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Pastor
Erwin W. Lutzer
All
of us love to sing Christmas carols, and I think a favorite, not just among
children but among all of us, is the one that speaks about Jesus being in the
manager.
“Away in a manger, no crib for a bed,
The little Lord Jesus lays down His sweet head.”
The little Lord Jesus lays down His sweet head.”
We
sing it every year and we sing it many times every year and we still love it as
we do the other carols.
We’ve
heard these stories many times, but today I’m going to take a fresh look at a
very familiar passage of the Bible (It may indeed be one of the most familiar
to all of us.), and that is Luke 2:7.
If
you want to turn to it in your Bibles you may. Many of you will know it by
memory, but first of all, let’s go to the city of Bethlehem.
Bethlehem
is in commotion. There are many different people and they are all trying to
find a place to stay because remember that the very same decree that brought
Mary and Joseph from Nazareth to Bethlehem is the same decree that brought many
other people to Bethlehem as well.
We
look at the couple and we notice that they are very ordinary. The man clearly
is an ordinary tradesman and his wife is about to give birth. And we see them
walking around and there is no room in an inn.
Now
you must understand that Bethlehem was a place where caravans often stopped.
They preferred even to stop there, maybe rather than in the big city of
Jerusalem.
And
these caravans needed a place to stay, and there would be animals in a cave,
and there would also be an inn where the people stayed. Sometimes the two were very
close together.
And so the Bible says, and now we’re in our text
today, chapter 2, verse 7 (the famous verse), “And she brought forth her firstborn son and wrapped Him in swaddling
cloths and laid Him in a manger because there was no room (or no place) for
them in the inn.”
You
know there is no reference in the Bible to an innkeeper. We as preachers, and
myself included, used to preach against that guy.
You
know that innkeeper kept Jesus out because Mary and Joseph were looking for a
room and he said no. Well we don’t know whether or not there was an innkeeper.
I
hope that if there was he made it to heaven and all of us ask his forgiveness
for what we’ve said against him.
I
do have to say, however, that he would have done it ignorantly because he
didn’t know that Mary was bearing the Son of God. You and I do deliberately
what he did in ignorance.
Jesus said, “Whoever
receives a child in My name receives Me.”
You
want to receive Jesus? If there’s room in your heart for Jesus then there
should be room in your heart for a child.
He
also said that if we go into prison and clothe those that are naked and give
food to the hungry we’ve done it for Him.
So
we have an opportunity to do what that mythical innkeeper apparently had an
opportunity to do, but we have more knowledge.
Now
I’m very interested in the manger story, and we’ll be looking at the manger in
just a moment, but first of all, let’s spend a few moments to analyze this
question. Why was the manger necessary?
Why
the stable rather than the inn? You know even though it says there in Luke 2:7
in the last phrase that there was no room for them in the inn, and even though
that’s a reference to a specific historical event, I can’t help but think that
it’s also a metaphor of the life of Jesus.
That’s
the whole story of His life, and it’s still true. There’s no room for Him.
For
example, there was no room for Jesus in the religious world. As a matter of
fact, His most ferocious enemies were the religious establishment because He
was always revealing their hypocrisy.
He
was always telling them that they were emphasizing externals rather than what
was going on in their hearts.
And so they hated Him. They made Him look bad. And
when it came time for Jesus to be crucified, Pilate asked the question, “Who do you wish that I release unto you –
this man or Barabbas?” and they said, “Release
Barabbas, but as for Jesus, crucify Him.”
There
was no room for Him in the religious world and it’s still true.
Oh
I know that people like to talk about Jesus but He’s a no-frills Jesus. He’s a
Jesus who has been humanized and down-sized, and so you have references to
Jesus as the one who taught us to love, but no reference to Jesus as judge,
coming with flaming fire upon them that obey not the Gospel of God.
People
are interested in Jesus of the manger, but not the Jesus of the resurrection,
not the Jesus of the ascension, and certainly not the Jesus of the glorious
blessed return.
So
Jesus basically had no room in the religious world. They had no room for Him,
and it is still true today.
But
there was also no room for Jesus in the political world. You know the Jews of
the time were looking forward to the coming of the Messiah.
In
fact it is said that Jewish virgins hoped that they would be the one who would
bear the Messiah, but they were looking for a king.
They said to themselves, “We want someone who is going to rule and is going to throw off Rome
(the Roman occupation) and to give us political freedom.”
That’s why Jesus was such a disappointment to the
people because here He was saying, “My
kingdom is not of this world.”
And
now of course there were those who did want to make Him a king. After he fed a
multitude with five loaves and two fish they wanted a king who would supply
bread.
They
wanted someone who would give them all that they needed to live so that they
wouldn’t have to worry about bread again.
But
Jesus said no to that, and He was not welcome in the political world of the
day. And He still isn’t.
Just
this past week I was told about a man who in military uniform – an American
citizen – prayed a prayer at an event in the name of Jesus, and he is being
prosecuted for doing it because of the separation of church and state.
As
a matter of fact, in America, Jesus is not welcome in the legal world. He’s not
welcome in the political world. He’s not welcome in the educational world. He’s
certainly not welcome in government.
As far as that world is concerned, still to this day
we can put up a sign that would say, “No
room for You.”
Jesus
had no room. They had no room for Him in the religious world, in the political
world, and there’s certainly no room for Jesus in the business world. Certainly
not!
You know, Jesus said, “The foxes have holes. The birds of the air have nests where they can
rest, but the Son of Man has nowhere to lay His head.”
Jesus,
so far as we know, owned nothing. Could you imagine even hiring Jesus as the
CFO of some business? I mean it would be unthinkable because He wasn’t into
that.
As a matter of fact, He irritated the money lovers. In
fact, it says that those who loved money hated Him because He said, “That which is greatly esteemed among men
(and He’s speaking about money) is detestable to God.”
How
would you like to put Jesus into business on Wall Street? Jesus would not be
welcomed, which really leads me to an interesting question that I’ve often
pondered, and it’s deeply troubling to me, and that is the question of how
Jesus would rate Christmas today. What does He think of His party?
Now
just imagine this. A multi-billion dollar party being thrown for you supposedly,
and yet nobody really to speak of is giving gifts to you.
Everybody
is giving gifts to everybody else, and the success of the party is totally
dependent on how much is spent, so that every day during the Christmas season
we hear that we are now one percent more than last year, or down from last
year, and that’s the evaluation of the party. Period! That’s it!
So
here Jesus has a party thrown for Him and He’s not invited to His own party. He
can’t show up at the celebrations. He is unwelcomed, and yet supposedly it’s
all about Him.
Did
you know that there are teachers in the United States of America today who are
being told that they cannot mention to their pupils that Christmas is a
religious holiday, because you know after all you can’t drag religion into the
class room?
So
Jesus clearly is not welcomed at His very own party. There’s no room – no room
in the religious world, the political world and certainly not the business
world.
Now
there was room for Jesus in one place though, and that was on the cross, and
that’s where some people would like to see Him, and that’s where they would
like to keep Him. Crucify Him! Crucify Him! Get Him out of here.
Yes, in Luke 2:7 it said, “There was no room for Him in the inn,” but it was really the story
of His life, and it still is.
Well, because there was no room that’s why you have
the beginning part of verse 7. “She
brought forth her first born Son and she wrapped Him in swaddling cloths, and
she laid Him in a manger.”
It’s
a beautiful verse in its simplicity, but let’s think about the manger for a
moment. This manger interests me.
First
of all, obviously it was a manger for animals. I grew up on a farm in Canada
and I know exactly what mangers are like, at least the ones that we had.
We
would put hay in the manger. We would also put grain in the manger for those
animals that ate grain. The cattle, yes, some grain! And that’s what mangers
are for.
Now
we come to this passage and we can’t get our mind around it when we think of
the fact that this is not only Mary’s first-born son, but also He is the
first-born of all creation.
He’s
the one who created the world. He created the manger and all the materials that
went into it. It is so difficult for us to get our minds around it that we have
sanitized the whole scene, haven’t we?
I
don’t know if it’s still true but I know that when Christmas cards have a
picture of the baby Jesus, they always have a little halo above His head.
The
manger in which He is looks as if it’s just been constructed with some very
fine lumber from Home Depot.
And
the manger is there. The straw is pure and clean. And then what has always
amused me is that little donkey that’s looking on, freshly shampooed and
blow-dried.
And
there he is. You know he’s watching, and sometimes you see that this manger is
even on a carpet.
Let
me speak to you plainly. That stable smelled like a pet shop. This was reality.
You know, even the wonderful carol that I like so much – Away in a Manger – has
a sanitized Jesus.
Remember
the cattle are lowing and the baby awakes but little Lord Jesus no crying He
makes. Are you serious?
Of
course He cried. How else would Mary know that He was hungry? And those little
swaddling clothes had to be changed. We’re talking here about a real baby, 100%
man – yes, with a divine nature that was invisible to the human eye.
But
this was a manger for animals. I can almost see it. I can reconstruct the whole
scene in my mind. Here are some animals. There were a number of different
mangers.
They would have had a number of mangers, primarily
probably for sheep, and I can see some of the shepherds saying, “Okay, okay, so you have a new baby. You
gave birth over there in the corner of the stable. You can take the baby and
here’s a manger. We’ll shoo all these sheep away on this side and you can use
this manger to put your baby in.”
Yes,
my friend, it was used by animals, and possibly sheep, and Jesus of course
becomes the Good Shepherd and frequently talks about us as the sheep.
There’s
something else though about this manager, and that is that not only did animals
use it, but it was also borrowed. You don’t go shopping for a manger for a
baby. You go shopping for a crib, but not a manager.
So
it was borrowed, and we can see here that the scene is indeed reconstructed as
someone lends Mary and Joseph this manger for at least a little while.
Isn’t it interesting that Jesus, as I mentioned, who
said, “The foxes have holes; the birds of
the air have nests, but the Son of man has nowhere to lay His head,” begins
His life by being laid in a borrowed manger, and He ends His life by being laid
in a borrowed grave.
And
that’s the way He lived here on earth. Jesus came into the world being laid in
a manger. It was a borrowed manger.
It
was also improvised. You know, poor people know all about this. If you’re rich
you’re not going to get this because rich people can buy whatever they like.
But
if you’ve been brought up in poverty, you know that you can improvise. I mean
there are mothers who have taken down curtains and used the cloth to make
clothes for their children, and they know what it is like to improvise.
Perhaps
you’ve been in situations where a box becomes a chair because that’s all that
you have and you have to make do. Well that’s the case here.
Did
Mary use straw or hay? We don’t know. Maybe she did. Maybe she had clothes with
her – maybe a couple of blankets, but she has to improvise this. This wasn’t
built for babies. It was built for animals. But when you are poor you make it
work somehow.
You
know the swaddling cloths were actually pieces of cloth ripped from a larger
piece of cloth into strips and then taken and the baby was wrapped in them to
give it a sense of security.
And
that’s the way in which Mary and Joseph handled their challenge, and handled
this little one who was here.
I’m
interested in the manger. The question is what does the manger teach us? What
are its great lessons? Why should Luke 2:7 not only be a historical fact, but
what do we draw out of it that should be life-changing for us?
First
of all, the manger reminds us of how silently He came.
Rebecca
and I have been to Scotland, and we have been in the very room where Mary,
Queen of Scots gave birth to James, who ended up being James the First of
England who was the one who commissioned the King Kames Version of the Bible.
But
I remember the room. It is a large room with a very high ceiling with gold gilt
ornamentation all throughout the room. And the guide told us that as Mary,
Queen of Scots was giving birth to James, there were a number of midwives, and
there were also people there to make sure that the baby wouldn’t be switched
with another baby.
If
a baby was born dead sometimes they took another baby that would be about the
same age and substitute it, so there were people there to make sure that
wouldn’t happen.
And
then outside of the building there were a whole bunch of people waiting,
wondering whether or not it was a boy or a girl, wondering whether or not the
child was alive, wondering whether or not Mary, Queen of Scots was still alive.
Now
here’s Jesus. Who in the world was paying attention to the fact that Mary and
Joseph were there, this couple that few people knew who came from Nazareth?
Nobody
was paying attention. This is not a big deal. Babies are born all the time.
And that’s why we sing, “How silently, how silently the wondrous gift is given,” and what
this story reminds us of is that God sometimes works mightily in very ordinary
ways. Very ordinary! Everything about this story was ordinary.
Now
we know of course that Jesus was conceived of a virgin, and that had to be so
that He would not be tainted with even original sin, so that He would be
totally sinless.
But the fact is that everything else is ordinary, and
we always look for God in the miracles. We say, “Give me a miracle, oh God,” and God comes along and says, “I’m giving you a manger,” and we don’t
see God in the manger.
Think
of how silently He came. There was no fanfare. There were no midwives there.
Nobody was waiting outside to see whether the baby is doing well or how the
mother and baby are doing. There was none of that.
How
silently He snuck into the world when no one was watching. The shepherds showed
up only because the angels told them they should.
There’s
something else that I think the manger teaches us and that is how personally He
came.
Now
last week I tried to explain to you why it was necessary for God to be the
Redeemer, that He could not create a human being, that there could be no one
else who could possibly do what God was going to do, and that is to redeem
humanity. Only God could do that.
This
was God in the flesh. Can you imagine holding God in the flesh? Can you imagine
Mary feeding God in the flesh? How personally He came.
Spurgeon,
the great preacher from England, said that it was as if all the light of the
sun was concentrated at a single point, and that’s true of this baby.
Oh,
I know that if you held the baby He would look like an ordinary baby because,
as I’ve explained many times, there was so much more to Jesus than the eye
could see.
That’s
why we sing, “Veiled in flesh the Godhead see.” It had to be veiled or you
couldn’t have looked upon this child.
And
He still had all the attributes of deity even though He chose not to use them
for the time that He was here on earth, but He still had them. He retained His
deity.
I
remember reading the story about a father who adopted a biracial child, and he
said that when he would look at that child across the breakfast table and stare
into this boy’s eyes, he wondered whether or not he would recognize the boy’s
father if he saw him.
It’s
a good question. Would he recognize the boy’s father? What are the traits that
his father might have?
You
know when you look at Jesus as a baby, He has the traits of His Father.
You
might not have guessed that right at the beginning, but as Jesus went on and did
miracles and made these stupendous claims about deity and then did the miracles
to back up those claims, you would know that you were in the presence of God.
And in one of the most breathtaking statements, Jesus
said in John 14, “He who has seen Me has
seen the Father.” Wow! “You see Me,
you’ve seen My Father.”
The
similarity – the resemblance is there. This is God on earth. And so I am amazed
at how personally God came. He didn’t delegate it. He didn’t say an angel would
do it or another man would do it. No, no, no!
He said, “If you
are going to be redeemed I have to do the redeeming.” God came personally.
I
think that when we think of the manger though, what strikes us the most – at
least at the beginning – is the fact that He came so humbly.
He
was so remarkably humble in His arrival. This is what staggers us - the
humility of it all.
I
don’t think that we would understand Luke 2:7 very well unless we remember that
Jesus is the only person born on this planet who chose where He would be born.
You
and I didn’t choose. We had to be with our mothers. Wherever she was, that’s
where we were. Jesus had a choice.
You
see, in eternity past, God the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit planned
redemption, and we’re speaking now in time, whereas from the standpoint of
deity these things were always true.
It’s
not as if God is making new decisions today because God has known all things
from the beginning.
God
has existed from the beginning, and still though decisions were made. There’s
no question about it. The Bible is full of the decisions of God.
So,
using time categories instead of eternity categories, which we can’t get our
mind around, I want you to visualize the Trinity discussing where Jesus is to
be born.
“Well,
what about Rome? I mean Caesar is going to be up and about at that time, and
how about being born right next to Caesar’s Palace, and then taking him on,
because after all, Jesus is King of kings and Lord of lords? Well, if not Rome,
what about Jerusalem? You know it says in the Psalms that God loves Jerusalem.”
It’s been a long time since I’ve been there but the
Bible says that God loves the Gates of Zion, and every time I see the gates of
Jerusalem I think, “Well, you know, God
loves those gates.” That’s what it says in the Psalms.
The discussion continues. “What about Jerusalem? There’s the big Temple that Herod built. How
about Jesus being in the Temple and Mary and Joseph showing up at the Temple,
and lo and behold there’s a baby born?”
“No, it’s
not going to be Jerusalem. It’s going to be Bethlehem six miles south of
Jerusalem. Bethlehem, though it is one of the least among all of the little
towns (and that’s why we sing O, Little Town of Bethlehem, though it’s much
bigger today), I’m going to choose Bethlehem.” And that’s where Jesus is to be born.
You
have to understand that the birth of Christ was just as much planned as His
crucifixion. It was part of God’s program. And so Bethlehem is chosen.
And
then He’s not to be born in an inn, which is where respectable people had their
babies born. No, no, no, He is going to be born in a stable, and of all things,
laid in a manager.
Church
historian, Bruce Shelley, said that Christianity is the only religion that has
as its central doctrine the humiliation of God. You can’t find this anywhere
else.
Look
at all the other religions of the world. And that’s why the Jewish people of
the day rejected Jesus as Messiah.
One
of the reasons is because, you know, you get a baby, and the story circulates
that He’s born and He’s put in a manger.
And
then you also have Him being crucified. We don’t understand that but
crucifixion was terrible. Crucifixion was relegated to those who were really
thugs.
I’ll use the word scum. Those are the people that were
crucified. That’s why the Bible says, “Cursed
is anyone who hangs on a tree,” and there’s Jesus, hanging on a tree in
absolute weakness apparently, unable to do anything about His plight.
Now
He was able, but He wasn’t doing anything about where He was. Anybody else with
the power He had would have come down from the cross. Jesus could have but He
didn’t.
And
so what you have is this weakness of God. And you know I read it this morning
(I can’t believe this.)
In First Corinthians 1:25. I never saw this verse
before. I obviously saw it but it just never hit me. It says, “The foolishness of God is wiser than men,
and the weakness of God is stronger than men.”
The
weakness of God! I mean, here He speaks and the worlds are created – the stars
are created. The weakness of God!
It’s
the apparent weakness of God with Jesus dying on a cross, and of all things
being born and being put into a manger. And yet, why did Jesus do it?
Paul says, “Christ
came to redeem us from the curse of the law so that we might be redeemed.”
In other words, Jesus says, “I’m going to bear what you deserve, namely your sin, so that you get
what you don’t deserve, namely My righteousness and forgiveness.”
And
that’s really what salvation is all about – the wonder of the righteousness and
the forgiveness that God gives to those who believe. And that’s why the preaching
of the cross is such a stumbling block.
We say, “Give us
a god that you can’t crucify. Give us a god who is born in a palace, but don’t
give us a god who is born in a manager.”
And
yet it is in that humiliation and the eventual cross that you and I have been
redeemed.
It was Augustine, the great theologian, who said, “God has humbled Himself and yet man remains
proud,” and there are some of you who are listening to this message right
now, and you’ve never trusted Christ as Savior, and if you analyzed it, it
would be because of your pride.
You
have not recognized your deep need of a Savior who could do for you what nobody
else can do.
There’s
nobody else out there like Jesus, and if you trust Him, He can be yours. You
can believe in Jesus. You can be saved and reconciled. There is no other way.
And
there are some of you to whom the Holy Spirit is speaking right now, and you
know who you are and that you have never received the gift of eternal life that
came to us initially in a manger.
You
know, sometimes my heart is like that stable. Sometimes it is dark and cold.
Sometimes it is unclean, just like that stable. And then we think back and we
see that Jesus was in a stable.
Jesus,
the presence of the King, was there in that stable, and because I’ve received
Christ as Savior, and I hope that you have too, the presence of Jesus is in my
heart. Jesus is in that stable, to use that analogy.
Now
I know there’s a big difference. He was in the stable in Bethlehem only for a
short time, and He comes to live in my heart and in yours permanently. And then
there’s something else that’s different. He wants to clean up our hearts and He
wants us to be cleansed from our sin. He wants all of the gunk of the world and
all of the rationalizations of our sin to be put away. He wants to cleanse us,
and that’s what He’s doing.
You know, Paul says something in Ephesians 3 that is
very interesting. He says, “I pray that
Christ shall dwell in your hearts by faith.”
Well, of course, all believers have Christ in their
hearts by faith, but what he means is “that
Christ might feel at home in your heart by faith.”
That’s
a good translation. He comes to the stable of your heart and does He feel at
home? Has He cleansed it?
Have you let Him cleanse it, or have you said, “Now You can be there, but I don’t want to
be cleansed. I love my sin too much.”
A
Christian can even say that. But for those of you who have never trusted Christ
as Savior, I have good news.
If
you invite Christ into your life, to receive His forgiveness, you will belong
to Him forever if you give Him that opportunity to come in.
And
in a moment we’re going to sing a song and if you sang this song with sincerity
and understanding you could be saved while you are singing it. The words
written by Emily Elliott are these:
“Thou didst leave Thy throne
And Thy kingly crown
When Thou camest to earth for me,
But in Bethlehem’s home
Was there found no room
For Thy holy nativity:
O come to my heart Lord Jesus;
There is room in my heart for Thee!”
And Thy kingly crown
When Thou camest to earth for me,
But in Bethlehem’s home
Was there found no room
For Thy holy nativity:
O come to my heart Lord Jesus;
There is room in my heart for Thee!”
I say to you in all sincerity in my heart as your
pastor, “I want there to be plenty of
room in my heart for Jesus.”
And
I want Him to clean it up, and that’s what the message of the Gospel is.
The
baby of the manger becomes the baby of the cross, becomes the man of the
resurrection and the glorious return, and becomes the Savior of those who
invite Him in.
Would
you join me as we pray?
“Our
Father, I want to pray for those who have never trusted Christ as Savior. May
they know now why they need Him. And we want to thank You, Father, for the manger.
Thank You for Jesus Christ’s humiliation, and we ask that as we sing together
that there may be those who sing You into their hearts by saying, ‘Lord Jesus,
there’s room in my heart. I give up the fight.’”
In
fact, before I close this prayer, I’m talking to you now my dear friend. Would
you, right where you are, believe on Jesus and be saved?
Grant
it, oh God, we pray. We do love You very, very much. In Jesus’ name we pray,
Amen.
Erwin W. Lutzer is
Pastor Emeritus of The Moody Church where he served as the Senior Pastor for 36
years. He earned a B.Th. from Winnipeg Bible College, a Th.M. from Dallas
Theological Seminary, a M.A. in Philosophy from Loyola University, and an
honorary LL.D. from the Simon Greenleaf School of Law.
A clear
expositor of the Bible, he is the featured speaker on three radio programs that
are heard on more than 1,000 outlets in the United States and around the world:
· Running
to Win—a daily Bible-teaching broadcast;
· Moody
Church Hour—The Moody Church’s Sunday morning worship service;
· Songs
in the Night—an evening program that’s been airing since 1943.
Dr.
Lutzer is also an award-winning author of numerous books including: The Church In Babylon, Rescuing The Gospel, He Will Be The Preacher, The Cross In The Shadow Of The
Crescent, One Minute After You Die, When A Nation Forgets God, and Christian
Bookseller’s Gold Medallion Award winner, Hitler’s Cross.
He and
his wife Rebecca have co-written the books: Life-Changing Bible Verses
You Should Know and Jesus, Lover Of A Woman’s Soul.
His
speaking engagements include Bible conferences and seminars, both domestically
and internationally, including: Russia, the Republic of Belarus, Germany,
Scotland, Guatemala, and Japan. He also leads tours to Israel and the cities of
the Protestant Reformation in Europe.
Dr.
Lutzer and Rebecca live in the Chicago area. They have three grown children and
eight grandchildren.
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