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Results from: Answered Bible Questions, Answers, Unanswered Bible Questions, Notes Ordered by Verse | ||||||
Results | Verse | Author | ID# | |||
1 | Sovereign Grace at our Lord's Advent | Luke 2:10 | DocTrinsograce | 211807 | ||
"In a remarkable manner Divine grace was exercised at the time of the Savior's birth. The incarnation of God's Son was one of the greatest events in the history of the universe, and yet its actual occurrence was not made known to all mankind; instead, it was specially revealed to the Bethlehem shepherds and wise men of the East. And this was prophetic and indicative of the entire course of this dispensation, for even today Christ is not made known to all. It would have been an easy matter for God to have sent a company of angels to every nation and announced the birth of His Son. But He did not. God could have readily attracted the attention of all mankind to the 'star;' but He did not. Why? Because God is sovereign and dispenses His favors as He pleases. Note particularly the two classes to whom the birth of the Saviour was made known, namely, the most unlikely classes -- illiterate shepherds and heathen from a far country. No angel stood before the Sanhedrin and announced the advent of Israel's Messiah! No 'star' appeared unto the scribes and lawyers as they, in their pride and self-righteousness, searched the Scriptures! They searched diligently to find out where He should be born, and yet it was not made known to them when He was actually come. What a display of Divine sovereignty -- the illiterate shepherds singled out for peculiar honor, and the learned and eminent passed by! And why was the birth of the Saviour revealed to these foreigners, and not to those in whose midst He was born? See in this a wonderful foreshadowing of God's dealings with our race throughout the entire Christian dispensation -- sovereign in the exercise of His grace, bestowing His favors on whom He pleases, often on the most unlikely and unworthy." --A. W. Pink | ||||||
2 | Sovereign Grace at our Lord's Advent | Luke 2:10 | Hank | 211810 | ||
A timely piece from gifted author Pink. How many times I've read Luke's "Christmas story" I do not know, but never tire of it though. At every reading I find something fresh, something new, something that I'd missed before. The incarnation of the Christ is a major event in the history of the universe, as A. W. Pink points out. Followers of Jesus Christ ought not ever to lose sight of that fact. --Hank | ||||||
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Questions and/or Subjects for Luke 2:10 | Author | ||
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Hank |