Mid-week
Advent #3
December 20, 2017
Matthew 1:20-23
INTRODUCTION: To whom does Jesus come? He comes to
people who struggle with their faith. So often in matters of life the issues
are not always black and white. Sometimes there is a lot of gray. Often we are
forced to struggle and wrestle as we grapple with the question, “Lord what
should I do?” At other times we know intuitively what we should do.
There is no needing to ask: “what shall I do now?” We know, in our gut, with
every fiber of our being, what we ought to do. All we need to ask in such
instances is for the strength and the will to act. To whom does Jesus come? He
comes with enlightenment to him who does not understand.
We consider this evening Joseph. When he learned
that Mary was bearing a child, he was understandably disturbed. He knew of two
realities. First, Mary to whom he was engaged was expecting a child. He also
knows he is not the Father!
Joseph, being a just man, tried to conform his life
to the Jewish law. “Because Joseph her husband was a righteous man and
did not want to expose her to public disgrace, he had in mind to divorce her
quietly.” (v.19) Here we see Joseph’s dilemma. Whose reputation, he
pondered, should be tarnished, Mary’s or his own? That was the issue with which
he was wrestling. Joseph felt betrayed; he loved Mary, yet he didn’t want to “expose
her to public disgrace.” To whom does Jesus come? He comes to people who
struggle with their faith. He comes with enlightenment to him who does
not understand.
1. In
making decisions, of which we do not fully understand all of the circumstances
remember it is God who is working behind the scenes to will and to do His
perfect good pleasure. Such was the case in the birth of Jesus as Joseph understood
it. An angel sent by God had to intervene. Matthew 1:20 But after
he had considered this, an angel of the Lord appeared to him in a dream and
said, “Joseph son of David, do not be afraid to take Mary home as your wife,
because what is conceived in her is from the Holy Spirit.
2. Joseph
also learned a second valuable lesson. When God is acting for us it is He who
will act. Because man is blind, dead, and an enemy of God we need God’s saving
work in our lives. This is exactly why Jesus was born in the first place. This
is why He came. The angel explains to Joseph specifically why this birth means
so much. Matthew 1:21 She will give birth to a son, and you are to give him the
name Jesus, because he will save his people from their sins.”
And save us He has. God is at work working out your
salvation. Nothing is left to chance. To the contrary He is shaping, molding
and using ever circumstance in your life to bring about one reality. He was
born to afford you salvation. That is why Jesus came to this earth. He came to
save His people from their sins.
3. Joseph
also learned a valuable lesson. The Scriptures cannot be broken. Jesus’ birth
was not a mistake, a miscalculation, an inaccuracy. To the contrary it was all
mapped out in Scripture. The Savior’s birth had been foretold in sacred
Scripture and to Joseph’s amazement these Scriptures were fulfilled in his
lifetime. He lived to see them played out right before his eyes! Matthew
1:22-23 All this took place to fulfill what the Lord had said through the
prophet: “The virgin will be with child and will give birth to a son, and they
will call him Immanuel”—which means, “God with us.”
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