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The entire history of the world is marked by a single moment. No wonder academics today have changed the letters from BC to BCE.
Good morning, welcome to the Morning Motivation, brought to you by the Patriot Gold Group and the Public Square app. I'm done with the crazy, craziest part of the week. I still have a couple of crazy things coming up a little later in the week, but like, so my stress level is way down and my joy level is way higher. And it feels good, but that's a problem. This whole month has been about joy, a little advent leading up to Christmas about joy. Joy shouldn't be dependent on how much work I have. It shouldn't be dependent on how stressed I am, how much I have to do today or tomorrow or this week. Joy should be independent of all other circumstances. That's what I'm trying to get to. It's what the Bible calls for. So this whole month again has been about joy. I wanna share a thought here from Hebrews. First, it's pretty interesting that we used to mark things as BC and AD. BC before Christ. All of time marked by the birth of Christ. This thing that we're going to celebrate in just a couple days here. If nothing else that shows what a Christian world we used to live in. When the scientists who would look back and try to figure out you know when when things happened they would mark it based off of the distance from the birth of Jesus. The birth of Jesus that's zero. We'll start from here and everything before that we're gonna go into negative numbers and then we're in positive time now. Isn't that amazing?
Again, it speaks to how everyone is of course Christian. Everyone had a Christian worldview. Like, what's the most important thing in all of time? Okay, great. That's zero. We'll start from there. Other things could have been year zero. And other communist regimes want to start year zero from the beginnings of the revolution. Today is year zero. But no, it's the birth of Christ. How times have changed. Now it's CE and BCE, which is common era. CE is common era and before common era. But of course, it's still the birth of Christ that centers around. They didn't change the numbers. They just changed the letters. AD, by the way, means Anno Demone, which is the year of our Lord. Hebrews 1, 1. At many times and in many ways God spoke to our fathers by the prophets but in these last days he has spoken to us by his Son. The birth of Jesus is the moment when the last days begin and it is great to live in the last days. It's better to live in the last days because we have the Holy Spirit. Joel 2, 28 says in the last days, here we are, God will pour out His Spirit upon all flesh. Jesus has come. The Old Testament prophets looked forward to the day when the Messiah would come. And He has come. And we're like, Eh, whatever.
In the words of John Piper, This is where we live. The already of fulfillment is massive. Incarnation, crucifixion, atonement, propitiation, resurrection, ascension, heavenly reign, intercession, outpouring of the Holy Spirit, New Testament scriptures, prayer in Jesus' name, joy unspeakable, and purchased certainty. That is the time we're living in right now. What a wonderful, joyful time it is. We still have the Second Coming to come. The resurrection of the dead, new and glorious bodies, the end of sinning, glorification, judgment on all unbelief, rewards, entrance into the Master's joy, new heavens and new earth, Jesus present among his people face to face, no more misery, pleasures forevermore. This is the time to live, but we have that to look forward to, too. Christmas is the moment that split history. And thank goodness we live in the last days. That should bring us great joy. No matter how much work I still have to do this week to get ready for the days off. To go back to Matthew 2.10, this is what I'm going to be thinking of the most this Christmas. It is the shepherd seeing the star. Matthew 2.10 says, they rejoiced exceedingly with great joy. Sounds redundant, doesn't it? You rejoice exceedingly with great joy. You said the same thing twice. Rejoice exceedingly with great joy. It's the same thing. Yeah, yeah. When they saw the star, they rejoiced exceedingly with great joy. They didn't say, oh, but I got work to do. I'm pretty stressed. They rejoiced exceedingly with great joy. Mike Slater dot Locals dot com, commercial transcript night before, commercial transcript night before, Mike Slater dot Locals dot com.