Wednesday, December 22, 2021

The Gift We Never Deserved: A Christmas Reflection on 2 Corinthians 5:21


“He made the one who did not know sin to be sin for us, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God.” — 2 Corinthians 5:21 (CSB)

When the Wrapping Paper Falls Away

Christmas is a season of giving. Trees are trimmed, stockings are stuffed, and stores bustle with the urgency of “finding the perfect gift.” Yet beyond the lights and the ribbons lies the most undeserved and unfathomable gift of all—God’s righteousness, wrapped not in paper but in flesh.

In the center of this holy season, 2 Corinthians 5:21 resounds with deeper meaning than ever. It tells the story that every Christmas carol hints at, every nativity scene represents, and every believer holds dear: the story of Jesus becoming what we were so that we might become what we never could be without Him.

Let us unwrap this verse together and discover the miracle within.

The Greatest Exchange in History

He Became What He Was Not

“He made the one who did not know sin…”

This is where the wonder begins. Jesus Christ, sinless and holy, perfect in every way, did not just touch our world—He entered into it. Not as a king on a throne, but as a baby in a manger. The One who flung the stars into space chose the vulnerability of human birth.

He knew no sin, not in thought, not in word, not in action. He was not merely innocent; He was holiness personified. Yet Scripture says He “became sin.”

He Took on What Was Not His

“…to be sin for us…”

Here lies the heart of the gospel and the soul of Christmas. Jesus was not a sinner, but He was treated as one. The innocent One bore the penalty of the guilty. The manger led to the cross. The wood that cradled His infant body foreshadowed the wood that would carry His crucified frame.

At Christmas, we celebrate not just that Jesus came, but why He came. He came to take the weight of our brokenness, our rebellion, our shame—and to do so in love.

 

The Righteousness We Could Never Earn

That We Might Become

“…so that in him we might become…”

This part of the verse brings it home. The sacrifice was not random or abstract—it was deeply personal. Jesus did not come for general humanity; He came for you, for me. Not just to forgive sin but to transform sinners.

In Him—not through effort, not through religious performance, not through good deeds—we become. This is not about achieving a moral checklist. It is about receiving a spiritual identity.

The Righteousness of God

“…the righteousness of God.”

The baby born in Bethlehem brought more than peace on earth—He brought righteousness to broken people. He made a way for humanity to stand before a holy God, not covered in shame, but clothed in Christ.

We do not just receive a new heart—we receive a new position, a new standing. We are declared righteous. Not almost holy. Not halfway acceptable. Fully, completely, eternally righteous.

And that is the scandalous beauty of Christmas grace.

 

What This Means for Us at Christmastime

1. We Are No Longer Defined by Our Past

The world often reminds us of what we lack, what we lost, or what we failed to become. But Christmas is the reminder that in Christ, we are no longer defined by what we did—we are defined by what Jesus did.

So many people dread the holidays because of regret, pain, or grief. But 2 Corinthians 5:21 whispers another truth: your past is not the final word—Jesus is.

Let this Christmas be the season where you stop rehearsing your failures and start remembering His righteousness.

2. We Are Free to Come Home

Jesus entered a world that had no room for Him. Yet He made room for us in His righteousness.

This truth beckons us home—not just to a physical place of comfort, but to the arms of our Savior. You do not have to earn your place at the table. The invitation was sealed with His blood and wrapped in His grace.

So come. Come weary, come wondering, come broken, come searching. This righteousness is not for the perfect. It is for the repentant.

3. We Have Something Worth Celebrating

Christmas becomes even more glorious when we realize it is not just about what happened in the past, but what still holds power in the present.

The righteousness we have been given is not seasonal. It is not on loan. It is ours in Christ—eternally.

This is why we sing. This is why we worship. This is why we rejoice—not just for the birth of a baby, but for the birth of a new identity in us because of that baby.

 

The Manger and the Mission

A Mission of Reconciliation

If you go back just one verse, 2 Corinthians 5:20 tells us:

“We are ambassadors for Christ... Be reconciled to God.”

Christmas does not end with comfort. It begins with a calling. Because we have been made righteous, we are now representatives of the Righteous One.

The shepherds told the good news. The wise men bowed in worship. And now, we—those made right with God—carry the message of reconciliation to others.

This means Christmas is not just a time to receive, but a time to share. The joy you feel is not meant to stay in your living room. It is meant to spill into your workplace, your neighborhood, your community.

You are not just celebrating Christ. You are carrying Him.

A Life Marked by Love

To be the righteousness of God is to walk in a different kind of love. Not a conditional, commercial love—but a self-giving, sacrificial love. The kind of love that mirrors the heart of Christ.

This Christmas, who can you love with that kind of love?
Who needs to hear the good news?
Who needs to know they are not too far gone, not too messed up, not too late?

Be the ambassador of grace. Be the living witness of righteousness. Let the gift you give be Jesus through you.

 

This Christmas, Remember Who You Are

You are not forgotten.
You are not forsaken.
You are not who you used to be.

Because of Jesus, you are redeemed. Reconciled. Righteous.

And all of this was made possible not by your goodness, but by His grace. Not through your performance, but through His perfection. Not by earning, but by receiving.

When you look at the lights, remember the Light of the world.
When you open gifts, remember the Gift who opened heaven.
When you sing carols, remember the cry from the manger that echoed into eternity.

Let every moment of Christmas point you back to the miracle of 2 Corinthians 5:21.

 

Final Reflection: The Cradle and the Cross

As we gather around Christmas trees and nativity sets, let us never forget that the story does not end in Bethlehem. It stretches to Calvary and into our hearts. The One who knew no sin came near—not just to dwell among us but to transform us from within.

This is the glory of Christmas: the holy became human, the sinless became sin, the rejected became Redeemer, and the righteous One made us righteous.

You are no longer just someone in need of grace.
You are the proof of grace.

And that, beloved, is worth celebrating—this season and always.

 

A Prayer for Christmas

Father,
Thank You for the gift of Jesus. Thank You that He who knew no sin became sin for me, so that I might become Your righteousness. Let that truth soak deep into my soul this Christmas. In all the noise and celebration, help me remember the sacred exchange that changed everything. I receive Your love, Your forgiveness, and the new identity You offer. Make me an ambassador of this good news. Let my life be a reflection of Your glory—this Christmas and beyond.
In Jesus' Name, Amen.