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When God wanted to defeat sin, His ultimate weapon was the sacrifice of His own Son.
On Christmas Day two thousand years ago, the birth of a tiny baby in an obscure
village in the Middle East was God's supreme triumph of good over evil.
Charles Colson
A Dangerous Grace
Untethered by time, God sees us all. From the backwoods of Virginia to the business
district of London; from the Vikings to the astronauts, from the cave-dwellers to the
kings, from the hut-builders to the finger-pointers to the rock-stackers, He sees us.
Vagabonds and ragamuffins all, He saw us before we were born.
And He loves what He sees. Flooded by emotion. Overcome by pride, the
Starmakers turns to us, one by one, and says, "You are My child. I love you
dearly. I'm aware that someday you'll turn from Me and walk away. But I want you to
know, I've already provided a way back." And to prove it, He did something
extraordinary.
Stepping from the throne, He removed His robe of light and wrapped Himself in skin:
pigmented, human skin. The light of the universe entered a dark, wet womb. He
whom angels worship neestled Himself in the placenta of a peasant, was birthed into the
cold night, and then slept on cow's hay.
Mary didn't know whether to give Him milk or give Him praise, but she gave Him both since
He was, as near as she could figure, hungry and holy.
Joseph didn't know whether to call Him Junior or Father. But in the end called Him
Jesus, since that's what the angel had said and since he didn't have the faintest idea
what to name a God he could cradle in his arms.
.... Don't you think..... their heads tilted and their minds wondered, "What in the
world are You doing, God?" Or better phrased, "God, what are you doing in
the world?"
"Can anything make me stop loving you?" God asks. "Watch Me speak
your language, sleep on your earth, and feel your hurts. Behold the Maker of sight
and sound as He sneezes, coughs, and blows His nose. You wonder if I understand how
you feel? Look into the dancing eyes of the kid in Nazareth; that's God walking to
school. Ponder the toddler at Mary's table; that's God spilling His milk."
"You wonder how long My love will last? Find your answer in a splintered cross,
on a craggy hill. That's Me you see up there, your Maker, your God, nail-stabbed and
bleeding. Covered in spit and sin-soaked. That's your sin I'm feeling.
That's your death I'm dying. That's your resurrection I'm living. That's how
much I love you."
Max Lucado
In the Grip of Grace
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