CHAPTER XVIII. Was a Child the Best Christmas Gift to the World?
When we come to think of it, does
not a child seem an insignificant and disappointing
gift for God to make to the world? After so long
preparation and so great promises and hopes, would
we not have expected some greater and more wonderful
gift? But a child is so common; millions are
born every month; there is nothing unique and wonderful
about a child. Why did God not rather give some
invention or discovery or piece of knowledge that
would revolutionize and bless the world? Would
he not have done enormously more for mankind if in
the first century of our era he had given them the
printing press, or the steam engine, or the electric
light? May there not yet be waiting for us some
invention or knowledge that will work wonders beyond
anything we have dreamed and shower material comforts
on the world?
This thought grows out of our blind
materialism which leads us to think that matter is
the master of mind, circumstance more important than
character and the things of the body than the things
of the spirit. But material improvements do not
necessarily improve men. The locomotive has little
relation to character. It picks a man up at one
point and drops him at another the same man he was.
If he is selfish and wicked at the beginning of the
journey, he is just as selfish and wicked at its end.
It is a simple fact that all our material progress
works little improvement in morals. At the hour
Christ was born Rome had an amazing material civilization,
blazing with splendor, but all the more rapidly was
it rotting at the core.
But a child has in it the possibility
of growth and of imparting regenerating ideas and
a new life to the world. Sir Isaac Newton did
not give any money or material gift to the world,
but he gave it scientific ideas and a scientific spirit,
and in giving it this he raised the intellectual level
of the world and gave it the power of making millions
of money. Shakespeare gave the world no new machine,
but he opened the eyes of men to see heavenly visions
and thus enriched them with treasures above all the
gold of the world. Martin Luther invented no
steam engine or sewing machine, but he taught men the
rights of conscience and created our modern liberties.
No material thing, however powerful and splendid,
can make a better world: this work calls for
better men. Therefore when God brings into the
world a child endowed with superior intellectual and
moral power, though his gift is only a babe and seems
insignificant and hardly worth counting among so many,
yet he has sent one of the greatest gifts of which
his omnipotence is capable. An old German schoolmaster
always took his hat off to each new boy that came
into his school, never knowing what elements of genius
might have been mixed in his newly molded brain.
When Erasmus came out of that school his prophetic
instinct was justified. Never despise a child,
for in it sleeps some of the omnipotence and worth
of God.
But the Child which God gave the world
as its Christmas gift was no merely human child however
richly endowed. This Child was human and was
born in time, but he was also divine and came forth
from eternity. The possibilities that were sleeping
in this Child were foreseen by the prophet Isaiah
in the names that were prophetically given him, every
name being a window through which we can look in upon
his personality and power, every title being one of
his crowns: “His name shall be called Wonderful,
Counsellor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince
of Peace.” All these powers and possibilities
are incarnated in this Child, and he is working them
out in a redeemed world. God made no mistake,
then, he gave us no small and common gift, but he did
his best and gave the world the greatest possible
Christmas Gift when this Child was born. All
the grass in the world came from one seed, all the
roses from one root, and all the redeemed that shall
at last populate heaven and fill it with praise throughout
eternity shall be saved by the grace and clad in the
beauty of this Child.