Hidden Christmas: The Surprising Truth Behind the Birth of Christ
Hidden Christmas: The Surprising Truth Behind the Birth of Christ book cover

Hidden Christmas: The Surprising Truth Behind the Birth of Christ

Hardcover – October 25, 2016

Price
$11.99
Format
Hardcover
Pages
160
Publisher
Viking
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0735221659
Dimensions
5.31 x 0.71 x 7.5 inches
Weight
8 ounces

Description

“[A] great gift book . . . Keller achieves his pastoral goal of teaching Christmas’ most important message—‘God alone has the life, truth, and joy that we lack and cannot generate ourselves’—and in doing so, provides solace for those who seek it.” —Publishers Weekly Praise for Timothy Keller and his other books: “Superbxa0.xa0.xa0.xa0wexa0shouldxa0bexa0gratefulxa0toxa0Kellerxa0forxa0hisxa0wisdom,xa0scholarship,xa0andxa0humility.”xa0—The Gospelxa0Coalition“Tim Keller’s ministry in New York City is leading a generation of seekers and skeptics toward belief in God. I thank God for him.”xa0—Billy Graham“Unlike most suburban megachurches, much of Redeemer is remarkably traditional. What is not traditional is Dr. Keller’s skill in speaking the language of his urbane audience. . . . Observing Dr. Keller’s professorial pose on stage, it is easy to understand his appeal.”xa0— The New York Times “Fifty years from now, if evangelical Christians are widely known for their love of cities, their commitment to mercy and justice, and their love of their neighbors, Tim Keller will be remembered as a pioneer of the new urban Christians.”xa0— Christianity Today Timothy Keller was born and raised in Pennsylvania and educated at Bucknell University, Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary, and Westminster Theological Seminary. His first pastorate was in Hopewell, Virginia. In 1989 he started Redeemer Presbyterian Church in New York City with his wife, Kathy, and their three sons. Today, Redeemer has nearly six thousand regular Sunday attendees and has helped to start more than three hundred new churches around the world. He is the author of Making Sense of God, The Songs of Jesus , Preaching , Prayer , as well as The Meaning of Marriage , The Prodigal God , and The Reason for God , among others. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Christmas is the only Christian holy day that is also axa0major secular holiday—arguably our culture’s biggest. The result is two different celebrations, each observed by millions of people at the very same time. This brings some discomfort on both sides. Many Christians can’t help but notice that more and more of the public festivities surrounding Christmas studiously avoid any references to its Christian origins. The background music in stores is moving from “Joy to the World” to “Have A Holly, Jolly Christmas.” The holiday is promoted as a time for family, for giving, and for peace in the world. “Christmas is a wonderful, secular holiday,” wrote one enthusiast at the popular Web site Gawker.On the other hand, nonreligious people can’t help but find that the older meaning of Christmas keeps intruding uninvited, for instance, through the music of traditional Christmas carols. It can be irritating to have to answer their child’s question, “What does that music mean—‘born to give them second birth’?”As a Christian believer, I am glad to share the virtues of the day with the entirety of society. The secular Christmas is a festival of lights, a time for family gatherings, and a season to generously give to those closest to us and to those in greatest need. These practices are enriching to everyone, and they are genuinely congruent with the Christian origins of the celebration.Because of the commercial indispensability of Christmas, it will remain with us as a secular festival. My fear is, however, that its true roots will become more and more hidden to most of the population. The emphasis on light in darkness comes from the Christian belief that the world’s hope comes from outside of it. The giving of gifts is a natural response to Jesus’ stupendous act of self-u200bgiving, when he laid aside his glory and was born into the human race. The concern for the needy recalls that the Son of God was born not into an aristocratic family but into a poor one. The Lord of the universe identified with the least and the most excluded of the human race.These are powerful themes, but every one of them is a two-edged sword. Jesus comes as the Light because we are too spiritually blind to find our own way. Jesus became mortal and died because we are too morally ruined to be pardoned any other way. Jesus gave himself to us, and so we must give ourselves wholly to him. We are, therefore, “not [our] own” (1 Corinthians 6:19).xa0Christmas, like God himself, is both more wondrous and more threatening than we imagine.Every year our increasingly secular Western society becomes more unaware of its own historical roots, many of which are the fundamentals of the Christian faith. Yet once a year at Christmas these basics truths become a bit more accessible to an enormous audience. At countless gatherings, concerts, parties, and other events, even when most participants are nonreligious, the essentials of the faith can sometimes become visible. As an example, let’s ask some questions of the famous Christmas carol “Hark! The Herald Angels Sing,” heard in malls, in grocery stores, and on street corners. Who is Jesus? He is “everlasting Lord,” who from “highest heaven” comes down to be the “offspring of the virgin’s womb.” What did he come to do? His mission is to see “God and sinners reconciled.” How did he accomplish it? He “lays his glory by,” that we “no more may die." How can this life be ours? Through an inward, spiritual regeneration so radical that, as we have seen, it can be called “the second birth.” With brilliant economy of style, the carol gives us a summary of the entire Christian teaching.While few of the most familiar Christmas songs and Bible readings are that comprehensive, it remains that one season a year hundreds of millions of people, if they would take the trouble to ask these kinds ofxa0questions, would have this same knowledge available to them. To understand Christmas is to understand basic Christianity, the Gospel.In this book I hope to make the truths of Christmas less hidden. We will look at some passages of the Bible that are famous because they are dusted off every Christmas, at the one moment of the year when our secular society and the Christian church are, to a degree, thinking about the same thing. In the first chapters of the book, looking at the Gospel of Matthew, we will learn about the gifts God gave us at Christmas. In the following chapters, focusing on the Gospel of Luke, we will consider how we can welcome and receive those gifts.My hope is that, when the reader is done, the true meaning of Christmas will no longer be hidden. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • From pastor and
  • New York Times
  • bestselling author Timothy Keller comes the perfect gift for the Christmas holiday—a profoundly moving and intellectually provocative examination of the nativity story
  • Even people who are not practicing Christians think they are familiar with the story of the nativity. Every Christmas displays of Baby Jesus resting in a manger decorate lawns and churchyards, and songs about shepherds and angels fill the air. Yet despite the abundance of these Christian references in popular culture, how many of us have examined the hard edges of this biblical story? In his new book Timothy Keller takes readers on an illuminating journey into the surprising background of the nativity. By understanding the message of hope and salvation within the Bible’s account of Jesus’ birth, readers will experience the redeeming power of God’s grace in a deeper and more meaningful way.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

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Most Helpful Reviews

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The Gospel wrapped in the Christmas Story

Two things impressed me most about this book: the warmth and engaging call of the gospel in every chapter, and Keller’s skillful way of handling complex theological topics with wonderful precision. Keller’s treatment of the favorite Christmas passages is complete with God’s sovereign grace, man’s corruption and sin, the need to respond in faith, the fact that faith is something only God gives, the Lordship that salvation demands, and on and on. I’ve never seen it put so humbly, so gently, so clearly, so accurately, so concisely. But the average reader won’t even know he’s reading a theological tour de force—it’s just the Christmas story, well told, suffused with the gospel. Keller writes like a modern-day C. S. Lewis, wrapping profound theology in the language of Everyman. There is no jargon in this book.

Keller manages to get beyond the matters that divide in our current social scene and strikes right to the heart of our brokenness and sin. You can hand Hidden Christmas to the most radical leftist, or to a Constitutional conservative, and neither will be offended by anything but the presentation of the cross itself.

I’ve read a few, not all, of Keller’s books. This is the best so far, which is saying a lot since the others have been so good. In Hidden Christmas the author takes the Christmas texts from Matthew and Luke and carefully unfolds their meanings. A Liberty and Westminster grad, I’ve been preaching and teaching since 1978, and in every chapter Keller is writing about things I’ve never noticed in these passages of Scripture, and they are powerful and profound!

Hidden Christmas is the gospel presentation you’ve been waiting for. Get a copy, enjoy it yourself, and then pass it on to a loved one.
166 people found this helpful
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KRIS KRINGLE OR KELLER?

Hidden Christmas has all the hallmarks we’ve come to expect from Keller. Keller loves to remind us of God’s amazing grace and does so with well-chosen illustrations and fresh insights on old truths.

Keller is irenic in his approach, but that doesn’t mean he pulls his pastoral punches. He is an honest diagnostician of the soul so he reminds us in no uncertain terms that all of us have sinned and fallen short of God’s glory. With all the commercial fanfare of Christmas it is easy to forget what Christmas is all about. And the incarnation, as Keller rightly notes, is the centerpiece to everything: “But I have known many people who have discovered that once they wrestled with and understood the incarnation, it became far easier to accept the rest of the teachings of the New Testament as well.” For Christians like me who have struggled with doubts, this is a wonderfully clarifying and life-giving truth. It will be the same for many who read Hidden Christmas.

Hidden Christmas is a good reminder that “Jesus is not one more lovely story pointing to these underlying realities—Jesus is the underlying reality to which all stories point.”
49 people found this helpful
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This is not an in-depth investigation into the Bethlehem miracle birth, but still an inspiring read

I judged Hidden Christmas: The Surprising Truth Behind the Birth of Christ by Timothy Keller by its cover. I thought it would be an investigation into the Biblical nativity, an exploration of the Bethlehem miracle in the manger. Instead of providing more information about the birth of Christ than what is provided in the Bible, Keller extrapolated on what Christ's birth means for humanity as the path to salvation. While not a bad message to impart upon any reader, that the acceptance of Christ and God's grace will lead to peace and eternal life, nonetheless I found the book and its blurb on the back to be misleading. It was not an in-depth analysis of the Christmas story itself.
7 people found this helpful
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Doesn't Disappoint

Tim Keller doesn't disappoint. This book is a delightful and easy read that is filled with poignant truths. Each chapter is laced with the richness of the Gospel, and Keller uses the nativity narrative to direct our gaze to the Word made flesh and the profound impact that His incarnation has (or should have) on the way we live. If we truly believe that God humbled Himself by becoming a newborn- if Jesus is truly who He claimed- then He is not just a great example to be admired or emulated. He is King, sovereign and Lord of our lives, and our only reasonable response is to join His mother Mary in saying, "Behold, I am the servant of the Lord; let it be to me according to your word.”
5 people found this helpful
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This little book is packed with insight. It really ...

This little book is packed with insight. It really enriched my understanding of Christmas and I ordered more to give as gifts. I'll read it again every year.
1 people found this helpful
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Make This Part of Your Christmas reading

What a wonderful little gem. Most Christians know the details of the Christmas story but this book unpacks the implications of the responses given by the participants. The chapter on Mary is especially insightful. I plan on reading it each right after Thanksgiving each year to remind of the tremendous implications the Incarnation has for us.
1 people found this helpful
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I have read this through twice and am still processing ...

I have read this through twice and am still processing it.Some of the material that Pastor Keller puts together I have seen in other writings, but he develops it more thoroughly. He writes about aspects that are hidden from non Christians, but also some that appear to be hidden from Christians.
1 people found this helpful
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It is both easy and deep reading

I have read many books on the meaning of Christmas. This one is OUTSTANDING! It is both easy and deep reading. Keller's insights continue to astound. We are using for an Advent study in our Sunday School, and everyone is loving it. That says a lot since usually they only like DVD studies -- and they have to actually READ this book! :-)
1 people found this helpful
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Beautifully Written

Written in a way that makes you think. It makes the Christmas story real and personal.
1 people found this helpful
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Keller & Donley--Get Both For Christmas!

What can be said of Timothy Keller's Hidden Christmas—a very good book! A great book for Christmas.

But, I’ve come across another new book by Dr. Jeffrey Donley titled The Counterfeit Christmas: What the Gospels Really Teach About the Birth of Jesus. (Check it out on Amazon).

Donley far outshines Keller' work. Check it out for yourself! You decide!

Donley has a truly unique voice that is gripping, unusual, and absorbing. His writing is so effortless that you don’t realize until you race to the last sentence just how carefully he’s plotted this page-turner. The combination of Donley’s comprehensive (meticulous) research and his skill at creating credible characters of Mary, Joseph, Herod the Great, and the Wisemen, make for a factual and very exciting reading. Donley pulls everything together in a story that suits his gifts for compelling historical narrative. Donley’s book will uplift you while skillfully communicating some of life’s verities through the experiences of Mary and Joseph.

In Donley’s book the narrative he CORRECTS the counterfeit Christmas traditional nativity scene. There was no donkey for Mary to ride on! No mean innkeeper! No sweet-smelling crib for Jesus to lay in! No blue or white blanket to cover baby Jesus! No warm barn for Mary to give birth in! No Wisemen at Jesus’ birth! There were not three Wisemen! The Wisemen were not Kings. The Wisemen did not ride camels! Donley even teaches us the true identity of the Wisemen through historical documentation

Get BOTH books for Christmas!
1 people found this helpful