In the Waiting Room…Dec. 21st
For many of us, the image is clear in our minds. Daddy is nervously pacing (or sitting) in the waiting room while the doctor and nurses tend to the expecting mother. At the same time, others can be found in this same room waiting ‘on pins and needles’ for the news that their loved one made it through. Most of us have been in the waiting room anticipating the ‘good news.’ But as we look deeper into our own lives, we find we are spending our life waiting for more than just the doctor.
For hundreds of years the Jewish nation was waiting and longing for the coming of the Messiah. And now, some two thousand years later, we find ourselves waiting and longing for His return! During the Christmas season, our world remembers Christ’s arrival on this earth, and welcomes the newborn baby…the Messiah. But after the tree is taken down and the Christmas music stops, will this world anticipate His return? David wrote in the 25th Psalm, “…You are the God of my salvation; For You I will wait all the day.” Yet today many of us don’t want to wait. We fail to see that, like it or not, we are still waiting. Not for the newborn baby, but for our Savior’s return. Perhaps you could say we’re still…”In the Waiting Room.”
“…I will sing with the spirit and I will sing with the mind also.” I Corinthians 14:15
Sunday morning, Dec. 21, 2014
The following songs are found in the hymnal, Songs of Faith & Praise.
“Joy to the World” – 1018
Not to be reserved for December alone … this song of ‘welcome’ is one we’ll sing to open our assembly this morning. Written in the late 1700’s, this spiritual song was not intended as a Christmas hymn. Instead, Isaac Watts penned these words as a reminder of Christ’s birth. Look back at last December to read more about the joy that came into this world. (click on…December, 2013)
“Savior, Thy Dying Love” – 667
Before we open our wallets and give back as God has given to us, consider the three lines of each verse in this song, “…Something for Thee.” And each of these verses reflect on what we will give to Him; some offering…some song…some wanderer won…my soul in eternity. When we reflect on His giving to us, His dying love, what is it that we are willing to give back to Him? While you’re waiting, consider what you’re giving.
“Restore My Soul” – no book
And now consider the state of your soul; how are you doing spiritually? This song calls for God to restore my spirit, revive the fire in my soul, and renew my courage. At times we all become weary and feel ‘burned out,’ but this is when we need God’s guiding hand all the more to have the courage to stand up and replace our doubts with a stronger, bolder faith in His return. Renew your love for Him, rebuild your faith in Him and seek to have Him restore your soul!
“One Day!” – 353
Before we partake in the Lord’s supper we’ll sing only the first two verses of this hundred year old spiritual song. One day the angels sang of Christ’s birth as Jesus was born into this world. But just as we are born and die, so Christ was born and died. One day they led Him up Calvary’s mountain to nail Him on the tree, bearing our sins. And yet we find hope in knowing He didn’t stay in the tomb. Unlike this earthly body, Jesus was raised from the dead. So we sing, “Rising, He justified (freed us from sin) freely forever…” And then, wait for it, we sing “…One day He’s coming! Oh glorious day!”
“Bethlehem…Galilee…Gethsemane” – 357
“Bethlehem, Christ was born there. I believe, I believe! Galilee, He walked there. I believe, I believe! Gethsemane, my Savior prayed there. On Calvary, He died alone. But the tomb, He left there. I believe, I believe!” Believing is important and obeying is vital, but how many of us are willing to go each day, faithfully waiting for our Savior? We do when we confess that, “…Now He lives and reigns forever. I believe, I believe!”
“Blessed Assurance” – 480
What’s your story? Do you tell a story of assurance in Christ through the life you live? Will your song declare that you are an heir of salvation, and that you’ve been purchased by God? If so, and if you’ve read this far I believe you are, then you can’t help but sing praises to our Savior in song…all day long! What better thing to do while you’re waiting then to sing praises!
“When Jesus Comes” – no book
Our invitation song is one from years gone by. As a matter of fact it’s no longer in the book, Faith & Praise. But it’s message is one confirming our resolve as we wait for Christ’s return. Perhaps the chorus says it best, “O can we say we are ready, brother? Ready for the soul’s bright home? Say, will He find you and me still watching, waiting, waiting when the Lord shall come?“
“When He Comes in Glory By and By” – 854
As we are waiting, we are longing for His return. And you and I know, “How sweet it will be…when He comes in the sky!” So be patient, don’t loss faith and always remember the goal is heaven. “When He comes in glory by and by…” it will be sweet, for those who are in the waiting room!
God With Us…Part One
Part 1 of 2…Immanuel; God with Us!
“In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was in the beginning with God…And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us, and we beheld His glory, the glory as of the only begotten of the Father, full of grace and truth.” John 1:1, 2, 14
Incarnation, by simple definition is, “God in the flesh!” The scripture explains it, and for years we have sung about it. Perhaps you’ll remember some of these old hymns:
- Come Thou Almighty King (“Come, Thou incarnate Word…”)
- Hark! The Herald Angels Sing (“…veiled in flesh the Godhead see;hail the incarnate Deity; pleased as man with men to dwell, Jesus, our Immanuel…”)
- One Day (“…one day when sin was a black as could be, Jesus came forth to be born of a virgin, dwelt among men, my example is He!”)
- We Saw Thee Not (“We saw Thee not when Thou dids’t come to this poor world of sin and death, nor yet beheld Thy cottage home, in that despised Nazareth…”)
So how do we explain such a miracle in time? Certainly numerous questions come to mind when we consider incarnation. “How can God become flesh?” “What is the natural, logical property involved with incarnation?” Read the words of God as we consider this holy phenomenon. Paul writes in Colossians 3:9, “For in Christ all the fullness of the Deity lives in bodily form…” Earlier in Colossians, Paul confirms the supremacy of Christ, “He is the image of the invisible God, the first born of all creation.” (Colossians 1:15) Jesus the Christ was not 50% god and 50% man. He came to earth 100% divine and 100% flesh. Though the ‘logical properties’ may be unknown to us, for the believer we have blessed assurance that this mystery of Godliness is great. We believe that He still came to earth, and everything we need to know about salvation and reconciliation with God is found in Christ Jesus. We wasn’t born in palace as would be expected of royalty, his birth was in a lowly stable. Royal recognition was gone and He came to experience royal rejection even by His kinsmen (Mark 3:21). But still…He came. The video below is a song from Donna Douglas and Pam Thumb that proclamations our faith. Listen to the message as you read the words.
Do we truly understand the sacrifice Jesus made in becoming our Immanuel? “He left all heaven’s glory to fulfill the Father’s plan.” A plan that was necessary for our salvation. We might sing about it and we might know it’s ramifications, but do we truly appreciate it? There was no out, no substitute as we read in Hebrews 9, “For this reason He is the mediator of a new covenant, so that, since a death has taken place for the redemption of the transgressions that were committed under the first covenant, those who have been called may receive the promise of the eternal inheritance. For where a covenant is, there must of necessity be the death of the one who made it. For a covenant is valid only when men are dead…” (NAS) But as the song continues, “…the hope of what He offered so out weighed what must be done.” We have a means by which we are saved; through the incarnation of Jesus Christ. His death, burial and resurrection.