What
the
Incarnation Means for Us
The
Real
Meaning of Christmas
by
Steve Clark
What is the true meaning of
Christmas?
Every year as the Christmas season comes
around, we hear a great deal
about the real meaning of Christmas. But it is
not always clear just what
that real meaning is.
For some people, the true meaning of
Christmas is the warmth and love
of our families, a celebration of the home.
For others, the real meaning
of Christmas is love for other people – “Peace
on earth, good will toward
men.” And of course, many Christians think the
true meaning of Christmas
is that it is the birthday of Jesus.
All these things, and especially the
celebration of Jesus’ birth, have
something to do with Christmas. But the full
meaning of Christmas is something
bigger – bigger than the love of our families
or good will toward men,
even bigger than remembering the birthday of
Jesus. For when we celebrate
Christmas, we are celebrating one of the
greatest truths of our faith –
the incarnation. We are not just celebrating
the fact that some 2,000 years
ago Jesus of Nazareth was born; we are
celebrating the far greater fact
that in Jesus of Nazareth God himself became
man.
Most of us are familiar with the word
‘incarnation’ and know that it
has something to do with Jesus’ being both God
and man. But many of us
have not reflected on the full meaning of this
doctrine and on the consequences
it has for us.
Among Christians today you can hear a lot of
strange things said about
the incarnation. One common idea is that the
Word became flesh to show
us that we really ought to be flesh. The
meaning of the incarnation, according
to this way of thinking, is that we ought to
be as much flesh as we can
possibly be.
I do not know about everyone else, but I at
least do not feel that I
need to become any more flesh. Nor does anyone
else I know really need
to become more flesh. We human beings were
born flesh. We do not need to
do anything in order to become flesh – whether
flesh in the good sense
or in the bad.
Some of the early Christian teachers in the
Greek-speaking world spoke
of the incarnation in quite different terms
that I believe come much closer
to what the scripture itself says. They said
that the Word became flesh
– God became man – so that we might become
God. That is a spectacular statement
and could easily be misunderstood. But
compared to the modern notion, I
think it gets us a lot closer to the truth.
God did not become flesh so that we could
learn to be flesh. God became
flesh so that we might become more like God.
Jesus did not come into the
world in order to tell us, “You’re all great
just as you are. Just do more
of the same.” Jesus came to change us. He came
to give us a life that we
could not achieve of our own flesh.
How does the
incarnation make
us more like God?
To begin with, we should understand that the
incarnation is not simply
a call to imitate God. The Word did not become
flesh just to give us a
model of godlike behavior. Of course, if we
are going to become like God
we have to imitate certain elements of God’s
character as they are revealed
to us in Jesus – his love, patience, strength,
perseverance, and so on.
But the incarnation means more for us than
that.
The truth is that God became man in order to
make us godlike. He came
to give us something that would make us like
himself. God became man because
we did not have it in ourselves, in the
weakness of our flesh, to become
like God.
St. Paul explained what the incarnation means
for us when he wrote to
the Colossians, “For in Christ the whole
fullness of deity dwells bodily,
and you have come to fullness of life in him
who is the head of all rule
and authority” (Col. 2:9-10). In other words,
everything that is in God,
the fullness of deity, is in Jesus of
Nazareth. And now we, through Jesus,
have come into the fullness of the life of
God. We have been filled with
what is in Jesus.
Not that we become the second person of the
Trinity incarnate; not that
we have the omniscience or omnipotence of God.
There is a difference between
us and Jesus, a difference we know only too
well. Yet Jesus shares with
us what he himself is. He shares with us his
divine life.
We may find all this easier to understand in
terms of another idea the
New Testament gives us: God became man in
Jesus Christ, and as a result
of that incarnation God has poured out his
Holy Spirit on us to give us
the power actually to live the life of God. He
has poured out his Spirit
so that there may be a body of people, the
body of Christ, who truly live
like God himself. Other people should be able
to see us and say, “Here
is a type of human being different from all
other human beings. Here is
a kind of life that no other human has.” What
they should be able to see
in us is the very life of God himself.
The Word of God
becoming flesh
and dwelling among us
The Gospel of John states these same truths in
another way: “The true
light that enlightens every man was coming
into the world. He was in the
world, and the world was made through him, yet
the world knew him not.
He came to his own home, and his own people
received him not. But to all
who received him, who believed in his name, he
gave power to become children
of God; who were born, not of blood nor of the
will of the flesh nor of
the will of man, but of God” (John 1:9-13).
That passage describes the incarnation – the
Word of God becoming flesh
and dwelling among us. He was not recognized
by most people, the passage
tells us. He was rejected even by many of his
own chosen people. But we
who do receive him receive a new life, a life
as children of God. We have
been born in a different way, not by natural
means but by the Spirit of
God. We have been born with a life that puts
us on a different plane than
our natural life. That is an extraordinary
truth.
How many times have we heard those first
verses of the gospel of John?
How many times have we heard about God
becoming man and our becoming children
of God? It is all so big that we almost stop
thinking about it. If we do
think about it, we think of it as something
that happens in some “spiritual”
world, not here on earth where we live our
normal life. Here we have enough
to do, just trying to get dinner on the table
for the family, or trying
to get to work in the morning, or wondering
when to do the Christmas shopping,
or how to get the car fixed so we can visit
the family on Christmas Day.
Maybe, we think, being children of God in the
midst of all this just
means that we should be a little kinder to our
wife, or stop getting irritated
with the kids, or try to relate to our boss
better. It is easy to end up
thinking that Jesus came just to tell us that
we need to behave a little
bit better than we are naturally inclined to
behave.
Yet that is not what Jesus came to do. He did
not come just to tell
us to become better than we thought we had to
be. He came so that we can
become better than we thought we could be.
God’s purpose in becoming man
was to give us his own life, making us better
than we ever thought we could
be.
It would be easy to misunderstand what it
means to say that Jesus came
to make us godlike and give us a life
different from other human beings.
We could take that as meaning we become
something more than human. I think
it is more accurate to say that we become
fully human. If we are to be
truly human, if we are to be all that a human
being is meant to be, we
need the life of God.
Our condition as we are born into this world
is actually subhuman. That
is not a slight on our parents; it simply
reflects the fact that the human
race itself is under the power of sin. The
present “natural” condition
of humanity means living according to sin,
living in the flesh as Paul
used the word flesh (see Rom. 7:13-25).
In the image and
likeness
of God
That was not, however, the condition in which
God made us. When God
made Adam, he did not make a sinful man. He
did not intend his creation
to live the way most people live now. He made
us to live a life like his
own; he made us like himself. That is what
scripture means when it says
that human beings are made in the image and
likeness of God (Genesis 1:27).
Human beings are supposed to be something a
lot greater than what most
of us are right now.
Some Jewish rabbis used to say that Adam was
created with the glory
of God upon him, and that when he fell he lost
the glory of God. The New
Testament teaches that in Jesus, the glory of
God was restored to humanity.
You can look at Jesus of Nazareth and see what
God is like. As Paul says
many times in the New Testament, “He is the
image of the invisible God”
(Col. 1:l5).
Jesus wants to share God’s glory with us. He
wants to glorify us so
that here and now we can start looking like
God himself because we live
the life of God himself. He wants to restore
in us the image of God.
At the beginning of this article, I said that
Christmas is not simply
a celebration of the birthday of Jesus. That
may seem a rather strange
idea, since Christmas is the feast of the
Nativity, the birth of Jesus.
What I mean, however, is that in celebrating
Christmas we do not just look
back to what happened 2,000 years ago when
Jesus entered our world; we
also look forward to what will happen when
Jesus comes again to complete
the work of the incarnation.
Obviously, none of us have yet achieved the
fullness of the divine life
Jesus came to give us. We can experience much
of our new identity as children
of God right now, in our life on this earth.
But there is a great deal
more we will not experience until the Lord
comes again to judge the living
and the dead and to establish his kingdom.
On that day, what we truly are will be
revealed, and as John says, “We
shall be like him” (l John 3:2). It will be
manifest that we are truly
sons and daughters of God, bearing his image
and likeness, bearing his
glory. Everything that was to be accomplished
by Jesus becoming incarnate
will be accomplished. Everything God wants the
human race to be, we will
be.
On that day the true and everlasting feast of
Christmas will begin.
copyright © 1980 by
Stephen B. Clark.
Used with permission.
Steve
Clark
is past president of the Sword
of
the Spirit and founder of The Servants of the Word.
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