Author: Brad Whitt

2014 goals on digital tabletOk, I admit it - I'm a goal setter. I was just made that way. It's a natural part of my personal makeup. It's not something that I have to struggle through like some of my friends. In fact, it's something that I have to consciously not focus so much on at times. There are times when I have to take a deep breath, step back and realize that relationships are more important than "taking the next hill." (Then, after a friendly talk over coffee, an hour hanging out in the office, or a handshake and hug - I go back to see where I am in the process of reaching the goal.)

This Christmas I want to share a beautiful song written by Rev. George Matheson, "the Blind Bishop of Edinburgh," in the late 1800's.  The words are simply powerful and the theology is tight. He was blessed with a way with words that puts your mind on things above.  I pray it blesses your heart and feeds your soul as much as it has mine.

When we open the pages of our Bible, we encounter what many Christians refer to as “the book of beginnings.” And in Genesis 3:15 I believe that we discover one of the greatest Christmas verses in the entire Bible. The book of Genesis is, of course, the book of “firsts.”  Here we find the first day, the first planet, the first plant, the first ocean, the first mountain, the first animal, the first fish, the first bird, the first man, the first woman, and even the first promise ever given in the Word of God. It’s a powerful, personal promise concerning the coming of Christ into a world that had rebelled against the Father’s command. The result of such disobedience is a fallen, terrible condition which the Bible calls “sin.”  In the wake of this terrible decision, God gives to a subtle, slimy, sneaky serpent (and us as well), “the Promise of Christmas.”

 Yesterday, as we continued in our series of studies through Hebrews 11, we looked at and learned from the life of a man named Isaac. I have to be honest here concerning the life of this man. I found it very difficult to get excited or encouraged about his life. This is true for a couple of reasons. First, I don’t see where he and I have all that much in common. Second, there is not a ton of information concerning his life. Less is said about him than any other patriarch in the pages of the Old Testament. He is very much a very ordinary personality in the pages of our Scriptures. However, no matter how ordinary he may be, we can learn some extraordinary truths from his ordinary life.