"FLESH"
"FLESH": Activate Devotion
"The word became flesh, and made his dwelling among
us." - {John 1:14}
Not only did the Son of God become a baby, but also he became
flesh. Divinity joined to corporeal muscle, blood and bones.
In this humbling of the eternal Son of God, the Word who was
with God from the beginning and was God, chose to begin in the way all flesh
does-as a newborn.
But what does "flesh" really mean? Doesn't it sound a
bit crass?
In the Bible, the word "flesh" points to a number of
different realities. Literally, it means "the body," the tissues and
bones and fluids that are common to any human being living anywhere in the
world at any time. The body is the jar of clay in which God has placed
treasures. Consequently, at another level, "flesh" can mean
"humanity" or "human nature."
To speak of "flesh and blood" refers to the humanness
that you share with your family, friends, and people you've never met. And at a
different level, "flesh" can mean "fallen, flawed, human."
"The flesh" is shorthand in Paul's epistles for intrinsic human
nature-broken and fallible. But there is one exception. One human life that was
not flawed and full of sin-Jesus'.
"The word became flesh." It means that the Son of God
became human-really, truly human-with the exception that he had no sin.
Christmas is a time of awe because the best news the human race ever received
was that its Creator had so much love, that he joined the human race to save
it. He is a savior who experienced real hunger, real fatigue, real sorrow. He
faced temptation when the Evil One tempted him in the wilderness with very
"fleshy" things like power, wealth, and authority (Luke 4:1-13).
Jesus knows us,
because he was one of us. Real flesh, but perfect. So on those days when we are
so disappointed with ourselves because we are having a hard time controlling
the flesh, this is the kind of savior to turn to.
by Hope FM on Wednesday, December 28, 2011 at 6:08am ·
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