"God is with us", what does this mean? When Isaiah declared that the virgin's child would be named Immanuel, it seemed most likely that God would be with his people in Spirit. After all, God had gone to great lengths to convince his Covenant people that he was the only true God, that they need seek no other. God could be "with" his people wherever they were. And yet, more was needed, the Covenant people were unable to lift themselves up to the lofty standard of the Law of Moses, they needed help. As Matthew recounts the story of Jesus, the term Immanuel takes on a whole new meaning. Because Mary's conception was an act of the Holy Spirit, God himself would be entering into his creation in new way unlike anything that had happened before. The God of the universe, not bound by time or space, would take upon himself human flesh and live as we do, bound by the laws that he himself had helped his father craft. Immanuel would go from being a symbol of God's relationship with his people to being a literal truth; God would indeed be "with us" when the Christ was born.
How would this advent of Creator into his creation change our world? One thing became crystal clear, if God is willing to condescend so much to save us, his love for us cannot be doubted. Likewise, if God found it necessary to go to such an end to save humanity, our hope of ever fixing ourselves must have been false all along. God came down to earth at Bethlehem because there was no other way, Immanuel was our only hope.
After his dream ends, Joseph proceeds to obey the word of God by bringing Mary home as his wife. The Son of God will now have an adoptive father to raise him on behalf of his heavenly Father.
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