The Christ Child and the King
Karen Ehman

“Today in the town of David a Savior has been born to you; he is Christ the Lord. This will be a sign to you: You will find a baby wrapped in cloths and lying in a manger." Luke 2:11-12 (NIV)

“Read it again Mommy. Pleeeease read it again,” Mackenzie, my then seven-year-old, begged. Her three-year-old brother, Mitchell, echoed her plea. “Yes Mommy, especially the part about the little boy and his donkey!”

Their freshly washed faces and still wet hair glowed in the light of the Christmas tree as they sat with pajamas on next to me on the couch. A nightly December ritual, they chose a book from our “Baby Jesus Basket” full of story books about the birth of Christ. Their favorite this particular year was The Small One, a fictitious story of a too small donkey who has to be sold in order to bring in one piece of silver. His young master takes him to town, but no one wants such a small creature except for the village tanner. The donkey is ready to give up his life when a kind man offers to buy him to help carry his pregnant wife to Bethlehem. So the small donkey is given the great task of carrying the mother of Jesus to the stable where He will be born.

I have always loved reading Christmas stories to my children and each year they receive a new nativity book from my mom. That year, however, my eyes were opened to part of the story that I had been unintentionally leaving out. After tottering over to the “Baby Jesus Basket” to put away the book we’d just finished, Mitchell asked me to read him a story from the Bible about the other Jesus.

“What other Jesus?” I asked.

“Not baby Jesus,” he replied. “Big Jesus who died on the cross.”

Now realizing that he’d not connected the two in his mind, I sat and explained that the baby Jesus grew up to be the same Jesus who died on the cross to save us from our sins. Somehow he’d figured baby Jesus was a fairy tale and big Jesus was “for real.”

I thought of how we adults can do much the same thing. Oh, we know there is just one Jesus and that He is for real, but we are content to leave Him harmlessly in the manger. Somehow a sweet adorable little baby is acceptable to the world around us. But a Lord who calls for men and women to choose either to obey Him or suffer the consequences is not. But we can’t have one part of the story without the other. We must never forget that the hand-hewn manger one day became an old rugged cross. We can’t just peer lovingly into the manger without looking obediently to the cross. Baby Jesus deserves our adoration and the Lord Jesus deserves our allegiance.

The next year I did not neglect the entire story of the one true Jesus when reading nativity books to our children. Starting with Luke chapter two from God’s perfect Word before I chose a picture book from our special basket we read of God’s wonderful plan of sending Jesus to earth. We worked on memorizing more of the Scripture in order to put on our annual nativity play for Grandma and Grandpa complete with baby Spencer starring as the Christ child.

Still today, we’re inventing ways to keep the story going until Easter in order to tie it all together. One woman told me of how they save their Christmas tree, cut off all of the branches so they are left with one large trunk. They then cut off the top about one-third of the way down and then using twine tie the two pieces together in the shape of the cross. It is then placed in their house where the Christmas tree had been as a visual reminder of the entire life of Christ.

From the cradle to the cross . . . oh come let us adore Him!

Dear Lord, help me connect in my mind the sweetness of the baby Jesus with submission to the King of Kings. In Jesus’ Name, Amen.

Related Resources
Do You Know Him?

Homespun Memories for the Heart by Karen Ehman

Homespun Gifts from the Heart by Karen Ehman

The ADVENTure of Christmas by Lisa Whelchel

Reflections
Think back to your earliest recollections of learning about Jesus. How was He portrayed to you? Fact or fiction?

How do you now portray Him to others? As harmless baby or Lord of all? If you have contact with children, how can you make the truth of Jesus come alive to them?

Application Steps
Be on the lookout for how the world depicts Jesus at this time of year. Are the examples you see accurate? Why or why not?

Determine to use the Christmas season as a crack in the door to open up a conversation with someone about the reality of Christ and what He requires of mankind.

Power Verses
John 14:23, “Jesus replied, ‘If anyone loves me, he will obey my teaching. My Father will love him, and we will come to him and make our home with him.’” (NIV)

Hebrews 12:2 “Let us fix our eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter of our faith, who for the joy set before him endured the cross, scorning its shame, and sat down at the right hand of the throne of God.” (NIV)

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4 Comments:

Blogger Sisterlisa said...

Thank you for that. We also buy a new book every year and we pulled them out the other day. We also have Small One, very sweet story.

Blogger Lelia Chealey said...

Thank you for a great idea for a new tradition to begin.
Blessings
Lelia

Anonymous Anonymous said...

How truly special and what a great reminder! I had never really thought that this might be a difficult thing for kids to understand - that baby Jesus is the same as Easter Jesus. Every year it seems there is always something new we see in this story we have heard and read hundreds of times... God is truly amazing - morning by morning new mercies we see! How true!

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Great ideas for a new tradition and ways to connect baby Jesus with adult Jesus and the cross. Thanks.

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