Timothy Keller Sermons Podcast by Gospel in Life - Light in the Darkness
Episode Date: December 16, 2024What does Christmas mean? The Old Testament book of Isaiah helps us come to grips with the riches of Christmas. If I could put it in one sentence, it tells us that Christmas means the unexpected, ulti...mate light comes through the God-man, which can only be received by grace. Let’s look at it: Christmas means 1) God does something unexpected, 2) the salvation has to do with the ultimate light, and 3) the hope you get can only be received as a gift of grace. This sermon was preached by Dr. Timothy Keller at Redeemer Presbyterian Church on December 8, 2013. Series: Jesus, Our Hope (Advent). Scripture: Isaiah 9:1-7. Today's podcast is brought to you by Gospel in Life, the site for all sermons, books, study guides and resources from Timothy Keller and Redeemer Presbyterian Church. If you've enjoyed listening to this podcast and would like to support the ongoing efforts of this ministry, you can do so by visiting https://gospelinlife.com/give and making a one-time or recurring donation.
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Thanks for listening to Gospel in Life. Today, Tim Keller is teaching on the surprising expectation-defying
and surpassingly hopeful meaning of the Christmas story. After you listen, we invite you to
go online to Gospelinlife.com and sign up for our email updates. Now here's today's
teaching from Dr. Keller. The scripture this morning is taken from the Book of Isaiah, chapter 9, verses 1 through
7.
Nevertheless, there will be no more gloom for those who were in distress.
In the past, he humbled the land of Zebulun and the land of Naphtala, but in
the future he will honor Galilee of the nations by the way of the sea beyond the Jordan. The
people walking in darkness have seen a great light. On those living in the land of deep
darkness a light has dawned. You have enlarged the nation and increased their joy. They
rejoice before you as people rejoice at the harvest, as warriors rejoice when
dividing the plunder. For as in the day of Midian's defeat, you have shattered
the yoke that burdens them, the bar across their shoulders, the rod of their
oppressor. Every warrior's boot used in
battle and every garment rolled in blood will be destined for burning, will be
fuel for the fire. For to us a child is born, to us a son is given, and the
government will be on his shoulders. And he will be called Wonderful Counselor,
Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace. Of the greatness of his
government and peace there will be no end. He will reign on David's throne and
over his kingdom, establishing and upholding it with justice and
righteousness from that time on and forever
The zeal of the Lord Almighty will accomplish this. This is the word of the Lord
So we're looking this Christmas season at a number of
Classic texts in the Old Testament book of Isaiah
number of classic texts in the Old Testament Book of Isaiah to help us come to grips with
the depths of the riches of the meaning of Christmas. And this is perhaps the most famous of the famous passages in the Book of Isaiah that helps us understand what Christmas means.
And if I could put it in one sentence, though I'll break it into several points,
is this is telling us that Christmas means
an unexpected, the unexpected ultimate light
through the God man, which can only be received by grace.
Unexpected ultimate light
that comes through the God man and can only be received by grace. Let me break that down just the way I hinted I was going to break it down. First of all,
this is talking about something God does that is unexpected. Notice it says, in the past
he humbled the land of Zebulun and the
land of Naphtholo but in the future he will honor Galilee of
the nations. Now this would have been a big surprise to any of
the readers because the readers would have expected Isaiah's
readers would have thought if God's going to do something big
he would have started at divine headquarters which is Jerusalem.
Instead Isaiah says he's going to start in Podunkville. Even back when all 12 tribes were
there in Israel, Zebulon and Naphtala was the northern part,
sort of the outskirts of Israel. And they had been long
deported and taken away. And now Galilee was a place that did still have Jews in it, but it
also had lots of other countries. It was a very
multi-ethnic region. That's the reason this word, Galilee of the
nations, that literally means Galilee of the Gentiles, Galilee
of the nations. And it says he's going to honor it. That is the
salvation is going to come out of Galilee, which of course is
something that nobody would have expected. Do you remember in John chapter
one perhaps when Nathaniel, one of the twelve disciples, eventually is introduced to Jesus
and they are trying to get him to meet Jesus and they say, you know, he's this rabbi, he's
this great guy and he's from Nazareth in Galilee. And Nathaniel says, Nazareth?
See, there's always been a pecking order.
So if you're from Rome, you thought Jerusalem
was Podunkville.
And so if you lived in Jerusalem, you had to find somebody
else to look down on to deal with that.
So you said, well, Galilee is the backwater, see?
And so everybody looks down at something.
And so, in the world, are you kidding?
Some big religious figure coming from there?
But that's what God does.
And that's one of the main themes
of almost every Christmas passage we can find.
Jesus was not born into a comfortable home,
he was born into a feed trough, a manger.
He was not born into middle class home. He was born into a feed trough, a manger. He was not born into middle class wealthy family. He was born into a poor family. He was not
born surrounded by states of, you know, heads of state. He was surrounded by
shepherds who were at the bottom of the social totem pole. he was born to a pregnant, unwed,
teenage peasant girl who would, because she got pregnant
before she was married, been stigmatized the rest
of her life, and she was, in that culture in that time,
and so would her son have been.
In other words, and of course, Jesus had none of the markers
that the world looks for
that tells the world this will be a successful person.
He had none of the marks of greatness.
He was a person of no consequence
as far as the world was concerned.
And so what happened?
Well, Jesus was obviously has, I think inarguably,
in that obscurity you had the most influential person in the history of the world
In that servility in that manger. He had the greatest
Kingliness possible in that weakness you had the greatest strength possible. What does this prove? The point is that
Glory was going on in that manger and nobody saw it
And that glory was going on in that manger and nobody saw it. And so the world in general does not recognize greatness
when it's there, especially not in this situation.
And God loves, therefore, to generally bring greatness,
bring power, bring salvation into your life through ways
that you would never expect.
And actually, that's one of my favorite verses in the
whole Bible, was that great place in 1 Corinthians where
Paul says, God chose the foolish things of the world to shame
the weak. He chose the weak things of the world to shame the
strong. He chose the lowly and despised things of the world,
even the things that are not to bring to nothing the things
that are. So what is the spirit of Christmas?
You know, we always talk about, oh, don't you want to be shaped
by the spirit of Christmas, quote, unquote. What is the
spirit of Christmas? Well, here's one way to define the
spirit of the Christmas. It's that other text, that other
sacred text that many of us look at. There's a little phrase
that's gotten pretty famous. All that is gold does not glitter.
Not all those who wander are lost.
And of course, as far as the Bible's concerned,
almost nothing that is gold glitters.
But you and I live in the middle of New York City,
unless you're visiting from here,
and even if you're visiting, you recognize something.
New York is all about glitter.
It's about the glittering resume about everything.
It's about killer credentials, the right credentials,
the right connections, the right schools,
you know, the right people.
You wear the right clothes at the right time.
And in the right part of town.
You don't wear that there, you wear that there.
Jesus had none of those markers.
And what it means to be shaped by the spirit
of the Christmas is at the very least
not to be blinded by that, not to care that much about that.
And especially, how do you regard people
that don't have the markers?
How do you regard people like Jesus? People from nowhere.
People without the credentials.
People that don't have the right accent.
People that aren't of the right race.
They're not of the right political party.
They're not of the right whatever.
How do you regard them?
Or do you just paternalistically tolerate them
and think of yourself as a great person
because you don't despise them openly.
Or do you know how to learn from and respect them and love them?
Then you're beginning to be shaped by the Spirit of Christmas
because God works with the unexpected.
Secondly, the salvation that we're being talked about here has to do with light.
The ultimate light, verse two.
The people walking in darkness have seen it, pardon me, no verse, what is it?
Yeah, it is two.
The people walk, it's a long verse one.
The people walking in darkness have seen a great light, but on those living in the land
of deep darkness, a light has dawned.
Now that word deep darkness is a kind of unusual compound word
that's been created by Isaiah and it literally means the death shadow.
Those living in the death shadow and it takes the idea of darkness
and the idea of death, puts them together.
Because in general in this world light and life go together.
Not absolutely but by and large, they are connected.
When God creates the world, he's going to create life. In Genesis 1, he starts with light. Let there
be light, first thing, and then he goes on to life. Because you need light for life. That's how this
world basically works. I read an interesting article in Popular Science not too long ago
that talked about what would happen if the sun suddenly went out. Just like
that. The sun suddenly went out. Here's some interesting
people have to write about something. You know, it's. So
here's there's three things. Number one, if the sun suddenly
went out, the whole world would be zero degrees by the end of
the day, 100 degrees below zero by the end of the year,
all around the world,
and it would have stabilized at 400 degrees below zero.
That would be the Earth's temperature.
Secondly, photosynthesis would stop immediately,
which means all the oxygen that all the plants in the world
are putting out there in the world wouldn't be there.
So it's possible to survive,
but probably most of us would freeze to death before we could create shelters for everybody
And it's possible to not suffocate there are ways of creating oxygen that don't come from the plants
But most of us would suffocate before we had the chance to create oxygen supplies for the whole human race
And then of course we get so much vitamin A and D from the Sun that it's very very difficult very difficult to
Replace that that most of us would have our bones start crumbling
Because they become very very fragile in words, if there was no sun, life wouldn't have developed on the earth anyway.
And if the sun goes out, life will just quickly, slowly but surely die.
So what does it mean when it says, literally, on those living in the land of deep darkness,
on those in the death shadow, a light has flashed?
That's what it says literally there in Hebrew.
On those living in the death shadow, a light has flashed.
So what does that mean?
It must be talking spiritually, because we have the sun.
I mean, obviously, we've got the sun,
and we have photosynthesis, and we have life,
so it must be talking about spiritual darkness right?
No.
And I'll tell you why.
Would you stand back and think?
I said if the sun went out all life would end.
Don't you realize that the sun is going out?
And we are dying?
Thought experiment.
Imagine you cook this wonderful
turkey for Christmas Day, and you get the turkey out and it smells great, and you put it on the table.
Now, just a thought experiment. Instead of eating it, just let it sit
for four hours.
Now what? It's cold. Okay, let's sit for four days.
Don't touch it. Just let it there. Now
starting to smell bad. Okay. Let's leave it for four weeks. Well, you're probably not
going to be in your apartment anymore because the health people, health inspectors, have
been called by your neighbors in your apartment hall and they will have come because you're
now a health hazard and that sort of thing. Basically, why?
What's wrong with this turkey?
Well, the point is, if you don't do something to the turkey,
it just loses energy and it goes bad.
But that's your future.
You're looking at your own future there.
You're going, it's slower.
LAUGHTER
But you're running down. I'm running down.
We're losing energy.
That's where we're going.
But so is the whole world, including the sun.
And you can sit there and say noble things like, well, yes, of course I'm going to die,
but I can make the world better for people who come after me.
For how long will people come after you?
Because at a certain point, you know, the sun is going to die.
It's dying.
It's going down.
And eventually there won't be anybody around to
remember anything that anyone has ever done. Unless, see,
there's an ultimate light. When God created the world
perfectly in Genesis chapter 1, does anybody notice that when
God created the world, he said, let there be light, and there
was light, and the sun wasn't actually created until later?
So there was light, but there was no sun.
How did that happen?
I'll tell you why.
Because in the book of Revelation, it tells us that when God has created a perfect world,
when the city of God has come down out of heaven, and the new heavens and the new earth are here,
and the world is perfect, and all death is gone, and all suffering is gone,
all injustice and disease and aging and decay it's all gone. Why?
It says there will not be any Sun. Why? You won't need a Sun. The Sun is just a symbol of what?
It says God and the Lamb will be the light of the world.
See there's an ultimate light and in that ultimate light nothing dies.
Nothing decays.
And we need ultimate light, nothing dies, nothing decays. And we need that light.
We need that light.
And we're being told here that God is going to give it to us.
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Now here's Dr. Keller with the rest of today's message.
Well, then through what?
How do we get that light?
How does that ultimate light flash on us?
Verses 6 and 7, the most famous part, and in verse 6 and 7 it says, for unto us a child,
for, in other words, this child is the reason why we have all
this hope. The reason why we know all this is going to happen. It's all going to
happen because, for unto us a child is born and he will be called wonderful
counselor, mighty God, everlasting father, prince of peace. We obviously do not have
anything like the time to delve down into every one of these titles, but let's
just notice something. These four titles are titles
You could only give to God two of them are definitely from God for our divine and two of them are imply
He's the mighty God and he's not just a divine personage of sort of divining divine ish
You know, he's not some just kind of avatar of some kind of divine principle. He's the everlasting father
Which means he's's the source of all
creation. And yet, he's born. A child who is born is God. There's nothing like this,
nothing like this claim in any other of the faith's major religions in history.
This person is obviously human because he's born and he's a child, but this person is
obviously divine because he's the mighty God and he's the everlasting Father.
Jesus Christ is the God man.
And if he's the God man, let me just suggest two things.
Because obviously what Christmas means among many other things, you know,
Christmas obviously means that God works in unexpected ways,
but Christmas is about the birth of God.
It's about God becoming human, God becoming incarnate, the incarnation.
That's what we're celebrating, what we're observing at Christmas.
And it means two things, even though it could mean at least 200 things,
but I'll just give
you two.
First of all, if Jesus Christ is really God, not just human, but really God, you can't
just like him.
Listen, my life was utterly changed when I read a couple paragraphs in John Stott's
little book, Basic Christianity,
years ago when I was like 21 years old or 20 years old.
It changed my life and I'm trying to pass on the favor.
Because what he said there was, he says,
if you look and see people who actually talk to Jesus
in his life and heard his claims
and realized what he was claiming,
there are only three possible ways to respond to him.
You either hated him and tried to kill him
for claiming to be God,
or you were scared to death of this lunatic
and you ran as far away as you possibly could,
or you fell down and worshiped him
and gave him every single part of your life.
You embraced him, you gave him your highest allegiance,
you said, you're the reason I'm gonna get up every day
just to live for you.
You either hated him, you feared feared him or you worshiped him
But nobody liked him
Nobody just thought
He's inspiring. I like him. I and I get things out of him. I try to learn from him
Nobody ever said that anybody who does say that and most people in New York are either either, you know kind of like that
Well, I can learn from him
or, you know, whatever, haven't heard what Christmas is all
about. It's this claim. So, and he's absolutely, John Stott was
absolutely right, changed my world. I realized there's no
such thing as just liking him. So, if Jesus Christ is God become human, you have to worship him.
You have to give him everything. The word wonderful, by the way, means beautiful.
He's ultimately, he's the ultimate beauty. You would not just obey him because you
have to because he's God, because he would be the source of everything beautiful.
Anything that you have right now that attracts you, well, he'd be the source of everything beautiful. Anything that you have right now that attracts you, will he be the source of it
because of who he is, because of what he's done.
But on the other hand, if he's God become human, we just looked at if he's a human
being who is God, but if he's God become human, now you've also got a God who
understands. Again, that's unique.
Of all the religions in the world, and there's no other
religion that says God has suffered.
God has come down here and he's suffered.
He knows what you're going through.
So when you talk to him, he understands.
It's actually a way of helping me deal with the problem of
evil and suffering.
I don't know why God hasn't stopped evil and suffering, but I do know it can't be because he doesn't love us,
because he was willing to get that involved.
Dorothy Sayers, a British essayist and detective novelist,
said this years ago, helped me very, very much.
She says, the incarnation means that for whatever reason
God chose to let us fall into a condition
of being limited to suffer, to be subject to sorrows,
oh pardon me, the incarnation means that for whatever reason
God chose to let us fall into suffering
and to be subject to sorrows and death,
he nonetheless had the honesty and the courage
to take his own medicine.
He himself has gone through the whole of human experience
from the trivial irritations of
family life and the cramping restrictions of hard work and lack of money to the worst
horrors of pain and humiliation, defeat, despair and death.
He was born in poverty and suffered infinite pain all for us and thought it well worth
his while.
He's the God-man. Now lastly, all the stuff we've been talking
about, the hope that you can get if you believe in Jesus, that he was the one who
was born in the manger, that God himself has come into the world, the hope you can
get, the joy you can get we've been talking about, the humility you get, all
this can only be received
if you receive it as a gift of grace.
Because notice, it doesn't just say,
for us a child is born,
it also says, to us a son is given.
It's a gift.
Verse five actually says this great battle against evil.
It says, every warrior's boot used in battle
and every garment rolled in blood
will be destined for burning, it will be fueled for the fire.
What it's really saying is a great battle
is gonna be fought and evil will be overturned,
but you are not gonna have to fight it
because you won't need a warrior's boot,
you won't need armor, you won't need a sword,
melt it down, burn it up, it doesn't matter,
because it's gonna be a gift.
Someone else will do the fighting.
Now who?
It's Jesus, of course.
And even though it doesn't tell us here,
you have to wait until you get into the servant songs
of Isaiah 42 and 53, where it says,
all we like sheep have gone astray,
we've turned everyone to our own way,
and God laid the iniquity of us all on him.
He bore our transgressions, see?
He suffered for our iniquities.
If Jesus Christ had come in strength to put down all evil, think about it.
I hate to do this in 30 seconds, but I must.
What is the source of the evil in the world?
It's basically the self-centeredness of the human heart.
The self-centeredness, everything's about me, me first.
That's where the misery of the world comes from.
So if he comes and he decides to destroy evil,
how many of us would be left?
You see, because that self-centeredness
is in every single person's heart,
even though it comes to different levels of expression.
And if he'd come in strength the first time to fight this battle against evil, we would
all have been destroyed.
And if you don't believe that, it's because you still don't know what your heart is capable
of, but someday you probably will.
Instead, he came in weakness.
He came as a lamb.
He was crucified. He took the punishment we deserve.
And therefore, this great salvation,
this light that comes into your life partly now,
and ultimately it's going to flash out
and it's going to destroy all death and suffering
at the end of time, this comes as a gift,
a gift of grace. And the only way that you can receive it
is to admit it's a gift.
Now, just last idea here.
I want you to think of something for a second.
Some gifts make you swallow your pride.
See, some gifts are hard to receive.
So for example, if you open a book on Christmas morning
from a friend and it's a dieting book,
well, thank you.
Then you open another book from another friend
and it's How to Win Friends and Influence People.
And so you say, thank you, I really appreciate,
I am fat and I am obnoxious, I do know that, I do, really.
So there's no way to receive the gift, thankfully,
without admitting something that you would rather not admit.
Seriously, however, there are situations,
some of you have been in them,
where you were in great financial straits,
and somebody came, really, really bad financial difficulty,
and somebody came and offered you
an incredibly generous financial gift
that would get you out.
Do you remember how you felt was tough?
Some of you probably turned it down.
Most of you were probably male.
But if you accepted it, you remember it meant a lot of pride
swallowing, like I guess I'm not self-sufficient, I can't make
it all by myself.
Well, there's never, ever been a gift offered
that makes you swallow your pride to the depths
that the gift of Jesus Christ to the world at Christmas
makes you, if you understand it, do.
Because see, if you are, if God had to become human
and go to the cross and suffer infinitely, that must mean we are really in bad shape.
That must mean nothing less than the death of the Son of God would save us.
That means that you must not be somebody who really should be able to pull yourself together
and pull yourself up by your bootstraps.
No.
To really accept the gift that's given.
You have to admit you're a sinner,
you need to be saved by grace,
you need to give up control of your life,
you need to give over everything to Jesus.
That is descending way lower than any of us
really want to do.
That's swallowing our pride at a level
we nobody ever wants to do.
And yet Jesus Christ's greatness is seen
in how far down he came to love us. And yet Jesus Christ's greatness is seen in how far down
he came to love us.
And your greatness will be achieved by going on the same
path.
He descended into greatness.
And the Bible says it's only through repentance that you
come into light.
It's only through repentance by descending that you come into
greatness.
Let me just read this quote from C.S. Lewis and then we're done. But listen carefully. Listen very carefully to this one. The power of the
higher just in so far as it is truly higher can come down to include the lesser. Everywhere
the great enters the little, its power to do so is almost the test of its greatness.
Thus solid bodies exemplify truths of plain geometry, but plain geometry figures no truths of solid.
Thus we can become kittenish with our kittens, but your kitten will never discuss philosophy with you.
Thus when I'm at peace, in joy, and joy, I can enter into the hurt of
someone who is angry and despondent, but when I'm angry
and despondent, I cannot enter into joy and peace.
Why?
Because joy and peace are higher, greater.
That's why, I can add, Lincoln can understand Hitler, but
Hitler will never be able to understand Lincoln.
Why?
Because Lincoln is greater.
How do you know, therefore he's saying,
how do you know something is really high and really great
because it can come down, it can enter into the lesser,
it can sympathize, it can humble itself.
You're strong enough to be weak.
You're secure enough to be vulnerable.
And therefore, if you want the greatness that you can have
and the greatness of the light
That light treatment that begins the minute you believe
You need to follow your Savior's path descend into greatness
The meaning of Christmas, let us pray
Our Father, thank you so much for what Christmas forces us to do
It forces us to think and think and think about some of the greatest things, the greatest things that have ever happened in the history of the
world. But it's amazing that we are capable of turning those things into
routines so that we just don't even realize we're not amazed at them anymore.
Don't let that happen to us. We ask that you would let all the things we've
talked about today become more and more true in our lives
We ask the name of the one who came not to be served but to serve and to give his life a ransom for many
It's in his name. We pray
Thanks for listening to today's message from Tim Keller
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That's gospelinlife.com slash stories. Today's sermon was preached in 2013. The sermons and
talks you hear on the Gospel in Life podcast
were preached from 1989 to 2017 while Dr. Keller was senior pastor at Redeemer Presbyterian Church.