Come, Thou Long-Expected Jesus Day 4

Open Your Bible

Genesis 22:1-18, Psalm 130:1-8, John 1:29-34, John 3:16-21

Christmas is a visual season, full of spectacles that invite us to turn our heads and look. The lights, trees, decorations, packages, and culinary treats all call us to take in their displays in wonder. 

Pay attention to the word look in our reading today. It invites us to observe something unexpected, and to take note because what is about to happen will be unlike anything before.

A hint of the importance of looking ahead occurs in our reading from Genesis: “Abraham looked up and saw the place in the distance” (Genesis 22:4).

From far away, Abraham perceived this significant place—one that would be a place of hope and provision. There he would witness God provide a ram to take the place of his son. Generations later, God would provide His own Son, Jesus Christ, near that same mountain as our saving sacrifice.

We recognize this thread of wonder expressed in His Word.

Israel, put your hope in the LORD. 
For there is faithful love with the LORD, 
and with him is redemption in abundance.
—Psalm 130:7 

Hope in the Lord. Recognize His redemptive plan. See from afar how amazing it is, both in anticipation and completion!

Abraham’s story mirrors the story God put in place to redeem us. It foreshadows the promise in John 3:17, that the baby born in the manger was not sent “to condemn the world, but to save the world.”

In John 1:29, we read John the Baptist’s exclamation, “Look!”, as he urges us to seek out and behold the unexpected and unbelievable, to look past the familiar. Throughout the passages of today’s reading, there are numerous calls to observe the threads of a bigger story unfolding before us. Each story is a piece of a greater story that points toward when the narrative is fulfilled in the flesh and bone of Jesus Christ: “Look! The Lamb of God, who takes away the sins of the world” (John 1:29). 

The perfect, sinless baby we celebrate in the manger is the unblemished lamb of God who offered Himself on the tangled wood of the cross to redeem the world. Look past the familiarity of the season, and see from a distance the wonder of the stories that lead to the nativity. Lift your eyes to inspect the wonder of the promise God fulfilled when He provided the lamb, Jesus Christ, to save us.

(137) Comments
[x]

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

137 thoughts on "Come, Thou Long-Expected Jesus Day 4"

  1. Chelsea Wilson says:

    There would be no Christmas without Jesus! Let’s celebrate Him!

  2. Kennedy Schwartz says:

    awesome!

  3. lauren willis says:

    look!

  4. Melissa Plooy says:

    ❤️

  5. Tara Wilson says:

    ❤️

  6. Ashley Koch says:

    Love the comparison between the story of Abraham & what Jesus did for us!

  7. Ashley Koch says:

    Love the comparison between the story of Abraham & He’s

  8. Caroline Hall says:

    I have never realized how Abraham was willing to sacrifice his son for the Lord, but God didn’t make him go through with it. However, God gave HIS son to save the world…. What a beautiful picture of how He loves us