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Christmas: Why is it important that God became Flesh?
Dec 24, 2001 | xzins

Posted on 12/24/2001 8:05:12 AM PST by xzins

The Bible says, "The Word Became Flesh".....God became flesh, human. The incarnation.

Why is this important to the average joe? Any opinions, reflections, stories are welcome.


TOPICS: Miscellaneous; Your Opinion/Questions
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1 posted on 12/24/2001 8:05:13 AM PST by xzins
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To: xzins
Bread of life
2 posted on 12/24/2001 8:08:40 AM PST by damnlimey
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To: xzins
In order to expiate our sins(mankind)and ransom our souls,God Almighty sent His only Son to earth to be conceived as a human-being.His purpose was to teach,lead by example,and to be put to death(in order to be raised up on the third-day to conquer death itself).
3 posted on 12/24/2001 8:21:58 AM PST by bandleader
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To: xzins
Hi there xzins.

God had to become like one of us...tempted by everything we are and yet He couldn't sin...not even once. That's why Satan tried to tempt Jesus with everything that he could.

Jesus is our Passover Lamb. If you're aware of the Passover story. He had to die as a spotless Lamb without a flaw or blemish. In order that we might be saved.

Without Jesus's shed blood there couldn't be forgiveness for our sins. When God looks at a saved sinner all He see's is Jesus's blood covering us.

4 posted on 12/24/2001 8:37:19 AM PST by Ready2go
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To: xzins
It was necessary for God to become flesh to fulfill the requirements of The Law, that we, being a fallen human could not do for ourselves. God gave the Law to teach man about Holiness and to point out our need. Since we are all fallen, or sinners, we could never save our selves. Not one of us can totally keep or fulfill the Law, no matter how hard we tried (though most of the time we never even try). Christ came, the Messia or Savior, to fulfill that law. When we put our faith in Him, as our Savior, we are accepting the work he came to do and God then attributes His sacrifice to our debt.
5 posted on 12/24/2001 8:45:21 AM PST by Southern Fury
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To: Southern Fury
��5{��������m feeling down because of someone else's meanness or unfair behavior, I think of the pain and suffering that He endured at hands of sinful and stupid humanity.

One of the lessons I take from Him is that all else passes, love alone endures.

6 posted on 12/24/2001 8:52:45 AM PST by jacquej
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To: bandleader, damnlimey, Ready2go, Southern Fury
I've always thought that the logic of the idea was difficult to sustain except for the simple, "so we can know that God truly knows what it's like to be human." So He can "show me the way out of this mess" also is easily followed logically.

While I believe that Christ was the sacrifice for our sins, I cannot completely follow the logic of it. Why did He have to die, for example, just because I sinned? Why is it logical for God to forgive me because Jesus sacrificed himself on the cross. It seems like God would've been really pleased with Jesus, but that I'm still standing there looking pretty dirty.

It's like if my brother came to the Judge to offer to take the penalty for my reckless driving conviction. The judge might be impressed with my brother's love, but he'd still have to consider that I was THE ONE WHO had broken the reckless driving law. Not to mention that I would need retraining in driving.

7 posted on 12/24/2001 8:58:40 AM PST by xzins
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To: xzins
Christ is our sacrafice for our sins....God doesn't want us to go to hell for our sins, so He sent his Son to die on the cross, so that if we believe this, we are saved and will go to Heaven...
8 posted on 12/24/2001 9:00:20 AM PST by Uglywhiteguy
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To: Uglywhiteguy
see post #7. Thanks for your reply.
9 posted on 12/24/2001 9:01:18 AM PST by xzins
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To: xzins
Just tacking on here.

Firstly thank you for the thread, as someone who sometimes struggles with such things and has arrived at my search rather late in life I find the questions and answers helpful.

But it raises a point that I've not been able to resolve nor have I found anyone who can.

If indeed Jesus died for our sins so that if we believe in him we will go to heaven when do we go to heaven? When we die?

I find this at odds with things like the various creeds that proclaim that Jesus will return to judge the living/quick and the dead/raise the dead (depending on the creed). If we're in heaven (or hell) who is going to be /judgedraised?

Any references, clarifications, discussions etc. would be greatly appreciated.

10 posted on 12/24/2001 9:14:55 AM PST by Proud_texan
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To: xzins
St. Thomas Aquinas studied this issue extensively, and the conclusion he reached was that God did NOT have to become flesh. Because is all-powerful, He could have redeemed the human race simply by exercising His will.

The conclusion that St. Thomas reached was that the Incarnation had a secondary purpose, and that purpose was to provide an example for mankind of supreme humility and compassion. From a human perspective, nothing could be more "humiliating" than for an all-powerful, immortal God to assume a mortal body and become a part of His own creation.

Interestingly, I find that the story of Satan's temptation of Christ is the most compelling evidence in Scripture of this view. Satan offers three distinct temptations, and in every instance Christ refuses them in a manner that does not require him to "use" any supernatural powers.

11 posted on 12/24/2001 9:25:49 AM PST by Alberta's Child
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To: Proud_texan
I recommend you read C. S. Lewis for an easy read and insightful answer to these questions. Mere Christianity, Lewis's most popular book, is really three books in one: 1. "Right and Wrong as a Clue to the Meaning of the Universe," 2. "What Christians Believe," and 3. "Christian Behavior," all adapted from a series of radio lectures. The book's title comes from Lewis's attempt to strip Christianity of all that is nonessential, getting down to the "mere" basics of what it means to be a Christian.
12 posted on 12/24/2001 9:26:43 AM PST by cebadams
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To: xzins
It was only the sacrifice of a perfect human (i.e. a human without sin) and the assumption of our sins by that sacrifice that could fulfill God's requirement for the salvation of mankind. God became flesh so that the perfect human (Jesus Christ) could live, teach, be sacrificed, and be resurrected - all so that our sins are forgiven. No other sacrifice could meet God's requirement of perfection.

That is why Christ was required to be born, die, and live again.

13 posted on 12/24/2001 9:28:53 AM PST by jimkress
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To: Proud_texan
Try http://rbthieme.org/
14 posted on 12/24/2001 9:31:01 AM PST by jimkress
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To: Proud_texan
when do we go to heaven?

It's figurative. The Kingdom of Heaven is the issue. The 8 Beatitudes explain this to some degree.

15 posted on 12/24/2001 9:35:52 AM PST by RightWhale
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To: xzins
While I believe that Christ was the sacrifice for our sins, I cannot completely follow the logic of it. Why did He have to die, for example, just because I sinned? Why is it logical for God to forgive me because Jesus sacrificed himself on the cross. It seems like God would've been really pleased with Jesus, but that I'm still standing there looking pretty dirty.

Well, we know from the Bible that "the wages of sin is death." So apart from Christ, all men are sinners deserving of death and eternal punishment. The reason Jesus had to come as God incarnate is so that he could be our substitute. On the cross, Jesus willingly took on every single individual sin that his people have ever committed...he took on every sin nature....and in those moments, he took upon himself God's judgment of US. This is the miracle of the incarnation and the cross. It was both a supernatural and a human act that broke the power of sin and satisfied God's justice. This is part of Jesus' cry from the cross, "My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?" At that moment, God turned his back on his own son because of the sin he took upon his own sinless person...in this, Jesus endured God's wrath and God turning away from him, so that God could turn his face toward us.

By the life that he lived, we are clothed in His righteousness (because he fulfilled the law we were unable to) and in His sacrifice, our sins are washed away.

This is a gift that could only come through someone who was perfectly human and perfectly God, both at the same time.

The reason that Christ HAD to be both God and man was so that his humanity could "stand in" for us and could satisfy God's justice. God cannot go against his own nature and righteousness, so Jesus satisfies God's justice on our behalf, but he also mediates God's mercy and grace to us. Mercy, grace and justice all meet at the cross of Christ.

Amazing Grace indeed!!

-penny

16 posted on 12/24/2001 9:42:36 AM PST by Penny1
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To: xzins
It's important because the very idea of it is the most transformational concept ever devised. Even if you view "religion" as merely a useful construct for passing on family history and forming aesthetic tastes--the idea that god became man has far-reaching consequenses for political and social practices.

By re-alligning man's relationship with the all powerful "god in the sky", we radically alter all our notions of the individual's relationship to earthly authority--and vice versa, of course.

Which is why Christianity will, inevitably become the targetted enemy of the New World Order. It has to be. This is also why you find that global capitalists, left-wing radicals and bureacratic/mangerial functionaries have an affection for Islam. When you see all those men with their foreheads on the ground you should meditate upon the underlying assumptions about authority and the individual human's place in the hierarchy of the universe that such a physical posture betrays.

And all because Christians were able to fashion a brilliant melding of Jewish, classical Greek/Roman, and European pagan practices around the person of Jesus and his followers.

We also see, as the visigoth Ruling Elite tears us further and further away from our cultural heritage, certain loathsome Christian heresies have taken root. A sort of de-naturing of the faith is taking place--the anti-intellectual demands of a commercialized, democratic society--and the person of Jesus is subtly downplayed in favor of the Old Testament psycopath who is so beloved to so many "law and order" types.

Consequently the American people are much more bovine and complacent in the face of the grotesqely huge Imperial interventionist police/welfare state that now "protects" them from "evil" at home and abroad.

As Montiverdi so brilliantly puts it in "Christe, Redemptor Omnium":

"Christe, Redemptor omnium,
Quem lucis ante originem,
Parem paternae gloriae,
Pater supremus editit,

Memento, rerum Conditor,
Nostri quod olim corporis,
Sacrate ab alvo Virginis,
Nascendo, formam sumpseris...."

When a human being can stand upright under the sun and adress his "god" in this fashion it has revolutionary implications....

Merry Christmas. On to the barricades...

17 posted on 12/24/2001 9:43:00 AM PST by LaBelleDameSansMerci
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To: bandleader
Excellent answer...
18 posted on 12/24/2001 9:43:20 AM PST by wwjdn
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To: xzins
It's not.
19 posted on 12/24/2001 9:44:02 AM PST by Psycho_Bunny
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To: Proud_texan
Good questions...To be absent from the body is to be with the Lord...The modern "scholars" will tell you that the bible is inaccurate...So when you read the passages speaking of the Judgement seat of Christ as compared to the Great White Throne Judgement of God, you will be told they are the same thing...Oh, the gems that modern scholars don't get!!!When you die, your soul will immediately go to heaven (if you are a saved, born again Christian)...You will be a partaker of the great feast which is called the Marriage Supper of the Lamb...You will be what is called the Bride of Christ...

During the Great Tribulation, you will come back with Jesus as his army to fight against the un-Godly...And of course, you and Jesus will prevail, mightily...

When you get to heaven, you will be judged by Jesus on "what you did for Him as a Christian"...The Bible says that what you did on earth that didn't produce good for God, will be burned...What you did that was good, you will be rewarded for...

At the White Throne Judgement, everyone WILL confess that Jesus is Lord, before they are cast into outer darkness to the lake of fire....The two are not the same...

Many will disagree with what I just said...My only advice to you or anyone is, Don't let someone "educate" you out of the Bible...

20 posted on 12/24/2001 9:45:25 AM PST by Iscool
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