Tuesday, November 19, 2019

The Importance of the Deity of Christ in the Christmas Story

Therefore, the Lord Himself will give you a sign. Behold, the virgin shall conceive and bear a Son, and shall call His name Immanuel.” (rf. Is. 7:14 ESV)


            It is very easy for us to grow complacent and take something for granted when we have heard it told to us time and again. We know the words of “Amazing Grace” by heart because we were raised with it and other hymns enveloping us as we grew up, yet how often does the meaning of those words escape us as we sing them. The same can be said for the Christmas story and the Scriptures that surround the events of that special evening long ago when our Savior, Jesus Christ, entered into the world.
            I confess that I had not realized the significance of this verse outside of its context during the Advent season until I was given the opportunity of witnessing the truth of Christianity and its doctrines to two sweet Jehovah Witness ladies one Saturday morning. As I attempted to show them the fallacy of their own beliefs regarding Jesus as a god (notice the small “g”), secondary to Jehovah God, using their own translation of the Bible (the New World Translation), one of them confronted me with the question, “So you believe in the Trinity?” to which I answered, “Absolutely. Yes.”
            This may come as a surprise to some of you as readers. Jehovah’s Witnesses are NOT Christians. They do not believe that God is three Persons, one Substance, that is, that God is a Trinity. They cannot fathom that we affirm and believe that God is Father, Son and Holy Spirit, separate Persons, but all three being God at one time, concurrently. I agree that this is a mind-boggling concept, but it is nonetheless true and what the Bible teaches throughout its pages, although you will not find the word, “Trinity”, anywhere so designated in the Scriptures.
            In any case, I brought to their attention the above passage from Isaiah among others. We agreed that this one not only foreshadowed the coming of Jesus and His virgin birth, it also showed the specialness regarding His mother, Mary, being a “virgin”. However, they were somewhat confounded when I then pointed out the name that was to be given this “Son”—“Immanuel” which when joined with the corresponding account in Matthew (1:23) states, “which translated means ‘God with us’”. They wanted to downplay the phrase by saying that God is always with us in a very general sense. Yet I told them that was not at all what the prophet Isaiah nor the Apostle Matthew was conveying. By attaching the name, “Immanuel”, including the “-el” in the preceding name which refers to “God” or Jehovah in the Hebrew of the Old Testament, both Isaiah and Matthew were clearly stating Jesus was God in the flesh Who had come to earth in the form of a child to be “with us”, mere human beings, in order to fulfill the Father’s will.
            Though I did not convince my Jehovah’s Witness audience that day of the truth of Jesus being God, it did serve to reinforce the truth that He came to be “with us” to understand life as a human. Only by being fully human and fully God could Jesus Christ take away the sin that separated us from God His Father and do so once for all. Only now as God the Son can He be our High Priest and advocate on our behalf before His Father for our spiritual and physical best interests, answering our prayers daily according to the Father’s will. What a treasure we truly have in Jesus as our “Immanuel”. What a gift He is to us as “God with us”. Never let us forget it!