shepherds were among the lowest of all social groups since their occupation kept them from mingling in society and observing the religious feasts. God the Father, in his grace, allowed these social outcasts to be the first to know the Good News, a pattern Christ followed in His preaching, making sure that the poor and sinners had the Good News preached to them.
Our lesson from Luke 2 says that the shepherds told everyone what happened, (like Jesus miracles) and everyone “BOGGLED” at what the shepherds told them. But although “all who heard it were amazed at what the shepherds said,” we don’t’ hear of anyone going to see what had happened for themselves! They just weren’t interested enough in it.
So we have busy and indifferent. And third, another person who missed that first Christmas was Herod. There are a lot of Herod’s today!
He told the Wise Men that he wanted to “Worship” Jesus in Matthew 2, but in truth he was afraid of this King of the Jews, because he didn’t want competition for his throne, he was King of the Jews, he was king in Jerusalem.
Herod’s problem was authority. Herod felt threatened, his paranoia was legendary—even though Jesus was a baby, and Herod was an old man, he wanted Him dead. When the wise men didn’t return, Herod had all male children under the age of two in Bethlehem murdered.
If Herod had a motto, it was “I must sit on the throne of my life.”
But Herod failed. Not only did he miss that first Christmas, but his rebellion against God failed. And of course, in the end, he died, in one of the most gruesome miserable deaths Imaginable. But that’s another story.
Herod’s fear was that someone else would be on the throne of his life. And there are lots of people who miss God, and miss Christmas, because they hate the idea that anyone or anything would have moral authority over them or tell them that what they want to do is wrong.