“All this took place to fulfill what the Lord had said through the prophet:
‘The virgin will conceive and give birth to a son, and they will call him Immanuel’
(which means “God with us”). (Mt. 1:23)
Beyond the lights and decorations there is a TRUTH that looms large during Christmas. And beyond the carols and festivities there is a FACT at the heart of our joy and delight. I pray that we all will first experience and then let it be known that the preeminent glorious TRUTH and FACT that we Christians celebrate during Advent/Christmas is the advent of the promised coming of “Immanuel” (God with us) into our world.
With so much focus on the birth of an adorable baby laying in a stable manger, we become blinded to the deeper, more glorious FACT that this baby child is God himself entering our darkened, hopeless world, clothed in human flesh. God chose to lay aside his glory, majesty, and power, to come down from heaven and experience for himself all the feelings and trauma of human birth, life, and death.
But why would God go to this extreme emptying of himself to come into our fear-filled world of darkness and experience human life from birth to death? The Scriptures tell us that it is because he loves the world so greatly and longs for it to be filled with his gifts of light, love, joy, and peace. Yes, we joyfully sing the Christmas carols, but do we ever pause to hear and ponder their messages? To do so promises us a much better understanding and a deeper appreciation for the TRUTH and FACT that the “Christmas carols” musically proclaim.
I remember as a young teenager walking home from the neighbor’s house after darkness had settled across the field, railroad tracks, small stream, and meadow that separated our two houses. I remember how much less fearful I became after I was able to see the porch light of our house, and how relieved I was to have the darkness of the night give way to the bright lights of home.
I often think of this experience as an excellent description of the TRUTH and FACT of Advent and Christmas. God enters the darkness of our world and wherever his presence is believed and accepted, the “I am the light of the world” replaces the darkness and fear with his light and peace.
On one dark night a mother said to her fearful child as she put her into bed, “There is nothing to fear in the dark. And besides, the angels are near you.” And the child whimpered, “But, mommy, I don’t want angels. I want a skin face to be with me.”
In the opening verses of his gospel, John declares that in Jesus, God came to fearful humans with a skin face. “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. …. In him was life, and that life was the light of all mankind. The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it. …. The Word became flesh and made his dwelling among us. (Jn. 1:1-4, 14).
Christmas is God’s answer to the darkness of our failures and fears. And so, when you hear or sing the joyous music of Christmas, listen carefully to the messages of God’s love for you, and open your heart to feel his “Immanuel” presence with you. “Joy to the world, the Lord is come.”
<><><><><>
Ray M. Geigley – “Healing Rays of Righteousness” – www.geigler13.wordpress.com – 12/17/25
Leave a comment