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WHAT WILL YOU
DO WITH THE BIRTH OF JESUS?
By Al Baker
'When they saw the star, they rejoiced
exceedingly with great joy'
Matthew 2:10.
Jesus was born in Bethlehem,
as Micah the prophet promised seven hundred years before He was
born. Bethlehem, the city of David, is six miles south of Jerusalem
on a limestone ridge, 2500 feet above sea level. The name in Hebrew
means house of bread and it was in a fertile area which grew crops
very well. Bethlehem had a long Biblical history, serving as the
place where Jacob buried Rachel, where Ruth had lived with her
husband Boaz, looking across the Jordan valley to her home in
Moab. It is the water from the well in Bethlehem that David longed
for and which his mighty men procured for him while he was on
the run from Saul. Indeed it was the city of David, Bethlehem,
where knowing Jews expected Messiah to be born. The houses in
Bethlehem, high on the limestone ridge, had dug out caves below
them, which served as stables for their animals. This, no doubt,
was the kind of place where Jesus was born to the Virgin Mary.
Sometime after Jesus' birth Matthew tells us that Magi from the
east came to pay homage to Messiah. Scholars are not sure of the
origin of the word Magi, but they appeared to be priests, religious,
scholarly, holy men from the Medo-Persian Empire in Iran. They
believed that reading the stars of heaven could foretell or explain
important acts in history. Later the word Magi would refer to
fortune tellers and charlatans, like Simon Magus in Acts 8:9,
11, but at the time of Jesus' birth they were a well-respected,
well-educated people. What star were the Magi following? Matthew
does not tell us, nor do we know how many Magi travelled together,
though we tend to think the number was three because they brought
three gifts to Jesus. We do know, however, that Halley's Comet
was brilliantly visible at the time, and very possibly could have
been what they saw.
Not only were the Magi highly interested in the bright star and
what it may mean, but many others in the Roman Empire at the time
were convinced that something monumental was soon to occur. They
were expecting a king to be born in the east, to come from Judea
to rule the world. Suetonius in his Life of Vespasian reported
this. Tacitus also believed that Judea would grow strong and that
a universal ruler would come from there. Josephus says the same
thing in Wars of the Jews, that the Jews at the time of Jesus'
birth were expecting a ruler to govern the whole world. And about
the time Jesus was born the people of Rome hailed Augustus as
the Saviour of the world. My point here is that there was a genuine
eagerness in Judea and the rest of the Roman Empire. Many were
looking for something monumental to happen.
So when Herod the Great heard of a king being born he was deeply
concerned. He called his High Priests (those of aristocratic blood)
and his biblical scholars, the scribes, to discern the place where
the rival king was to be born. Herod, half Jew and half Edomite,
had been appointed Governor by the Roman Emperor in 47 B.C. due
to his allegiance to the Empire, and he gained the title King
in 40 B.C., ruling until his death in 4 B.C. In many ways Herod
was indeed great. He was a master builder, rebuilding the temple
in Jerusalem, and he could be magnanimous, melting down his own
gold plate at one point, to buy food for the poor in a time of
famine. On more than one occasion he reduced taxes to relieve
the burden on the poor. But he was a jealous, vindictive, and
suspicious man. He liquidated any rival, including his own wife
Mariamne, her mother Alexandra, and three of his sons - Antipater,
Alexander, and Aristobulus. Augustus had said that Herod's pigs
were safer than his own children. Knowing that he was hated and
despised, just prior to his death he had some of the finest citizens
of Jerusalem rounded up, and directed that they be executed the
day he died, thus assuring that there would be weeping on the
day of his death.
So, with this in mind it is not hard to understand why Herod was
so intent on killing Messiah, a rival to his kingdom. Which brings
me to this - there are three responses possible to the birth of
Jesus. First, you can hate Jesus, wanting to kill his memory,
like Herod sought to do. People today still try to kill Jesus
by impugning his deity, saying that the gospel accounts are not
trustworthy, pushing the Gnostic gospel notion that he was married
to Mary Magdalene and bore a child through her which was the beginning
of French aristocracy. There are those of the Jesus Summit who
reduce the gospels to superstition, claiming that very little
of them is accurate. People typically 'kill' Jesus because they
don't like what he demands of them, namely total submission and
devotion. They don't want Jesus challenging their lifestyles.
One must humble himself before Jesus as Lord and Master before
he can know or claim him as friend.
Second, some are indifferent to him, like the Chief Priests and
scribes who were so busy with their religious ritual, so given
to prejudice, that they could not see him for who he was. Are
you like that, so busy with your work, even your religious life,
paying lip service to Jesus by giving him one hour on Sundays,
two or three times per month, without truly worshipping him, bowing
down to him, giving your life to him?
Or third, some truly worship him, like the Magi, who brought gold,
frankincense, and myrrh. We suspect that the gold represents Christ
as King. People in that day would not approach a king without
a gift, and the Magi rightly understand Christ's kingship by presenting
him with such a gift. We suspect the frankincense represents his
office as priest. Frankincense is a sweet smelling perfume used
at that time by the priests in temple sacrifice. The priests were
to bridge the gap between God and man with the sacrifices of goats
and bulls. Incidentally, the Latin word for priest is pontifex,
which literally means bridge builder. And we suspect that myrrh
represents Christ's death. Myrrh was used as an embalming agent
in those days, and the Magi are proclaiming that Messiah came
to die.
So, what will you do with the birth of Jesus? Will you allow the
world's fixation on money and 'Happy Holidays' to rob you of the
incomparable condescension of our King and Saviour, or will you
bow down before him as the Magi did, bringing your sacrifice of
praise and devotion to the one who has loved you with an everlasting
love, the one who has ripped open heaven and come to earth for
his people, the one whom we call King, the one to whom every knee
in heaven and earth will one day bow, the one whom all will confess
to be Lord?
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