Another reminder that blesses me this season is just how much the Savior humbled himself. As I watched That The World May Know video The True Christmas Story Ray Vander Laan shares about the manger in which Christ was born versus the kingdom King Herod built for himself, I am in awe. Vander Laan shared the luxuries in which Herod held, versus that which Jesus was born. The smell of several feet of manure of sheep refuse from a thousand sheep that have come through the cave during their many travels, the soot from thousands of thousands of fires by the Shepherds to stay warm, the hard concrete to lay the baby down in the cave. Solid blocks of rock. Vander Laan reminds us of how we western christians 'sanitize' the Nativity scene with clean animals, and clean straw. He showed Herod's palace, its ruins, and the magnitude and glory of his palace with plants, cisterns, swimming pools, fruit trees, etc. Herod, king of the jews. While King Herod was sitting in all his comforts in the kingdom he made up for himself, the savior of the World is lying on a rock in a cave. God decided his way of bringing Christ up was to put him in the family of David, in the city of David, and born in a shepherd's stall. I love that movie. I watch it every year. Herod's vision died. His ruins are still there. We usually remember Herod at this time for killing the babies at Christmas time. Herod built for himself and there was nothing. The baby in the cave built a faith and kingdom that is still growing, still transforms lives, still grows. He left a great vision. A great salvation. The greatest gift!
Ray Vander Laan
He is Risen. His promise to Abraham is complete. He is alive. We need to decide is the tomb empty or full, as that is how we live our lives. We need to decide for ourselves if it is empty. We need to show others the tomb is empty. They need to know. What an awesome declaration of His love for us.






















