
Preached on Christmas Day, this fourth in a series of four messages upon Christmas Hearts looks at The Wisemen as model for developing our own worshiping hearts.

And now, after you have worshipped Christ in your soul, and seen Him with the eye of faith, it will not need that I should say to you, give Him yourself, give Him your heart, give Him your substance. Why, you will not be able to help doing it! He who really loves the Savior in his heart cannot help devoting to Him his life, his strength, his all. With some people, when they give Christ anything, or do anything for Him, it is dreadfully forced work.
If you have gold, give it. If you have frankincense, give it. If you have myrrh, give it to Jesus. And if you have none of these things, give Him your love—all your love, and that will be gold and spices all in one! Give Him your tongue, speak of Him. Give Him your hands, work for Him. Give Him your whole self. I know you will, for He loved you, and gave Himself for you.

As we approach this Christmas, let's think about a time when Jesus was lost by Joseph and Mary (Luke 2:41-50). There are four question for us to ask ourselves this holiday season:
1. Who Lost Christ?
Joseph and Mary lost the Lord Jesus. Those who were the closest to Him, lost Him. Jesus had been with them for twelve years. No matter how long you have known Jesus you can still lose Him. No one is exempt from backsliding.
Some of the greatest men and women in the Bible have fallen in sin. All Christians are vulnerable to backsliding. Regardless of who you are or what you have done, you can lose Christ. Here is a thought: If Mary and Joseph can lose him, anyone can lose Christ.
2. When Did They Lose Christ?
Joseph and Mary lost Jesus during a religious celebration. The irony of ironies took place because the Passover celebration symbolized Him. Not only was the Passover about Christ, but Christmas concerns itself with Christ. Passover involved the sacrifice of a lamb. Christmas includes the sending of the Lord. The Passover mad man look ahead to redemption. Christmas makes us look back at the incarnation.
During this Christmas Season remember that our joy is because of Jesus; our songs are because of our Savior, our love is because of our Lord and our inheritance is because His incarnation and our blessings are because of His birth!
3. Why Did They Leave Christ?
We can leave Christ when our perception is weak. The Bible says, "And when they had fulfilled the days, as they returned, the child Jesus tarried behind in Jerusalem and Joseph and his mother knew not of it."
The second reason that Joseph and Mary left Jesus is their perception was wrong. They supposed that Jesus was with them but He was not. I encourage you to evaluate your spiritual condition this holiday season.
The third reason that their progress was wasteful. Can you imagine the scene? Mary and Joseph traveled an entire day before they realized that they had left him behind. A life without Jesus is a wasted life! How did they leave Him? One step at a time. If there has ever been a time when you loved Jesus more than you have backslidden that far.
4. Where Did They Latch Onto Christ?
Jesus' parents found him at the exact place where they had left him. It is the place where people leave Christ is where they find him.





Live while you live. While it is called today, work, for the night comes wherein no man can work.And let us learn never to do anything which we would not wish to be found doing if we were to die. We are sometimes asked by young people whether they may go to the theater, whether they may dance, or whether they may do this or that. You may do anything which you would not be ashamed to be doing when Christ shall come. You may do anything which you would not blush to be found doing if the hand of death should smite you. But if you would dread to die in any spot, go not there. If you would not wish to enter the presence of your God with such-and-such a word upon your lip, utter not that word. Or if there would be a thought that would be uncongenial to the Judgment Day, seek not to think that thought. So act that you may feel you can take your shroud with you wherever you go.Happy is he that dies in his pulpit. Blessed is the man that dies in his daily business, for he is found with his loins girt about him serving his Master. But, oh, unhappy must he be to whom death comes as an intruder and finds him engaged in that which he will blush to have ever touched when God shall appear in judgment. Power Supreme. You everlasting King—permit not death to intrude upon an ill-spent hour—but find me rapt in meditation high—hymning my great Creator—proclaiming the love of Jesus, or lifting up my heart in prayer for myself and my fellow-sinners.


But if I give myself to the Holy Spirit and ask His guidance, there is no fear of my wandering.Again—we rejoice in this Spirit because He is ever-present. We fall into a difficulty sometimes. We say, “Oh, if I could take this to my minister, he would explain it. But I live so far off and am not able to see him.” That perplexes us and we turn the text round and round and cannot make anything out of it. We look at the commentators. We take down pious Thomas Scott and, as usual he says nothing about it if it is a dark passage. Then we go to holy Matthew Henry and if it is an easy Scripture, he is sure to explain it. But if it is a text hard to be understood, it is likely enough, of course, left in its own gloom. And even Dr. Gill himself, the most consistent of commentators, when he comes to a hard passage manifestly avoids it in some degree.
But when we have no commentator or minister, we have still the Holy Spirit. And let me tell you a little secret—whenever you cannot understand a text, open your Bible, bend your knee and pray over that text. And if it does not split into atoms and open itself, try again. If prayer does not explain it, it is one of the things God did not intend you to know and you may be content to be ignorant of it. Prayer is the key that opens the cabinets of mystery. Prayer and faith are sacred picklocks that can open secrets and obtain great treasures. There is no college for holy education like that of the blessed Spirit, for He is an everpresent Tutor to whom we have only to bend the knee, and He is at our side, the great Expositor of Truth.

In Dr. Seuss's Christmas classic, the Grinch's heart grew three sizes when he understood the meaning of Christmas. This series will look at how we can let God enlarge our hearts this season. In this first message we look at how Mary and Joseph had hearts willing to let Jesus enter their lives and ask how we can have willing hearts to do the same.