The Often-Overlooked Aspect of the Christmas Story

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The spiritual warfare element of Jesus' birth is not one that many consider at this time of year.

Each year, as the Christmas season ramps up and I begin to transition to the holiday music, there’s always a line in one of the traditional hymns that moves me to worship.

One year it was the simple verse, “God and sinners reconciled” from “Hark! The Herald Angels Sing.” The next was the proclamation that, “in His name, all oppression shall cease” from “O Holy Night.”

But most recently, a stanza from the less familiar, “God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen” provoked the praise: “Remember, Christ our Savior was born on Christmas day, to save us all from Satan’s power when we have gone astray.”

Perhaps the significance of this line to me is that it poignantly portrays the often-overlooked meaning of Christmas.


Most never consider that the purpose of Christmas has anything to do with spiritual warfare. But overcoming Satan is precisely what John declared was the mission of Christ’s ministry on earth: “For this purpose the Son of God was revealed, that He might destroy the works of the devil” (1 John 3:8b). Yes, the original Christmas is the inauguration of Jesus’ entry into this world to transfer us from the dominion of darkness and into God’s marvelous light.

The Plan

Let’s begin on the same page about the world into which Jesus was born. It was a world under the influence of Satan. In short, in the beginning, Satan deceived the first couple with a promise of knowledge of good and evil. By succumbing to his scheme, Adam and Eve effectively handed over to the devil the dominion that God had previously given them (Gen. 1:26, 28). From this moment, creation was fallen. For the first time, death reigned, and with it, all of its counterparts: sickness, disease and suffering.

The only solution to restore something from death is to cover it with perfect life. And thus, God eventually instituted a law of atonement in which the sins of His people were cleansed by the lifeblood of a pure, spotless lamb.


Certainly, a fallen creation wasn’t God’s original will. And animal sacrifice was only meant as a temporary solution to point to what would later come—the redemption plan devised from the beginning. This is what Peter announced. Before the creation, God had a plan in place that His Son, Jesus, would come to earth to be the final, once-for-all sacrificed Lamb of God. (See 1 Pet. 1:19–20.) As the Lamb who was slain, Jesus would destroy the works of the devil: the power of sin and all its effects.

The first Christmas marks the moment when this Word became flesh. And, as we’ll now review, everything about the Christmas story points to this purpose.

The Birthplace

One of the most familiar details of the nativity is also one of the most revealing. It’s the birthplace of Jesus: Bethlehem. Luke records that because of a census, Joseph and Mary had to return to Bethlehem—the city of Joseph’s descendants (Luke 2:4). But it’s not happenstance that Jesus was born during this visit. No, scholars report that Bethlehem is the city where lambs purchased for sacrifice in the temple were born and raised. In fact, every firstborn male lamb in Bethlehem was set aside to later be delivered to Jerusalem.


And so was the Lamb of God.

The Setting

Luke’s account chronicles that after Mary delivered baby Jesus, she and Joseph had to settle upon resting Him in a manger, wrapped in swaddling clothing. Once again, this didn’t happen merely out of coincidence. It wasn’t only “because there was no room for them in the inn” (Luke 2:7c). But rather, it was ordered by God as a prophetic setting for Jesus’ destiny.

A manger is “phatne” in the Greek, which is simply another word for a feeding trough. A manger is the suitable place for a lamb. And fittingly then, it’s where the Lamb of God spent His first days.


The People

A region known for raising lambs should also be known for shepherds. And Bethlehem was no exception. Luke concludes his Christmas story by telling about angels who directed nearby shepherds to tend to the newborn Jesus (Luke 2:8-20).

It’s only appropriate that shepherds were the first to visit Jesus. After all, it is a shepherd’s responsibility to tend to the birth of infant lambs.

Little did they know they were tending to the birth of their final sacrificial lamb. It was Jesus Christ, the Lamb of God, who came to earth for a mission to take upon the sin of the world and thereby destroy the works of the devil in my life, your life and the lives of all who know Him as Savior. {eoa}


Kyle Winkler equips people to live in victory. His mobile app, Shut Up, Devil!, is the #1 spiritual warfare app; and his recent book, Silence Satan, has helped thousands shut down the enemy’s attacks, threats, lies and accusations. Kyle holds a Master of Divinity in biblical studies from Regent University. Get daily encouragement from Kyle on Facebook and Twitter.

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