Wednesday, December 24, 2025

The Nativity as the Fulfillment of God’s Rescue Plan


Christmas Eve is not an isolated pageant of sentiment or a quaint prologue to Jesus' public ministry. It is the turning point in a history that the Bible presents as a single, unified narrative of creation, fall, promise, and redemption culminating in the incarnation of the Son of God. The manger in Bethlehem stands within a long arc that begins in Eden and runs through patriarchs, kings, and prophets to the Gospel proclamation that the Savior has come. In this sense, Christmas Eve is the strategic moment in which the eternal counsel of God becomes embodied in time. Two texts disclose the depth of this narrative coherence: Genesis 3:15 and Isaiah 9:6. The first promises a decisive conflict and victory; the second names the victorious child and declares the character of the reign He inaugurates. Read together, these passages reveal that the Nativity fulfills a rescue plan God set in motion “from the very beginning.”

This essay argues that the birth of Jesus Christ fulfills the “seed” promise in Genesis 3:15 and the royal Son prophecy in Isaiah 9:6 in a manner that binds the entire biblical canon into a coherent proclamation. It will offer exegetical engagement with the Hebrew and, where helpful, the Greek, will situate both passages in their historical-literary contexts, and will show how the New Testament’s Nativity accounts portray the coming of Jesus as the climactic realization of the ancient Gospel promise. The aim is not merely to provide a historical description. The goal is to trace the canonical logic by which the Church confesses that the child born in Bethlehem is the long-awaited King who shatters the serpent’s dominion, establishes everlasting peace, and bears the government upon His shoulder for the life of the world.

From Creation and Fall to Promise and Fulfillment

The Bible opens with God creating a very good world and installing humanity as royal image bearers to cultivate and guard creation in fellowship with the Creator (Genesis 1:26–31; 2:15). The fall in Genesis 3 is therefore not a minor moral misstep but a cosmic rebellion that ruptures communion with God and unleashes disorder, death, and exile. Yet within the pronouncement of judgment, God plants a seed of hope. He addresses the serpent and utters a promise that is both enigmatic and explosive: “I will put enmity between you and the woman, and between your offspring and her offspring; he shall bruise your head, and you shall bruise his heel” (Genesis 3:15, ESV). The rest of Scripture narrates the unfolding of this promise through covenants with Noah, Abraham, Israel, and David, as well as through prophetic oracles that increasingly sharpen the identity of the coming deliverer.

The New Testament announces that “when the fullness of time had come, God sent forth his Son, born of woman, born under the law” (Galatians 4:4, ESV). The phrase “born of woman” evokes the Eden promise, while “fullness of time” signals that the rescue plan ripened to its decisive moment. The Nativity narratives in Matthew 1–2 and Luke 1–2 present the incarnation not as a theological novelty but as the moment when God’s longstanding purpose becomes visible. The angelic declaration to the shepherds crystallizes this conviction: “For unto you is born this day in the city of David a Savior, who is Christ the Lord” (Luke 2:11, ESV). The terms “Savior” (sōtēr), “Christ” (Christos), and “Lord” (Kyrios) are not abstract religious honorifics; they are covenant titles that connect back to Israel’s hopes under the promises of God.

To see how Genesis 3:15 and Isaiah 9:6 frame this arrival, we must read them in context and attend closely to decisive lexical features.

Genesis 3:15 and the Protoevangelium: The First Gospel Promise

Genesis 3 records the serpent’s deception, the disobedience of Adam and Eve, and God’s judicial response. The narrative culminates in a series of divine speeches addressed to the serpent, the woman, and the man. Genesis 3:15 stands at the center of the serpent’s judgment and functions as both sentence and promise. The verse introduces two lines of “offspring” and forecasts a future conflict culminating in a head wound to the serpent and a heel wound to the woman’s offspring. The literary function is programmatic. As early as the patristic period, Christian interpreters called this verse the protoevangelium, the “first Gospel,” because it intimates the ultimate defeat of the serpent through a human deliverer.

Key Hebrew Terms and Theological Nuances

“Offspring” (zeraʿ)

The Hebrew noun zeraʿ can refer to seed in an agricultural sense or to offspring and descendants. Its semantic flexibility allows for both collective and singular readings. In Genesis 3:15 it denotes both the corporate line of the woman and the serpent and culminates in a singular representative: “he shall bruise your head.” The shift from collective to singular is suggested by the masculine singular pronoun huʾ (“he”). This representative individual will accomplish what the corporate line cannot. The broader canonical development reinforces this movement from the collective to the singular, as in the promises to Abraham where zeraʿ points to a multitude and yet finally to a singular messianic heir. The Apostle Paul underscores this singularity with respect to Abraham’s promise in Galatians 3:16, and although that text addresses Genesis 12, the conceptual overlap is instructive. The narrative logic presses toward a representative seed who embodies the destiny of the faithful line.

“Bruise” or “Crush” (shūph)

The verb shūph appears twice in Genesis 3:15. The ESV renders both occurrences as “bruise,” though many scholars argue that the verb, especially in the collocation with “head,” carries the connotation of “crush.” The parallelism is asymmetrical. A blow to the head is decisive; a blow to the heel is painful but not fatal. The poetic structure thus signals a victory that comes through suffering. The woman’s seed receives a real wound, yet the serpent receives a terminal defeat. Theologically, this anticipates the messianic pattern of triumph through apparent weakness.

The Enmity God Establishes

The first clause, “I will put enmity between you and the woman,” is crucial. The enmity is not merely the natural aversion between humans and snakes. It is enmity that God Himself establishes as an act of redemptive separation. This divine intervention ensures that human history will not collapse into unbroken complicity with the serpent’s rebellion. A faithful line will persist, safeguarded by God’s purpose, culminating in the champion who will finally crush the serpent’s head. Genesis itself narrates the early outworking of this enmity in the contrast between Cain and Abel, and then between Seth’s line and the escalating violence of the earth.

Canonical Development and Christological Fulfillment

The serpent in Genesis 3 becomes, in later Scripture, a stock figure for Satan, the archenemy of God and His people (cf. Revelation 12:9). This connection is not a late invention but a theological deepening of the serpent’s identity as the personal agent of deception and opposition to God’s kingdom. Within this framework, the “seed” theme matrix develops through the patriarchal narratives, the Davidic covenant, and the prophetic literature. The promised line narrows: from the woman, to Abraham, to Judah, to David, and ultimately to a righteous branch who will reign in justice and peace.

The New Testament identifies Jesus as the one who brings this enmity to culmination. He is the seed of the woman, born of Mary, who confronts the devil in the wilderness and in His ministry, binds the strong man, and through the cross and resurrection renders Satan’s claims null and void. Several texts state this victory with remarkable clarity: “The reason the Son of God appeared was to destroy the works of the devil” (1 John 3:8, ESV), and “that through death he might destroy the one who has the power of death, that is, the devil” (Hebrews 2:14, ESV). Paul assures the Roman Church, “The God of peace will soon crush Satan under your feet” (Romans 16:20, ESV), echoing the vocabulary and imagery of Genesis 3:15 and applying the victory to the Church’s ongoing participation in Christ.

The Nativity Connection

How does the Nativity relate to Genesis 3:15? The verse foretells conflict and victory through a specific “seed,” and the Nativity is precisely the moment that the promised seed enters history as a true human. Matthew’s genealogy traces Jesus through David and Abraham, situating Him squarely within the covenantal seed line (Matthew 1:1–17). The angelic instruction to Joseph locates Jesus’ identity and mission: “She will bear a son, and you shall call his name Jesus, for he will save his people from their sins” (Matthew 1:21, ESV). Luke’s infancy narrative likewise frames Jesus’ birth within Davidic royal expectations (Luke 1:32–33), and the angelic announcement to the shepherds declares Him “Savior,” “Christ,” and “Lord” (Luke 2:11, ESV). The seed has arrived, not as an abstract principle but as a person. Christmas Eve is thus the moment when the long war between the serpent and the woman’s line narrows to a single child who will win the final victory.

Isaiah 9:6 and the Royal Child: The Government on His Shoulder

Historical-Literary Context

Isaiah 7–12 contains oracles delivered during the Syro-Ephraimite crisis, a geopolitical moment of fear and intrigue in Judah’s history. The house of David faced pressure from neighboring states and the looming Assyrian empire. Isaiah’s prophecies denounce faithless strategies and call the king and people to trust in the Lord. In this context, Isaiah 9:1–7 depicts a great reversal: gloom will give way to light, oppression to liberation, and instability to a just and everlasting reign. At the center stands the birth of a royal child who embodies the promises given to David.

Isaiah 9:6 declares: “For to us a child is born, to us a son is given; and the government shall be upon his shoulder, and his name shall be called Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace” (ESV). Verse 7 continues: “Of the increase of his government and of peace there will be no end, on the throne of David and over his kingdom” (ESV). The promise cannot be reduced to a short-term dynastic wish. The titles and the scope of the reign indicate a horizon that transcends any merely human monarch.

Key Hebrew Terms and Royal Titles

“Child” (yeled) and “Son” (ben)

The parallelism is emphatic. A child is born; a son is given. The birth underscores genuine humanity; the giving accentuates divine initiative and grace. The phrase “to us” highlights vicarious representation. This Son is not only for Himself; He is given to the people of God for their salvation and rule.

“Government” (miśrāh) upon His Shoulder
The noun miśrāh is rare, occurring in Isaiah 9:6–7. It refers to dominion or rule. To bear something on the shoulder is to carry it as a weight of office. The imagery conveys that the authority of the kingdom rests fully on this person’s capacity and vocation. He is no figurehead. He bears the administration of the world.

“Wonderful Counselor” (Peleʾ yōʿēṣ)

The adjective peleʾ denotes wonder in the sense of supernatural acts and counsel beyond human capacity. In the Hebrew Bible, peleʾ often describes the Lord’s saving wonders. The noun yōʿēṣ identifies an adviser or counselor. Together they portray a ruler whose plans are divine in origin and efficacious in execution. The ruler’s strategic wisdom is miraculous, not merely shrewd.

“Mighty God” (ʾEl gibbor)

This title is striking. ʾEl is the common term for God, and gibbor denotes might or heroic strength. The same phrase occurs in Isaiah 10:21 where it clearly refers to the Lord. The application to the royal child signals a mystery of identity. The coming king embodies the power of God in a way that transcends any ordinary royal encomium. The text presses toward the reality that the promised Davidic ruler will possess divine identity.

“Everlasting Father” (ʾAviʿad)

This title does not blur Trinitarian distinctions or collapse the Son into the person of the Father. Rather, it ascribes to the royal Son a paternal mode of kingship. He cares for His people as a father does for his children, and He does so perpetually. The term ʿad denotes perpetuity; His paternal rule is not subject to death or dynasty failure. He is the father of eternity in the sense that He is the author and guardian of an everlasting order.

“Prince of Peace” (Śar shālôm)

The noun śar identifies a ruler or prince. Shālôm is not a mere ceasefire; it is comprehensive wholeness, flourishing, and reconciliation. In the prophetic imagination, true peace is covenantal order restored under the Lord’s righteous rule. This king does not secure his throne through bloodshed alone; he brings the plenitude of well-being that only God can give.

The cumulative force of these titles and claims creates a portrait that exceeds any mortal Davidide. The result in verse 7 confirms this: a never-ending increase of government and peace, enthroned on David’s seat, upheld “with justice and with righteousness from this time forth and forevermore.” The theological seal is explicit: “The zeal of the Lord of hosts will do this” (Isaiah 9:7, ESV). Human politics cannot conjure such a king; only the ardent commitment of God can bring Him forth.

The Nativity Connection

The New Testament writers implicitly and explicitly apply Isaiah 9:6–7 to Jesus. The angel’s announcement to Mary that her child would receive “the throne of his father David” and “of his kingdom there will be no end” (Luke 1:32–33, ESV) aligns exactly with Isaiah’s horizon. The birth narrative in Luke situates Jesus’ arrival in David’s city, Bethlehem, accentuating His royal identity. The angelic proclamation to the shepherds employs royal and salvific titles that echo Isaiah’s counsel and peace: “a Savior, who is Christ the Lord” (Luke 2:11, ESV). Matthew likewise reads the birth through the lens of prophetic fulfillment, citing texts like Micah 5:2 concerning Bethlehem and Isaiah 7:14 concerning Immanuel. While Matthew does not quote Isaiah 9:6 in the Nativity section, his whole presentation of Jesus’ person and mission resonates with the Isaianic portrait of the divine Davidic king.

The Nativity in the Light of Promise: How Christmas Eve Is the Pivotal Fulfillment

If Genesis 3:15 inaugurates the promise of a seed that will crush the serpent and Isaiah 9:6 portrays a divine-human royal child who will bear the government of peace, then the Nativity is the point at which these trajectories intersect. Christmas Eve is not merely the announcement of a birth. It is the unveiling of the King who will accomplish the primordial promise.

Bethlehem as the Cradle of Covenant Fulfillment

The setting underscores fulfillment. Luke records, “And Joseph also went up from Galilee, from the town of Nazareth, to Judea, to the city of David, which is called Bethlehem” (Luke 2:4, ESV). The “city of David” label signals the Davidic covenant in 2 Samuel 7, where God promised a son to sit on David’s throne forever. Micah 5:2 foretold a ruler from Bethlehem “whose coming forth is from of old, from ancient days” (ESV). Bethlehem is not an accident of imperial census logistics. It is the ordained locale where the seed of the woman is also the promised son of David.

The Identity Announced: Savior, Christ, Lord

The angel’s proclamation in Luke 2:10–11 is thick with covenant meaning. “I bring you good news” renders the Greek verb euangelizomai, from which the English “Gospel” derives. The content of the Gospel is the person of the child: “a Savior (sōtēr), who is Christ (Christos) the Lord (Kyrios).” In the Septuagint and the New Testament, Kyrios is the standard translation of the divine name and the common title for God’s sovereign rule. The conjunction of “Savior,” “Christ,” and “Lord” places the infant Jesus within the identity of the God who rescues His people and exercises royal dominion. Isaiah’s “Mighty God” and “Prince of Peace” meet here in the manger.

The Sign of Humility and the Logic of Victory Through Suffering

The shepherds receive a sign that subverts conventional expectations: “You will find a baby wrapped in swaddling cloths and lying in a manger” (Luke 2:12, ESV). The King’s cradle is a feed trough. The paradox is deliberate. The one who bears the government on His shoulder is cradled where animals feed. This humiliation anticipates the pattern by which He will defeat the serpent. The victory promised in Genesis 3:15 includes a heel wound. The Messiah will be struck. The Nativity signals that the path of salvation runs through vulnerability. The stable foreshadows the cross, and the cross is the place where the serpent’s head is crushed. As Hebrews says, Christ partook of flesh and blood “that through death he might destroy the one who has the power of death” (Hebrews 2:14, ESV). The incarnation is therefore not a detour but the necessary means by which the Son enters the arena of death to conquer it.

“Peace on Earth” as Eschatological Shalom

The angelic host sings, “Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace among those with whom he is pleased” (Luke 2:14, ESV). The Greek noun eirēnē corresponds to the Hebrew shālōm. The announcement is not sentimental tranquility. It is the inauguration of the Prince of Peace’s reign foretold in Isaiah 9:6–7. Peace results from the King’s righteous rule, the reconciliation of sinners to God, and the eventual harmonization of all creation under Christ’s lordship. This peace, begun at the Nativity, proceeds through the cross and resurrection and will be consummated when the King returns. Christmas Eve thus marks the dawn of everlasting peace, even as the world still groans in expectation of its full manifestation.

Exegetical Interlude: Tracing the Word Threads

A brief lexical interlude can further illuminate how the Old Testament and New Testament interlace around the Nativity.

Seed (zeraʿ) and Son (ben)

Genesis 3:15’s zeraʿ and Isaiah 9:6’s ben converge in Luke’s presentation of Jesus as both the seed promised to the woman and the Son given by God. The “born of woman” phrase in Galatians 4:4 directly engages the seed motif, while the Son language pervades the infancy narratives. The Son is given “to us,” and the seed is given to the world through the woman. The two strands cohere in the person of Jesus Christ.

Government (miśrāh) and Lordship (Kyrios)

Isaiah’s miśrāh resting on the child’s shoulder finds its narrative realization in the ascription of Kyrios to the infant Jesus. The lordship title is not a future promotion. It names who He is at birth. The Nativity reveals that God’s government has invaded the world in the person of His Son.

Peace (shālōm; eirēnē) 

Isaiah’s “Prince of Peace” and Luke’s proclamation of peace on earth ground the Christmas message in the covenant concept of comprehensive well-being under God’s reign. This is not humanistic optimism but the fruit of the Messiah’s redemptive work.

Wonderful (peleʾ) and Gospel (euangelion)

The wonder associated with God’s saving acts in the Old Testament is matched by the “good news” of the New. The angels evangelize the shepherds not with a set of propositions detached from history but with the announcement of a person whose arrival is God’s wondrous counsel embodied.

The Nativity and the Defeat of the Serpent: From Manger to Cross to Empty Tomb

If Genesis 3:15 frames the battle, then the Nativity commits the champion to the field. Jesus’ life immediately manifests confrontation with the serpent’s design. Herod’s murderous rage in Matthew 2 is more than political paranoia. It is the serpent’s ancient hostility toward the seed erupting anew. Jesus’ public ministry then displays continual victory over the devil’s works. He casts out demons, announcing that the kingdom of God has come (Matthew 12:28). He resists temptation in the wilderness where Adam failed, driven by the Spirit into conflict and prevailing by faithfulness to the Word. Each exorcism and each act of healing previews the final crushing.

The decisive blow occurs at the cross. The heel is bruised as the crucified Lord suffers and dies, yet that very death is the strike against the serpent’s head. As Jesus says, “Now will the ruler of this world be cast out” (John 12:31, ESV). The resurrection then manifests the victory publicly. The Lord who rose in power embodies Isaiah’s “Mighty God” and “Everlasting Father” in the sense that He secures an indestructible life for His people and shepherds them forever. In the ascension and session at the right hand of the Father, the government is indeed upon His shoulder. Christmas Eve begins this chain of events not as a preface but as the incarnation of the person who will accomplish them.

The Church’s Confession and Participation

The Church’s confession at Christmas is therefore richly Biblical. The Church does not celebrate a generic festival of light but the arrival of the serpent-crushing, peace-bringing King. The creeds capture this by confessing that the Son “for us and for our salvation came down from heaven.” Christmas is soteriological. It is about salvation. The Church’s participation in this salvation is both doxological and missional.

Doxology: Worship Befitting the King

The shepherds’ response models the Church’s posture. They go to Bethlehem, see the sign, and glorify and praise God for all they have heard and seen (Luke 2:15–20). The Greek term for glory, doxa, saturates the scene. The Lord’s glory shines around them; they respond with glory to God. To confess Isaiah 9:6 at Christmas is to ascribe royal honor to Jesus. The titles are not merely theological ornaments. They demand adoration and obedience.

Discipleship: Living Under the Government of Peace

If the government is upon His shoulder, then Christian discipleship means living under His wise counsel. The title “Wonderful Counselor” suggests that Christ’s governance encompasses instruction, moral guidance, and practical wisdom. The Sermon on the Mount is the charter ethic of the kingdom. It trains the Church to embody the peace that the Prince of Peace bestows. The Church practices reconciliation, mercy, and peacemaking not as utopian ideals but as the enacted fruit of Christ’s lordship.

Mission: Proclaiming the Gospel of the Kingdom

The angels evangelize; the Church continues their work. The term euangelion signals not only personal forgiveness but the public announcement that Jesus is the saving King. Christmas preaching therefore announces that God’s ancient promise has arrived, invites repentance and faith, and summons all peoples into the joy of His reign. The Church bears witness that the child of Bethlehem is the crucified and risen Lord, and that in Him the serpent’s empire crumbles.

Answering Objections and Clarifying the Canonical Logic

Scholars sometimes raise objections to reading Genesis 3:15 and Isaiah 9:6 Christologically. It is helpful to address two common concerns.

Is Genesis 3:15 really messianic or only about general human-snake animosity?

The text certainly includes the immediate reality of conflict between humans and serpents. However, the divine establishment of enmity, the narrowing from collective “offspring” to a singular “he,” and the asymmetry of the victory indicate more than zoological observation. Moreover, canonical reading is not a violation of the text; it is the mode by which Scripture invites us to read. Later Scripture interprets earlier Scripture. Paul’s application of seed language, the New Testament’s portrayal of Christ’s mission vis-à-vis the devil, and the Church’s reception history collectively support a messianic reading. Genesis 3:15 functions as the seed promise that the rest of the Bible waters, grows, and harvests.

Do Isaiah’s titles exaggerate a merely human king rather than predict a divine Messiah?

Ancient royal rhetoric can be extravagant, yet Isaiah’s language presses beyond hyperbole. “Mighty God” is a divine title elsewhere in Isaiah. The endless increase of government and peace, the everlasting Davidic throne, and the assertion that the zeal of the Lord will accomplish this together exceed the limits of ordinary kingship. The New Testament’s depiction of Jesus as fully divine and fully human corresponds exactly to the unique fusion the titles signal. The incarnation gives literal embodiment to Isaiah’s royal poem.

Christmas Eve as the Theological Center: The Fullness of Time

Paul’s statement that Christ was born “when the fullness of time had come” (Galatians 4:4, ESV) captures Christmas Eve’s theological centrality. The phrase "to plērōma tou chronou" signals that time itself has reached its God-appointed saturation point. The Nativity is not merely timely; it is the designated moment in which God’s eschatological plan breaks into history. The genealogy in Matthew 1 underscores the same truth via structure, organizing Israel’s story into three sets of fourteen generations that culminate in Christ, as if history had been winding toward this birth all along. Luke’s careful dating with reference to Caesar Augustus and Quirinius establishes not mythology but incarnation in real time. The point is that God’s rescue plan is not an abstract theorem. It is executed in the concrete.

That rescue plan begins with the promise of a seed who will crush the serpent and reaches a crescendo with the birth of a royal child who bears divine titles. The manger in Bethlehem is the locus where these promises converge. The infant is the seed. The infant is the King whose name is Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, and Prince of Peace. The government rests on His shoulder even as He rests in Mary’s arms.

A Brief Word on the Original Languages in Devotional Practice

Attention to the original languages serves the Church’s devotion by sharpening understanding and deepening worship. Recognizing that zeraʿ in Genesis 3:15 can refer to both collective and singular entities helps Christians understand how God can shape a community through a representative leader. Recognizing that shūph likely entails a crushing blow to the serpent’s head clarifies the gravity of Christ’s victory. Hearing miśrāh as the weight of real governance keeps Christmas from dissolving into sentimentality; it is about the world’s rightful Ruler assuming His office. Relishing the resonance of Peleʾ yōʿēṣ teaches the Church to expect Christ’s guidance to be both wise and wondrous. Confessing ʾEl gibbor at Christmastide directs adoration to Jesus as true God. Embracing Śar shālôm anchors the Church’s peacemaking in the King’s own identity. In the New Testament, receiving the angelic euangelizomai as Gospel proclamation trains the Church to speak of Christmas not as a private feeling but as public news that changes everything.

Pastoral and Ethical Implications: Living the Nativity Year-Round

The Nativity’s theological depth bears concrete implications for Christian life.

Hope amid Enmity

The enmity God established persists. The Church should not be surprised by opposition. Yet Christians are not defined by fear. The serpent’s head has been crushed. The Church’s hope is not optimism but confidence grounded in the finished work of Christ initiated at His birth and completed in His cross and resurrection.

Peacemaking as Royal Allegiance

To belong to the Prince of Peace is to practice peace. This includes reconciliation across lines of hostility, both personal and social. The Church’s peacemaking is neither naive nor compromised; it is courageous fidelity to the King whose government is peace. Christmas forms communities that embody Isaiah’s vision in miniature.

Obedience to the Wonderful Counselor

Discipleship means receiving Christ’s counsel, which comes through Scripture, the wisdom of the Church, and the ministry of the Holy Spirit. The Wonderful Counselor’s guidance is not advisory but royal. Christians live under His commands as a delight, for His yoke is easy and His burden is light.

Evangelism as Sharing the Angelic News

The Gospel is an announcement. Christmas energizes evangelism, not as a seasonal project only, but as a year-long participation in the angels’ proclamation. The Church tells the world that a Savior has been born, who is Christ the Lord, and invites all to come and adore Him.

Worship as Life’s Center

The glory of God revealed at the Nativity reorients the Church’s priorities. Worship is not one activity among many. It is the center from which everything else flows. The Church gathers to adore the King and is then sent to serve Him.

Christmas Eve as the Hinge of the World

The Nativity is the hinge upon which the world’s true story turns. From Eden’s ruin, God promised a seed who would crush the serpent’s head. Throughout Israel’s history, God promised a royal child upon whose shoulder the government would rest, whose name would be Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, and Prince of Peace. On Christmas Eve, in the city of David, the seed and the Son arrived. The angels announced the Gospel. The shepherds worshiped. Mary treasured all these things in her heart.

This is not a tale of religious nostalgia. It is the central event in the rescue plan God devised from the beginning. The infant’s heel would be bruised, but the serpent’s head would be crushed. The government that rests on His shoulder will increase without end. Peace will cover the earth as the waters cover the sea. The Church knows this because it hears these promises in Genesis and Isaiah and sees their fulfillment in the manger, the cross, the empty tomb, and the exalted throne of Christ.

Therefore, to celebrate Christmas Eve rightly is to read it within the larger Biblical narrative and to confess that in Jesus Christ God has fulfilled the ancient promise. The seed of the woman has come. The Mighty God has been born to us. The Prince of Peace has begun His everlasting reign. The Gospel announces what Isaiah foresaw and what Genesis anticipated. “For to us a child is born, to us a son is given” (Isaiah 9:6, ESV). “He shall bruise your head, and you shall bruise his heel” (Genesis 3:15, ESV). The manger is the place where these two lines meet, and from that place the light has shone in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it.

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The Nativity as the Fulfillment of God’s Rescue Plan

Christmas Eve is not an isolated pageant of sentiment or a quaint prologue to Jesus' public ministry. It is the turning point in a histo...