We use E-Verify to help others be certain we are who we say
we are; and we are eligible to work in our United States. We have documentation like our driver’s
licenses, our birth certificates, our social security cards to provide further
evidence. Our systems are built to trust
paperwork. Our systems nearly always
require the word of a witness to that same paperwork. But just the “word” of someone else, is
rarely enough. Even when that person
claims to be our best friend, having known us our entire life. A parent’s “word” is also rarely
effective. Mom and Dad can rarely help
establish who we are, and our right to work in this country must require
something beyond the words of those who know us. Our identities hinge on documents like passports
and birth certificates to make us solid.
In a digital age this trend will only continue. The “person” of who we are gives way to the digital
footprint of who we are. And while the
means have changed, this method was no less effective in the days of Jesus.
Matthew is determined to illuminate the Old through the life
of the New in Jesus Christ. From His
ancestry to His birth Matthew begins to tie the prophetic of the Old, with the
reality of the New. Matthew does not
just do this through a first-person account of what he himself has witnessed
and been told; but he does this through a careful comparison of scripture and
its fulfillment in Jesus. The
documentation trail is set in motion.
The audience Matthew is determined to witness to through his Gospel,
will be quick to argue with only the words or opinions of Matthew. But that same audience will be slow to
discount the prophecies of Isaiah, or of David.
When the prophets of Old, the prophets of ancient days begin to speak:
the penitent become reverent and listening becomes an art. The documentation of scripture begins to
validate the circumstances of the life of Jesus Christ.
But the gospel of Old is not constricted to the land of
Judea and the city of Jerusalem. As much
as a proud Jewish nation might have wished it to be so; the disobedience of the
past planted seeds of a Messiah in lands of captivity. Yet before the Babylonian captivity would
spread the gospel of a Messiah to every nation in the kingdom of Nebuchadnezzar;
King David would pray for his son Solomon, and without realizing it, would
prophecy of the coming Messiah. The
reference can be found in the book of Psalms in chapter 72. David begins by asking for blessings, and
then transitions into what the coming of Messiah will be like. Verse 4 speaks of the salvation of the “needy”
and of breaking in pieces the oppressor (arguably Satan, not Rome as the Jews
would misinterpret). Verse 10 however is
what Matthew is intent upon focusing on now.
Verse 10 speaks of the … “the kings of Tarshish, and of the isles, shall
bring Him presents: the kings of Sheba and Seba shall offer gifts.” It follows in verse 11 … “Yea, all kings
shall fall down before Him”.
So, years after David sleeps with his fathers, Abraham,
Isaac, and Jacob, captivity does what an informed people would not; it spreads
the gospel. Nebuchadnezzar and Darius both
make proclamations that the God of Daniel shall be worshipped throughout the
land. The scriptures would be copied in
pristine form and sent to the far corners of the earth. Every nation would be exposed to the Jewish
faith. Every nation would hear the
prophecies of the coming Messiah. And
some of them, would be led by the Holy Spirit to know the truth of the mission
of the coming King; a mission of redemption from our slavery to sin. There would be converts in the East who were
not looking for a solution to the Roman problem. Those converts only awaited the longed-for
hope of the ages, the promise handed down since Adam and Eve, soon to arrive in
the land promised to those who first sought our God.
The people of the east were not distracted by the religious power
brokers in Jerusalem. They did not need
to submit to a central religious authority.
Their wisdom was given of the Holy Spirit, and their own interpretation
of scripture and of the prophecies was correct.
In addition, they were given a sign in the heavens to reward their
faith. This symbol would lead them to
the baby they had so long waited for, and so long hoped for. It was a sign that they would follow, coming
out of all the major lands of the East, where the hope of the Messiah had not
been given over to misinterpretation.
Each night the star would lead them West. As they traveled their company grew. More and more of the wisest men would join,
bringing gifts fit for the Giver of all Things.
This story was a reality of the New that was foretold by David in the
Old, and Matthew was determined to share it.
Only Matthew would ever reveal these facts.
In chapter two of the Gospel of the Hebrews, Matthew writes
beginning in verse 1 saying … “Now when Jesus was born in Bethlehem of Judaea
in the days of Herod the king, behold, there came wise men from the east to
Jerusalem, [verse 2] Saying, Where is he that is born King of the Jews? for we
have seen his star in the east, and are come to worship him.” Imagine the disconnect. The company of kings from the east, the wise
and noble men who had journeyed so far, have finally arrived at the city of
Jerusalem. They expected to find it a-buzz
with excitement and delight as the time of the Savior’s birth had arrived. The star in the heavens had led them here,
after hundreds, and perhaps even thousands of miles, they were here at the
center of it all. They had arrived at
the city center of where the worship of the Messiah was to take place. And the only ones excited about it, were
them. Everyone else was completely
unaware. Everyone else was
oblivious. Even the priests were dead to
the idea. This day was like every other
for the people of the Messiah. No one
knew, no one seemed to care.
How could this be possible?
How could people not born to this, actually care about it more than
people who were raised with it from birth?
Perhaps the better question is, are we repeating the very same behavior
today? People raised in an Advent
movement, a movement spanning many protestant churches and generations; that
the time of His second returning was near at hand, have grown tired and asleep
at the wheel. New converts seem more
excited about this than we do. New
converts seem to experience Jesus in a way us long-timers seem to have never
experienced. And we, like our Jewish
forefathers, who claim to worship in the right churches, doing it the right
way, have lost all passion for the soon coming of His return. We have collectively decided that “soon” is a
relative term, and frankly does not elicit much response in us. Just like the deadbeats the Magi found in
Jerusalem; people who have a real relationship with Jesus find in us. The same responses, the same apathy. This day is just like the last one, just like
the next one.
The effects of a centrally controlled religion seem to have
chilled the passion for God, then and now.
It takes an uproar to finally elicit a response. Matthew continues in verse 3 saying … “When
Herod the king had heard these things, he was troubled, and all Jerusalem with
him. [verse 4] And when he had gathered all the chief priests and scribes of
the people together, he demanded of them where Christ should be born.” The Magi were determined, excited, and not
going home, or giving up. They made such
a commotion. They awoke an apathetic people
from their malaise. Even the King heard
about this, and demanded to know an answer.
Ironically, he demanded to know something, from the source who should
have known it, should have cared about it, but were keeping largely
silent. No one can imagine why, at least
the group of nobles from the East could not imagine.
Matthew continues in verse 5 saying … “And they said unto
him, In Bethlehem of Judaea: for thus it is written by the prophet, [verse 6] And
thou Bethlehem, in the land of Juda, art not the least among the princes of
Juda: for out of thee shall come a Governor, that shall rule my people Israel.” Think of the context of this for a
minute. The same star that guides the
kings of the east to Jesus is visible to anyone else who looks up at
night. The star had to be low enough to
earth to provide guidance, and bright enough from earth to outshine other
objects. It moved slow enough and
settled where it needed to. Jews could
have seen this. Jews might have been
just a bit curious. But even in the face
of an astronomical miracle, the leadership of the church seems totally
unconcerned.
Then think about the context of preparation. The Magi have traveled great distances in
time to witness a miraculous birth. They
have prepared extensively. They were not
planning on just picking up some trinket at the last minute at the airport and
giving that to Jesus. They brought great
wealth a great distance, guarding it, hiding it, and carrying it with
them. They were prepared as they could
be. The priests, who knew this answer,
and could see this star, made ZERO preparations. No one was looking for Jesus. Literally NO ONE, except a group of kings
from the east, representing nearly every nation outside of Israel touched by
the message of the Messiah. No
preparation at all by those who claim His name. The people of Jerusalem were actually “troubled”
by what these kings were saying. Imagine
the new guys were aggravating the old guys with their incessant excitement and
anticipation. And it is not as if anyone
started preparations late, still nothing got done.
But Herod had his own ideas on this topic. Matthew continues in verse 7 saying … “Then
Herod, when he had privily called the wise men, inquired of them diligently
what time the star appeared. [verse 8] And he sent them to Bethlehem, and said,
Go and search diligently for the young child; and when ye have found him, bring
me word again, that I may come and worship him also.” Here is where the crafty old king gets
lazy. Instead of sending his own guy
with this delegation to report back, Herod decides to trust these kings will
report back as ordered. And in fairness,
they would have done just that without the interference of God to redirect them
to another path home. Herod, it would
appear though, is the only one making preparations. He is preparing to kill the competition for
his own throne. It does not matter that
a child born then would take long enough to grow up that Herod was not really
threatened at all. Despite the star,
despite the kings from the east, despite scripture and prophecy; Herod is
intent on killing Jesus at the get go.
Matthew continues in verse 9 saying … “When they had heard
the king, they departed; and, lo, the star, which they saw in the east, went
before them, till it came and stood over where the young child was. [verse 10] When
they saw the star, they rejoiced with exceeding great joy.” Witness the disconnect once again. The kings continue to follow the star, which
incidentally goes to Bethlehem as predicted in scripture. The kings of the east are again elated at
these events. The star moving forward
again coming to rest over the new baby and His mother; are earth shattering
events of joy for this delegation from the nations of the East. And yet Matthew records not a single Jew
joining the delegation, or sharing in the great joy of the arrival of the
Messiah. The eastern kings entered
Jerusalem, stirred up quite the commotion with their questions and their
implications and news, and yet once they leave, all the deadbeats go right back
to their lives without the slightest change.
Are we any different?
Then must come the fulfillment of the documentation, the
witness to it, the third-party verification of the authenticity of who Jesus
is. Matthew concludes this section in
verse 11 saying … “And when they were come into the house, they saw the young
child with Mary his mother, and fell down, and worshipped him: and when they
had opened their treasures, they presented unto him gifts; gold, and
frankincense, and myrrh.” David said the
kings of the East would fall before Him, and bring Him presents. And the fulfillment of scripture is retold by
Matthew in his Gospel. Years before the
captivity, the servant of God prays for his son, and prophecies of events that
would take years further to come to pass.
Babylonian and Persian edicts, copies of scriptures, the leading of the
Holy Spirit, a journey of great distances following a star of miracles, and a
virgin who has recently given birth to the Messiah. The culmination of these things provide a
testimony, a verification of who Jesus is.
E-Verify is not this accurate. No documentation we have in place today can
coordinate itself over centuries, generations, and thousands of miles on foot
and camelback, with timing accurate to a week.
As far as third party verification systems go, this one was in a
category of its own. In modern Christianity,
we assume it was only three wise men, because there were only three gifts
cataloged by Matthew. But earlier
studies suggest it may have been as many as 12 representatives from just as
many countries who made up the final delegation who sought to witness the birth
of the Messiah. But these men we call
Magi returned to their native homelands and their faith did not die on this
journey. It was affirmed. The good news of the gospel was spread far
and wide in the East long before disciples could carry it there. It has been suggested that even as far as the
Mongol empire where Genghis and Kublai Khan would emerge that Christianity held
roots with no benefit of missionaries beyond the descendants of the Magi who
sought the baby Jesus so long ago.
Uncorrupted from a set of religious leaders who sought only
control, the Magi would return home spreading only the good news that the
Messiah had come. God was with man. The salvation of our souls, of the “needy” as
David had identified was upon us. The
Magi had the benefit of the prophecy of David, combined with the witness of
their own eyes. Their passion could not
be squelched. Ask yourself, are you the
passionate convert troubling the hearts of the established believers; or are
you troubled by the questions you hear today by those who seem to seek only the
love of Jesus …
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