Christmas is a celebration of God’s great rescue plan. Paul, chief of the apostles and “chief of sinners,” put it succinctly when he wrote that God “did not spare his own Son but gave him up for us all,” and then asked, “How will he not also with him graciously give us all things?” (Romans 8:32)
Having gone to such lengths already, what would God NOT do to win your heart and save your soul?
Christmas is a celebration of God’s vertical rescue plan. Having gone to such lengths already, what would God NOT do to win your heart and save your soul?
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I’m convinced that the mothers of boys view the world and read the Bible through a unique lens. I’m thinking about a scriptural account of another rescue plan, the Luke 5 story of Jesus healing a paralyzed man. Without a single thing in the text to support my theory, I stubbornly cling to the idea that it was four brothers on the business ends of that stretcher, carrying a family friend (or a fifth brother?) who had been tragically paralyzed.
Jesus was inside the house, surrounded by so many listeners and critics that every door and every window was blocked. When “excuse me” and “pardon me” failed to clear the way to Jesus, things looked pretty hopeless. They were stuck outside, completely blocked off from healing and hope for their paralyzed friend, and if it were not for some creative problem solving, that would have been the end of a sad story, lost to history and never recovered.
The Wonder of a Vertical Rescue
When horizontal measures were just not doing the job, this foursome thought vertically. Palestinian households utilized their rooftops as an extra room, so an external stairway and some teamwork facilitated the hoisting of their stretcher-bound friend to the tiled roof. Then, without so much as a conference or a committee meeting, the digging and dismantling began.
Tile fragments and falling dust would have alerted the non-omniscient occupants of the packed house that something strange was going on over their heads, but no one was prepared for the response of the only omniscient fellow in the room. As the four warriors lowered their friend’s bed into the room, Jesus said, “Man, your sins are forgiven you.”
Did the four stretcher bearers roll their eyes?
Did the most outspoken open his mouth to clarify the “real need” as he saw it?
“Um, Jesus… Well, we sort of had something else in mind.”
Scripture tells us Jesus’s words gave the Pharisees what they came for that day: evidence to initiate a blasphemy charge. For those who came with open hearts, however, it profoundly established Jesus’s identity as God the Son. And since restoring life to paralyzed limbs is a mere carnival stunt compared to forgiving sin, Jesus went on to heal the man, lifting in a flash his burden of helplessness and hopelessness.
High fives all around, and I’m sure the crowd parted for the guys this time as the newly-healed man obediently picked up his bed and went home, followed by his four satisfied advocates. They had accomplished their mission by thinking vertically.
When God witnessed the helpless condition of humanity, he put a plan in place that cost him everything. There was no horizontal way out of our fallenness, so he thought vertically. Down he came, wearing a body that could bleed and die, because that was the only way to make things right again.

Have you opened your heart to God’s great rescue plan? It’s the first and best Christmas gift and it’s been given to you!
And if you have been rescued, having sat on the receiving end of such grace, having taken the “all things” of rescue and salvation from the God of the universe, how could we not also freely give?
Holding You in the Light,

See all my Given—One Word 2024 posts here.
God put a plan in place that cost him everything. There was no horizontal way out of our fallenness so he thought vertically. Down he came wearing a body that could bleed and die because that was the only way to make things right again
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Thinking vertically – YES! 🙂
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Thanks so much for reading!
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God’s great rescue is a beautiful gift. Merry Christmas to you and your family.
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It is indeed! Indescribable! Merry Christmas to you and yours!
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So thankful for His great sacrifice to rescue us! Hope you and your family have a wonderful Christmas.
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Blessed Christmas to you and yours!
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I believe this is the first time I’ve heard this miracle story used at Christmas time, to help us understand the healing Jesus performs in our spirits. Well done, Michele! And praise God for his vertical plan, sending Jesus down to us so that one day we might rise with him into eternal life!
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Ha! You are the first to acknowledge that this story is not standard fair for Christmas, but it came to mind because I taught it to a group of children a few years ago and the vertical thinking idea was born. I love thinking about the lengths God has traveled to restore us!
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He is indeed the only superhero (aka Rescuer) that we need.
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And that’s the beauty of the Christmas story!
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He is the only Rescuer we ever need!
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So true!
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Merry Christmas!!!!
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And I hope yours was wonderful!
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Thanks Michele, it was just as lowkey as we were hoping it would be 🙂
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God’s ways and thoughts are not our ways and thoughts, are they? (What did Lewis say, that Christianity was something we “never would have guessed”?) I love the possibility that the four stretcher carriers were brothers. Sounds perfectly plausible to me. 🙂
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I think so, too, and I LOVE the Lewis quote!
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We made it through the year, friend. Thanks for all the ways you speak into my life. I am blessed by your wit, wisdom, strength, and dynamic walk with Jesus.
xo
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And you are a gift to me as well. Thanks for your willingness to keep showing up in all kinds of ways.
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I have definitely been given much, and hope that I will give back. Thanks for this, Michele! Given has been such a great word choice.
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Yes, I was grateful for the lessons it taught me this year.
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Those four guys were absolute chads, I’m sure of it, and that story is one of my favorites in the gospels. I love how you compared it to God’s vertical rescue plan for all of us!
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One of my favorites, too! So glad you resonate!
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