The Child Who Was God (Colossians 1:15–20)
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It’s always a special joy for me also to come to the Christmas season and have the opportunity to focus on the simple and yet profound message of the birth of Christ. You know, it is an irony of rather significant proportions in America that we celebrate the birth of someone we refuse to acknowledge. Sort of a curiosity.
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We have George Washington’s birthday and Abe Lincoln’s and they have to share a day. And Martian Luther King gets his own day and we, to my knowledge, I have never heard of anybody from the ACLU suing someone for celebrating the birth of any of those three, it amazes me that in any public setting on any public property we can’t celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ.
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We can’t sing his praise or articulate his uniqueness without the threat of a lawsuit or a ban. Now the truth is, nobody wants to stop the celebration. That’s not the idea, not the commercial world anyway, they want the money. Not the government, they need the taxes that buying and selling and traveling produces, and not the partygoers, they want the fun.
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If we can just have the party without Jesus, everybody will be happy. The birthday of Jesus, frankly has become very useful. It has immense pragmatic value if you can just keep Jesus out of it. You might be the impression based upon that that Jesus is an insignificant person, a figment of some well-meaning Christians fantasies or some character of archaic antiquity who has been embellished through the years to have become something he never really was and we are kind of just stripping it down to eth way it out to be.
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Is Jesus someone less important than George Washington, Abraham Lincoln or Martian Luther King? Is Jesus someone about whom we shouldn’t be making so much fuss and certainly not too much articulation of the character of his life and what he said and why he came. Is Jesus someone to be pushed into the background? Should we keep the party and get rid of the person whose party it is.
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Is he insignificant? Should people who want to proclaim Christ and sing his praises be silenced? Well, the apostle Paul wants to help us understand who Jesus is. And I want you to look at your Bible to Colossians chapter 1. Among all of the passages of scripture that we might have looked at to see the reality of the child who was God, none is more grand than this one in the first chapter of Colossians. I want to read to you starting in verse 15.
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Listen to what the Bible says about Jesus Christ. “He is the image of the invisible God. The firs born of all creation. For by him all things were created both in the heavens and on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or dominions or rulers or authorities, all things have been created by him and for him. And he is before him all things and in him all things hold together.
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He is also head of the body the church, and he is the beginning the first born from the dead so that he himself might come to have first place in everything. For it was the father’s good pleasure for all the fullness to dwell in him.” Every one of those statements that was made from verse 15 through verse 19 is absolutely exclusive. They are true of him and nobody else.