Friday, 2 December 2016

Rediscovering Christmas 2

Reading Matthew 1- the genealogy of Jesus.

I have been reading a book called The Grace of God by Andy Stanley for the college group that I help out with at my church. It has reminded me that God uses the least likely people, or the people who did not have perfect lives, to bring about his ultimate promise.

Looking through the bloodline of Jesus it is riddled with adulterers, liars, murderers, a prostitute, but more importantly changed people. All of these people  made mistakes, and some mistakes were pretty huge mistakes, but God still chose to use them, to bring Jesus into this world. That is grace. That is redemption.

Judah for example slept with his daughter in law, unknowingly- after treating her horribly, Rahab a prostitute and not a Jew, but a converted Jew, David who slept with someone else's wife, then killed her husband to cover it up. When the wife is mentioned in the genealogy there was an indiscretion, that son that was born by those parents, when they are both mentioned, was formed through an extremely sinful act or by a defiled person. But God still chose to use them and Matthew chose to mention them. I do not think that He chose to mention them to bring shame to them, but to show the grace of our God. The entire Bible is a story about Grace, and what more fitting way that our savior was brought into this world through grace story after grace story after grace story.

Then we come to Joseph, who God would choose to father his son Jesus. I cannot imagine what Joseph had to be feeling to deserve such an honor. I feel as though he was feeling one of two things initially, very flattered and honored, or why me, I cannot do this. You are asking too much. Or maybe it was a combination of the two. Or maybe one came first, and another, after it started to sink in, came later. Also thinking about how all of these previous generations that are mentioned in Matthew 1 were anticipating this, expecting it, how did that affected Joseph. People and their expectations can reek havoc on our self concept and also on what is being asked of us.  Other's expectations have no influence on what our God is capable of, if he is asking you to do it, it is less about you and more about Him. He will not fail, He will follow through.

Usually when I am asked to do something that scares me I am in shock at first, because why else would I agree, then almost immediately after I say yes self doubt creeps in. Then while I am doing it God makes it happen. God makes me strong enough, or capable enough. He allows me to rise the occasion. But the time in between being asked and actually performing said action, anxiety can have its way with me. I very much have to choose to either let anxiety take over or give it to God. This choice is almost daily.

So what is God asking you to do that seems ridiculous. I challenge you to make a plan to accomplish this. You can do it, and more importantly if He is asking you to, you cannot fail.

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