In its fulness, love is the fearless laying down of our lives for another.
Christmas gift
The Name of Jesus – Part Two
And she will have a son and you are to name Him Jesus, for He will save His people from their sins Matthew 1:32
Where ever Jesus went, whatever He was doing, when he would turn to the sound of His name He would be reminded of the reason He had come. At the beginning of Jesus’ ministry in Nazareth when He began to explain that He was coming to fulfill the prophecies of Isaiah, the Bible tells us that they were so angry that they took him out and were ready to through him over a cliff! Yet miraculously Jesus slipped away because “His hour had not yet come” He always had an awareness throughout his ministry and teaching of that approaching hour. He told his brothers one day, “Any time is good for you, but my hour has not yet come”
As Jesus prayed in the garden, struggling with the thoughts of the cross He said, “… should I pray, ‘ Father, save me from this hour.’ ? But this is the very reason I came.” John 12:27 Later when he finished praying he went back to the disciples and found them sleeping he said, “…Are you still sleeping and resting? Look the hour has come…” 
All that God had promised in the name Jesus was fulfilled as Jesus began the terrible process of paying for our sins. He was determined that no obstacle would keep him back. He accepted no protection and looked for no escape. To the very end Jesus was true to His Name – the Name that is now above all names. Jesus is the name before which every knee will bow in both heaven and earth. It is a mighty name. It is a name that gives hope in dark places. Jesus is a name that brings healing and a name that forgives sins. Jesus is the name that never loses power and it is the name given for us all! Jesus is the name given just for you. Jesus is the name of Christmas!
Re-gifting!
Because Corinth was a wealthy city filled with business activity it possibly compares most closely to our modern Western church than any of the others. The Corinthians were opinionated, trendy and fell easily for some of the attractions of the world around them. But these people who struggled with more issues than most of the other churches combined also held a special place in the heart of the Apostle. He not only devoted two of his longest letters to them, he also visited them often and built a father/son relationship with many of them. When Paul corrects he tells them he did so with tears and concern. In his first letter one of the issues he addressed was their pride. There were brothers and sisters in their church who began to act as if they were better than others. They got their noses a bit up into the air because they felt they were more talented more wealthy and more gifted by God. Paul finds himself forced to remind these people that they shouldn’t consider themselves as the source of their gifts. Rather than being self-sufficient they were instead supposed to remember that anything they had to give had first been given to them.
Whenever the subject of re-gifting comes up at the holidays, I find myself torn. On one side of the debate are those who say “What a cheap skate!” and on the other “Why buy things that people don’t need with money we don’t have?” The Apostle Paul enters into a debate just to remind us that there is nothing that we have or ever will that originated with us. We are in fact simply recipients of so much that we can do nothing else as God’s children but to give to others what has been given first to us! So don’t be ashamed to be a re-gifter! Tell your friends and family this Christmas. I am just giving a little to you of the many things that I already received!


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