The Briefing with Albert Mohler - Friday, December 20, 2024
Episode Date: December 20, 2024This is The Briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.Part I (00:13 - 14:06)A Protestant Christmas: How Protestants Came to Celebrate the Incarnation of Christ as Christ...masPart II (14:06 - 17:45)How Do We Understand Promise and Fulfillment in Matthew’s Use of Hosea 11:1? — Dr. Mohler Responds to Letters from Listeners to The BriefingPart III (17:45 - 21:34)In Light of Jesus’s Fulfillment of the Law, Are Christians Still Required to Keep the Mosaic Law? — Dr. Mohler Responds to Letters from Listeners to The BriefingPart IV (21:34 - 23:09)Why Do We Not Sing More Hymns About the Incarnation Throughout the Year, Like We Do with the Resurrection? — Dr. Mohler Responds to Letters from Listeners to The BriefingPart V (23:09 - 24:14)Can a Baby Fuss Without Sin? — Dr. Mohler Responds to Letter from a (Probably Sleep-Deprived) Listener to The BriefingPart VI (24:14 - 25:31)If Jesus was Born on Christmas, How Was He Around While Adam and Eve Lived? — Dr. Mohler Responds to a Letter from a 6-Year-Old Listener to The BriefingPart VII (25:31 - 29:30)How Should Christians Celebrate Christmas While Also Separating It From Any Pagan Origins? — Dr. Mohler Responds to Letters from Listeners to The BriefingSign up to receive The Briefing in your inbox every weekday morning.Follow Dr. Mohler:X | Instagram | Facebook | YouTubeFor more information on The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, go to sbts.edu.For more information on Boyce College, just go to BoyceCollege.com.To write Dr. Mohler or submit a question for The Mailbox, go here.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's Friday, December 20, 2024. I'm Albert Moller, and this is the briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.
Now, the way the year works is that today is the last kind of normal day of business for most people here in the United States.
Now, there are those, of course, whose lives don't accommodate that kind of schedule, who are in medical fields or in special fields that simply do not allow for that kind of holiday observance.
But when it comes to the school,
when it comes to most businesses, when it comes to the world of finance even and so many things,
there is a pause that is about to go into effect.
And that pause is because of what the secular world calls the holidays,
but what we as Christians refer to as Christmas.
Now, I just want to point out there is an awful lot of hypocrisy and confusion about Christmas in the secular culture.
But let's put a pause on that for a moment, and let's just think about Christians at Christmas.
You know, I think one thing that was surprised many Christians is to understand that.
that for at least a lot of Christian history,
and in particular, in more recent Christian history,
Christmas has been controversial.
And in particular, it was controversial
in the tradition of the Puritans.
The Puritans on both sides of the Atlantic
were quite concerned about worldly amusements
and worldly pleasures,
and they were quite concerned about anything
that would approach something like a Roman Catholic festival,
something like the old Roman Catholic holy days.
and so there was the fear that the observation of Christmas would come with several theological errors and spiritual missteps,
that it would come as something like a festival day in the sense that you had the Saints days and all the rest in the old Roman Catholic calendar.
And you had people who cared a lot more about the calendar than they did about the substance of the Christian faith.
And so there was the sense that every day is a day unto the Lord.
Every Lord's day is to be respected as the Lord's Day.
and there are to be no real special observances otherwise.
And then there were also those who were pretty radical in their Protestantism,
who feared that the observation of a Christian year was, A, perhaps rooted in paganism,
and B, certainly rooted in Catholic tradition.
And so you had more radical Protestants who said that as you look at Christmas,
one of the problems is that in historic terms,
you've had many pagan societies and other societies that have a winter festival,
and they have a spring festival,
and both of them come with attendant dangers,
especially since,
and by the way,
this is perhaps even more true
of what is called Easter,
more properly called the Festival of the Resurrection
on the Christian calendar.
It's even more true there,
because let's just say
that many civilizations
coming up with some kind of festival
for the spring,
and made it a festival of procreation and reproduction,
and I'll just leave it at that and say,
you do the math.
But coming back to Christmas,
the Puritans were quite concerned
about the continuation of that kind of paganism, and they saw it directly in conduit with the Roman Catholic
observation of Christmas and of Easter, the masses that were held, also the festivals that were
held, and so they basically said this is wrong. The larger Protestant tradition was not an
agreement with that, but the larger Protestant Reformation tradition was concerned about the integrity
of Christmas. Now, one of the interesting things, by the way, is that what we consider Christmas as an
observation with a Christmas tree and all the kinds of decorations of evergreen and all the rest.
That is actually more European than it was properly English, and it was particularly German and
particularly rooted in the Protestant Reformation Luther's Reformation in Germany.
Now, one of the interesting things in the Reformation is that you had Martin Luther there
in Wittenberg there in Germany leading the Lutheran Reformation you would later have, for example,
John Calvin in Geneva, leading the Reformed Protestant movement.
the more Calvinistic movement.
And especially when you look at the Lutheran Reformation,
one of the distinctions between the Lutheran Reformation
and the Calvinist Reformation there in Geneva
was the fact that the Lutheran Reformation,
Martin Luther himself, maintained much of the church calendar.
Luther even allowed for the observation of Saints days.
And Luther also allowed for something that was, say,
beyond a normal Protestant admiration for Mary.
And I would say one of the reasons why is because Luther was very much a medieval man.
He was very much a Catholic man until he came to Reformation convictions.
And Luther himself did not take the Reformation in every aspect to its logical conclusion.
And that was something that, by the way, is not particularly a criticism.
I think it's just an observation.
You know, Luther, on the front end of the Reformation, he was having to fight for justification by faith alone, the principle of scripture alone.
The holidays would wait.
but it is really interesting that the German traditions having to do with Christmas
and the Christmas celebration, they had a great deal to do with the development of what became a Christmas tree
and the ornamentation with evergreens and all the rest and the festivals.
And the Christmas tree itself came to Great Britain largely as a German import
and largely through a German prince.
And that would be Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg Gotha, who was, of course,
the husband to Queen Victoria, or the woman who became Queen Victoria.
And as you understand that Victoria, who by the way, had a lot of German background already,
she married a German prince. The German prince comes over as Prince Albert,
and by the way, it is a royal love story, a true one. They were genuinely in love with one another.
Victoria never got over the early death of Prince Albert or Albert the Prince Consort, her husband.
and by the way, they had a very large family that was a part of the dynastic ambitions of monarchy,
and Victoria and Albert were very productive when it came to children,
and they had a lot of young children in the palace.
The habit of the British aristocracy at the time was that you had adults who ate
and who celebrated very much separate from their children.
If you had enough money, your children were not seen.
Your children were not a part of the celebration.
The parents would eat with other adults and some great big.
dining hall and the children would be taken care of by nannies and other servants.
That was not the way it was in Germany with a far more familial context. By the way, not only
of Christmas, but of larger week, as a matter of fact, just normal life. It was far more
familial in that sense among the German nobility than among the British or the English
aristocracy. But now you have Victoria married to Albert and Albert brought those German
traditions not only into England. He brought those German traditions right into Buckingham Palace
and other royal residences, right down to a Christmas tree. And by the way, on both sides of the
Atlantic, there was a revolution that was brought by Prince Albert. And that revolution came with
the use of the Christmas tree. This was a legitimizing aspect. If Prince Albert and Queen Victoria
can have a Christmas tree, then so can I. So can the rest of us. But the really amazing thing is that
Prince Albert arranged for an illustrator to be able to draw an illustration of Queen Victoria
and Queen Albert with their children celebrating Christmas. That was earth-shaking. That changed the
perception of Christmas in much of the English-speaking world. And on both sides of the Atlantic,
it became a very well-known illustration. It was widely published in both the United States and in
Great Britain, and it legitimated the use of the Christmas tree. And it brought a very German Christmas
into a lot of family life, a lot of cultural life in the United States, when most people had no idea.
This had been imported from Germany. They had less of an idea that it was Prince Albert, who was in
many ways the vector for that influence. By the way, if you look at the British version of that
illustration and you look at the American version of that illustration, a couple of things
will pop out at you. Number one, it's rather odd that Queen Victoria is entirely in regal regalia
for a family Christmas.
But nonetheless, that's the way the illustration was made
because that's the way you drew Queen Victoria.
But the other thing is that in the British illustration,
Prince Albert is in head-to-toe military uniform.
In the American illustration, he's in civilian clothes.
We'll take the German Christmas.
Thank you.
We'll leap behind the German militarism.
But I want to go back to Luther for a moment.
I want to say a part of the sweetness of Martin Luther
is Martin Luther's,
Luther's understanding of Christmas, a part of the sweetness of Martin Luther, and it really is a sweet. It's a sweetness of his theology. It's the sweetness of his devotional life. It's a sweetness of the hymnody that he produced. It is deeply rooted in his Christian faith, in his Reformation doctrine, in his understanding of why we celebrate Christmas. And so he wrote widely on Christmas. He wrote widely on the incarnation of the Lord Jesus Christ. And remember that among the solos of the Reformation, it is not only great,
alone and faith alone. It is not only scripture alone. It's not only ultimately to the glory of God
alone. It is also Christ alone. It is the work of Christ alone that saves. Christ is the one mediator
between God and sinners. And that's the amazing fact of Christmas that Martin Luther wanted to point
to. It is the word become flesh. It is the word become flesh for our salvation.
And as I said, Martin Luther was very tender towards Mary, just thinking about this young woman, very young woman, on whom such responsibility had fallen, and this young woman who gives us such an illustration of faithfulness, he also pointed to the faithfulness of Joseph after the angelic message had come to him in a dream.
You shall call his name Jesus, for he shall save his people from their sins.
after the Reformation when you come to more modern times there's been a theological assault upon
Christmas we often think of the secular assault on Christmas we need to think about the theological
assault upon Christmas there's been an assault upon the doctrine of Christ there has been an
assault upon the biblical teachings concerning the incarnation there's been an assault upon every
aspect of Christ's life including his bodily resurrection from the dead but there is also
a denial a subversion of the doctrine of
Christ when it comes to how he came to be born of Mary and Bethlehem.
The doctrine of the virgin conception of Christ.
That's the best way to put it.
We'll call it the virgin birth because that's what it's commonly called.
But the most important aspect of the doctrine of the virgin birth is that Jesus was conceived
in Mary by the Holy Ghost.
So it is the conception that is the most important issue here.
And you know back in the 19th century, continuing, of course, unto our own times, going back
to the rise of theological liberalism in the 19th century,
there are so many people who said,
I want the sweet Jesus and his morality.
I don't want all this claims about virgin births
and bodily resurrections from the dead.
But as the Apostle Paul told us and warned us,
going all the way back to the first century,
all the way back to the book of 1 Corinthians,
if indeed Christ is not raised from the dead,
bodily raised from the dead,
then we are still dead in our sins and our trespasses.
And by the way, I think there's a very clear reference
to the virgin birth in the writings
of the Apostle Paul in Galatians chapter four. But I just want to state that if Jesus Christ was
not conceived within Mary by the Holy Ghost, by the Holy Spirit, then we have an equally large problem.
It's really important that we understand that even as Jesus Christ became man, he was born that
man no more may die, but we must also recognize that it is of utmost importance that we take
Christmas as a whole, that we affirm all that the scripture reveals concerning Christ,
and not only his birth, but of course, every single detail,
but his birth right down to every single detail.
Nothing is extraneous, nothing is unnecessary,
all of it is true, and all of it is glorious.
Some of the most glorious truths revealed in Scripture
concerning the incarnation of Christ and the biblical accounts of the birth of Christ,
the larger meaning, the incarnation that come down to hymns,
and indeed some of the hymns and songs we refer to as Christmas carols.
I just want to give a word of encouragement here.
I'm not saying that there is nothing good
that has been written in terms of Christmas music
in the last 100 years, in the last 200 years,
in the last 300 years, that is not what I am saying.
I am saying this, especially in the English hymnic tradition,
in the metrical hymn Christmas Carol tradition,
there is a tradition of Christian doctrine
in the story of the birth of Christ that is carried through
not only in words but in music that joined together
have been passed down from generation to generation.
Those so-called traditional Christmas carols include rich theological content.
And furthermore, even just hearing the melody line of those carols immediately strikes a doctrinal and a spiritual note in our hearts.
I'm not saying don't sing any modern music.
I'm saying do sing the traditional carols.
Do sing the traditional Christmas hymns.
Sing them often, sing them in full, and sing them.
loudly. And please do not allow your children to be raised without knowing those Christmas hymns,
knowing immediately what they mean and knowing how much they mean to you, and you hope by God's
grace one day to them. All right, I'm going to transition with that word of exhortation to questions,
and we received a lot of questions, not coincidentally, about the incarnation and about Christmas.
So let's turn to those. Okay, the first question is from,
Portland, Oregon, listener says, I have a question that is related to the Christmas story in
Jesus' life as a baby. He cites Matthew chapter 2, verse 15, which tells us that they remained
in Egypt until the death of Herod, quote, that it might be fulfilled, which was spoken of the Lord
by the prophet, saying, out of Egypt, I have called my son. End quote. He then says, in this verse,
Matthew understands that this aspect of Jesus' life as an infant fulfills Hosea 111. In terms of
understanding prophecy and fulfillment, how do you understand this to work? Do you think this would have been
in Josea's mind at all? Or do you think it's something that Matthew sees that Jose did not? Now, okay,
this is something Christians have had to think through and reason in terms of scriptural reasoning about
for centuries, for a very long time. And it is an especially interesting issue in the gospel of Matthew.
Because Matthew will tell us this took place in order that scripture may be fulfilled. And there's
several aspects of that in which you look at the scripture that's being cited there and you realize
this is not what the first readers of that text or the first hearers of that text was thinking about.
So is that legitimate or illegitimate? I think the best way to understand this is that it is
quite clear in scripture there is a dual fulfillment of some prophecies. And you say, well,
which ones? Well, the one scripture tells us have a dual fulfillment. That's the ones.
In other words, this is another indication of the perfection of scripture.
We understand that this was in fulfillment of Hosea chapter 11 verse 1 out of Egypt I've called my son,
specifically because the Holy Spirit inspired Matthew to tell us this.
And the Holy Spirit would not lie to us.
The Holy Spirit is conveying to us the inerrant and fallible, unchanging truth of God's word.
And so this does remind us that in the pattern of promise and fulfillment,
which is the larger pattern scripture, there are other patterns,
but the overarching pattern is promise and fulfillment.
There was a proximate and a more distant fulfillment
that honestly we would not know to connect
except for the Holy Spirit connecting the proximate
and the ultimate fulfillment
by revealing these things to Matthew
and Matthew conveying these things in his gospel.
But Matthew does convey these things in the gospel
and thus they are unquestionably true.
And not only that, our knowledge is for our prophet.
And it is a reminder of the power of the prophetic word,
in these situations in which it was even more powerful than was understood at the time, and its
fulfillment was even more glorious than was understood at the time. There was approximate,
and in some cases, an ultimate fulfillment of Scripture, and this just points to the wonder
and the power of God's prophecy. The words he gave through the prophets, it turns out that
the fulfillment is even more glorious than was understood at the time, and even more glorious
than was understood, at least we might suspect, on the part of the prophet himself. Remember
that God is speaking through the prophet in such a way that when we say,
Josea speaks this, we fully mean that God speaks this.
I do appreciate the question.
The question is grounded in a very careful reading of Scripture,
and it's grounded in an understanding that the Scripture is the Word of God.
So how do we understand these things?
We remember that it is God's Word,
and I believe that God uses His Word in such a way
that the Holy Spirit will apply the Word of the Apostle Paul,
say to a congregation when a text on the Apostle Paul is preached
that goes beyond what even the Apostle Paul may have known
at the time would have such an effect.
Now, okay, another very interesting question,
and this one's grounded in a situation I think we can all sort of see.
So let's see this.
Quote, yesterday we had Christmas dinner with my in-laws,
and the conversation of the law of Moses came up.
I am of the belief that Jesus came to fulfill the law,
law. My father law says it's blasphemy to say such a thing and that according to Jesus we are to
continue to uphold the law of Moses to this day. Can you clarify the above topic? By the way, he says that
he was born and raised in the context of the Southern Baptist Convention. His father-in-law was
born and raised a Catholic, but here's what he says, has gone in and out of multiple denominations
and YouTubers throughout the last 10 years. End quote. Okay, we got the picture. We can see it now. So who's
right, this man says that Christ came to fulfill the law and his father-in-law says,
is blasphemy to say such a thing and that according to Jesus, we are to continue to uphold the law of
Moses to this day. Okay, well, I don't like the way this is presented to me in terms of the fact
I can't be satisfied with the either or here. And I don't think you should be either. So did Jesus come
to fulfill the law? Well, not only did Jesus come to fulfill the law, he perfectly fulfilled the law.
So in that sense, yes, that's exactly right.
Well, if you believe, quote, I am of the belief that Jesus came to fulfill the law, end quote,
then you are of the right belief because Jesus did come to do that and perfectly did that.
So we are now free from the law in that sense.
Those who are in Christ are no longer under the condemnation of the law.
Okay.
The father law says that according to Jesus, we are to continue to uphold the law of Moses to this day.
Well, there we have to ask the question.
Is that right or wrong?
And that the answer is, yes, it's right or wrong.
That's just to say, it's not exactly right and it's not exactly wrong, but he is on to something here.
So let me tell you what's wrong about this or what's not right about this.
Because Jesus didn't say that we are to continue to uphold the law of Moses.
And remember, the law of Moses is more comprehensive than the moral law.
It would also refer to the dietary law.
It would refer to the calendar law.
It would refer to the criminal and penal law.
I'll just say, I don't think that's what the father law is insisting on here.
I think he's more concerned with the moral law.
And I'll simply say that in that sense, your father-in-law is correct.
If what the younger man says, the son-in-law means that Jesus came to fulfill the law,
now we are under no law.
Okay, this is where I want to say to both the son-in-law and the father-in-law,
Christ did perfectly fulfill the law.
And we are saved only because Christ perfectly fulfilled the law.
but we are not under no law.
We are no longer under the law of Moses.
We are under the law of Christ.
And in the New Testament, we have the recapitulation of the moral commands in such a way that there is no doubt that when Jesus said he came not to break but to fulfill the law, he has left for us no less a moral law.
But it is for us no longer merely a matter of the externals, but it is also a matter of internal elites.
and obedience to the law of Christ.
So that's the quick answer.
If I have got to come between this son-in-law and this father-in-law,
I want to make peace by pointing to the gospel of Jesus Christ,
in which Christ clearly is to be confessed and worshipped as the one who has perfectly
fulfilled the law.
But we are now not under the law of Moses in that sense,
but we are not under a law.
We're under the law of Christ.
and our obedience to that law is a matter of internal and not merely external accountability.
Okay, another question.
Young man writes in, number one, why don't we sing more Christmas music year round?
We sing about the resurrection often, but why not Jesus's arrival?
That's a good question.
And there is no reason that Christmas music should be restricted to Christmas tide.
There is no reason that we should not sing, even some of the music that's most closely
associated, say, with the Christmas celebration at other times of the year. It's also clear
that this listener is absolutely right. We should be singing praises to the one true and living God
for the truth of the incarnation of the Lord Jesus Christ at all times. But I also want to say
there is more explicit reference to Christ and to the incarnation in much of the hymnody,
classic hymnody that is sung all throughout the Christian year. And so I want to say even as the
birth narrative may be missing from some of that hymnody, the incarnation is profoundly not
missing if we're singing the right hymns. One little footnote to that, by the way, the Christmas
Carol, as it is often designated, joy to the world. I'm sure that has immediately come to your
mind now, even as a tune traditionally associated with the hymn. That hymn was primarily
written originally about the second coming of Christ, but is now sung as a Christmas Carol. That is not an
error, but it is an interesting historical point. And by the way, joy to the world, the Lord has come.
Is true when we celebrate Christmas. It's also true when we look forward to his coming again.
Okay. This same listener asks a second question, quote, do we understand Christ's holiness and
perfection to imply he never fussed as a baby is fussing sinful? End quote. You know,
that's a sweet question. I do not have a text or a verse.
to which I can refer you about a fussing Jesus.
I can tell you that he became flesh and then became like us in every way yet without sin.
So you ask me, can a baby fuss without sin?
I'm going to say I'm quite certain, and I don't have chapter and verse on this,
but I'm absolutely certain that a baby being a baby registering hunger because the baby needs to be fed
is not at all necessarily sending in any way by what is called here fussing.
We also understand that a line is crossed when that fussing becomes fussing.
That's a different matter.
I don't have chapter inverse,
but I think anyone who's ever raised a baby understands the difference between fussing and fussing.
Okay, the next question comes from a six-year-old boy through his father.
The little boy asked, quote,
If Jesus was born later in history,
How was he around during Adam and Eve's time?
Father says we've been talking about Christmas and Jesus's birth
and trying to help and understanding the Trinity of Jesus being eternal.
I think I know exactly what you mean here.
I think the point is that we make very clear the pre-existence of Christ.
We make very clear there never has been a time when Christ was not.
We make very clear that the Son of God has been with the Father eternally.
But I think it's also important that we make clear
that at Christmas the Son of God
becomes in a very real sense
the son of man. That is to say,
he assumes human flesh. He is born
as a baby in Bethlehem. That's in space and time
in history. There never was a time when the sun was
not, but there is
a time when Jesus was born.
And you know, those two things are just
equally, profoundly, eternally true.
And as Christians, we believe both
of them. And if a six-year-old boy has
a struggle with that, well, it
might be honest for us all
to admit, this is a
larger truth, a more glorious truth, and we can get our minds around, but we affirm everything
the scripture says, and we praise God for everything he has revealed to us.
Okay, an honest question, and this comes from a student right here at Voice College, and, you know,
I'm going to take it. He asked this, quote, when talking about Christmas, many people talk about
trees, origins, and how that is pagan rather than Christian, how did the two of those conversion
history, what is our responsibility in separating the two now? End quote. Okay, I love the question.
And we're going to deal with it honestly. We're going to have to close with this one. But if a tree
represents paganism to you, do not put it in your house. If a evergreen tree indicates pagan fertility
rights to you, do not put it in your house. And we admit the historic association of those things
and there were pagans. And even closer to us in Germany, in the fours,
of Thuringia. There were certainly druids and others, or druid-like religious patterns among people. Boniface,
the Catholic home, Saint Boniface, the missionary to the Germanic tribes. He was confronted with a
sacred tree, they claimed, and so famously, he took an axe and he cut it down, so much for your
sacred tree. And by the way, in my office, I have a statue. I'm proud to possess of Boniface
I'm not going to call him St. Boniface, but of Boniface, the evangelist, cutting down the tree.
And if a tree is being worshipped, brothers and sisters, cut it down.
But I just want to be honest, and I want to say that even though we know there were pagan associations,
and by the way, that's true with many, many things, many things.
And you see some of this, even in the Old Testament, we do not associate, of course, any such pagan references.
And those pagan references are inseparable.
to our mind, then, again, don't put the Christmas tree in your house. But I think it's also fair to say
that most Christians, most Christians who have Christmas trees in their homes have no idea of a pagan
background or pagan associations, and thus there is no paganism in having that tree in their house
and decorating it for Christmas. There are Christmas trees on this campus. There's a Christmas
tree in our home. Yet, if I thought for a moment there were any pagan associations, what people thought of
it out we go the tree. I appreciate the questions and we have to come to an end. And today is not only
the end of today's edition of the briefing, it is the end before we resume again on January the 6th.
And so we'll be taking a Christmas break here and I hope you're doing the very same thing.
I know the news won't wait. We'll get to it in due time. But we have and I know you have
greater priorities in the days ahead than some of the things we've been thinking about day by day on the briefing.
The world won't wait, but we will, and we'll get back to them and seek to be faithful in that.
But in the meantime, I just want to thank you for listening to the briefing, and I want to say that my prayer
and hope for every single one of you and for your families is that you will have a glorious Christ honoring
Christmas filled with the joy of the gospel and directed to the glory of God.
I'm going to hope that it's a wonderful time for your families and for you.
And I'm going to pray that there will be people in the larger culture
who will come to understand our observation of Christmas
as more than they ever dreamed and come to a saving knowledge of the Lord Jesus Christ.
So thanks for listening to the briefing.
For more information, go to my website at Albertmuller.com.
You can follow me on Twitter by going to Twitter.com forward slash Albert Moller.
For information on the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary,
go to sbtsbts.
For information on Boyce College, just go to BoiseCollist.com.
Lord willing, I'll meet you again on January 6, 2025, for the briefing.
