So deeply do we care
for you that we are determined to share with you not only the gospel of God but
also our own selves, because you have become very dear to us.
- 1 Thessalonians 2:8
With
Thanksgiving now in the rearview mirror and hordes of shoppers descending on
stores, the season of giving is officially upon us. For the next month the
lines will be long, the parking lots will be packed, and presents will steadily
pile up beneath Christmas trees.
For
Christians, the season of giving is about more than consumerism or generic
holiday cheer. It is during Advent that we reflect on the awesome truth that
God is with us in Christ, that the Son of God came to this earth in humility
and brought us salvation. As we celebrate this gospel during Advent, we are
also inspired to share it, to proclaim the good news of Jesus Christ with
renewed fervor. So how should we give Jesus to people in this special season of
giving?
Some
do so with such passion that they become combative—fearing that the world has
“taken the Christ out of Christmas,” they resolve to put him back in themselves
by forcefully inserting Jesus into every otherwise innocuous holiday exchange.
The trouble with such an approach is that nobody ever savored a meal they were
force-fed—it’s hard to appreciate the goodness of the Good News when it’s being
shouted at you.
So
others take things to the opposite extreme, virtually ignoring the Christmas
story and counting on generic themes of joy and generosity to carry forward the
specific message of the gospel. The problem with this approach, of course, is
that it’s tough for anyone to learn about the gospel of Jesus Christ without
ever mentioning his name. While generalized talk about hope, peace, joy, and
love is fine, if it isn’t eventually tied to the person of Jesus Christ then
it’s a gospel so diluted of specificity that it ceases to be gospel at all.
From
Paul’s first letter to his beloved church in Thessalonica we get a look at a
third way to give people the gospel, one that goes beyond words and remains
true to Jesus’s own witness. Referencing his ministry in Thessalonica, Paul
remarks that he is “determined to share with you not only the gospel of God but also our own selves.” Paul was not
content to leave the church merely with sermons about Christ’s love, he wanted
to show them that love.
During
the holidays, believers want to give people the gospel more than ever; we want
the world to sing along with the heavenly host that Jesus Christ has come to
save. But for the message to cut through the noise, we need to take a page a
page out of the apostle’s book. We need to give the world more than religiosity
or moralism; we need to serve when we could be indulging, to help when we could
be passive, to give when we could be receiving. We need, in Paul’s words, to
give ourselves for others' sakes. What could be more Christ-like than that?