Ron Hutchcraft Ministries - The Radical Christmas Victory Plan - #6249

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The Radical Christmas Victory Plan - #6249 Print
 
A Word With You - Your Hard Times

Thursday, December 23, 2010

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There's something very special about having a new baby in the family at Christmastime - since it's really all about a baby. And this past Christmas, we had the joy of celebrating with our brand new granddaughter. Well, she didn't actually do much celebrating - she really didn't do much of anything except lie there and look irresistible. Now, in my head, I know that babies are helpless, but being around one for a little while really brings that home. Our little darlin' couldn't eat unless Mommy fed her. She couldn't burp unless someone burped her (that's something that some of us grew up and learned to be quite good at). Our baby couldn't move unless someone moved her; her little hands sort of flailed around - absolutely no ability to control what they did. Helpless.

Well, I'm Ron Hutchcraft and I want to have A Word With You today about "The Radical Christmas Victory Plan."

Now try to get your mind around this: the helpless hands of that little Jewish baby Mary was holding in the manger were the hands that created the galaxies! The Son of God, the second Person of the Godhead, the One of whom the Bible says, "Through Him all things were made" (John 1:3 ). He comes to our planet in a helpless little package that basically can do nothing for Himself. Omnipotence becomes helpless to rescue a world full of dying people. As one song says, "What a strange way to save the world."

Get used to it. It seems to be God's favorite modus operandi. And this radical victory plan - use the weak to do amazing things - can be both an encouragement to you and an explanation for some of your recent struggles. Let's go to our word for today from the Word of God to see the story of that first Christmas from heaven's viewpoint. Philippians 2 , beginning with verse 5, tells us that our attitude "should be the same as that of Christ Jesus."

God goes on to explain that, though Jesus was "in very nature God," He "made Himself nothing" - now picture that helpless, little infant in a cattle stall - "taking the very nature of a servant, being made in human likeness...He humbled Himself and became obedient to death - even death on a cross!" The great plan of God to redeem our world starts with Jesus as a helpless baby in a cattle stall and culminates with Him nailed to a criminal's cross. But Colossians 2:15 announces the crushing triumph won by that "weakness" - it says Jesus disarmed the princes of hell and "made a public spectacle of them, triumphing over them by the cross!" And Michael Card says, "His most awesome work was done through the frailty of His Son!" God loves to win through weakness. Then it's a whole lot of God, and hardly any of us.

That's why He chooses unlikely candidates and does mighty things through them - which means your inadequacy and ordinariness may be exactly what qualifies you to be a spiritual hero. According to Jesus, who is it that will "inherit the earth?" The mighty? No - the meek (Matthew 5:3 ). And about the struggles you've been going through recently. God will do whatever it takes to help us realize our weakness - to break our death grip on the steering wheel and to finally let Him drive - to break that stubborn pride of ours, the self-reliance, our need to control. All so we can finally surrender and let His strength come flooding in. Maybe the battles you've been going through have been to take you beyond yourself and beyond things you can fix, you can solve, or you can figure out - so you'll get out of the way and let God do what only He can do.

A baby wrapped in rags - a bloodied man, hanging on a cross. Vivid pictures of God's radical plan for victory - winning through weakness so everyone will know that the Lord is God!

 

Comments 

 
0 By MARVIN PURSER on December 23, 2010 at 8:49 am
If he came helpless as a baby and depended upon mankind to raise him in the likeness of God, then it was Mary who did the job from the time he was in the manger until he began his ministry at age 30.

That would include sending him to the Essenes in the desert with John the Baptist to be trained as a rabbi.
Then, he refused to be limited by the scriptures and instead spoke with authority and not as the scribes.
We should "Do What Jesus Would Do" and speak with authority.
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+2 By Sra. Susana Franco on December 23, 2010 at 9:17 am
I find extremely risky using "would do this, would happen that..." There's so much with what He's let us already have! Why suppose things that can lead us astray, open doors to paths that seem like leading to life, but ending in death? Today's message makes me want to cry. Wish I were a poet to express my gratitude with beautiful words. Thank you LORD for your servant Ron and for all the people in this ministry. They bless me abundantly and timely. Please reward them as only you can, Amen.
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