The Birth of Christ an Unfathomable Mystery 

The virgin will be with child and will give birth to a son, and will call
him Immanuel. Isa. 7:14, NIV. 

We cannot understand how Christ became a little, helpless babe. He could
have come to earth in such beauty that He would have been unlike the sons of
men. His face could have been bright with light, and His form could have
been tall and beautiful. He could have come in such a way as to charm those
who looked upon Him; but this was not the way that God planned He should
come among the sons of men. 

He was to be like those who belonged to the human family and to the Jewish
race. His features were to be like those of other human beings, and He was
not to have such beauty of person as to make people point Him out as
different from others. He was to come as one of the human family, and to
stand as a man before heaven and earth. He had come to take man's place, to
pledge Himself in man's behalf, to pay the debt that sinners owed. He was to
live a pure life on the earth, and show that Satan had told a falsehood when
he claimed that the human family belonged to him forever, and that God could
not take men out of his hands. 

Men first beheld Christ as a babe, as a child. . . . 

The more we think about Christ's becoming a babe here on earth, the more
wonderful it appears. How can it be that the helpless babe in Bethlehem's
manger is still the divine Son of God? Though we cannot understand it, we
can believe that He who made the worlds, for our sakes became a helpless
babe. Though higher than any of the angels, though as great as the Father on
the throne of heaven, He became one with us. In Him God and man became one,
and it is in this fact that we find the hope of our fallen race. Looking
upon Christ in the flesh, we look upon God in humanity, and see in Him the
brightness of divine glory, the express image of God the Father (Selected
Messages, book 3, pp. 127, 128). 

In contemplating the incarnation of Christ in humanity, we stand baffled
before an unfathomable mystery, that the human mind cannot comprehend. The
more we reflect upon it, the more amazing does it appear. How wide is the
contrast between the divinity of Christ and the helpless infant in
Bethlehem's manger! How can we span the distance between the mighty God and
a helpless child? And yet the Creator of worlds, He in whom was the fullness
of the Godhead bodily, was manifest in the helpless babe in the manger. Far
higher than any of the angels, equal with the Father in dignity and glory,
and yet wearing the garb of humanity! Divinity and humanity were
mysteriously combined, and man and God became one. It is in this union that
we find the hope of our fallen race (Signs of the Times, July 30, 1896). 

>From Lift Him Up - Page 75

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