december
24, 2003
excerpts from
christmas
by A. W. Pink
"Thus saith the Lord, Learn not the way
of the heathen . . . for the CUSTOMS of the people are vain."
(Jer. 10:1-3)
Christmas is coming! Quite so; but what is
"Christmas?" Does not the very term itself denote
its source - "Christ-mass." Thus it is of Romish
origin, brought over from Paganism. But, says someone, Christmas
is the time when we commemorate the Savior's birth. It is?
And who authorized such commemoration? Certainly God did
not. The Redeemer bade His disciples "remember"
Him in His death, but there is not a word in Scripture, from
Genesis to Revelation, which tells us to celebrate His birth.
Moreover, who knows when, in what month, He was born? The
Bible is silent thereon. Is it without reason that the only
"birthday" commemorations mentioned in God's Word
are Pharaoh's (Gen. 40:20) and Herod's (Matt. 14:6)? Is this
recorded "for our learning?" If so, have we prayerfully
taken it to heart?
And who is it that celebrates "Christmas?"
The whole "civilized world." Millions who make no
profession of faith in the blood of the Lamb, who "despise
and reject Him," and millions more who while claiming
to be His followers yet in works deny Him, join in merrymaking
under the pretense of honoring the birth of the Lord Jesus.
Putting it on its lowest ground, we would ask, is it fitting
that His friends should unite with His enemies in a worldly
round of fleshly gratification? Does any truly born-again
soul really think that He whom the world cast out is either
pleased or glorified by such participation in the world's
joys? Verily, the customs of the people are vain; and it is
written, "Thou shalt not follow a multitude to do evil"
(Ex. 23:2).
Some will argue for the "keeping of Christmas"
on the ground of "giving the kiddies a good time."
But why do this under cloak of honoring the Savior's birth?
Why is it necessary to drag in His holy name in connection
with what takes place at that season of carnal jollification?
Is this taking the little ones with you out of Egypt (Ex.
10:9,10) a type of the world, or is it not plainly a mingling
with the present-day Egyptians in their "pleasures of
sin for a season?" (Heb. 11:25). Scripture says, "Train
up a child in the way he should go: and when he is old, he
will not depart from it." (Prov. 22:6). Scripture does
command God's people to bring up their children "in the
nurture and admonition of the Lord" (Eph. 6:4), but where
does it stipulate that it is our duty to give the little ones
a "good time?" Do we ever give the children "a
good time" when we engage in anything upon which we cannot
fittingly ask the Lord's blessing?
There are those who do abstain from some of
the grosser carnalities of the "festive season,"
yet are they nevertheless in cruel to the prevailing custom
of "Christmas" namely that of exchanging "gifts."
We say "exchanging" for that is what it really
amounts to in many cases. A list is kept, either on paper
or in memory, of those from whom gifts were received last
year, and that for the purpose of returning the compliment
this year. Nor is this all: great care has to be taken that
the "gift" made to the friend is worth as much in
dollars and cents as the one they expect to receive from him
or her. Thus, with many who can ill afford it, a considerable
sum has to be set aside each year with which to purchase things
simply to send them out in return for others which are likely
to be received. Thus a burden has been bound on them which
not a few find hard to bear.
But what are we to do? If we fail to send
out "gifts" our friends will think hard of us, probably
deem us stingy and miserly. The honest course is to go to
the trouble of notifying them - by letter if at a distance
- that from now on you do not propose to send out any more
"Christmas gifts" as such. Give your reasons. State
plainly that you have been brought to see that "Christmas
merry-making" is entirely a thing of the world, devoid
of any Scripture warrant; that it is a Romish institution,
and that now you see this, you dare no longer have any fellowship
with it (Eph. 5:11); that you are the Lord's "free man"
(I Cor. 7:22), and therefore you refuse to be in to a costly
custom imposed by the world.
What about sending out "Christmas cards"
with a text of Scripture on them? That also is an abomination
in the sight of God. Why? Because His Word expressly forbids
all unholy mixtures; Deut. 22:10, 11 typified this. What do
we mean by an "unholy mixture?" This: the linking
together of the pure Word of God with the Romish "Christ-mass."
By all means send cards, preferably at some other time of
the year, to your ungodly friends, and [at] Christmas too,
with a verse of Scripture, but not with "Christmas"
on it. What would you think of a printed program of a vaudeville
having Isa. 53:5 at the foot of it? Why, that it was altogether
out of place, highly incongruous. But in the sight of God
the circus and the theatre are far less obnoxious than the
"Christmas celebration" of Romish and Protestant
"churches." Why? Because the latter are done
under the cover of the Holy name of Christ; the former are
not.
"But the path of the just is as the shining
light, that shineth more and more unto the perfect day."
(Prov. 4:18) Where there is a heart that really desires to
please the Lord, He graciously grants increasing knowledge
of His will. If He is pleased to use these lines in opening
the eyes of some of His dear people to recognize what is growing
evil, and to show them that they have been dishonoring Christ
by linking the name of the Man of Sorrows (and such He was,
when on earth) with a "Merry Christmas," then join
with the writer in a repentant confessing of this sin to God,
seeking His grace for complete deliverance from it, and praise
Him for the light which He has granted you concerning it.
Beloved fellow-Christian, "The coming
of the Lord draweth nigh." (Jas. 5:8) Do we really believe
this? Believe it not because the Papacy is regaining its lost
temporal power, but because God says so - "for we walk
by faith, not by sight." (2 Cor. 5:7) If so, what effects
does such believing have on our walk? This may be your last
Christmas on earth. During it the Lord may descend from heaven
with a shout to gather His own to Himself. Would you like
to be summoned from a "Christmas party" to meet
Him in the air? The call for the moment is, "Go ye out
to meet Him" (Matt. 25:6) out from a Godless Christendom,
out from the Christ -deserted "churches," out from
the horrible burlesque of "religion" which now masquerades
under His name....
The following extract is from the late C.H.
Spurgeon's exposition of Psa. 81 in the Treasury of David.
"Blow up the trumpet in the new moon,
in the time appointed, on our solemn feast day." (v.
3) Obedience is to direct our worship, not whim and sentiment:
God's appointments gives a solemnity to rites and times
which no ceremonial pomp or hierarchical ordinance could
confer. The Jews not only observed the ordained month, but
that part of the month which had been divinely set apart.
The Lord's people in the olden time welcomed the times appointed
for worship; let us feel the same exultation, and never
speak of the Sabbath as though it could be other than a
'delight' and 'honorable.' Those who plead this passage
as an authority for their man-appointed feasts and fasts
must be moon-struck. We will keep such feast as the Lord
appoints, but not those which Rome or Canterbury may ordain.
'For this was a statute for Israel, and
a law of the God of Jacob.' (v. 4) It was a precept binding
upon all the tribes that a scared person should be set apart
to commemorate the Lord's mercy, and truly it was but the
Lord's due. He had a right and a claim to such special homage.
When it can be proved that the observance of Christmas,
Whitsuntide and other Popish festivals were ever instituted
by a divine statute, we will also attend to them, but not
till then. It is as much our duty to reject the traditions
of men as to observe the ordinances of the Lord."
ed note: while i must admit i'm not really
set one way or another, this is definitely worth considering.
one must wonder why we seem to cherish christmas so much over
easter, when the latter was that which Christ instructed us
to commemorate. perhaps the worldliness of christmas is too
overwhelmingly alluring. |
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