For the past few weeks I’ve been transfixed by a word. That may sound a little bit strange but it is exactly what’s happened. It keeps coming to mind and I keep pondering it, trying to gain a sense of its meaning. Though the word appears just three times in Scripture, twice in Isaiah’s prophecy about the coming of Christ and once in Matthew in the fulfillment of that prophecy, it’s a word we have all used and a word whose meaning most of us know. Our children read about it every Christmas and our pastors mention it in their Christmas sermons. That word is Immanuel. God with us. God is with us.
I sense there is a lot to this word and to the truth behind it that I’ve never thought about before and I know that there must be great application to my own life. I hope to spend more time studying it and discerning how God wants me to live based on the awesome fact that “God is with us.” But even now as I’ve meditated upon this word I’ve been profoundly moved. How can we ever exhaust the wonder of God, the One who created the heavens and the earth, taking on human flesh? And even then, how can we but marvel that He did not come in the form of a great and mighty warrior, but in the form of a tiny, helpless baby. God in flesh; God in human flesh. Like every baby before and since He entered this world through pain and agony, sweat and blood. Though He was the power that had created the world, He depended upon His mother’s breast for physical sustenance. Though He upheld the creation by the Word of His power, He needed His parents to protect and nurture Him as a helpless infant.
What mind could conceive of a God who would walk this world and be so misunderstood? Why would God come to earth only to have almost everyone He encountered ignore His divinity? How could people see God and not understand?
Yesterday my pastor preached on John 8, one of two chapters dealing with Jesus’ time at the Feast of Booths. Here, as in so many passages of the gospels, we see people trying to figure out who this person is. They accuse Him of being a Samaritan and of being possessed by Satan: “Are we not right in saying that you are a Samaritan and have a demon?” They wonder how He could claim to know Abraham: “You are not yet fifty years old, and have you seen Abraham?” They ask if He is going to commit suicide: “Will he kill himself, since he says, ‘Where I am going, you cannot come’?” They are utterly bewildered, blinded by their own ignorance and their own hatred of all that is good and true. Before them stood “God is with us” and all they saw was a wicked and perverse man who blasphemed their faith.
As Jesus’ ministry continued, people continued to seek but not find His identity. Even as He stood trial the questions continued. “Are you the King of the Jews?” asked Pilate, and then “So you are a king?” Pilate was incredulous, unable to understand who this man was. Even His beloved disciples wondered and wavered.
As I sat in church yesterday and pondered the mystery of so many who were unable to see that God was with them, standing before them, I was struck by the fact that this will not always be so. Jesus came to earth incognito, announced only to a group of shepherds as they tended their flocks in the night. Suddenly the dark night was disturbed and God’s glory shone all around. An angel announced the birth of Jesus and immediately a host of angels poured forth their praise at the wonder of it all. “Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace among those with whom he is pleased!” To so many others, though, Jesus appeared just as a man, walking the dusty roads of Israel. No angels foretold His coming; no trumpets blew as He approached. Even today, Jesus is present with us through the Word of God. He is quietly but powerfully present there, though just as when most people looked at Jesus and saw only man and not God, today most people look at the Bible and see words but not Word.
But this will not always be. God gives us today, He gives us now, to understand who Jesus is and to humble ourselves before Him. He tells us that today is the day we need to put our faith in this God who came as man. When Jesus returns to earth, He will not come incognito. He will come with all of the power and the glory and the honor that are rightly His. When He returns to earth, there will be no mistaking who He is. When He comes again, every knee will bow before Him and every tongue will confess that He is Lord. And God will be glorified in every one of us. There will be no mistaking who He is.



Comments (11) »
1. Alex
June 2, 2008
10:14 AM
Selah. And that concludes church for today.
2. Lance
June 2, 2008
11:22 AM
Don’t know if you’ve noticed it, but Matthew’s gospel begins with “God with us” and ends with, “Lo I am with you always.”
Some pretty sweet bookends!
3. Andy Wood
June 2, 2008
11:55 AM
Going forward in John, Jesus’ words in chapters 14-16 also speak to the whole “with us” idea. In chapter 1, He (Immanuel) was made flesh and dwelt among us. In chapter 14, He begins preparing his followers for a time when He would go away. Using wedding language, He said He was going to prepare a place for us, that where He was, there we could be also (14:3). So we go from “God with us” to “us with God.”
But what about in-between? He speaks of a Comforter - the manifest presence of God in indwelling Spirit form. He is the Spirit of Truth, who testifies of Christ and confirms every word He has spoken (15:26). His truth convicts the world of sin, and completes our growth in understanding and power (16:8, 13). He glorifies Jesus (16:15) and gives what belongs to Christ to his followers (16:16). Jesus actually said to them that it was BETTER that He went away because of what they (we) would experience.
Immanuel - God With Us in Christ. God IN us in the Holy Spirit. We with God in eternal life. It’s all about that incredible relationship.
4. David Porter
June 2, 2008
12:14 PM
Tim,
One of the things that I love about you is your willingness to teach and be taught. Your willingness to be transparent. Your obvious desire to understand who God is and sincerely, in your heart, seeking a deep and meaningful relationship with Him.
These are the things that make your witness meaningful for the things of Christ. First your heart and then your head.
I suppose we are all on the same journey. In my journey, it seems that my diet has been primarily oatmeal. I have currently moved to the “steakhouse” of God and reveling in the mysterious meat that exists in the Word.
My relationship with God and my understanding of who He is has changed a great deal in the past few months. Each day, after chewing on some meat, I find myself at your banquet station, sipping on a fine wine and musing about the things of God.
Thank you for sharing your gifts and I look forward to the continuing dialog.
Truly “God is with us” is a great mystery and at the same time, for some it would seem, a very real relationship.
Mind boggling indeed!
5. Catherine
June 2, 2008
3:13 PM
Tim,
Not long ago, as I was going through 2 Corinthians in my 5-year tour through the Bible, I had a verse that struck me for the first time as something of vital importance. It wasn’t that I had never read this before. I’ve read through 2 Corinthians many times and don’t think I noticed this verse for its importance before. 2 Cor. 3:14-16 “But their minds were made dull, for to this day the same veil remains when the old convenant is read. It has not been removed, because only in Christ is it take away. Even to this day when Moses is read, a veil covers their hearts. But whenever anyone turns to the Lord, the veil is taken away. (NIV).
Only those that know Christ as their Savior and their Lord, have this veil removed. I was born and raised in the Roman Catholic Church and I know from personal experience of this veil. It covered my face for years. I think it’s the same as “God is with us”. We don’t have Him with us until the veil is removed and we can really know “God IS with us.”
As always, thank you Tim for the mini-sermon, and something to think on as we go through our day. Good stuff!
6. c
June 2, 2008
3:47 PM
re: lance’s comment - i hadn’t noticed that before! sweet bookends indeed.
i liked this post a lot. i especially appreciated how you brought out the idea that God was and is truly with us, even though many are unaware, and that one day he will be revealed so that all will know.
7. Andy Wood
June 2, 2008
5:05 PM
One other thought - Paul says that it is “Christ in you, the hope of glory.” I think we can spend a lifetime unpacking the implications of that, as many authors in classic Christian literature have done.
8. donsands
June 2, 2008
5:37 PM
“Before them stood “God is with us” and all they saw was a wicked and perverse man who blasphemed their faith.”
And Jesus spoke words that you don’t much hear in our day to these religious leaders in John 8.
“If God were your Father, you would love Me, …Why do you not understand My speech? Because you are not able to listen to My word. You are of your father the devil, … He who is of God hears God’s words; therefore you do not hear, because you are not of God.”
Thanks for the good post.
9. Dan Hagan
June 3, 2008
1:11 PM
“Before them stood “God is with us” and all they saw was a wicked and perverse man who blasphemed their faith.”
Just as liars don’t believe anyone because they assume everyone is like them and are liars also. The same can be said for those who are “not of God”, as evil will see only evil in everything. Depravity loves depravity and abhors righteousness. The unrighteous do not desire the contrast of good, but the comfort of the like minded, hence they revel in the fellowship of the lost.
However, we as believing Christians know how depraved and sinful (unlawful) we are. Yet, our hearts yearn for Him who makes our best look like “filthy rags”. All because in our hearts we “believe” in the redeeming promise of Christ and the “work” He did for us on the cross.
Thanks Tim!
10. Dave Sherrill
June 3, 2008
1:27 PM
Tim,
As a layman apologist I’ve been taken with the wonders of Christ for many years. In so many ways he is the enigmatic Word within the Word. But oh, there comes a day… the curtain is torn away, the dark glass is shattered.
Psalm 29 has gained special attention in my reading recently, through Jerry Bridges’ book The Joy of Fearing God. In Psalm 29 the psalmist ascribes glory to God, building to a crescendo that grips the soul.
9 The voice of the LORD twists the oaks
and strips the forests bare.
And in his temple all cry, “Glory!”
As we meditate, read, fellowship, live, love, and long for Him our heart cries out for that enduring home where we shall be with Him. And in his temple all cry, “Glory!”
11. Brian
June 3, 2008
2:25 PM
Tim,
I like the way you summed up.
But this will not always be. God gives us today, He gives us now, to understand who Jesus is and to humble ourselves before Him.
What a great example of God’s love and mercy - and our need to acknowledge Him as Sovereign.
I was struck by a passage in my study in Matthew 15, where an unnamed Gentile woman asks Jesus to heal her demon-possessed daughter. Jesus tells her that it is not right to take the bread from children and feed it to dogs. She replied (in great humility I believe) that even dogs eat the crumbs that fall from the Master’s table.
Jesus commends her on her great faith - acknowledging both His deity and her need. This is true humility — recognizing Jesus’ true identity — and responding to it.
Thanks for the great insight.