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The 12 Days of Christmas

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Firstborn Over All Creation Colonel Henry Lee once described General George Washington as “first in war, first in peace, and first in the hearts of his countrymen.” Lee was not saying George Washington was chronologically the first soldier, the first treaty writer, and the first person ever to endear himself to his troops. Lee’s use of “first” had the idea of preeminence. In writing to believers in Colossae, the apostle Paul used the word “first” similarly, referring not to chronology but to rank (Col. 1:15–16). His word for “firstborn” was similar to its English equivalent. That is, while people in Paul’s day sometimes used “first” to refer to something first chronologically, such as “firstborn child,” the word could also suggest preeminence in rank, as in “firstborn over.” In describing Christ as “firstborn over,” Paul was not saying that Jesus was created, as if the Son of God had a beginning, The preposition “over” gives us a clue to his meaning. Paul is pointing the people in Colossae to the Son who ranks above all creation because the Son Himself made it. As Paul described the second person of the Godhead to his readers, he had in mind honor, glory, supremacy, and first in importance. For first-century believers, a “firstborn” son had special rights of inheritance. And the invisible, preeminent One who created the world had the right to inherit the world because He is the Son and He Himself created it. The baby Jesus entered a human birth canal and was born, but the Son of God precedes chronology, made all things, and outranks all creation. As the Nicene Creed (A.D. 3256) asserts, and we sing in “O, Come All Ye Faithful,” He is “very God, begotten, not created.” O, come let us adore Him, Christ the Lord. Photo credit: Markus Spiske on Unsplash; used with permission.

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The 12 Days of Christmas

"The 12 Days of Christmas" is a devotional designed to help readers draw near to Christ during the twelve days that begin with Christmas and end on Twelfth Night. It ends on the eve of Epiphany or Three Kings' Day, which...

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