The Day of His Coming
It’s come and gone! Do you feel a little deflated?
In the end, Christmas happens so quickly. After all the preparations, it is over and gone almost in a flash, and we now have to wait for another 360-odd days before it comes again with the same excitement and buzz. The post-Christmas feeling can bequite depressing, especially if there is a lot of turkey still to be consumed.
It is true that, if Christmas is only about the nativity of Jesus, His birthday, we can only celebrate that birthday once a year. But Christmas is also about Christ’s incarnation, when ‘the Word became flesh and lived for a while among us’ (John 1.14[NIV]), the Divine taking on human form and being present with us.
Christmas proclaims that we do not have an unconcerned Creator, a God who cannot be bothered about us. Instead, we have a God who comes to us – that is not only the message of the season of Advent leading up to Christmas, but the message
which the Nativity stresses and which also continues right through the year.
As an eminent churchman has said, the proclamation of the Christian Church can be summed up in the two words ‘God comes’. It is not in the past tense, God has come, nor in the future tense, God will come, but in the present tense, God comes.
In its account of the nativity, the Bible tells us that God has come in that special birth in a stable in Bethlehem, 2,000 years ago (Luke 2.8-16). The Bible also tells us that God will come again when Jesus returns (Mark 13.26). But between these two great events, God comes continually to and in those people who, through faith in Jesus as Saviour and Lord, have become part of the body of Christ in the world.
Through the Holy Spirit, He comes continually to redeem and save, to guide and direct, to support and strengthen. Jesus talks about us being ‘born again’ (John 3.3) and St Paul about us being ‘transformed by the renewing of your mind’ (Rom.12.2); both of these are the work of the Holy Spirit as He comes to us.
So, at Christmas, we are not only celebrating Christ’s ‘birthday’ by remembering a historical event, something that happened long ago in Bethlehem, but we are also celebrating the tremendous fact of the incarnation, the fact that ‘God comes’. And that is not just yesterday or tomorrow, but today. The day of His coming is today, and every day, to those who serve Him. Now that is something to clear away the post- Christmas blues.








