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Now before we pray and then turn
to the ministry of the Word, I want to read one text from
the Book of Acts, chapter 17, a text familiar to many of you
with reference to the manner in which the people in the city
of Berea received the ministry of God's servant, the Apostle
Paul. We read in Acts 17 and verse
11, with respect to these Bereans, Now these were more noble than
those in Thessalonica, in that they received the word with all
readiness of mind, examining the scriptures daily, whether
these things were so This kind of spiritual nobility that is
underscored in this text was comprised of two basic elements. In the presence of a servant
of God, ministering the Word of God, they manifested a willingness
to be taught. There was readiness of mind. there were not concrete reinforced
walls of prejudice, predetermined conclusions that would stand
in the way of the Word of God finding a fair hearing in the
ears and hearts of the Bereans. But along with this disposition
of readiness to receive the Word, there was this sanctified and
this godly, this spiritually noble disposition of discernment. Though the message came from
an apostle and came based upon the Scriptures, there was a commitment
to further examine the total witness of Scripture, believing
that the message of Scripture is one, and if that which the
apostles said the Scriptures taught was indeed the truth,
further examination would only confirm it. And what I plead
for the message this morning, tonight, and, God willing, next
Lord's Day morning as well, is that each of us plead for the
disposition of the Bereans, because I will not be long into the message
before I would be willing to predict without claiming any
gift of prophecy that not a few of you will find A real spirit
of uneasiness beginning to arise in your heart as long-cherished
sentimental perspectives and associations and traditions are
challenged, and perhaps some of them crumble as you sit there. And all I plead is this disposition
of the Bereans. That's all I ask for. But I ask
for nothing less, for anything less than this is ignoble. If it is spiritual nobility to
receive the Word with readiness and to search the Scriptures,
then it is something less than spiritual nobility to reject
the Word out of hand because it crosses some predisposition
of mind, some long-held and cherished tradition, some sentimentally
suffused practices. What are these before the Word? of the living God. So may we
together unite our hearts, pleading that God would grant us the disposition
that He gave to the Bereans. Let us pray together. Our Father, we thank You for
the privilege that has been ours already in this place this morning
to engage in the worship of You, the living God. Son and Holy
Spirit, we thank You that we have been able to express our
praise in psalms and hymns and that we have been enabled to
address You on the throne of grace as together we have united
our hearts in prayer and added the affirmation of our Amen to
the sentiments and concerns expressed by the One leading us in worship. Now we come again, Holy Father,
praying that you would so work in the mind and heart of every
man, woman, boy or girl in this place, that it may be said of
us that we receive the word with readiness of mind, determined
to search the Scriptures to see if indeed these things be so. We ask that by the power of the
Spirit through the Word, you would cast down every imagination
and every high thing that would exalt itself against your knowledge
and bring into the captivity of Christ every single thought. Meet with us. May your Word run
and have free course, we ask through our Lord Jesus Christ. Amen. Now each of us who is here this
morning of sufficient age to be aware of the world around
us is very much aware that we have once again come into that
time of the year called the Christmas season. Whether we like it or
not, whether we approve of it or not, we are forced to face
this reality. Crowded shopping centers, decorated
street lights, cards in the mailbox, strange figurines on front lawns
all the way from the fat little jolly man in red to reindeer
and replicas of manger scenes and a menagerie of garishly lighted
houses are reminders we're in the Christmas season. Now since
a Christian is called upon to glorify God in the real world
in which he lives, in the providence of God, 1 Corinthians 10.31,
whether you eat or drink or whatsoever you do, do all to the glory of
God. And since the Christmas season,
with all of its trappings, is a part of that world, the child
of God must wrestle with this question, how can I most glorify
God in this season of the year? It will not do just to wish that
by a wave of your hand all of these things would vanish so
that you not have to wrestle with the question. It will not
do to hope that if you close your eyes and count to ten when
you open them, the world around you will appear as it did on
November 1st or as it will appear around February the 1st. The
reality is the Christmas season is upon us with all of these
factors and many more that I have not mentioned. Now, it is one
of the peculiar functions of the Scriptures, according to
2 Timothy 3.16, to instruct the people of God in righteousness. And since the task of pastors
is to teach the people of God how to walk so as to please God,
that's the language of 1 Thessalonians 4.1. Since Ephesians 5.17 says
we are not to be unwise, but understand what the will of the
Lord is, It is the mind of your elders that it would be appropriate
as we approach this season of the year, or in the midst of
it, to take up this subject, the Christian and Christmas in
the light of the Scriptures. The Christian and Christmas in
the light of the Scriptures. Now, we're not speaking of the
world and Christmas in the light of the Scriptures. and about
to enter into a harangue against the obvious abuses of everything
that is decent and moral according to the Ten Commandments with
the world's interaction with this season, But I am concerned
with my fellow elders to bring out of the Scriptures directives
for the Christian in the midst of this particular holiday season. Now, in attempting to come to
clear biblical thinking and practice, and never forget, that's the
divine order. Biblical thinking leading to
biblical practice. It's by the renewing of the mind
that we prove in our experience and practice what is the good,
acceptable, and perfect will of God. And the directive of
the apostle in Ephesians 4 is that the new man is being renewed
unto knowledge after the image of him that created him. And in seeking to come to clear
biblical thinking and practice with respect to this issue of
celebrating Christmas is for many of us a very difficult thing. And it's difficult because we
face these impediments, three major impediments that I want
to address briefly, and this is all by way of introduction.
First of all, we have inherited traditions. Most of us have a
set of traditions in connection with the celebration of Christmas,
traditions which are woven into the very fabric of our thinking,
our practice, and in some cases, very cherished memories. And
whatever the traditions may be, favorable or unfavorable, Traditions
exert a powerful influence upon us. I remind you of the frightening
possibility of the scathing words of the Lord Jesus, which may
have a surprising relevance to this very issue. In Matthew 15
and verse 6, Jesus said of the religious people of His day,
the people who were the leaders in religion, that you make void
the Word of God because of your tradition. Long-cherished, inherited,
ingrained traditions can actually be the occasion of the blatant
violation and negation of explicit directions from the Scriptures. And that's what makes addressing
this subject very difficult. Because almost all of us, without
exception, have some inherited traditions with respect to the
Christmas season. Traditions that either may be
top-heavy on the side of giving a large place to the holiday
or a tradition that treats it in a totally negative way as
though it doesn't exist. But whatever those traditions
may be, they are powerful influences upon every one of us. And then
there's a second factor that makes it difficult to come to
our subject, the Christian and Christmas, in the light of the
scriptures, not only that of inherited traditions, but secondly,
cultivated emotional and sentimental associations. Cultivated emotional
and sentimental associations. Most of us find it impossible
to think of the celebration of Christmas without some powerful
emotions and sentiments rising to the level of present consciousness. For some, those emotions are
almost entirely favorable. Some of you can remember when,
as a child, some of your most cherished family memories cluster
around the Christmas season. That's a reality. And to say
the word Christmas is immediately to touch a string in your psyche
that vibrates with the most pleasant music to your inner ear. And
the very thought that anyone would put his hand on that string,
let alone cut it, all your defenses are already up. And some of you
are already thinking, you're not going to touch my heart.
You're not going to bust one of my strings. You see, if I
would ask how many of you are conscious already, I haven't
said a thing, except announce the subject, and you're conscious
of certain emotions being stirred within you. That's a reality.
There are cultivated emotional and sentimental associations
for some, as I've indicated, almost entirely favorable for
others. It's a mixed bag. We have happy
memories. of that time of the year and
family associations, but we also have bitter memories. We can
remember when we found out that Santa Claus was a myth and our
world came crashing round about us. That those fried eggs we
left on the plate that were eaten when we came out in the morning
and a note was there was all a ruse. And how disappointed
we were. Some of us grew up in homes where
Our parents, out of genuine love but out of biblical ignorance,
engaged in that ruse. And we can remember how shattered
we were when someone who was on the inside track before we
were whispered in our ear, there's no real Santa Claus. It's your
mom and dad. We were ready to put up our dupes
and go after them and say, no way. My mom and dad wouldn't
lie to me. There's a Santa Claus. I've seen
his notes. I've seen the yolk left on the
plate where we left the fried egg for him. So we have mixed memories. The
bitterness and the disillusionment. Some of us remember as we began
to get older, and there was all the buildup of excitement, of
thinking what we were going to get for Christmas. And then the
day came, and we got it, or those things. Yet at the end of the
day there was a strange, empty feeling down in the pit of the
stomach, and we began to realize what Jesus said, a man's life
does not consist in the abundance of the things which he possesses.
Cultivated emotional and sentimental associations, and for some of
us, that are older and more mature as Christians, we see what this
thing has become. And the very mention of the name
stirs up emotions of righteous disgust and anger that anything
so sacred as the enfleshment of deity should be a breach to
debauchery, to irresponsible spending, to all kinds of carnal
indulgence. So you see, when we come to the
subject, we not only bring inherited traditions, but we bring with
us cultivated emotional and sentimental associations. And you see, when
a lot of emotions are pumping their juices up into your head,
it's hard to think clearly. When there's a lot of heat of
emotion in your brain, it's difficult to get the light of truth into
your brain. So when you feel that heat starting
to come up, will you ask the Lord, please, to throw some water
on it? And the Lord will turn down the temperature of the heat
of your emotions and keep the pure light of His truth. Be a
Berean. Receive the Word with readiness
of mind. But then there's a third factor
that makes dealing with this subject a difficult one, and
it is this. It is the pressure of the world
to conform to its standards. The pressure of the world to
conform to its standards. Now there's no question that
our society as a whole, with but few exceptions, is very favorably
disposed to celebrate Christmas, to nurture the Christmas spirit. Now this poses a real problem
for the true child of God because he's conscious of Romans 12 and
verse 2 and a host of other similar texts. Be not conformed to this
world. Don't let this world squeeze
you into its mold. Yet he's conscious of the prayer
of his Lord, as recorded in John 17, 14 and following, that I
pray for those whom you have given me out of the world. I
pray not that you should take them out of the world, but that
you should keep them from the evil or the evil one. Our Lord has no desire to take
us out of this world system yet, but to leave us here and preserve
us from the evil that adheres to and is inherent in this world
system. Furthermore, an intelligent Christian
is conscious of the principles of 1 Corinthians chapter 9. that
on non-moral issues the Apostle Paul was willing to conform to
various sets of standards that were both cultural and in some
cases religious in order to neutralize prejudice and gain an entrance
for the gospel. To the Jew I became as a Jew
that I might gain the Jew. To the Greek I became as the
Greek I become all things to all men, that I might by all
means save some." Now, the enlightened Christian is conscious that the
world is putting pressure upon him to conform to its standards
with respect to this holiday. And on the one hand, he's determined,
I will not, by the grace of God, be conformed to this world. Yet,
knowing my Lord is praying that leaving me in this world I would
be kept from evil, but be light and salt in the midst of it,
and realizing if I love people I'm ready to accommodate on non-moral
issues to win them, this creates a real problem for the Christian
who takes his Bible and the world about him and lost men and women
seriously. Now, in summary, when we come
to any issue surrounded by such powerful influences upon our
thinking and our feelings, we must determine to do three things. Number one, we must pray. We
must pray. We must pray, first of all, for
the grace to bring any and every tradition to the objective standard
of the Word of God. That's what we must pray for,
first of all, for grace to bring any and every tradition to the
objective standard of the Word of God. Isaiah 8 and verse 20
says, to the law and to the testimony, if they speak not according to
this word, there is no light in them. Jesus said in John 14,
15, that if we love him, we will keep his commandments. And then
in 15, 14, those two texts should be easy to remember. 14, 15,
and then just reverse it. 15, 14, you are my friends. If
you do whatsoever, I command you. And we need to pray. God, give us grace to bring every
tradition to the objective standard of the word of God. We need to
pray, secondly, that sentiments and emotions will not cloud our
judgment or capture our actions. We must pray that sentiments
and emotions will not cloud our judgments or capture and dictate
our actions. There are many examples in Scripture
of this. Perhaps the supreme example is
our Lord's agony in Gethsemane. All of his holy emotions had
an aversion in the direction of the will of God. He prayed
three times, if possible, another course might be opened to do
the will of God. He prayed with such an agony
that he sweat, as it were, great drops of blood. Yet in each instance
he said, nevertheless, not my will be done. a will surrounded
at that instance with emotions the likes of which none of us
can relate to. We can only stand back in humility
and wonderment and marvel and wonder what the depth of that
emotion must have been. Yet he was not controlled even
by the holy emotion of desire to avert the awesome reality
of the wrath of His Father. But He said, Thy will be done. He that saith He abideth in Him,
1 John 2.6, ought himself so to walk, even as He walked. Emotions must never be ultimate
and directive of our conduct. It is Thy Word which is a lamp
unto My feet. and the light to my pathway,
Psalm 119, 105. And if the path of the Word of
God means that I must bring my heel down upon the raw, bare
nerve endings of the most powerful emotions, then bring down my
heel, I must, or I give up the name of Christian. Emotions are not ultimate. Sentiments
are not ultimate. God's authority is ultimate,
and that authority is expressed in His Word. So we need to pray
for grace to bring any and every tradition to the objective standard
of the Word of God. We need to pray that sentiment
and emotion will not cloud our judgment and dictate our actions.
And then we need to pray, thirdly, that we may be given discernment
with respect to what is sinful conformity to the world and what
is righteous accommodation with a view to winning men. And here
the most appropriate prayer I know is the prayer of Philippians
chapter 1. And I would ask you as families
to pray this prayer. Perhaps you heads of households
to read it even. in family worship over the coming
days. This is what Paul prayed for
the Philippians. Philippians 1, 9 to 11. And this
I pray that your love may abound yet more and more in knowledge
and discernment. Notice he's not praying. that
their love simply abound and then express itself however it
feels a present impulse to express itself. No, he's asking God that
God would so work in the Philippians that their love may abound more
and more within the realm of knowledge and discernment. To
what end? So that you may approve the things
that are excellent that you may be sincere and void of offense
unto the day of Christ, being filled with the fruit of righteousness
which are through Jesus Christ unto the glory and praise of
God. Now surely that's an appropriate
prayer. Lord, in the face of this complex
issue of what I as a Christian man or woman should do, what
I as the Christian head of a home should do in relationship to
this holiday season that I cannot avoid, it is upon us, it is upon
me, it is upon my family, it is upon society, O Lord, by your
Holy Spirit, may my love abound more and more in knowledge and
discernment, that I may approve the things that are excellent,
that I may be sincere and void of offense unto the day of Christ,
being filled not with the fruits of my conditions, my sentiments,
or the pressure of the world, but filled with the fruits of
righteousness. conform to the divine norms and
standards which are through Jesus Christ unto the glory and praise
of God. So that's the first thing you've
got to do. I can't do it for you. I can pray that for you.
But you and I must pray these three things for ourselves. Now,
is there anything unreasonable in asking you if you profess
to be a Christian to pray those three things? Is there anything
unbiblical? Am I binding your conscience
beyond the Word of God to ask you, as a Christian, earnestly
to pray for the grace to bring any and every tradition to the
standard of the Word of God? And if the Word of God condemns
any tradition, you're prepared to jettison it. If the Word of
God mandates that you begin a tradition, you're prepared to begin a tradition,
if necessary. Are you prepared to bring everything
to the touchstone of the Word of God? Surely, a Christian does
not find it difficult to pray for grace. So, to act, to pray
that sentiment and emotion will not cloud your judgment and dictate
your actions. Surely, if you're a Christian,
that's the desire of your heart. And to pray that you may be given
discernment with respect to what is sinful conformity to the world
and what may be a righteous accommodation with a view to the advancement
of the gospel. So that's the first thing we've
got to do is pray. Second thing we've got to do is get our facts
established accurately. We've got to get our facts established
accurately. What do we really know for sure
with respect to the celebration of Christmas? Facts from the
Word of God, facts from history, facts from current observation. What do we know for sure about
this thing called Christmas? The celebration of a specific
day, December 25th. as the day in which Jesus Christ
came into the world, or if not convinced it was on that day,
that that day ought to be peculiarly honored with religious or social
or religious and social actions peculiar to that day. We need
to get our facts established accurately. And that's what I
hope to do in the time that remains this morning. And then, God willing,
tonight and next Lord's Day morning, the third thing we need to do
is to grasp and apply the relevant biblical principles. Grasp and
apply the relevant biblical principles. convinced that the Scriptures
are the only and the infallible, authoritative, and sufficient
guide in matters of faith and practice, what principles of
the Word of God need to be brought to bear upon this whole issue
of the Christian and his relationship to Christmas? Well then, in the
time that remains this morning, I want us to consider the facts,
the indisputable facts concerning the celebration of Krishna's.
Now, please don't make a leap in your mind. When I state a
fact to say, oh, well, if that fact is so, then surely what
Pastor Martin's going to say is pop up. Please, please let
me tell you what I'm prepared to say. Don't assume in your
mind a leap from the facts to its implications. Consider the
facts. Fact number one foundational
to everything is this. There is no biblical warrant
whatsoever for the remembrance of the birth of our Lord Jesus
Christ by means of a specially designated day of religious or
social celebration. Now, folks, don't take that statement
lightly. It took me a long, long time to be satisfied with how
I was going to state that fact, crossing out one word after another,
replacing And I don't claim it's a perfect statement, but it's
the best I can give you. When the moment of truth comes,
the man must be in the place where God's people are gathered.
Here is fact number one. There is no biblical warrant
whatsoever for the remembrance of the birth of our Lord Jesus
Christ by means of a specially designated day of religious or
social celebration. What is Christmas? It is a day,
December 25th. marked out for religious or social
celebration in some way or another in connection with the coming
into the world of the Son of God. But when we search the Scriptures,
we do not find a shred of evidence that either our Lord or His apostles
practiced or mandated the practice of such a special day of remembrance. We search the Scriptures and
we do not find a shred of evidence that our Lord Himself celebrated
a specific day in conjunction with the events recorded in Luke
chapter 2, nor did the apostles articulate the necessity of such
a day and impose it upon the churches. Now, Paul the Apostle
in 2 Timothy 2.8 does command Timothy to remember Jesus Christ. With a present imperative use
of the verb to call to remembrance, he says, keep on remembering
Jesus Christ. Are we to constantly bring our
Lord Jesus Christ to remembrance? Yes. And in this context, in
particular, in a two-fold light, risen from the dead of the seed
of David, according to my gospel. He said, Timothy, constantly
keep your Lord in remembrance, particularly in terms of His
literal bodily resurrection and all of the implications of the
resurrection for the salvation of men and for the validation
of the identity of the Lord Jesus. And remember Him as coming of
the seed of David. Remember him in his true humanity,
in a humanity identified with the seed of David, that he is
the rightful heir to David's throne and the true Messiah. But even when Paul says, remember
Jesus Christ particularly with respect to his resurrection and
his identity as seed of David, he does not say, and in order
to help you and others to do this, designate a day to remember
the resurrection in this unique way and remember him seed of
David in a unique way. No such thing. We do find the
Lord and His apostles clearly establishing a special day for
the remembrance of His being the resurrected Lord. One reads
the Gospel accounts and notices the unique emphasis upon Christ
coming to His disciples after His resurrection on the first
day of the week. They are gathered behind closed
doors and He gathers with them. He himself begins to make it
evident that the New Covenant community will have a New Covenant
Sabbath, the Lord's Day Sabbath, the Day of Resurrection triumph. And by the time we come to the
epistles, we find that the apostles have established a universal
practice among the churches throughout the Greco-Roman world, so that
when Paul writes to the Corinthians, he says, when ye come together
on the first day of the week, let each of you lay by him and
score as God has prospered. It's an assumption. that the
people of God will gather on the Lord's Day. And by the time
we come to the last book of the New Testament, and John writes
to the seven churches of Asia Minor and says, I was in the
Spirit on the Lord's Day. He doesn't have to stop and say,
now let me explain to you what that means. He assumes they will
all understand what the Lord's Day was. So our Lord Jesus and
the apostles clearly established a day, the Lord's Day Sabbath,
and they clearly established a special ritual supper of remembrance,
the Lord's Supper. Jesus said, this do in remembrance
of me. And in 1 Corinthians 11, Paul
says, I delivered unto you that which I first received, that
the Lord Jesus in the night in which he was betrayed took bread,
this do in remembrance of me. Furthermore, we find there was
universal apostolic establishment of the male and female roles
and relationships within the church. Paul could say in 1 Corinthians
14, as in all the churches, let your women keep silence. It is
not permitted for them to speak. Universal practice in many things,
but to scour the literature of the New Testament looking for
the slightest suggestion that God has designated any specific
day For the special remembrance of the birth of Christ by religious
or social celebration, you will not find a grain of biblical
data. As the apostles obeyed Matthew
28, 19, teaching the disciples to observe all things whatsoever
He commanded, There is no evidence that they laid upon the consciences
of first century Christians a special day to remember the birth of
the Lord Jesus. Now, what are we to conclude
from this fact? This is a fact. If you don't
believe it, search the scriptures and see. And when you find the
biblical evidence, bring it to me. And I will make a public
retraction. I'll tell Bill, erase the master
tape. I'll beg your indulgence to preach
in January or February a retraction. Search the scriptures and see. Have the nobility of the Bereans. No biblical warrant whatsoever. for the remembrance of the birth
of our Lord Jesus Christ by means of a specially designated day
of religious or social celebration. And what conclusion do we draw
from that? Well, the first is this. The conscience of no Christian
should ever be bound to have any sense of duty to observe
in any way December 25th as a day of religious or social celebration. Now, I'm sticking closer to my
notes. I've taken more notes than usual when you deal with
the consciences of God's people. It's spiritual neurosurgery,
and I've been very conscious of that in my preparation. Hear
me carefully. The conscience of no Christian
should be bound to have any sense of duty. I didn't say liberty,
but I said duty. The conscience of no Christian
should be bound to have any sense of duty to observe in any way
December 25th as a day of religious or social celebration. Simply
because such a day exists, it's on our calendars, and we're given
the day off from work, that does not bind your conscience. Listen
to the marvelous statement of the liberty that is ours in Christ
in such matters. From our own confession, chapter
21, paragraph 2, on Christian liberty and liberty of conscience,
God alone is Lord of the conscience and hath left it free from the
doctrines and commandments of men which are in anything contrary
to his word or not contained in it. so that to believe such
doctrines or obey such commands out of conscience, you may do
certain things out of liberty of choice, not out of a conscience
bound by its sense of duty. They understood that distinction,
so they say, to believe such doctrines, obey such commands
out of conscience, is to betray true liberty of conscience. And the requiring of an implicit
faith and absolute and blind obedience is to destroy liberty
of conscience and reason also. So you will never find in this
assembly, so long as Christ is King, ruling by His written Word,
responsibly expounded by godly men, no one will ever bind your
conscience to keep this day in any way whatsoever. You are free as far as your conscience
before God to act as though the day doesn't exist. I don't know how to state it
more bluntly. And furthermore, and this I want you to hear carefully,
and I want you young men and women who, if the Lord tarries,
will carry on the torch of truth in this place into the next generation.
Hear me carefully. No Christian church, as church,
can impose upon its people in their corporate life and worship
any activities or objects which would indicate any special significance
attached to December 25th. Hear now what I said. No Christian
church can impose on its people in their corporate life and worship
any activity or objects which would indicate any special significance
attached to December 25th. Why? Because in the corporate
life of the church, the rule of Christ is to be the scepter
that touches every facet of that corporate life. And there are
some of you who have chosen to exercise your liberty by totally
disregarding December 25th. And if we were to put little
red balls on these fake trees, to give a little seasonal flavor
when you gather to worship the living God. You see what we would
be doing? We would be imposing upon you an element of this season
called the Christmas season and forcing it into the orbit of
your thought and consciousness while you were worshiping the
living God. That would be wicked on the part of the leadership
of this church. That's why there are no poinsettias. And I looked it up. It's proper
to pronounce it both poinsettia or poinsettas. So please don't
come and correct me. Look it up in your dictionary.
Though it's spelled with the I, you can skip the I and say
poinsettia and it's still correct. All right, I've looked it up.
So you save you the trouble of doing so. So it's poinsettia
or poinsettas, whatever you want. Why don't we have them? Didn't
God make them? They're beautiful. Yes, they
are. We've got a nice big one in our living room. And I told
my wife last night, I love to look at it. God made it, not
the devil. But I believe I would say I'd
be willing to be put in jail. I don't know if I'd be willing
to be slain, but I'd be willing to be put in jail before I'd
allow anyone to put one up here on the platform at this season
of the year. Because that would be to intrude
upon the consciences of some, that for which we have no warrant. That's why you find no seasonal
decorations in our place of worship. That's why there is no stated
meeting on Christmas Eve. We may judge. That it would be
a good evangelistic opportunity to have a Christmas Eve service
to try to reach the lost and make it an optional service?
Surely we're at liberty in the light of 1 Corinthians 9 to do
that. But to say as elders we're having
a stated service on Christmas Eve and as a member you must
come, you would have every reason to say show us from the Word
of God where you can bind our conscience to such a service. You see the distinction? We may
have the liberty and we may have a gospel duty to have a Christmas
Eve service at a given time, in a given cultural setting,
as an opportunity to preach the gospel to people who would come
into a church building thinking they're just going to have some
nice sentimental slush and instead they get gospel bombs dropped
on them. That may be an expedient But
we could never bind the consciences of God's people to attend it.
There is no necessity for any one of us who is in this pulpit
to preach on any of the birth narratives or the theme of the
incarnation on the Lord's Day nearest to December 25th. We may choose to do so. And no
one can ever fault the servant of God who expounds the word
of God on any theme contained in it. That's an entirely different
thing. To expound Luke 2, Matthew 1, 2 Corinthians 9, 18, thanks
be unto God for his unspeakable gift. Philippians chapter 2.
Surely it is proper to expound any portion of the word of God,
any time in a place that claims to receive the whole of scripture
as the deposit of divine revelation. But you will not find any special
services mandated. No concatas within the worship
service. And you will not find any little
pageants in the Sunday school or in the Sunday school I was
raised in. We actually had somebody dressed up like Mr. Fat Red Man
who came in and distributed boxes of candy. Why don't you find
that here? Have you ever asked the question?
It's not a matter that some of us have got Scrooge's blood in
our veins. It's we've got Bible blood in
our veins. And Christ died to liberate you
from every commandment of men, that He might bind you to loving
obedience to all of His commands. But anything that He does not
command or forbid, none of us have any right to impose upon
you. Now, I can almost hear the moan
of dashed sentiment. Oh, the Christmas pageants at
Sunday school when I grew up were so sweet. Well, and they
well have been. And the lovely memories of the
poinsettias on the platform, the organ music swelling with
the chords of familiar Christmas carols. Oh, it has such marvelous
memories. I'm sure it does. But I ask you
one question. What does it have to do with
worship regulated by the Word of God? Nada. Nothing! So treasure your memories, but
don't make your pleasant memories a standard for the house of God.
There's only one Lord in Christ's house, and He shares it with none. So
that's fact number one, and the implications of it. Fact number
two, the designation of December 25th as the day to commemorate
the birth of our Lord Jesus Christ is rooted in pagan and diluted
Christian origins. Now, this is a fact that's going
to cause some of you to be shocked, but it's a fact. The designation
of December 25th as the day to commemorate the birth of our
Lord Jesus Christ is rooted in pagan and diluted Christian origins. Now, if we come to grips with
facts, we must ask the question, since there is nothing in the
Bible to mandate December 25th as a day to commemorate the birth
of the Lord Jesus Christ in either a religious or social manner,
where did this practice, where did this present phenomenon originate? When, where, and why was December
25th ever designated as a special day in the so-called church and
national calendar? Well, the best answer to these
questions that I have found presented in a brief form is that which
I found in my research in Baker's Dictionary of Theology Page 117
on the entry under Christmas, and it's just a relatively brief
paragraph. Good distillation. The man did
his homework in giving this succinct statement. The early Christians
did not observe the festival of Christ's birth, to which they
did not attach the importance ascribed to his death and resurrection. And rightly so. He gave them
a memorial supper to commemorate His death. It's called the Lord's
Supper. And He gave them a special day
to commemorate His resurrection called the Lord's Day. No wonder
they didn't have a special day to celebrate His incarnation.
He didn't give them one, personally or through His apostles. Now
listen carefully. In the East and later in the
West, that is the Eastern Church and the Western Church, Christ's
birthday was observed on a January 6th in connection with his baptism,
a day on which the pagan world celebrated the Feast of Dionysius
associated with the lengthening of the days. The night of January
5 and 6 was devoted to the Feast of Christ's birth and the day
of January 6 to his baptism. A fourth century papyrus contains
the oldest Christian Christmas liturgy in existence. The Nativity
Festival was separated from the early Christian Epiphany Feast
and given its own day, December 25th, somewhere between the years
325 and 354 A.D. In Rome, December 25th is attested
as the day of Christ's birth in 336 It was introduced, perhaps, by
Constantine the Great, who evidently chose the day because of the
popular pagan feast of the sun. December 25th was the shortest
day in the year. The sun rose the latest and set
the earliest. From that point on, the day was
a longer day, and in celebration of that, the pagans had their
pagan feast to the god of the sun. And when Constantine Christianized
the Roman Empire, he incorporated that feast. And since the quote,
son of righteousness arose when he was born, this became designated
as a commemoration of the birth of Christ. Gregory Nazianzen
and Chrysostom popularized the new festival in Constantinople,
one of the other centers of Christianity in the fourth century, but opposition
to the new feast was stubborn throughout the East, especially
in Syria, Antioch. Egypt did not receive it till
431. Armenia never. Coptic Armenian Christianity,
which exists to this day, does not acknowledge December 25th
as, quote, Christmas Day. And so, you see, the pagan origins
are patent in any responsible historical account of the origin
of this date. And why did I use the term diluted
Christianity? Well, I quote now from one of
the most respected of church historians, Philip Schaaf, in
his History of the Christian Church, Volume 3, in a chapter
called The Christmas Cycle, and this is what Schaaf says. The
feast of Epiphany had spread from the east to the west. The
feast of Christmas took the opposite course. We find it first in Rome
in the time of the Bishop Liberius, who on the 25th of December,
360 A.D., consecrated Marcella, the sister of St. Ambrose, nun
or bride of Christ, and addressed her with the words, quote, Thou
seest what multitudes are come to the birth festival of thy
bridegroom, end quote. Christmas was, this passage implies
that the festival was already existing and familiar. Christmas
was introduced in Antioch about the year 380. In Alexandria,
not until 430, Chrysostom, who delivered the Christmas homily
in Antioch on the 25th of December 386, already calls it, notwithstanding
its recent introduction some ten years before, the fundamental
feast or the root from which all other Christian festivals
grow. Well, you see, already, already, the concept of a higher
level of piety being attained by a life of perpetual virginity
had begun to enter into the Church. and someone who's been consecrated
to being a nun, and the concept of being married to Christ. I
call this a diluted Christianity, and anyone familiar with the
so-called church fathers knows how quickly, after the death
of the apostles, superstition and gross doctrinal imbalance
and inaccuracy and sacramentalism entered into the pure stream
of apostolic Christianity and diluted it. Now, it is a fact,
then, it is a fact that the designation of December 25th has its origins
in pagan and diluted Christian sources. Now, that's a fact. Facts are stubborn things. You
can't go back and change history. Now, you can do as many as are
doing in our day, and that is try to reconstruct history according
to one's own desires. But that's a violation of the
ninth commandment. It is not bearing a true witness,
but a false witness. Or what conclusion do we draw
from this fact? Well, since a true Christian
is concerned with the avoidance of pagan revelry and decadent
religion, should it not be a day which a Christian approaches
with a great deal of suspicion because of its origins? Ephesians
5.11 says, have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of
darkness, but rather recruit them. Second Corinthians 6.14,
wherefore come out from among them and be ye separate in touch,
not the unclean thing. And Second Timothy 3.5, where
it speaks of those who casting off the truth hold to a form
of godliness, but denying its power from such turn away. Well, if it was that kind of
diluted Christianity that gave birth to this date in the so-called
Christian calendar, a thoughtful Christian is going to have some
reservations about just jumping on the Christmas bandwagon and
riding it for all its worth without any thought about its origins. Yet, on the other hand, on the
other hand, a thoughtful, well-instructed Christian believes that God is
the Lord of history. and that God in history, in the
scriptures, and in the period from the closing of the canon
to this day, as far as we've been able to ascertain His workings
in church history and Christian biography, God is the Lord of
history, often uses strange materials to build noble things. He used
the strange materials of a hard-hearted pharaoh that knew not Joseph,
to be the very instrument that would get His people desperate
to get out of Egypt until their cry comes into God's ears and
He raises Moses to be their deliverer. God is the Lord of history who
uses the deception and the wretched, foul treachery of Judas to be
the instrument to hand our Lord over to the Roman authorities
that all of the prophecies concerning the Son of God might be fulfilled. And a Christian who is sensitive
to his Bible does not simplistically say, well, it has pagan origins,
therefore I have nothing to do with it. Wait a minute, wait
a minute. Slow down a little bit. Was God
on his throne when Constantine declared the Christian faith
the official religion of the Roman Empire? Yeah, God didn't
vacate his throne. He was just as much on his throne
then as when Christians were hunted down and thrown to the
lions. Was God on His throne when a
decision was made to try to Christianize pagan ceremonies? Was that a noble thing to attempt
to replace pagan festivals with Christian festivals with Christian
theology at their basis and the celebration of the great redemptive
acts of Christ? Are you prepared to say it was
all of the devil? There should be a day set apart
to remember the incarnation of the second person of the Godhead.
If the devil had his way, the whole world would forget that
fact. So what am I to do? It's not
quite so simple now, is it? You see, that second fact has
two edges to it. It creates, on the one hand,
a sense of reservation in a thoughtful Christian, about simply going
with the flow of the Christmas madness, recognizing its pagan
and diluted Christian origins, yet on the other hand, knowing
that God is the Lord of history, and that even in a world that
hates the Son of God, there is this annual remembrance in ways
the world doesn't even recognize of this stupendous fact that
at a point in human history, God broke into humanity in the
enfleshment of the second person of the Godhead there in Bethlehem's
manger. And should I not then as a Christian
want to do something to help preserve whatever remnants of
consciousness there may be in this sin-sick world that someone
came into this world, sinners to say? You say, Pastor, you're making me
more confused. Good. I hope I'm making you think.
You start with your facts. You see, you can have simplistic
answers to complex things when you've got limited knowledge
of your facts. Get your facts, and many times the answers are
not simple. Fact number three, no, we'll have to stop. And we'll just have to pace these
things accordingly. I had no way of knowing that
we'd only get the first two facts, but we're going to, God willing,
tonight, look at facts number three and four, and then hopefully
at least begin to bring to bear what biblical principles ought
to influence us in the light of these facts But I'm more concerned
that you come to grips with the teaching of the Word of God and
have a conscience that is personally persuaded by an enlightened,
fresh application of Holy Scripture. So that as we continue through
these days, and certainly as has already been suggested by
Pastor Barker, as we come to Our Lord's Day next week, since
some of you may only hear this installment, I want to close
on this note. Hear me carefully now. Romans
14 says, On matters of remembering days that are things of indifference,
one man regards one day, one man regards all days alike. Paul
goes on to say in the key passage that we'll be studying, He that
regards the day regards it to the Lord. The man that does not
regard any special day, it's unto the Lord. Listen carefully. Don't rationalize in your conscience
that you can remember December 25th as unto the Lord, if in
so doing you violate the clear will of the Lord with regard
to the day He has designated as His day. He has designated
a whole day for Himself. In the accident of our calendar,
December 25th falls on His day next week. And if you're prepared
to take December 25th and let it alter in one iota, keeping
a day wholly unto God, fulfilling all of your biblical and church
responsibilities from morning till night, you're proving that
you've allowed the world and the pressure of relatives and
conformity to custom to be more important than the will of Christ
as revealed in the word of Christ. And no amount of rationalization
will cut it. You don't keep that day unto
the Lord by disobeying the Lord. Can you say, well, it's Christmas
Day, therefore I can be gluttonous. It's only one day. No, no. You don't violate God's word
that condemns gluttony simply because it's Christmas. And you
don't violate God's Word which says, remember the Sabbath day,
not just the morning, the day to keep it holy. So whatever
you do or you don't do, remember, next Lord's Day has already been
marked out on God's calendar the whole day. So whatever you
do as a matter of liberty with December 25th, you must do nothing
that violates the will of God. But you say, Pastor, I'll offend
my relatives. He that loves father, mother,
brother, sister more than me is not worthy of me. I came not
to send peace, but a sword. And you may feel the sword when
you lovingly tell your relatives, God's already marked out next
Sunday. I don't care that so-called Christmas Day happens to fall
on it. We'd love to come over on Saturday and bring our presents.
We'd love to come over on Monday but somebody's already claimed
my Sunday. You ready for that? If not, then
sentiment, tradition, the world, and the love of men is of greater
importance to you than the smile of Christ. And if that's so,
you're either unconverted or you're in a pitifully backslidden
state in either case. May God help you to have dealings
with Him. Let's pray. Our Father, we're so thankful
that in the midst of all of the confusion of men's voices, we
have a sure word from you. We thank you for Holy Scripture,
which is a lamp to our feet and a light to our pathway. We pray
that as we continue our examination of this issue, that You would
help us to have hearts prepared to receive the Word with all
readiness and to search the Scriptures to see if these things be so. We pray that as a people we may
honor You through this season. Whatever our own individual practices
may be, whatever our domestic patterns may be, grant, O God,
that in all of them we will consciously and jealously seek to glorify
You, knowing that the best way to glorify You is not dictated
by our own whims and fancy, but by Your holy Word. Oh, may Your
Word regulate our thought and our practice. To the glory of
our Lord Jesus Christ we pray, amen.
Christmas and the Christian 1
Series Christmas and the Christian
Is Christmas a day Christians can celebrate with a good conscience, or is Christmas condemned in the Scriptures? How do we deal biblically with our differences of perspective and practice on this relevant topic?
We must learn from God's Word how we may glorify Him in all things. In opening up the Scriptures in this series, Pastor Martin provides a biblical case study in the doctrine of Christian liberty. (TT-G-1)
Also available in RealAudio® format on www.tbcnj.org
Also recommended: "Christmas and the Gospel", SermonAudio message #122027375
For a more recent study in the doctrine of Christian Liberty see the series, "A Fresh Look at the Doctrine of Christian Liberty", beginning with message #6220481340.
| Sermon ID | 12302222845 |
| Duration | 1:06:57 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday - AM |
| Language | English |
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