The High Calling Jan 01, 2015 Keeping Christmas Well: Taste the - TopicsExpress



          

The High Calling Jan 01, 2015 Keeping Christmas Well: Taste the New Creation READ 2 Corinthians 5:1-21 This means that anyone who belongs to Christ has become a new person. The old life is gone; a new life has begun! 2 Corinthians 5:17 The High Calling The High Calling The High Calling The High Calling The High Calling The High Calling The High Calling By Mark D. Roberts Happy New Year! Yes, today is the first day of the new year. But it is also the eighth day in the Christian season of Christmas. So today, we continue our series in Keeping Christmas Well. At the same time, our reflection today picks up the theme of newness, focusing on how we can experience new life through Jesus Christ. Do the things we do in this life really matter? How are we to live in light of God’s plans for the future? Second Corinthians 5 addresses questions like these, focusing on the nature of our new life in Christ. At first glance, 2 Corinthians 5 doesn’t have anything to do with Christmas. It doesn’t mention the birth of Christ but focuses instead on his death and the new life it has brought for us. This new life reaffirms the essential value of God’s creation, including our bodies. In fact, when we stand before Christ on the day of judgment, “we will each receive whatever we deserve for the good or evil we have done in this earthly body” (5:10). Paul is not saying that our salvation hinges on our own works, of course. But there will be a time when the things we have done in this world, things that have been an expression of our physical bodies, will be evaluated. Clearly, God cares about what we do with our bodies. When we put our trust in Christ as our Savior, everything in life begins to change. Our translation of 2 Corinthians 5:17 reads, “This means that anyone who belongs to Christ has become a new person. The old life is gone; a new life has begun.” If we were to translate this verse very literally, we might come up with something like this: “Therefore, if someone is in Christ … new creation! The old things have passed away. Look! They have become new.” Notice that the newness experienced by the Christian is not only individual or internal. The one who enters into relationship with God through Christ begins to participate in the new creation, even though continuing to live in the old creation. How do we experience the new creation in this life, even as we hope for the fullness of the new creation that is yet to come? We live in the new creation when we gather with God’s people for worship. Or when we forgive someone who has wronged us. Or when we serve people in the power of the Spirit. Or when we live sacrificially, giving away ourselves and our stuff for others. Or when we bring the values of God’s kingdom into every facet of our lives. Or when we remain steadfast in the midst of suffering. Or when we continue to hope in God even when he seems very far away. Or when our sisters and brothers in Christ love us with a soul-embracing kind of love. Or when we feed the hungry, clothe the naked, visit the prisoners, heal the sick, and hug the lonely in the name of Jesus. Or … Though 2 Corinthians 5 doesn’t mention the Incarnation specifically, it does express several implications of this central truth of Christmas. The fact that God came to us in a human body emphasizes the value of our bodies, a point drawn out by Paul in this chapter. The fact that God chose to become part of his creation underscores its inestimable value. It reminds us that God’s vision for the future is not the destruction of creation but its renewal. The new creation fixes, completes, and perfects this creation. Keeping Christmas well means taking seriously what we do with our bodies, even as God takes our actions seriously. It means using our bodies for God’s service in every aspect of life. Honoring Christmas every day highlights the value of this creation, even as we anticipate the full new creation that is still to come. When we let the Incarnation guide our lives, then we will also live incarnationally as in-the-flesh instances of God’s truth and love. Our lives will communicate the good news of Christ in word and deed so that others might come to experience the new life found in Christ, the Word of God Incarnate.
Posted on: Thu, 01 Jan 2015 13:27:22 +0000

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