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The Supernatural Amid the Ordinary

“But after he had considered this, an angel of the Lord appeared to him in a dream and said, ‘Joseph son of David, do not be afraid to take Mary home as your wife, because what is conceived in her is from the Holy Spirit. She will give birth to a son, and you are to give him the name Jesus, because he will save his people from their sins.”

– Matthew 1:20-21


Isn’t it amazing how much of a role angels and dreams play in the narrative about Jesus’s birth! They keep showing up, announcing, worshiping, and explaining. (See Matthew 1:20, 24; 2:13, 19, and more than a dozen times in Luke 1–2.) It’s even more striking coming right after we read that Joseph “considered” all that was happening. This narrative weaves together the natural (“considering”) and the supernatural (“warned in a dream”).

The birth of Jesus is the greatest display of the supernatural crashing in on the natural, the divine entering the mundane, God becoming a baby. The cast of characters includes, on the human side, shepherds and animals and, on the heavenly side, angels and songs of praise to God. Living in a highly secularized culture today, where God is simply ignored, omitted, or patronized, Matthew’s account seems terribly out of place.

As Christians, it is easy to get caught up in all the “natural” aspects of Christmas and down play the startling reality that God came to earth to save sinners. That’s why the angel needed to explain what Jesus’ name means. Yeshua, a form of the Hebrew verb “to save,” must remind us that “He will save his people from their sins.” It’s the ultimate “good news/bad news” message all wrapped in a name. The good news is He saves. The bad news is we all need saving!

No wonder people want to remove that message from Christmas and focus on gifts, trees, reindeers, and egg nog. Charles Dickens even wrote a whole book about the holiday without even a mention of the main character: the One whose name means “Savior.”

Prayer

Jesus, the One who saves me from sins, may this holiday season be one of
great contrition and praise, repentance and rejoicing, humility and
exaltation, sorrow over sin and gladness over salvation.


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Randy Newman

Randy Newman is the Senior Fellow for Apologetics and Evangelism at the C.S. Lewis Institute. He has taught at several evangelical seminaries. After serving for over 30 years with Campus Crusade for Christ, he established Connection Points, a ministry to help Christians engage people’s hearts the way Jesus did. He has written seven books, Questioning EvangelismCorner ConversationsBringing the Gospel HomeEngaging with Jewish People, Unlikely Converts: Improbable Stories of Faith and What They Teach Us About Evangelism, Mere Evangelism. and his most recent, Questioning Faith: Indirect Journeys of Belief through Terrains of Doubt. Randy has also written numerous articles about evangelism and other ways our lives intertwine with God’s creation. He earned his MDiv and PhD in Intercultural Studies from Trinity International University.
 

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