“‘Immanuel, God with us.’ It is hell’s terror. Satan trembles at
the sound of it. . . . Let him come to you suddenly, and do you but
whisper that word, ‘God with us,’ back he falls, confounded and
confused. . . . ‘God with us’ is the laborer’s strength. How could he
preach the gospel, how could he bend his knees in prayer, how could the
missionary go into foreign lands, how could the martyr stand at the
stake, how could the confessor own his Master, how could men labor if
that one word were taken away? . . . ‘God with us’ is eternity’s sonnet,
heaven’s hallelujah, the shout of the glorified, the song of the
redeemed, the chorus of the angels, the everlasting oratorio of the
great orchestra of the sky. . . .
"Feast, Christians, feast; you have a right to feast. . . . But in
your feasting, think of the Man in Bethlehem. Let him have a place in
your hearts, give him the glory, think of the virgin who conceived him,
but think most of all of the Man born, the Child given.
"I finish by again saying, A happy Christmas to you all!”
-- C. H. Spurgeon, The Treasury of the Old Testament (London, n.d.), III:430.
HT: Ray Ortlund, Jr.
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