The Birth of the King
Fools and Wise Men -- Part 1
by
John MacArthur
All Rights Reserved
(A copy of this message on cassette tape may be obtained by calling
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Matthew 2:1-3 Tape GC 2183
Tonight we come back to the Book of Matthew, and I’d like you to take your
Bible and turn with me to the second chapter of Matthew, Matthew chapter two,
and ah, we’re looking, we began our little glimpse last week at the Biblical
story of the visit of the wise men to the birth of Jesus Christ, to Bethlehem.
And we spent a lot of time last time introducing to you the wise men and who
they were and something about them in some detail.
And I don’t want to take the time to go over that all, let me just remind you
that what we basically saw was that these men were Persian king makers who were
coming because they were aware of the birth of the anticipated king that they
had no doubt heard about from such as Daniel and others of the Israelites who
had lived in their land since the time of the Babylonian captivity, and these
Persian king makers were very anxious to look for a king because they did not
have a king, the king at the time was deposed and they wanted a great monarch to
rise to the throne of the east in order that they might pose a threat to the
great Roman Empire of the west, so their feelings were both political and
spiritual, and we saw that they came into town and they were immediately
confronted with a most Interesting character by the name of Herod, and we’re
going to see more about him tonight.
But I shared with you that the reason that Matthew includes this particular part
of the birth of Jesus Christ, is because Matthew presents Christ as King, and
what could be more fitting in a presentation of Christ as King than to have some
king makers come to crown Him as King, and not only were they king makers but
they were Gentile king makers. We saw how almost paradoxical it was that the
Jewish people who should have been looking for their Messiah didn’t even bother
with the birth of Christ, whereas these Gentiles who were a no people at that
time, apart from the covenants of God did seek to acknowledge this King. So He
was a King then we saw in Matthew’s presentation by virtue of His lineage from
David, we saw that.
And here we see that He is a King by virtue of the fact that there were those in
the world who were official king makers who recognized Him as such. You might
say that in chapter 1, Matthew says, Jesus deserves royal honor and in chapter 2
He gets it. And He indeed even here was being recognized as King of Kings and
Lord of Lords in some sense by these Persian king makers. This is a
reinforcement of the Kingliness of Christ, His right to reign. And as I told you
last time I can’t help but stop and think about the fact that the true King was
not known in Jerusalem, His own city, in His own royal residence, the place
where of all places He should have been hailed as King, He was not. They didn’t
seek Him, they didn’t care about Him; they never even bothered to come to
Bethlehem to see Him. Instead it was some strangers from a distant land, seeking
Him to worship and adore. And besides the common people, the leaders and the
rulers and the theologians and the priests of Israel were totally indifferent.
Or else as Herod, filled with bitterness and hatred and envy and jealousy. And
so right here at the very beginning of Matthew’s Gospel we see the way it’s
going to be, there are going to be those people who are indifferent, there are
going to be those people who are antagonistic, and there are going to be those
people who are worshipful. And we’ll see more about those three groups as we
move on. So the Magi represent the first fruits of the Gentile nations, and show
us really that God always had them in His heart.
Now as we look at verses 1 to 12, and we’re going to look at it now specifically
viewing the text, last time we just talked about introduction, but as we view
the text I want you to see five acts in this incredible drama that is played out
in chapter 2. Five separate acts. And we’ll just title them with a simple word
so we’ll remember them, arrival, that’s act one. Number two, agitation. Number
three, acting. Number four, adoration, and number five avoidance. Now that’s not
a very brilliant outline but it’s just a few hooks to hang your thoughts on.
First of all we come to arrival. Let’s look at verses 1 and 2, “Now when Jesus
was born in Bethlehem of Judaea in the days of Herod, the king, behold, there
came Magi (and you’ll remember I told you that that really is an untranslatable
word that has reference to a certain hereditary priesthood line, a tribe of
people who came originally apparently from the Medes, but through the years had
risen to place of great prominence in the kingdoms of Persia ah, the Median
kingdom and the Babylonian kingdom as well, and so it became synonymous in many
ways with being a wise man. To be a Magi was to have a place of the wise man in
a society. So there came these Magi) from the east to Jerusalem, 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.” Now obviously we have the arrival right here. Shortly
after Jesus’ birth the Magi arrive in Jerusalem.
Now there are two things we want to note in the very beginning in verse 1. First
of all the phrase, “in Bethlehem of Judaea.” Now Bethlehem is a quiet little
town, approximately five or six miles south of Jerusalem. It was once called
Ephrathah, and is so designated by the prophet of the Old Testament, Micah.
Now the name Bethlehem is interesting it means house of bread. Beth is house,
lehem is bread, house of bread a fitting name for the place where the very bread
of life was born. Now this little village sits in a fertile countryside, and it
was very productive. In fact if I can give you a brief description it might help
you to visualize it, I’ve been there a couple of times and ah, I’ll do the best
I can. Jerusalem as you know sits on a plateau, some two thousand plus feet
above, the valley beneath. It just sits a top a high hill, and slightly to the
south.
An interesting thing about where Bethlehem sits, on one end of it is a high ...
higher ridge, and ah, on the other end of it is a higher ridge, and it’s just
almost like a saddle, and Bethlehem sort of cradles itself in the middle. The
area is for the most part kind of a gray limestone, in fact that’s all you ever
see there because there’s a zoning regulation now a days in Jerusalem in that
area, that you cannot build any edifice unless you build it out of Jerusalem
stone. So that what ... the buildings simply rise out of the ground and look
exactly like the ground looks. It’s a limestone grayish color, and it looks like
a little town sort of set in an amphitheater. Very striking.
Now the little town of Bethlehem has had a long and very interesting history, if
you go all the way back to the Book of Genesis you will find that in Bethlehem
Jacob buried Rachel, and set a pillar or a marker by her grave, and even today
as you take a Mercedes Benz taxi down to Bethlehem some guy will point and say,
that’s Rachel’s tomb, off to the right of the road.
We find also that when Ruth married Boaz in the Book of Ruth, she lived in the
town of Bethlehem, and from Bethlehem Ruth could see clear across the Jordan
Valley, and that’s true, you can stand in that little saddleback and you can
look way across the Jordan Valley, across the Dead Sea and see Moab’s hills on
the other side and Ruth was a Moabitess, living in Bethlehem she could have
stood and seen her own homeland.
But above all, the town of Bethlehem was the home and the city of the great king
of Israel by the name of David. And that is what is characteristically known
about Bethlehem, it is ever and always the city of David. In First Samuel 16 and
First Samuel 17 and First Samuel 20, we find indications that this was David’s
city. In fact in Second Samuel 23, when David was a hunted fugitive, he cries
out and he says that he longs for the water of the well of Bethlehem. That was
his hometown. In later days Rehoboam, after the splitting of the kingdom in
Solomon’s time, Rehoboam fortified the town. But uniquely it stands ... many
little things happen in history but uniquely it stands as the city of David.
And it was really there, this is important, it was really there in that little
place, that little village, it isn’t really a city, it was in that little
village that the people of God had long expected their Messiah to be born. And
there was reason for that, and the reason is the Old Testament prophecy. They
waited for David’s greater Son to come out of David’s city, they waited for the
Messiah to be born there, and when He was born there they couldn’t bother to
take note of it.
Now just a little more about Bethlehem to help you get a little visual
picture of it. The houses of Bethlehem are built all over the slopes, in fact
it’s very difficult to find a flat place unless you go up into the square right
by the Church of the Nativity. It seems to be just a whole lot of slopes, and
the houses are built all over the slopes. And very frequently when a house would
be built on the slope beneath that, because the limestone was not that hard and
because there were some natural indentations anyway in the mountain, people
would build out a hollowed cave which they would use for a stable. And it is
very likely that it was in such a hollow cave that our Lord Jesus was born. Even
today, the Catholic church believes that it has found the right cave. Of course
they always find somewhere where they can stick up a church, everywhere but in
the middle of the Sea of Galilee, haven’t been able to build one there where
Jesus walked on the water, but every other place Jesus ever put His foot, they
put a church. And this particular cave, that they think they’ve found in the
side of the hill, they have built a church on top of it, right on top, so you go
in the church, you go down the stairs, way down and you go into a little tiny
cave and you have to bend your head and bend your shoulders to kind of crawl
into this little cave and that’s the place they say Jesus was born.
Now by the way, this isn’t any Johnny come lately thing, they, they go all the
way ... it goes all the way back to the Emperor Hadrian, he first recognized
that Christians felt that this cave was the sacred place, so he thought held
desecrate it real good, so he built a shrine to Adonis, a false god right on it.
And Constantine came through in about the fourth century and smashed the temple
to Adonis, and built a church there, and that has continued to be thought to be
the site. And so, it’s just a little village built on a pile of slopes, where
houses usually had beneath them, if they had a stable a little stab ... stable
made out of a hollowed place in the hill.
Now this is Bethlehem of Judaea, not significant, and maybe it’s fitting, so
that whenever anybody thinks of Bethlehem they only think of one thing, and
that’s the birth of Jesus Christ, and maybe that’s the way God wanted it and so
He picked a very obscure place. And yet a place close enough to Jerusalem that
it should have commanded the attention of the entire population when the King
was born. Had they been as sensitive to God as He would have wished.
Now you’ll notice that there is no doubt some time that has passed. Between
chapter 2 and verse 1, when the wise men arrive and the birth of Christ there is
a time gap, and I hinted at it last time and I’m not going to go into great
detail about it but, it seems to me that there are several months, at least that
have gone on. There is a good period of months ... Jesus being born, something
near the end of the year and then Herod dying sometime near the front of the
next year, we know that he died, or at least we believe that he died somewhere
around the end of March, the beginning of April in a lunar eclipse in 4 B.C. it
couldn’t be more than 4 or 5 or 6 months at the very most, at least in my
judgment, after the birth of Christ.
And also you will note this, that it tells us in verse 11 that, “When they were
come into the house, they saw the young child.” Christ is no longer in the
manger, He is no longer in the stable, He is in a house, and I told you last
time that very likely they had already been to the temple for purification, when
a Jewish lady had a baby there was a certain period of time, she had to go and
be purified and offer a sacrifice, and I told you that they offered turtledoves,
which was the offering of somebody who was in abject poverty and had it, had it
been any great length of time after the birth of Christ they no doubt would have
taken the gifts that the wise men brought them, and they would have purchased a
greater sacrifice, so it seems to me that they had not yet received the gifts of
the Magi, which they would have used in that sacrifice which means the
purification happened before that which puts it at least a forty day period
before the wise men ever got there. So the child has grown at least a little
bit, maybe a few months old.
There’s another note of interest here, and I’m just giving you some data to kind
of set the stage. You’ll notice that it says, “in the days of Herod, the king.”
Now we could spend literally hours discussing this person, and all of his
background and where he came from, but that’s really not totally germane to our
point, let me just give you enough history so you’ll get the picture.
This man was not really strictly a Jew, he was an Edomite. He was an Idumaean,
there’s another word for it, Edomite and Idumaean being the same thing, coming
from an area to the east and, to the south a little bit of Jerusalem. He had
made himself available to the Romans.
Now remember this, the Romans came in and sort of took over that area. And
people who were smart sort of played, footsie with the Romans a little bit,
right? People who wanted to gain something sort of played up to the Romans, and
this man was one of those kinds of people. During the civil wars in Palestine
and during the time when Rome was trying to establish itself, prior to the birth
of Christ, Herod played games with Rome and made himself sort of winsome to
them, and they trusted him. He gained their favor. And once Rome had finally
conquered the land of Judaea, they set up a procurator, a procurator was like a
governor, sort of a, an official ruler of that little country. And his name was
Antipater, Antipater, and he was an Edomite, alright? He was an Edomite, and
Herod was his son. When they wanted a ruler they found this guy Antipater, and
Herod was his son, but Herod had played up so much to the Romans that they
appointed Herod as the, as the tetrarch of Galilee. In other words, they needed
one guy to handle Jerusalem and Judaea, and somebody else to kind of control the
rural area, it was a lesser position in significance but none the less it was a
position of honor among the Romans. So they put Antipater in Jerusalem and
Judaea and they stuck his son Herod up in Galilee, and so in 47 B.C. that’s
before the birth of Christ, Herod was made the tetrarch of Galilee.
Now seven years later in 40 B.C. that eastern Parthian Persian Median area that
we’ve been talking about from where the Magi came, started a civil war, and they
came across and attacked that area of Palestine and Syria and so forth, and
Herod took a quick boat to Rome. He took off, he could see the handwriting on
the wall and he went to Rome to tell ‘em what was goin’ on. The east was
beginning to disturb that little buffer area, so Herod took off and fled to
Rome, this is Antipater’s son, now he gets to Rome, and he starts laying it on
the Roman Senate, and he really plays up to the Roman Senate, and he convinces
the Roman Senate that he is pro Roman, but that he’s also from that part of the
world and he knows how to handle situations over there etc, etc, etc. He wants
absolute authority. So, in 40 B.C. or about, the Roman Senate made Herod the
king of the Jews, now remember that. They made Herod the king of the Jews, and
they said, you take an army and they gave him an army, they gave him some crack
troops and they said, you go and you carve out your own kingdom over there, and
you run your own show. Well, you know it took him three years to do it, it took
him three years to finally gain the power he had in title. Finally in 37 B.C. he
won, and he became king of the Jews, and that is a title that he maintained
until he died. He always tried to maintain the title king of the Jews.
Now, do you see the question that the Magi asked in verse 2? “Saying, Where is
he that is born King of the Jews?” Well that was enough to panic Herod. I mean
he had sought this thing like a political plum. He had traveled all the way to
Rome and played his game before the Roman Senate, he had gotten the right to be
the king of the Jews took an army back and fought for three years to gain the
right to make that a reality, and then he had held onto that thing right on down
till this time and now all of a sudden, here comes a whole pile of Persian king
makers, they come streaming into town asking all over the place, “Where is he
that is born King of the Jews?” And Herod is afraid.
Now a little of the shock of this whole scene is indicated in verse 1 again,
“When Jesus was born in Bethlehem of Judaea in the days of Herod, the king,
behold, there came Magi.” Not just there came Magi, but can you believe this
there came Magi? Or if you’re Herod, yikes!!! There came Magi. Or whatever.
Unexpected, lo, startling, shocking, amazing. There came Magi, from the east,
asking where the King of the Jews was born.
Now frankly, it shouldn’t have been so shocking, really, if those Jewish people
had carefully analyzed the Old Testament they no doubt would have had good
indication that the time was right. Historians reiterate for us, that at that
time there was in the world, now watch this, this is fascinating to met that at
that time there was in the world a strange kind of expectation for a coming
king. The people in the east had it, and that’s partly why the Magi came. People
in many places were anticipating the arrival of a king, it was the mood of the
day.
Even the Roman historians acknowledged this, for example, Suetonius wrote,
“There had spread over all the Orient an old and established belief that it was
fated at that time for men coming from Judaea to rule the world.” That’s
Suetonius, and Suetonius would have written later on about particularly the days
of Vespasian, and Vespasian conquered Israel in 70 A.D. so maybe Suetonius wrote
a little after that, but he looked back and said, that was a day when there was
an expectation for men coming from Judaea to rule the world, they were looking
at that place. Tacitus, the famous Roman historian tells of the same belief,
quote, “There was a firm persuasion (says Tacitus in his histories) that at this
very time the east was to grow powerful and rulers coming from Judaea were to
acquire a universal empire.” So says Tacitus. The Jews, according to Josephus in
his volume, Wars of the Jews, says Josephus says, that about that time the Jews
believed that one from their country should become governor of the habitable
earth. At a slightly later time we find Tiridates, King of Armenia visiting Nero
at Rome with his wise men along with him, according to Suetonius. We find the
Magi in Athens sacrificing to the memory of Plato. At the same time Jesus was
born we find Augustus the Roman Emperor being hailed as the savior of the world.
And we find the Roman poet Virgil writing about the golden age which has just
dawned. You see the Romans were looking for a golden age, the east was coming to
the west with their wise men, there was a tremendous feeling that somewhere,
from someplace there was going to come a great savior of the world, a great
leader, a great ruler.
I don’t know where all that anticipation came from, it’s just interesting that
it all came at the same time. The time was ready. And there came wise men or
Magi from the east to Jerusalem. Maybe it was that they recognized what Paul
wrote to the Galatians, “That in the fulness of time, God sent forth his Son,
made of a woman, made unto the law.” There was a sense in which time was full,
and some people could feel it. These Magi based on information from Daniel, and
other information that they had received from the Jews who were now living in
their land since the captivity, and based on their own sense of faith in the
true God, and based on their own expectation that God would fulfill His Word,
and based upon what they saw in the sky which is called a star here, they came
to Jerusalem.
Now people always say, how many were there? We don’t know how many there were,
at all, we don’t know what their names were, and so that’s pure speculation.
But they had a reason for coming, look at verse 2, “Saying,” and apparently by
the Greek construction here, they were saying this all over the place, they kept
on saying, “Where is he that is born King of the Jews? For we have seen his
astēr in the east, and are come to worship him.”
Now, they kept asking, where is He that is born King of the Jews? You know it
must have shocked them a little bit every time they asked that question, to get
a kind of a, huh? From everybody. They must have assumed that these people would
have known that. I mean after all, they were the Jews, and certainly they would
know when their King was born, and where He was born. But two things hit me out
of that verse as I read it, and I want to answer those questions cause they were
the two ones that struck me.
Question number one, what was the nature of the star? “We have seen his star in
the east, and are come to worship him.” What was the nature of the star? So I
did some reading this week and last week, to try to find out what the star was,
you won’t believe the suggestions. First of all, some people say it was a
genuine, real, bona fide, gild edge, honest to goodness star. Some say it was
Jupiter, because Jupiter is called the king of the planets. Some say, and this
was Kepler’s theory that it was the conjunction of Jupiter and Saturn in the
sign of the fish. And some say it was just an erratic comet. Some say it was a
low hanging meteor, and some say it was the star of destiny in the heart of
mankind. That’s a lot of dribble if ever I heard it.
You want to know what it was...I’ll tell you what I think it is. Look at Luke
2:9 and maybe this will help to answer a question you’ve probably had since you
were a little kid, if you’re still a little kid you’ve still got it. Luke 2:9,
now here’s a good key, here we are not at the wise men incident but at the
shepherds, and they were the first to come, and they were of Israel. And they
are a sort of a picture of the remnant. “There were in the same country
shepherds abiding in the field, keeping watch over their flock by night. And,
lo, an angel of the Lord came on them, and the glory of the Lord shone round
about them; and they were very much afraid.”
Now what was shining in the sky when the shepherds saw it? What was it? It was
the glory of the Lord. And if you go back into the Old Testament and you studied
the concept of the glory of God, you will find that the glory of God is manifest
as light, right? Over and over and over again in the Old Testament the glory of
God is manifest as light, when God radiates His presence He transforms it into
ineffable light. When the glory of God appeared at the daytime it was like a
cloud of light, when it appeared at night it was a pillar of fire, when the
glory of God descended on the tabernacle it was as light, when Moses went up
into the mountain, and he said, show me Thy glory, God hid him in a rock and God
showed him His glory manifest as light, and it was so much light that it got on
his face and when he came down the mountain side and spoke to the people his
face was lit up. The glory of God is blazing light. And when Jesus revealed who
He was, and revealed His glory on the mount of transfiguration, He pulled back
His flesh and they beheld His what? His glory, as transparent light. And when
Jesus comes the second time out of heaven, He will come in blazing light, and
Revelation says, God will turn out all the lights of heaven, all the stars will
fall, all the suns, all the moons, everything goes pitch black, heaven rolls up
like a scroll, and when it’s pitch black then Christ comes revealed as blazing
light, and people cry for the rocks and the mountains to fall on them to hide
them from the face of His glory.
Now all that just to remind you that God’s glory is manifest in the scripture as
light, as light. He told Moses he couldn’t look upon His face and live, held be
consumed in it. It’d be like standing ten feet from the sun only it would be
like a million, million suns. And I believe that it was the glory of the Lord
that shone that night when God’s glory was as ... was descending to earth, it
was God’s glory descending on the earth, coming in the form of a man, and I
believe that that glory of God is the thing that the wise men saw.
Now let me give you a little more support on this cause I think it’s kind of
interesting to trace this thought. The chief word in the Old Testament, the
Hebrew word for star is the word kôwkâb, not that that’s important just a point
of contact with the Hebrew. But it has a basic meaning, and its basic meaning is
to shine or to blaze forth, to shine or to blaze forth. Now sometimes the word
kôwkâb is used of a real star, sometimes it’s used to speak of just a regular
star, sometimes it’s used to speak of an angel, sometimes it is used to speak of
men. So it doesn’t necessarily always mean a real star, it can mean anything
that blazes, anything that shines, in an incredible way.
In fact in Numbers 24:17, a most interesting scripture. It says, and this is a
Messianic prophecy. “I shall see him, but not now: I shall behold him, but not
near: (now listen) there shall come a kôwkâb out of Jacob, and a Scepter shall
rise out of Israel.” That’s Numbers 24:17. That is a Messianic prophecy, there
will come a blazing forth, there will come a shining One, there will come a
star. And people I believe that the prophecy there is, that none other than the
glory of God incarnate is the star, the blazing.
Look for a moment at, Matthew chapter 24, Matthew 24:4, well let’s go over to
verse 30, we’ll just ... Instead of trying to go through all of it we’ll just go
to verse 30, “Immediately after the tribulation (verse 29 says) of those days
the sun’s dark and the moon doesn’t give its light,” that’s what I told you, all
the stars fall out of heaven and everything goes black and then 30, “Then shall
appear (now watch this, then shall appear) the sign of the Son of man,” now mark
that phrase out, “the sign of the Son of man.” In other words, whenever the Son
of man is about to show up there will be a sign pointing to Him.
Now do you know what a sign is for? The sign is to point you to something that
you want to see. You’re driving on the road, and the sign says, Roscoe Boulevard
three quarters of a mile. The sign is not Roscoe Boulevard but it’s there to
point you to Roscoe Boulevard, it has a function, it’s purpose is to point you
to something. And the Son of man has a sign, “the sign of the Son of man in
heaven;” oh, interesting, that sign is in heaven, and what is it? “they shall
see the Son of man coming In the clouds of heaven with power and great glory.”
Now here is His kôwkâb, His blazing forth. And although kôwkâb, the Hebrew word
is not used in the New Testament it is the same idea. I believe that this sign
of the Son of man is nothing more and nothing less than the shekinah glory of
God Himself. God revealing Himself in ineffable glorious light. In fact, it even
tells us, I think it’s Revelation 1:16 that, that the Son shines, the Son of
God, shines as if He were the sun in its strength.
Somehow, now watch this, somehow connected to Jesus Christ is this incredible
blazing glory of God, it is His sign in the heavens, He is a spirit, He is a
spirit being, He is also in a sense a physical being in the glorified body that
He has from His resurrection, but there is a sign that goes with Him, and it is
blazing glory, and one day on the mount He showed it to His disciples. And one
day when He returns the sign of His coming, the sign of the Son of man in heaven
will be there, blazing glory in the heaven.
Well, you know what I think? I think He had the very same sign the first time He
came too. I just think it was the sign of the Son of man in heaven. And the sign
of the Son of man in heaven is not a star, it’s not an astral body, it’s not a
conjunction of planets, it’s not, thoughts of human destiny rattling around in
somebody’s mystical mind, the sign of the Son of man is nothing more and nothing
less than the shekinah glory of God revealed in light, blazing, dazzling in the
heavens.
I would add this thought, verse 2 says, “We have seen (watch this) his aster.”
His blazing. The word astēr incidentally people, the word is translated star
here, but it is used of other things than stars. So He has His own ... and again
it means a blazing forth or a shining. “We have seen his shining in the east.”
We have seen His kôwkâb, His astēr, His blazing, His glory.
And the very fact that it’s His star means it’s something very special. It has
appeared. That’s an interesting word. “We have seen his star in the east.” His
star. Verse 7, Herod says, I want to know the time the star appeared. And the
word phainō in the Greek means that which lights up. What, what time was it when
that thing lit up? And the word ... the same word, interesting thought, the same
word is used with lightning. Lightning is a form of astēr, sometimes it’s
translated as a star in the sky, sometimes it’s translated as lightning,
sometimes as the shining forth of something, and here it is a shining forth. We
can’t push it any further, we can’t make it mean a real star, and there is the
sense in which Herod says, when did this particular shining forth light up? And
even that is sort of a hint that it was something that never existed and was
called into existence only because Jesus was coming, and so I believe this was
His astēr, the sign of the Son of man, in the heavens. It was there at His first
coming, and beloved it’ll be there at His second coming. It’s His sign, it’s His
star, it’s not some astral body.
The pseudoscience of astrology could never predict the Lord, they weren’t
looking in their little puny deals and seeing, well "looky" there, there’s old
Saturn and whatever doin’ their thing, it must be that He’s being born, no, no.
What they saw was something they never saw before, and they knew that it had to
be something unique and they tied it together with what the Old Testament said
and what Daniel had told them. No astronomical research gave them their
direction, God revealed Himself. It was no different than the pillar of fire in
the Old Testament.
And you remember the pillar of fire and the cloud, in the Old Testament stood
over the Holy of Holies? Well in this it tells us that whatever this star was it
went and stood over the house where He was born. Now you tell me how a literal
star would ever do that. Can’t do it, it’s none other than the sign of the Son
of man.
You say, well, well if it was such a blazing magnificent glory of, of Christ’s
sign in the heavens, how come only the wise men over there in Persia and nobody
else saw it? Now that’s a fair question, that’s the second question I asked. How
come God is so selective? Well, you know He ... that’s nothin’ new for God, He
can make everybody in the world blind to something if He wants to.
In Exodus chapter 14, 1 found a good parallel, 14:19 says, “And the angel of
God, who went before the camp of Israel, removed and went behind them;” now
they’re going to go through the Red Sea, so the angels been leading them down to
the Red Sea, once they get to the Red Sea he goes around the rear, gets behind
them. You say, to push? No, I’ll show ya what: “the pillar of cloud (of cloud,
here’s the glory of God, the pillar of the cloud) went from before their face,
and stood behind them.” Now behind the Israelites you’ve got the pillar of
cloud, God’s glory, and you’ve got the angel of the Lord, and who’s the angel of
the Lord? Jesus Christ. “And it came between the camp of the Egyptians and the
camp of Israel; and it was a cloud and darkness to them, but it gave light by
night to these, so that the one came not near the other all the night.” You know
what happened? Israel saw it as light and the...and the Pharaoh and his army saw
it as what? Darkness. And it was the same thing. There’s something about God
revealing what He wants to reveal just to those to whom He wants to reveal it.
And that’s all I can say about it. How did they connect it with Jesus Christ’s
birth? I don’t know, I really don’t know, except that God made it so obvious
that they knew, that they knew.
Now do you want to know something very fascinating people, this may shake you up
a little bit, might mess up your Christmas story next year. But do you know in
nowhere in the Bible does it ever say they followed the star to Bethlehem, from
Persia? No. It doesn’t say it led ‘em to Jerusalem, it doesn’t say it went
anywhere, not at all. “We have seen his star (where?) in the east.” They saw the
star in the east, and it didn’t need to tell them where to go they knew where
the Jewish Messiah was supposed to be, they knew the royal city was Jerusalem,
they knew that’s where all Jewish kings reigned, they knew exactly where to go
they didn’t need some star to guide them, and when they saw His glory, and God
made it so evident and obvious as He always does when He reveals what He wants
to reveal to whomever He wants, that they didn’t even ask a question, they got
on their horses and they went, and they went right to the right place.
And Matthew doesn’t give us all the bits and pieces and details of how they
saddled a Persian horse and how many miles and how it was and where they ate and
all of that, because this isn’t the story of these people it’s the story of
Jesus Christ. And they have a place only in so far as it’s related to Him. So
the details aren’t there. But it it’s incredible to me how God works things out
when He wants to get His things done, He gave these Magi, God fearing Gentiles
way off in Persia, king makers, His sign and they knew that it was His sign and
they knew where to go to Jerusalem.
And the emphasis of Matthew is so beautiful, he says in verse 2 that they said,
“we have seen his aster in the east, and are come (for what purpose?) to worship
him.” They knew that He was to be worshiped, to worship Him, they knew there was
no other one as worthy as this one, and they were right. Here you have it,
pagans who had nothing to guide them but smatterings of Old Testament
prophecies, nothing to guide them but their own science mingled with its funny
superstitions, and yet they are the true seekers of God. And when the sign came
with all of their misgivings and lacks in knowledge, they were enthusiastically
embarking on a journey to seek a king they had along time waited for.
But the Jewish hierarchy, with the Pentateuch in their hand, studying it
everyday, with the prophecies in their hand, reading them everyday, ruled by a,
a bitter and evil man named Herod were content to be totally indifferent to what
was happening five miles away. And here again we see Matthew’s constant attitude
of condemnation toward the officials of Judaism, and his constant sensitivity
that God is opening the church, He’s opening the Gospel to the Gentiles.
Listen, there always are somewhere hungry hearts yearning for a divine Savior,
and willing to follow even a faint sign that might lead to His feet. And it’s
super when ya find somebody like that. There always are those seeking hearts.
I remember being on an airplane one time and I was wanting to study because I
had a manuscript due and I had to get it to a publisher, and so I just kind of
whispered almost facetiously, Lord, don’t let anybody unsaved sit near me so I
have to witness all the way from St. Louis to Los Angeles, because I have got to
get my work done. And sure enough we had to make a stop and we got in the wrong
plane ah, or something was malfunctioning ... we had to change planes and all
things were messed up, and we got on another plane and a guy came and sat down
next to me and.. so I was studying, studying and he was asleep and I didn’t want
him to wake up and then I jostled around a little bit and he woke up, and I
thought oh boy, and then he asked me a question, and he said, are you, are you a
teacher, you have all those papers and everything? And I said, well, kind of a
teacher and ... yes, I guess I’m a teacher. He says, what do you teach? I said,
I teach the Bible. He said, you teach the Bible? Oh, he said. Listen, he said,
this is terrific, he said, you wouldn’t happen to know how I could have a
personal relationship with Jesus Christ, would you? That is the truth!! And I
went hub bab bab bab, ha. Well, you’re not supposed to start there! You’re
supposed to be skeptical, you’ve got at least one hour of apologetics before we
get to that. Somewhere over the Grand Canyon he received Christ, I later
baptized him and he told me after that that he was coming to Los Angeles to work
for somebody, I asked who, and he told me and it was one of our elders, it was
interesting. There always are prepared hearts, and here were some, who came to
Jerusalem.
So we see the arrival. Secondly, and this is really interesting. The arrival is
scene one and it quickly leads to scene two, agitation, agitation. Herod is an
exact opposite to these people. Verse 3, “When Herod, the king, had heard this,
(heard that these guys were there and that they were asking this) he was
troubled, and all Jerusalem with him.”
Now Herod knew very well that he was sitting on a powder keg. In the first place
he knew that the people of the city didn’t like him, and they didn’t like Roman
rule, and they wanted their own independence and autonomy. And he knew that they
had aspirations of overthrowing him, and overthrowing Rome, and he also knew
that if the Persians got in on the act, and built this huge confederacy
engulfing this individual called the King of the Jews he was really in trouble.
His army was out of the country, temporarily. He knew that the eastern empire
posed a constant threat to Rome and conflict was always fomenting, and he knew
his job was in the balance and his life was in the balance and even though he
was seventy years old at least by this time, he still wanted to hang onto every
single thing he had, so he was troubled. He was panicky. It’s a word that really
means to be stirred up and upset, in fact I don’t know if there is a stronger
word than this one in reference to this thought. A good comparative one, it
would be in Matthew 14:26 where the very same word is used, and it says this,
“And when the disciples saw Jesus walking on the sea, they were agitated.” It’s
the same word, I mean this was really a abnormal thing, this was very, very
upsetting and they were in a state of panic.
Now he was agitated, and he had a reason after all he was the king of the Jews
in his own mind, he had fought hard to keep it and maintain it, and now all of a
sudden somebody’s arrived, He’s going to take his throne and here are the king
makers to make sure He gets it, boy, this is serious business.
And this kind of rumor, he could just imagine, this kind of rumor is now
floating all over the city, there’s a new king, there’s a new King of the Jews,
there’s a new King of the Jews, did you hear the Persians are here? The king
makers are here, there’s a new King of the Jews. And he can imagine the stirring
up of freedom riots among the fanatics and the zealots in the ci ... in the
country and boy, he’s shaky. And so he realizes, I’ve got to take some radical
steps, and in his rotten depraved mind a plot begins to brew.
Well, he overstated his case frankly, because from Matthew’s record it doesn’t
appear that the Jerusalem population was at all impressed by the Magi’s
questions. You don’t see a mass of people scurrying down to Bethlehem. They
didn’t seem to get the picture, there doesn’t seem to be any stir and that’s so
hard for me to believe, it’s shocking. I mean these, these famous king makers
from Persia asking a question like this, you would have imagined that the people
would have just come in an uproar, but it’s just part of the way it was goin’
be, because it’s simple the Bible says, “He came unto his own and his own
(what?) received him not, he was in the world and the world knew him not.” And
it’s true, it ... what all of normal circumstances should have dictated a high
level of interest, there was none, none. There was no “we shall overcome revolt”
fomenting in Jerusalem. There was no let’s get a new king and knock off Herod.
And I think there’s a reason for it basically, and the reason is they were more
afraid of Herod than they were trusting in God. They had more fear of Herod than
they had confidence in God’s Word. They were really afraid of what he would do,
look what it says, it says that “he was troubled, and all Jerusalem with him.”
Why were they troubled? Because they feared him so much, and they had a lot to
fear, they had learned by a long and sad experience that there were no limits to
the wrath and vengeance of this maniac, and I mean he was a maniac. And they
figured man, if these guys upset Herod we are goin’ be in a blood bath. They
dreaded it.
Now let me talk about Herod for a minute. He committed some atrocities that are
hard to describe.
But first of all let me talk about the positive things. He was a very capable
man, and usually diabolical people who rise to this level have some capability.
While a young governor in Galilee he had a tremendous victories over the
guerrillas, there were always these mountain guerrillas, I don’t mean animal
guerrillas but soldiers, but he used to defeat these little bands of guerrillas
in Galilee and he brought real peace there, he was very efficient in collecting
taxes for Rome, so Rome liked him. He was a capable orator and a very subtle
diplomat, history tells us he was a very decisive leader in battle and could
turn the tide of a battle from defeat to victory.
He was the only ruler in the history of Palestine who ever succeeded in keeping
peace and bringing order. In times of difficulty he even gave people back their
tax money so that they would have enough. In 25 B.C. there was a tremendous
famine and he melted down the gold plates in the palace and gave the money to
the poor. That was a subtle guy and he was a sharp guy and he did things he
could to get in to...with people, he was a great builder, he built a theater in
Jerusalem, he built an amphitheater, and he built a hippodrome, you know what a
hippodrome is? It’s a race track. And he also built a magnificent palace for
himself, and he even began in 19 B.C. the construction of the temple, the great
Herodian temple, and died long before it was ever done, and of course it was
totally demolished in 70 A.D. when Titus Vespasian and his Roman army came and
conquered Jerusalem. He restored Samaria from its depraved situation, he built
the city of Caesarea which is a magnificent port city, he embellished cities
like Beirut, like Antioch, like Damascus, Tyre, Sidon, Rhodes, and even made
contributions to the buildings in Athens. He built the fortress at Masada, which
was an impregnable fortress. He had a great welfare program. And when people had
trouble getting clothes he imported clothes for them. So you know he did some
things endear himself because he was a smart politician.
But he was also cruel, diabolical and maniacal. He was hopelessly ... historians
all agree on this, this is the first line in every article I read about Herod,
the guy was incredibly jealous, and he was hopelessly suspicious of everybody.
He was threatened by everybody and everything, and so he spent his entire life
plotting the murder of people. He was plotting murders constantly.
He didn’t like the Hasmoneans, who were a family of people so he plotted to
murder all of them, they were the descendants from the Maccabees, and you
remember that the Maccabees were a group of Jewish people who had fought for the
freedom against the Greeks, and when the Romans came in, he was afraid that the
relatives of the Maccabees might do the same against him and so he would rather
just kill them all so none of them would have any hope of ever doing that.
He had ten wives, and twelve children. And his most notable wife is a lady named
Mariamne, not that that’s important but that’s just for you to make an
identification, you may see that sometime in reading history books. Mariamne,
she had a brother, her brother’s name was Aristobulus and Aristobulus was the
high priest at the time when he was in power, when Herod was in power, and he
was so afraid of Aristobulus that he decided he oughta murder him, this is his
wife’s brother. So on a hot day he said, we’re going to have a party down in
Jericho. Jericho was like Palm Springs, you go down the hill Jericho was a great
place, wonderful resort, beautiful palms, nice water there, and nice warm sun,
it was a fabulous place. So on a hot day he invited him for a swim down in the
Jordan River near Jericho and finally coaxed the young man to dive into the
water and when he did of course he had other men waiting, pretending to play and
have fun and they jumped in the water and while they were pretending to play
with Aristobulus they held him under until he was dead. And nobody really knew
what happened, and so Herod provided a magnificent funeral and went to the
funeral and wept the whole time.
He even killed his own wife. Mariamne. He also executed her mother cause he
didn’t want her buggin’ him, Alexandria. He had two sons of his own that he
didn’t like so he slaughtered both of them cause he was afraid they’d want his
throne. Five days before his death, he ordered his third son executed. He had a
lust for power, suspicion, an insane eagerness to avenge him¬ self that enslaved
the man all the days of his life. Cruel, bloodthirsty, panicky tyrant. He was
known as a killer.
The climax of this characterization has to be this, he was about to die, I mean
he knew he was about to die it was a matter of days, so he retired to Jericho.
He gave orders that a collection of the most distinguished citizens of Jerusalem
should be made, get all of them, arrest them and trump up charges and put ‘em
all in prison, all the most distinguished Jewish citizens of the city. And he
said, the moment I die, slaughter them all. And they said to him, why? And he
said, because no one will mourn when I die and I am determined that when I die
there will be mourning in this city.
Now when these Magi rode into town saying, “Where is he that is born King of the
Jews?” And the Bible says, he was agitated, he was agitated. That was what
disturbed him more than anything, a threat to his power, see. And he was really
shook. That’s so interesting to me, the contrast between the peace in the hearts
of the Magi, and the panic in the heart of Herod. And maybe it’s because there
were wise men and there were fools, and Herod was a fool.
Doctor Gaeblein says, “the great city with its magnificent religious
institutions, its wonderful Herodian temple then still in process of erection,
its aristocratic priesthood and benevolent institutions had no knowledge of the
King. Nay, they did not desire the King to come, they were self satisfied, this
foreshadows the whole story of the rejection of the King, the Lord from heaven
that there was not alone no room for Him in the inn, but there likewise was no
room for Him among His own, they received Him not, and Herod the king was
troubled and all Jerusalem with him. He feared for his throne which was not his,
and Jerusalem knew what Herod’s fear meant, it meant rebellion, bloodshed and
suffering.” End quote. He’s right, what he’s saying is the reason everybody else
was upset was because they knew the kind of man that Herod was, and they feared
what would happen. And let me tell you something folks, they had a right to fear
because it wasn’t a matter of days until Herod sent his soldiers to slaughter
every single baby in the land under two years of age, to make sure in his
collection he slaughtered this potential King. That’s why Jerusalem was shook
up.
Boy, this is exciting, isn’t it? Let’s have prayer.
Our Father we, we are thrilled when we see the Word of God opened to our
understanding, and our joy comes because we so deeply desire to understand Your
Word. And there’s a certain sense of exhilaration that comes with that
understanding. But we confess Father that there is absolutely no exhilaration,
there is absolutely no joy when we realize what all of this meant. We look back
at a man like Herod, who now burns in the eternal hell, we look back at chief
priests and scribes, elders of the people now lost forever. And recognize that
when the King came, they didn’t want Him, they didn’t know Him, they didn’t
bother to find out. And even when thirty years later He arrived in their city
and announced who He was, they wouldn’t have Him. Father we know it’s a little
different today, oh many people claim to be Christians, but I’m sure not all of
them are. And I’m sure there are many who reject as openly and flagrantly as
they did in those days. There’s no joy in a man like Herod. Father, all I can
think about is what he could have been, if only he’d have known that instead of
reigning for a little while on earth he could have reigned forever with You. If
only he’d have known that instead of having to avenge himself constantly he
could have trusted in You and You would have been his avenger, if any had
wronged him. In his quest for peace if only held known that You are the Prince
of peace. We can only imagine the torment of such a soul in hell with all that
he must have to remember, of slaughter and murder. And so there’s no joy in
that. So Father we are with mixed emotions in our thoughts tonight, grateful to
understand Your Word better and yet at the same time saddened when we realize
what it really says. And yet Father we can’t help but feel a deep affinity with
some men with whom we’ll no doubt spend eternity, that the Bible calls Magi. A
remnant from afar who believed, who became Your people. Thank You for them
Father. Help us to focus on the fact that all humanity is divided into those two
areas, those who reject and those who believe. Help us to realize that that’s
the dividing determiner of destiny.
I just pray tonight Lord that no one will go from this place who is not a
believer, no one will go from this place to take his place with Herod, or with
the indifferent scribes and Pharisees.
Added to Bible Bulletin Board's "John MacArthur Collection" by:
Tony Capoccia
Bible Bulletin Board
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