The words of the song sank deep and
reminded me that God didn’t have to send us a baby in a manger. That baby
didn’t have to give up residency in Heaven and lay down in the dirt where
animals slept. He could have stayed where He was and done one of two
things—revealed to us in a loud voice that we must follow Him, or else just wiped us out.
But neither of those plans would have suited
Him. He made us in His image, and so we can’t be obliterated—not really. He’s
eternal, so we’re eternal. And using His outside voice isn’t exactly in His
nature either. At least not when it comes to redeeming His children.
So did He have to come as a baby and
live like a peasant and die like a criminal? We can’t answer that question.
It’s what He did. He did it for us. He did it for Himself. But he could have just let it ride. We—the whole human
race—would have burned ourselves out eventually and existed eternally apart
from Him. That’s what would have happened if He didn’t do what He did.
The angels made an announcement that
night—whenever it was. “Good tidings of
great joy.” And then a light came on. Maybe the whole sky lit up. Maybe the light
burned in the hearts of those who heard the angels’ cry. Maybe it was just a
low glow in the souls of all mankind. A spark to ignite future generations. A
glimmer to remind creation that redemption had come at last. Whatever it was,
our dark world got interrupted by His glory. Halleluiah.
He could have left the light off—said, “Nobody’s home. Not for you, lost world.” But He didn’t.
Chorus from that new song—one I hope we
hear again in our church next Christmas:
You
could have stayed on high,
But
you came into our night.
Came
to give us light. Came to give us light.
( written by Beka
Burns)
Beautiful devotional and beautiful words to the song, too. Thanks for sharing, Victoria.
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