THE PURPOSE OF THE
INCARNATION
Dr. W. A. Criswell
Hebrews 2:9-18
12-21-69 8:15 a.m.
Now
the sermon this morning is going to be a surprise to you. I thought long and
earnestly about preaching it. What made me think about it is our service
Christmas Eve. By the way, when I was a boy and started out pastoring my
little country churches I always preached then had a baptismal service, usually
I’d stand out in the middle of a river or in the middle of a tank and preach,
give an invitation, walk up on the bank, give an invitation then have the
baptismal service.
Here
in Dallas in these new fangled urban ways, why we have our baptismal service
first and then we have our preaching service. But I want to turn it around
Wednesday night and do as I did long time ago. We’re going to have our service
first—at 7:30 o’clock—come to the auditorium, all of you. Then after the
delivery of the message I’m going to have our baptismal service.
Now
what made me think of this was—being a baptismal service on Christmas Eve—I’m
going to preach that night, this coming Wednesday night, on The Cradle, The
Cross, and The Crown. And as I began thinking about those things, baptism
on a Christmas Eve, I could not escape an extended passage in the Book of
Hebrews regarding the incarnation. And the reason I hesitated to preach—to
prepare the sermon like it is prepared and deliver it—is it is sort of out of
keeping with the tinsel, and the tin foil, and big fat Santa Claus. Not that I
am unsympathetic with tinsel, and tin foil, and rotund Santa Claus, we have a
Christmas tree and we decorate it and buy all of those glittering things at the
dime store to make it shine; and I’ve been through several parties of our
church group this year and I love to see the Ho, Ho, Ho, man come in, and his
rotund little belly shake his head, “Ha, ha, ha, ho, ho, ho;” I do not mind.
But the Bible, God’s Word, in the incarnation of Christ is such a different
thing; and I thought, “Should I do this or not?” But as I said, because I was
so much thinking about baptism on Christmas Eve and what it means that I just
decided to. I persuaded myself that we were mature enough for us to come to
church and listen to an exposition of the Word of God on the profound,
theological, everlasting, eternal meaning of “God born in the flesh,” so let’s
start.
The
message is an exposition of the second half of the second chapter of the Book
of Hebrews:
But
we see Jesus, Who was made a little lower than the angels for the suffering of
death,
—in
order to suffer and die—
that
He by the grace of God should taste death for every man.
For
it became Him for Whom are all things and by Whom are all things, in bringing
many sons unto glory, to make the captain of their salvation perfect through
sufferings.
For
both He that sanctifieth and they who are sanctified are all of one:
—God
incarnate and we in Christ, we have a common denominator—
For
which cause He is not ashamed to call them brethren,
Saying,
I will declare Thy name unto my brethren, in the midst of the church will I sing
praise unto Thee.
And
again, I will put my trust in Him. And again, Behold I and the children which
God hath given Me.
Forasmuch
then as the children are partakers of flesh and blood, He also Himself likewise
took part of the same; that through death He might destroy Him that had the
power of death, that is, the devil;
And
deliver them who through fear of death were all their lifetime subject to
bondage.
For
verily, He took not upon Him the nature of angels; but He took upon Him the
seed of Abraham,
—the
seed of a man—
Wherefore
in all things it behooved Him to be made like unto His brethren, that He might
be a merciful and faithful high priest in things pertaining to God, to make expiation
for the sins of the people.
For
in that He Himself hath suffered being tried, He is able to succour them that
are tempted, that are tried.
This
is an inspired account of the incarnation. This is a discussion of the purpose
of God coming down in human flesh. And there are three tremendous avowals that
He makes regarding the purpose of Bethlehem, of God coming down in the form of
a man. First, that we might be delivered from the bondage and despair of death:
Jesus,
made a little lower than the angels,
—that
is, coming down into the form of a man—
that
He might suffer death; that He by the grace of God should taste death for every
man…
Forasmuch
then as the children are partakers of flesh and blood
—we
are human and mortal—
He
also likewise took part of the same
—he
became human and mortal—
that
through death He might destroy him who had the power of death, that is, the
devil; And deliver them who through fear of death were all their lifetime
subject to bondage.
[Hebrews
2:9-15]
He
came down and became mortal, flesh such as we are, that He might enter all of
the black domain of despair and mortality, and that He might deliver us from
the bondage of the fear of death. Oh, what a tremendous thing! Just to
suggest it, that death might be turned from its horrible visage of corruption,
and decay, and despair into the glorious joy, and gladness, and freedom, and
victory of the children of God. Christ did that for us; He came down and
became one of us, and He entered the dark domain of death and He wrestled there
with the powers of decay and destruction; and He won.
And
death now to us; we haven’t time to speak of these things. As this author of
Hebrews says, “Through the veil of His flesh, through the suffering and the
tearing of His own body we have an entry into Heaven,” an entrance into glory.
And death now for us is nothing but a translation; it is a triumph. When the
trumpets sound on the other side of the river, and one of God’s children goes
home, it’s a great day and a great hour! It’s our finest day and our finest
hour. That’s what Christ did for us, coming down in the flesh to win for us
that incomparable victory.
Many
of our people are not able to attend the service on Wednesday night, so may I
describe this last Wednesday night? There was a man here by the name of Harlan
Toppeth; and for thirteen years he was tortured because he was a Baptist
preacher. He was tortured by the Communists in Russia. And in describing one
of those horrible hours of torment he was marched to the end of a dark corridor
and the light turned out, and he felt the cold steel of a pistol of a handgun
thrust against the base of his skull. And the Communist guard said, “I shall
slowly count to five, and at the end of five if you do not confess that you are
an imperialist spy I shall pull this trigger.” And the guard began to count, “One,
and two,” and that man—Wednesday night—said that when he counted to three there
came a flood of joy and glory over his soul that was indescribable, “For,” he
said, “in two more seconds I shall see Jesus. In two more seconds I shall be
in Heaven, in glory with God.” And when he counted to five, he said, “Lord,
here I come.” And he said, “I have never felt the closeness and dearness and
preciousness of God in my life as I did with that gun at the base of my skull.”
Well, the rest of the story, instead of shooting him the Communist took the
butt of the gun and thought he had burst his head open. And he survived and
lived through those years of torture that followed. But as he spoke, I could
not help but think what a glory that a man in Christ could just face the
horrible visage of death and do it with a flood of glory in his soul. That is
the first reason, this author says, that Jesus came into the world: to take
away from us the fear of the bondage of death.
Now,
the second thing he avows: “Verily,” he says, “He took not upon him the nature
of angels; but He took upon Him the seed of a man, of Abraham. Wherefore in
all things it behooved Him to be made like unto his brethren, that He might be
a merciful and faithful high priest in things pertaining to God,” and the King
James Version translates it, “to make reconciliation for the sins of the
people.” Hilaskomai, translated here, “to make reconciliation.” If we
were to take the word hilasterion —the word for the Mercy Seat—hilasterion;
and hilascomai means literally “to make expiation of sins, to make
reconciliation with God for our sins, to make atonement, at-one-ment, to make
atonement for our sins”. And that’s the word here; hilasterion,
the Mercy Seat; hilascomai, to make reconciliation, to make atonement to
God for our sins.
And
the author of Hebrews; Oh! He discusses that so marvelously; just the use of
the word brings a flood of Old Testament types and memories and rituals, all of
which were foreshadows and harbingers in earnest of the great atonement of God
for our sins in Christ Jesus. On the Day of Atonement, Yom Kippur as the
Jewish people observe it today, on the Day of Atonement the High Priest took
blood, and the only time in the year he entered into the Holy of Holies, the
Sanctum Sanctorum, and there sprinkled blood of expiation, of atonement, of
reconciliation on the Mercy Seat, the golden seat, the covering of the ark,
where the archangels look full upon it, their overspread wings touching above
it. And the author of Hebrews discussing that said that in the sacrifices that
were offered in the temple ritual there was remembrance again made of sins
every year, “For,” he said, “the blood of bulls and of goats could not take
away sins.” Therefore it was done every year; every year there was a
remembrance of sins. And the offering of blood shed by bulls and goats could
not take away sin. Remember Micah in that famous passage in Micah 6:6-8, the
prophet, in despair almost, cries,
Wherewith
shall I come before God, and bow myself before the great Jehovah? shall I come
before him with burnt offerings, with calves of a year old?
Will
the Lord be pleased with thousands of rams, or ten thousands of rivers of oil?
Yea, shall I give my firstborn for my transgressions, the fruit of my body for
the sin of my soul?
If
I were to offer not a bullock or a ram or a lamb, but if I were to offer my own
firstborn son, the fruit of my body for the sin of my soul, would that wash sin
away? Then the author continues:
It
is not possible that in blood of bulls and of goats sin should be taken away;
but in heaven it was decreed a body hast Thou prepared for Me. Then said I,
—Christ
speaking—
Lo,
I come; in the volume of the Book it is written of Me to do Thy will, O God.
Then follows the offering of Christ, by which will we are sanctified through
the offering of the body of Christ once for all; and there’s no more
remembrance of sin, gone forever.
O
Lord, that I could remember that and believe that. How many times do we bring
before God a sin in days past? Sins of youth, sins of young manhood or young
womanhood, and we still carry them and sometimes mention them before God, when
God says, “In Christ, in His blood, I have forever and forever washed them
away, I have forgotten them.” And when I come before the Lord in remembrance
of them, the Lord says, “What sin? I don’t even remember it. It is washed
away once and for all.” That did God do for us in offering the body of
Christ. The incarnation was the preparation of the atoning sacrifice. For
Christ primeval was spirit, but He became incarnate in a body that in that body
He might make sacrifice, atonement, for our sins. And in that offering God
washes away the stain out of our souls; it is as though we had never sinned, we
are without fault and without blemish in His presence. That did God do for us
in the incarnation. To make a body for God that He might make hilascomai,
atonement, reconciliation, expiation, washing away our sins.
Now,
a third reason why the incarnation: “For in that He Himself hath suffered
being peirazo—translated here, “tempted,” which is all right—actually
the word means “tried”, being tried:
For
in that He Himself hath suffered being tried, He is able to encourage them, to
succour them, to sympathize and understand with them who are tried.” In the
last verses of the fourth chapter he says it like this: “For we have not an
high priest who cannot be touched with the feeling of our infirmities, but was Himself
in all points,
—there’s
that word “peirazo” again—
tried
like as we are, though He without sin. Let us therefore come boldly unto the
throne of grace;
For
He knows and He sympathizes and He understands, for He was a man; He walked in
human flesh just as we are in human flesh.
Let
us come boldly unto Jesus that we may obtain mercy and find grace to help in
time of need.
It’s
a third reason for the incarnation, that God might understand and sympathize
with us, and that we might know of His understanding and His sympathy. He also
endured all the pangs and arrows of an outrageous fortune.
Some
of these Oriental stories out of Oriental lore are sometimes so poignantly
revealing. Here’s one out of that ancient literature. There was an eastern
Oriental monarch who said that when he died that his eldest son would assume
the prerogatives of the throne; but they’d never seen his eldest son and they
did not know his eldest son. And so they asked the monarch, “Who is he? Let
us see him.” And the monarch said, “You do not need to see his face, but you
will know him by the benevolent rule and the graciousness of his reign.” The
days passed and the aged monarch died. And the eldest son came to the throne.
They’d never seen him, they didn’t know him; and he hid his face from them.
But out of the throne there issued streams of kindness and mercy and love for
all of the people; it was a glorious millennial day. And the people could bear
it no more, and they came to the palace and said, “Never such grace, such
understanding, such sympathy, such love, let us, we pray thee, see thy face.
Who art thou?” And the king, the eldest son, the king came forth and stood
before his people. And as they gazed upon him, one man said, “Why, I know
thee, I know thee. When our child was sick and died, you came and stood by our
side. I know thee.” And another said, “I know thee, in the valley of the
shadow of a great trial you were with us and walked with us.” And another
said, “I know thee, when we were poor, you came to comfort and sustain and help
us.” And another, “I know thee, I know thee. In the hour of great need you
were there to comfort and sustain us.” What had happened was the eldest son
and their king had walked among them in disguise, one like them who understood
and who ministered and who sympathized.
I’m
sure that’s just an Oriental story; it never happened, except one time that
happened in Jesus. He lived our life, He walked our ways, and He understands;
He knows all about us, and loves us, and sympathizes with us. Our labors, He
was a carpenter himself, thirty years out of thirty-three He knew the drab
treachery of back breaking toil. Do you notice so many things He’ll say will
refer to that? “Come unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden; take my
yoke upon you,” He used to make yokes the legend says, “take my yoke upon you;
for it’s easy and my burden is light.” He understands our trials, “though he
without sin.” He knows our sufferings and our necessities: He was poor, He
was hungry, He was thirsty; the fifth saying from the cross, “I thirst.”
He
was weary, He was burdened, and He knows our death. And He knows our deep
sorrows. He knows all about us, touched with the feeling of our weakness and
hurts and infirmities. “He came into His own,” the Book says, “and His own
received Him not.” Those who ought to have claimed Him denied Him; those who
ought to have adored Him despised; even those who ought to have loved Him
forsook Him; He knows all about our trials, our temptations, our sorrows.
There
is a song that in its feeling captures that side of Christmas: “Sweet little
Jesus boy, they made Thee to be born in a manger. Precious little holy child,
and we didn’t know who You was…” And I’ve asked Dan Beam to sing it before I
give the invitation in the name of our Lord. “Sweet Little Jesus Boy”.
Sweet
little Jesus Boy, they made You be born in a manger
Sweet
little holy Child, and we didn’t know who You was
Didn’t
know You’d come to save us Lord, to take our sins away
Our
eyes was blind, we couldn’t see, we didn’t know who You was
Long
time ago, You was born
Born
in a manger low, sweet little Jesus boy
The
world treat You mean, Lord, treat me mean too
But
that’s how things is down here, we don’t know who You is
You
done showed us how, we is a’tryin’
Master,
you done showed us how, even when you’s dyin’
Just
seemed like we can’t do right, look how we treated You
But
please Sir, forgive us Lord, we didn’t know it was You
Sweet
little Jesus boy, born long time ago
Sweet
little holy Child, and we didn’t know who You was
[“Sweet
Little Jesus Boy”; Robert MacGimsey]
I
just wanted us, we here in our church, at least to remember that behind the
tinsel, and the tin foil, and the Santa Claus, God says that Christmas was His
way of giving us an open door into glory.
And
the invitation, and God always closes the revelation of His grace with an
invitation, as in Isaiah, “Come, come, incline your ear and hear that your soul
may live;” and he closes it with an invitation, “Let us therefore come boldly,
come boldly that we may obtain mercy, and find grace to help in time of need.”
That’s Christmas. That’s Bethlehem. That’s the incarnation. That’s God.
Come, come, to give your heart to Jesus, to ask Him to forgive your sins and
write your name in the Book of Life, to put your life in the family of this
precious church. In a moment we’ll stand to sing, and while we sing the song,
come. Make the decision now, and on the first note of the first stanza come,
while we stand and while we sing.