Sunday, December 24, 2023

Who doesn't love a baby

The 1934 Christmas song, “Sweet Little Jesus Boy,” made famous by Mahalia Jackson and written by Louisiana composer Robert MacGimsey (1898–1979), was to be portrayed as an American slave song.

"MacGimsey's song was to echo the senti­ments of black Christians in the Civil War era," says an online article by the Union Review. "He once described his most famous song as more a meaning than a song: He pictured an aging black man whose life had been full of injustice 'standing off in the middle of a field just giving his heart to Jesus in the stillness.'

"MacGimsey was influenced by his circumstance one snowy Christmas Eve in New York City. According to an account in the Our Daily Bread devotional, the composer was walking and passed by inebriated patrons in the many noisy nightclubs where the celebration of Christmas had no connection with who Jesus Christ is and why He came.

Sweet little Jesus boy, born in a manger

Sweet little Holy child, we didn't know who You were
Long time ago it seems You were born
Born in a manger Lord, sweet little Jesus boy

Didn't know You'd come to save us all
To take our sins away
Our eyes were blind we did not see
We didn't know who You were

You have shown us how
And we are trying
Master You have shown us how
Even as You were dying
This world treats You mean Lord
Treats me mean too
But that's how things are done down here
We didn't know it was You

*****

The power to destroy Satan comes from the birth of a child, the seed of the woman.

Isaiah 9:6: [6] For unto us a child is born, unto us a son is given: and the government shall be upon his shoulder: and his name shall be called Wonderful, Counseller, The mighty God, The everlasting Father, The Prince of Peace.

“That verse is on all kind of Christmas cards," says Richard Jordan. "A child is born (the first coming), unto us a son is given (Second Coming). You can’t have the Second Coming without the first, so there’s going to be a child, but He isn’t going to stay a baby.

“Everybody loves a baby, but people don’t necessarily like adults. That’s why Christmas is so popular; it’s a little teeny baby. But the baby’s a big boy now and He went to Calvary and He died, and He rose again.

*****

"When the wise men (the Magi) come on the scene in Matthew 2, Jesus Christ is NOT a babe in the manger—He’s a toddler living in a house in Nazareth!
“He’s not a baby in the sense of a newborn infant; He’s as much as two years old and living in a house. When Herod wants to go find Jesus, he says, ‘Go out and have every male baby two years and younger killed.' Why? He’d looked for the timing when the star appeared because he wanted to know how old the baby was.
“He’s called a ‘young child’ over and over in Matthew 2. No longer the infant baby, but the little toddler now, and yet He’s still God in our humanity.
 
*****

Matthew 2: ‘[2] Saying, Where is he that is born King of the Jews? for we have seen his star in the east, and are come to worship him.
[3] When Herod the king had heard these things, he was troubled, and all Jerusalem with him.
[4] And when he had gathered all the chief priests and scribes of the people together, he demanded of them where Christ should be born.
[5] And they said unto him, In Bethlehem of Judaea: for thus it is written by the prophet,
[6] And thou Bethlehem, in the land of Juda, art not the least among the princes of Juda: for out of thee shall come a Governor, that shall rule my people Israel.’


“Herod went out and got all the rabbinical scholars, brought them in and said, ‘Where’s the Messiah going to be born?’ And they answered, ‘That’s easy! In Bethlehem of Judea, for thus it is written by the prophet, thou Bethlehem in the land of Juda are not least of among the princes of Judah.’
“Now that’s just like a bunch of religious tomfoolery right there! Look at what it says: ‘And thou Bethlehem in the land of Juda are not least of among the princes of Juda.’

“Micah said you are ‘the least.’ These guys, they don’t want their king to be born in a little insignificant po-dunk place out yonder. They said, ‘You’re not!’ They actually changed God’s Word.
*****

“You better watch so-called ‘religious scholars’ because they’ll take God’s Word and twist it to make themselves look like the winner. That’s why you better look at the verses yourself.
“Don’t let somebody take the thing out of its context, stick it on a wall, or stick it in a book, and then impose another meaning to it. That’s what these birds did! You have to be careful letting people mess around with your Bible.

*****
“Now why did he get the town right? Because 700 years before, Micah had said it’s going to be Bethlehem. Think about what’s happening here. Here’s a bunch of rabbinical scholars who have no interest in Jesus Christ at all. When He shows up they’re going to hate Him and cry, ‘Crucify Him! Away with Him! We will not have this man reign over us.’ And yet here they are, unsuspecting, unknowing, being the No. 1 witness to the fact He is who He says He is.

“Micah 5:1-2 says, ‘Now gather thyself in troops, O daughter of troops: he hath laid siege against us: they shall smite the judge of Israel with a rod upon the cheek. But thou, Bethlehem Ephratah, though thou be little among the thousands of Judah, yet out of thee shall he come forth unto me that is to be ruler in Israel; whose goings forth have been from of old, from everlasting.’
“Micah lived 700 years before the birth of Christ. That’s seven centuries, longer than our country’s been in existence. Micah prophesies to the nation Israel about facing enemies coming in and invading their land, economic collapse and political upheaval and political corruption.

“You talk about a Middle East problem! The Middle East has been in turmoil for millenniums. You go 2,500 years ago in Micah’s day and the same kind of conflict going on in the Middle East today was going on then! And the goal of all the Gentile nations around Israel was to destroy Israel. 
*****
“Bethlehem was a small, itty-bitty little insignificant town. In fact, there were two Bethlehems in Israel at that time and that’s why Micah says ‘Bethlehem Ephratah.’ That’s like saying the name of the city and the county in which Christ resides.

“The only claim to fame this town ever had was that a little shepherd boy named David was born there and that little shepherd boy, you remember, became king.
“It says, ‘yet out of thee shall he come forth.’ In Galatians when Paul said, ‘God send forth His Son,’ that’s a reference back to this verse where Micah says, ‘Out of thee, Bethlehem, shall come forth.’

*****
“When it says, ‘whose goings forth have been from of old,’ you see how ‘goings’ is plural? He had more than one going. Now if you’re old, you’re ancient. That’s talking about how long you’ve been around. That’s a reference to time.

“You can go back to a place where time began. In the beginning of what? Time and creation. In the beginning of that continuum in which we live—time and space.
“But this one that’s going to come forth in time, comes out of eternity. This isn’t a human person; this is God stepping out of eternity into time in the clothing of our humanity. You see, that makes Him kind of unique. It makes Him a little different. The Lord Jesus Christ demonstrated His deity--that He was who He said He was--by fulfilling that verse.

“Seven hundred years after Micah, the wise men come to Jerusalem ‘seeking him born king of the Jews.’ They know the time! How did a bunch of Gentiles over in the east know? They had some books that told them the time when He was going to be born. God had identified a time and apostate Israel, who had no care for their Bible, laid it aside, but some other people took it up and knew WHEN to be looking.
*****

“They saw His star. They saw exactly what Jacob told Israel to be looking for in Genesis 49. Just what Balaam, in Numbers 23, said would happen. Just exactly the timeline Daniel told Israel it would be.
“Where would you go to look for the king of Israel? Well, Jerusalem’s the ‘city of the great king,’ so they go there.

“In Luke, you go to the nativity and see the shepherds and they’re biding in the field in that night, and they go and worship the babe and then they find Mary and Joseph and the babe lying in the manger.”

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