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A Christmas
Devotional
The
Word became flesh and made his dwelling among us.
We have seen his glory, the glory of the One and Only, who came from the
Father, full of truth and grace. (John 1:14).
Of all the gospel narratives of the Christmas story, these words of John the
Apostle are my favorite. But why did
John call Christ the Word? His
Gospel begins that way: In the
beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God and the Word was God.
He was with God in the beginning.
Through him all things were made…. (John 1-3a)
It is certainly crystal clear that “Word” means Christ.
No one argues with that.
In the beginning was [Christ], and [Christ] was with God and
[Christ] was God…. [Christ] became flesh and made his dwelling among
us.
John’s objective in writing
his gospel was to prove that Christ was God.
But John must have been trying to convey more or he would have
used the word Christ. What might
that be?
There appear to be two reasons why John
used
“Word”
instead of
“Christ.”
He was speaking to two audiences, the Jews, of course, and Greeks
and Greek-speaking gentiles. He was
writing in Greek, after all. The
Greek language gets much more mileage out of words, and since it is the original
language of the New Testament, preachers begin their seminary studies with
courses in Greek.
The Jewish audience would have understood, In the beginning was the Word,
as a clear reference to Genesis 1:1:
In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth. And how did he do
that?
He created them thru the power of his word.
Let there be light and there was light.
Such is the power of God’s word.
Isaiah 55:11 says so is my word that goes out from my mouth: It will not
return to me empty, but will accomplish what I desire and achieve the purpose
for which I sent it. A word
spoken by God is a deed done.
And Christ was the last and most important word of God the Father. We will not
find God apart from Christ (John
14:6,
Acts 4:11-12).
For the Greeks “Word” had even more meaning.
Logos, the original Greek word for “word" took on vastly more
meaning through the studies of a Greek philosopher named Heraclitus who lived in
As Dr. James Montgomery Boice tells it in Volume I of his commentary on John,
the Apostle is saying, “Listen you Greeks, the very thing that has most occupied
your philosophical thought and about which you have been writing for centuries,
the Logos of God, this word, this controlling power of the universe and
of man’s mind, has come to earth as a man and we have seen him.”
Now wouldn’t that be a blockbuster revelation to the Greeks?
It was a stroke of divine literary genius the way the Holy Spirit
inspired John to write it.
God became man. Marvin Olasky says
to think about man becoming a cockroach and you have the slightest inkling what
it must have been like for God to become man.
The
Logos, the Word, the controlling power of the universe became a man, full
of grace and truth, and to what end?
John 1:12 tells us: …to those who believed in his name, he gave the right to become
children of God. Dear
friends, all the gifts given in the world this season cannot equate to that gift
of a baby born in barn in
A Personal Invitation from JD
Wetterling Here is the best help: Other helpful reading: Are you bad enough to become a Christian? Are you good enough to get to heaven? A simple test. Do you feel like a doctrinal dunce? Here are the answers.
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