“Glory to God in the Highest, peace on earth, good will toward men.” Words from the bible so familiar at this time of year, reflected on Christmas cards and in Christmas carols. So familiar, in fact, that the meaning is probably lost to most of us because we don’t think about what they mean. And who thinks about Christmas for 10 months of the year anyway?
That’s a pity because the message of the angels to the shepherds was one of the greatest of all time for every person on planet earth, yet it has been almost completely misunderstood over the years. Some bible translations say something like “peace among men”, or “peace toward men of goodwill” (which of course is talking about mankind, not just the male gender!). But that wasn’t the message. Anyone can see that the birth of Jesus hasn’t stopped people waging wars and committing violence, yet so often that’s how it is interpreted, a sort of nice message, if only it were true. In fact, Jesus said He hadn’t come to send peace on earth – at least not at his first coming, and that wars would increase as the time of his return drew near (see Matthew 10:33-36 and 24:6-8).
It’s perfectly true that for those who accept Jesus Christ, the Prince of Peace, as their Saviour and Lord, there comes an inner peace that simply cannot be shaken or matched by anything on earth – and you have to experience it to know it! But the angels were declaring that the time of God’s anger against sinful mankind was about to come to a permanent end. God was about to declare peace with us! And when Jesus Christ went to the cross he became the once and for all peace offering for every human being in history. In fact, he has already made peace with God for everyone. There is nothing anyone of us can do to change or revoke that; it’s a done deal. The only thing we have to do to make it good to us is to believe it to be the truth; to accept it by an act of faith.
The Christian gospel is just that. Gospel is just another word for good news. God is not angry with anyone anymore because of their sins, failures, bad deeds, rotten attitudes or whatever. At the cross, Jesus took the full force of God’s wrath and judgement against all of that. And he did it absolutely perfectly so that it will never have to be directed at us. That’s the good news – the gospel. The only judgement left is: did we believe it and accept it? The bible makes it quite clear that no one on earth can gain acceptance with God on the basis of doing right. For a start, the 10 Commandments set the bar for acceptable behaviour way too high for anybody to succeed. And then Jesus took it to a totally new level: the 10 Commandments dealt with our behaviour – what we did – but Jesus said the rules apply equally to our motives – what we think. He said thinking about it is just the same in God’s eyes as doing it. Anybody want to go for an A-star grade? So Jesus, who God said was perfect in every way, took the punishment due to us for our failures – all of them – and gave us, in exchange, Jesus’ perfect right-standing with God. God’s justice – his judgement against our sin – is totally satisfied. He is at peace with you and me because Jesus paid the price for peace, and he offers it to us as a free gift. You could call it his Christmas present to the world. God has nothing but good will toward each and every one of us. That was – and still is – the message of Christmas.
We pray that you will all have a Christmas full of the peace and joy and love that God intends for you, and, as the bumper sticker says, that it’s not just for Christmas, but for life!
