Presented to the Swift Current Corps on 23 December, 2013 and 26 December 2010 by Captain Michael Ramsay
Click here to read a shorter 2014 and 2015 614 Toronto version: http://sheepspeaks.blogspot.ca/2014/12/matthew-118-218-what-is-your-choice.html
Click here to read a shorter 2014 and 2015 614 Toronto version: http://sheepspeaks.blogspot.ca/2014/12/matthew-118-218-what-is-your-choice.html
Click here to read the 26 December 2021 Alberni Valley version: https://sheepspeaks.blogspot.com/2021/12/matthew-118-218-whats-your-choice.html
.
In this passage
that we have just read, Matthew’s version of the Christmas story, we are faced
with three responses to the miracle of the birth of Christ, the coming of the
Messiah, that of:
1)
Joseph (his legal father),
2)
Herod (the king of the Jews), and
3)
Some magi (astrologers, astronomers,
magicians or wise men, traditionally ‘we three kings’).
I want to look a little bit today at their three responses to the
news that Jesus was to be born and the news that he was actually born.
1) Joseph[1]
First we have
Joseph: Joseph is a carpenter/stone
mason. He is from the tribe of Judah and – of course – a famous ancestor of his
is King David. Matthew records a few things about Joseph: we are told in our
text today that Joseph, Verse 19, is righteous. In our world today when we
think of a righteous person… if someone were to tell you that a person is
righteous… if someone were to say that a visitor that we have here today is a
righteous woman or man, what would we think that they would be like? They would
pray, read the Bible, love God and love their neighbour (cf. Luke 10:27). All
of the above would probably be true of them and more. This was very much what
it would have meant for Joseph too. Joseph served God and for the first century
Jews, if one was righteous it meant that one was very good at keeping the
religious law of the day.[2]
Matthew tells us
also, Verse 1:18, that Joseph is pledged to be married to a girl named Mary.[3]
Now, betrothal in the first century is not like it is today. When you are
engaged then you are already bound. You are already considered as husband and
wife and the union can only be dissolved through death or divorce.[4]
But before Mary and Joseph ever ‘know each other’ in the Biblical sense, before
they ever come together in THAT way, Mary becomes pregnant.
Imagine this
scenario with me, if you will – men in particular: you are engaged, you have
not had relations with your fiancée and all of a sudden you find out that she
is pregnant. What would you do? What would you say? What would you feel? What
would you think? What would you think and what would you do if your girlfriend
to whom you are engaged becomes pregnant – and not by you? Would you still get
married? Joseph, when he finds out that Mary is pregnant, is planning to call
off the wedding altogether. Verse 19 says that he wants to do this quietly so
as to not bring any disgrace upon Mary. Joseph is a righteous man.
Then something
happens. Joseph has a dream. He dreams about an angel and in the dream this
angel tells Joseph that he should ‘take Mary home as his wife’, Verse 20,
‘because what is conceived in her is from the Holy Spirit’. He then dreams
about what to name this child and how this son will save people from even their
sins. It is now that Joseph has a number of decisions to make.
1)
Does he believe in visions in general
and does he believe in this vision in particular?
2)
Does he believe that an angel actually
has spoken to him and does he believe that what this angel has told him is
true?
3)
And how will he respond to his belief?
Will he ignore his conviction that this vision is from God and press on with
the separation/divorce anyway or will he accept the commission given to him
from God through a messenger in a dream? What would you do? Do you believe in
your dreams?
Joseph does.
Joseph is a righteous man. When Joseph awakes from his sleep, Verse 24, he does
everything the angel from the Lord tells him to do including taking Mary home
as his wife and not having any sexual relations with her until after this child
is born. This is Joseph. Joseph is a righteous man. He follows his dream. He
follows God.
2) Herod[5]
The second
character’s response to the news of the birth of Christ that we are looking at
in our story today is Herod. Herod is not a carpenter like Joseph. Herod is a
regional king. He works for the Romans and he is known throughout history as
‘Herod the Great’. Herod the Great is the political leader at this time and in
this place. He is a politician of his era and as such is involved in all the
political intrigue of his era in all the ways that political intrigue is
carried out in his era (cf. Josephus, Bellum ii.10–13; cf. also Josephus,
Antiquities xvii. 224, 229, 250, 304, 307, 340).[6]
He is a king but his job is no more secure than that of a contemporary
politician in a minority government and Herod defends his title and his job no
less vigorously than our present day leaders: in order to secure his position
Herod needs to back the right horse and defeat all his rivals (cf. Josephus,
Antiquities i.358). He – like many contemporary politicians – switches his
allegiances more than once as to whom he backs for Emperor – first he backs
Mark Anthony’s (and Cleopatra’s) coalition government and later crosses the
floor to support Octavian, a.k.a. Caesar Augustus.[7]
Herod the Great is a king who left behind a good legacy of building and growth
but he is also an adept politician, cruel and insecure. His title awarded to
him by Caesar Augustus is Herod, King of the Jews.[8]
Imagine with me
what it must have been like for him. Imagine, you have the job that you have
fought hard for all your life and your job title is that of ‘King of the Jews’
and these privileged academics – these magi - come up to you and, Matthew 2:2,
they ask “Where is the one who has been born King of the Jews? We saw his star
in the east and have come to worship him.” Imagine, you have the job that you
have fought hard for all your life and your job is ‘King of the Jews’ – and you
are not even a full Jew by birth - and these strangers come up to you and ask
to meet your replacement, the new King of the Jews. How would you react?
I was a dishwasher
once, for about a week as a teenager; the job didn’t go well and I didn’t get
along with my co-worker and one day I meet a friend for coffee; he is excited
as he tells me that ha has just been hired for a job at this same restaurant.
When we talk for a while it becomes apparent that they have hired him for my
job. That is how I found out that I was going to be fired. This could be what
it is like for Herod when he hears this news that a there is going to be a new
king of the Jews - except that Herod actually likes his (and he also probably
never dunked his co-worker in a sink full of dirty water). This news that there
is a new king of the Jews is a shock to him. This news is a threat to him.
Current kings can be killed when new kings take over. Herod is the current king
of the Jews. He hasn’t just had a son; so who is this new King of the Jews that
has just been born? If you were Herod, what would you do? What would you say?
What would you feel? What would you think?
Matthew records,
2:3, that when Herod hears this news he is disturbed and all of Jerusalem is
disturbed with him. They and he immediately do their research. Herod, Verse 4,
immediately calls for the “people’s chief priests and teachers of the Law, he
asked them where the Christ was to be born.” He knows that the people are
waiting for a leader to deliver thFem. Many people are expecting a Messiah, a
political leader who will deliver them from the Romans. The Romans, remember,
are the Superpower of their day and they are the ones who, with their military
might, are keeping King Herod in power. If the Romans go, so probably does
Herod. When he finds out where this Messiah, this Christ, this new king is to
be born from the people’s chief priests and teachers of the Law (Matthew 2:6),
he calls a secret meeting with these Magi to find out when it was that this
star appeared (Matthew 2:7); Herod has a plan. Verse 8, he says to the Magi,
“Go and make a careful search for the child. As soon as you find him, report to
me, so that I too may go and worship him.” The Magi do not do this – they
outwit Herod (V. 15). Herod is likely scared. Herod is probably insecure. Herod
is definitely, Verse 16, furious. Herod
is determined to eliminate his would-be-rival so Herod sends in the troops. The
military massacres male babies two years old and younger – in order to wipe out
all the male children who were born in the possible timeframe that this new
king of the Jews was supposed to have been born. This is Herod’s reaction.
3) Magi
The third response
to the news of the coming of the King of the Jews that we are looking at this
morning is that of the Magi. Like we said earlier: magi are astrologers,
astronomers, or wise men (cf. Daniel 2:2,10; Acts 8:9; 13:6,8). Our word
‘magic’, interestingly enough comes from the same root as ‘magi’. In Acts
13:6,8, this same word, ‘magoi’, is actually translated ‘magicians’[9].
In the Christmas story traditionally these magi are commonly known as
‘we three kings’ (ca. 225 CE Tertullian called them kings[10]).
Now – of course – there is no mention as to how many of these magi there are in
this story. The Bible mentions that they bring three different kinds of gifts –
gold, frankincense, and myrrh – but does not mention how many magi there were
(Matthew 2:11). The word ‘magi’ is plural so presumably there are at least two
of them but there could be 2 or 102 of them; we don’t know but we do know that
they are learned people.
These learned
people see this thing in the sky. They see this ‘star’. These magi, they
probably aren’t Jews.[11]
They come from the east (cf. Philippians 2:10-11). Remember that travel isn’t
easy in that day and age: they can’t just hop a flight or drive the
Trans-Palestine superhighway to Jerusalem. These wise men realize somehow from
their studies of the world around them that the King of the Jews has been born
(cf. Numbers 24:17, Daniel 9:25, John 4:25,Romans 1).[12]
What do they do when they discover this? Remember that they probably aren’t
Jews and they don’t live in the area. They probably are men of privilege; who
else has time to devote to study and travel in this way in this time in this
place? What do these privileged foreign academics do when they find out that a
king of the Jews has been born? They come to worship him (Matthew 2:2; cf. TSA
d. 2,4).
This is
interesting. These men. They see the star (cf. Numbers 24:17). They realize
somehow that the King of the Jews has been born, so where do they go to see
him? They head to Jerusalem, the capital city of the province of Judea; they go
to the palace where the king lives. This is where one would go to find a new king,
isn’t it? This makes sense: a king would naturally be born to the family that
lives in the royal palace in the royal city – That makes sense but in this
instance by simply doing what makes sense, they are wrong (cf. Judges 21:25).
The new king of the Jews is not born in the palace of the old king of the Jews.
He is born about five miles out-of-town, just south of Jerusalem in a community
known as Bethlehem in Judea (Matthew 2:5). Lest we give our academic friends
too much of a tough time here, they quickly realize their error and make the
necessary corrections (Matthew 2:9). Instead of relying on their own devices
and falling prey to the plans of Herod, they pay attention to their dreams and
they decide to follow God’s star to the place where He is taking them (Matthew
2:10-12).
After an interview
or two with Herod (Matthew 2:1-9), the current King of the Jews, these learned
Magi realize that not only is the new king of the Jews not with the old and
current king of the Jews in the palace but they realize that the old and
current king of Judea has no immediate idea of what they are talking about and
King Herod even asks them in a subsequent interview to tell him what they find
out when they find him (Matthew 2:8). Herod is up to something (Matthew 2:16).
But the Magi are warned by God in a dream, they avoid Herod’s trap and they
follow God’s star to where God is taking them and God is taking them to a house
in Bethlehem where these gentiles meet the King of the Jews and present him
with the gifts they brought with them (Matthew 2:11). These foreigners see the
signs; they leave their homes and their lives to track down the young king and
worship Him. These are the Magi.
What is your
response?
These are the
three different responses to the birth of Jesus that Matthew intertwines for us
in our text today. And these are three different choices for us as we are faced
with the reality of the Advent of Christ in our world today. What is our
response to the news of Christ? Are we like Herod? Herod is a man of power,
prestige and privilege in society. He doesn’t believe in the power of the
Almighty God. Herod thinks he can take matters into his own hands and disregard
the truth of what God has preordained. He is wrong. Instead of worshipping the
Lord, he tries to rule his world himself. His plans are frustrated though and
he is furious. Likewise today if we deny the reality of the Kingdom of God and
the return of Christ and instead try to control our own world, in the end we
may be furious and we will be frustrated because in the end every knee will bow
and every tongue will confess that Jesus Christ is Lord – whether we want to
our not (Isaiah 45:23, Romans 14:11, Philippians 2:10). Jesus has already
defeated sin and death. We do not want to make the same choice as Herod
Better are the
choices of the Gentile Magi and the Judean Joseph in their responses to the
news of the birth of the Christ. Joseph, a righteous man, has grown up in the
faith. He knows that God can be trusted so when the almost inconceivable
conception occurs, he draws on the teaching of his youth, he follows his
dreams, he listens to God and he spends his life living with the Christ. This
is a faith that each of us who grew up in the church should have. We have the
Biblical record (cf. TSA d.1), we have the historical record, we have our
personal experience, and we have a brain; so rather than chuck all that we have
known and experienced out the window like the Herod, let us lean not on simply
our own understanding (Proverbs 3:5) but let us trust instead in the power and
majesty of our Lord.[13]
And let us today and forever more, when we realize the power and majesty of the
reality of Christ’s reign; let us, like the Magi, come and worship Him. This is
my prayer for us today on this December 23rd some 2000 years after
the birth of our Saviour, that indeed that we will realize from all the
evidence around us the reality of Christ, cast all else aside and come to
worship Him forevermore (cf. TSA d. 2,4).
Let us pray
---
[1] cf. Captain Michael Ramsay, 'Luke 1:26-37: Do You Believe?'
Presented to the Nipawin Corps 14 December 2008. Available on-line:
http://sheepspeaks.blogspot.com/2008/12/luke-126-37-do-you-believe.html and
Captain Michael Ramsay, 'Matthew 1:18-25: Do you believe?' Presented to each
Nipawin and Tisdale Corps, 24 December 2007 and the CFOT chapel in Winnipeg,
December 2006. Available on-line:
http://sheepspeaks.blogspot.com/2008/12/matthew-118-25-do-you-believe.html
[2] Walter W. Wessel and Ralph Earle, ‘Matthew’ in NIV Study Bible
(Grand Rapids, Mi : Zondervan, 2002), note on Matthew 1:19, p. 1467.
[3] cf. R. Alan Culpepper, Luke (NIB 8: Nashville, Tenn.: Abingdon,
1995), 51 and E. Earle Ellis, 71. Betrothal is not quite like engagements of
today. In those days a man and his wife were committed to each other at the
engagement ceremony. They did have a public ceremony with witnesses and the
more. They did each gain a marital status, complete with rights and
responsibilities and if Joseph had died after their engagement ceremony but
prior to their marriage ceremony, Mary would still be considered a widow with
all the responsibilities and rights (or lack thereof) of a widow. The betrothal
was very different then anything we have today and even though Mary would be
Joseph’s legal wife, after this engagement ceremony rather than going off to
live with one’s husband, the wife usually returned to her father’s household
for a period of up to a year.
[4] M. Eugene Boring, ‘Matthew’ (NIB VIII: Nashville, Tennessee:
Abingdon Press, 1995), 134.
[5] cf. Captain Michael, 'Luke 19:11-27: Time, Talent and Treasure
Series, Part 2: Employee Evaluation: What About the Slaves?' Presented to the Swift Current Corps, 19
September 2010 Available on-line:
http://sheepspeaks.blogspot.com/2010/09/luke-1911-27-time-talent-and-treasure.html
[6] Cf. R. Alan Culpepper, Luke (NIB 8: Nashville, Tenn.: Abingdon,
1995), 363.
[7] Jona Lendering, 'King Herod the Great', cited 23 December 2010.
Available on-line: http://www.livius.org/he-hg/herodians/herod_the_great02.html
[8] cf. Leon Morris: ‘Luke: An Introduction and Commentary’, Downers
Grove, IL : InterVarsity Press, 1988 (Tyndale New Testament Commentaries 3), S.
290 and Expositor's Bible Commentary, The, Pradis CD-ROM:Luke/Exposition of
Luke/V. Teaching and Travels Toward Jerusalem (9:51-19:44)/F. Final Approach to
Jerusalem (18:31-19:44)/4. Parable of the ten minas (19:11-27), Book Version:
4.0.2
[9] Douglas R.A. Hare, Matthew (Interpretation: Louisville, Kentucky:
John Knox Press, 1993), 13.
[10] Ralph L. Smith ‘Magi’ in Holman Bible
Dictionary, Editor, Trent C. Butler, (Holman Bible Publishers: Nashville,
Tenn., 1991), 910.
[11] Walter W. Wessel and Ralph Earle, note on 2:2, 1467, and Douglas
R.A. Hare, Interpretation: ‘Matthew’,
13.
[12] Cf. Exposition of the Gospel According to
Luke (NTC: Baker Academic: Grand Rapids Michigan, 2007), 155.
[13] Cf. France, R. T.: Matthew: An Introduction and Commentary.
Downers Grove, IL : InterVarsity Press, 1985 (Tyndale New Testament
Commentaries 1), S. 76: In
fact the aim of the formula-quotations in chapter 2 seems to be primarily
apologetic, explaining some of the unexpected features in Jesus’ background,
particularly his geographical origins. It would be a strange apologetic which
invented ‘facts’ in order to defend them!