| Changing Hands - #3898 |
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Wednesday, December 19, 2001Our good friends were visiting us with their precious, three-year-old daughter Tanya. Now she has captivating dark eyes, a winsome smile, a high-energy personality--and a mind of her own. Her Dad was crossing a very busy street with his daughter and he said, "Now hold Daddy's hand." She apparently didn't like that idea. She looked up at him with those big eyes and said, "That's OK, Daddy. I'll hold my own hand." Not a good idea. I'm Ron Hutchcraft and I want to have A WORD WITH YOU today about "Changing Hands." Our Heavenly Father looks at the road ahead and He knows exactly where we should go and when we should go. He reaches our direction and He says, "Hold Daddy's hand." Maybe you've got a mind of your own, an independent spirit. And you respond, "That's OK, Daddy. I'll hold my own hand." Not a good idea. Tucked away in the drama of the first Christmas is a better idea. Our word for today from the Word of God begins in Luke 1:26, "In the sixth month, God sent the angel Gabriel to Nazareth, a town in Galilee, to a virgin pledged to be married to a man named Joseph. The virgin's name was Mary ... The angel said to her, 'Do not be afraid, Mary, you have found favor with God. You will be with child and give birth to a son, and you are to give Him the name Jesus.'" Now, God comes to Mary and says, in essence, "Take My hand--I'm leading you into something amazing." Now if Mary had insisted on holding her own hand, she would never have gone. God is leading her into a situation where she will suddenly be mysteriously pregnant. And who's going to believe that God is doing it? She has a lot to lose if she takes God's hand and goes where He wants to take her. She will probably lose her reputation as the "nice girl of Nazareth." She stands to lose the man she loves when he hears she is expecting and he knows he is not the father. The wedding she has dreamed of will probably never happen. And since, the in the Jewish culture of that day, they stoned women for sexual sin, obedience could even cost Mary her life. But listen to her response to God's plan. "I am the Lord's servant." Those five words change everything. Now if Mary's identity is "I'm Joseph's girl," there's no way she's going to do what God wants. If her image as the "nice girl of Nazareth" is her identity, she won't do this. But Mary bases her identity on one thing and one thing alone. With open hands, open arms, face looking up, she declares, "I am the Lord's servant. May it be to me as You have said." And because of that surrendered spirit and surrendered future, Mary carries God's only Son in her body, nurses the Son of God, teaches the Son of God. See, God's most special assignments are for those who will let go of their own hand--who will grab God's hand and say, "Lord, I'll go where You want me to go." In fact, there's a hymn that says that. "Lord, I'll go where you want me to go, dear Lord/O'er mountain or plain or sea/I'll say what You want me to say, dear Lord/I'll be what You want me to be." As we approach this Christmas, look at what God gave because He loves you so much--He sacrificed His only Son. That removes any doubt of whether or not you can trust Him with the things that matter most to you. Anyone who loved you enough to die for you will never do you wrong. This Christmas season, take your Father's hand and with child-like faith tell Him, "Lord, take me wherever You want me to go." Open arms, open hands, face looking up--say those five words that open you up to God's best--"I am the Lord's servant." |
















