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| Copyright © 2004 by The Voice of Prophecy |
| David B. Smith |
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P.O.
Box 53055 |
| June 15, 2004 |
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WHAT A SAVIOR! #2
WHEN IS JESUS’ REAL BIRTHDAY? There’s a fascinating expression in the recent bestseller,
The Bounty, written by Caroline Alexander. In telling the story of this
most famous of mutinies, the author has done impeccable research about
Lieutenant Bligh, Fletcher Christian, and all of the other colorful characters
who were on board that ill-fated voyage in the year 1789. But one of the
able-bodied seamen in the crew, Edward Young, was hard to track. He was
a homely kid, standing about five foot eight, rotten teeth – several of
the front ones missing – dark complexion, and “rather a bad look,” as
one log put it. He was the nephew of a Sir George Young, who had served
His Majesty’s navy with distinction as a naval captain and admiral. But
family records don’t say anything about this nephew. Sir George had a
younger brother named Robert; was this Edward HIS son? And it’s conjectured,
as Ms. Alexander puts it, that this nondescript young sailor had been
“born on the wrong side of the blanket.” In other words, born out of wedlock
under unsavory circumstances. “This is how the birth of Jesus Christ came about: His mother Mary was pledged to be married to Joseph, but before they came together, she was found to be with child through the Holy Spirit.” Down about seven verses later, this conclusion: “But [Joseph] had no union with her until she gave birth to a Son.” The paraphrase interpretation many people in my Adventist denomination sometimes use for meditative reading, entitled Clear Word by Jack Blanco, goes like this: “Joseph, don’t be concerned about Mary.” (This is the angel speaking.) “She’s still a virgin, in spite of what you think. She was made pregnant by the power of the Holy Spirit and will give birth to the Messiah.” In the Message paraphrase by Eugene Peterson, which you might be more familiar with, it reads this way: “Before they came to the marriage bed, Joseph discovered she was pregnant.” Then the angel’s announcement: “Mary’s pregnancy is Spirit-conceived.” Some scholars debate and discuss whether “virgin” means what we all think it means. Perhaps it’s just a euphemism for “young girl.” But if we accept the account of God’s Word here, we find over in Luke 1 that Mary herself responds to the angel’s announcement of her pregnancy: “How will this be, since I am a virgin?” In their scholarly book, Ready With an Answer, John Ankerberg and John Weldon discuss this very question. First of all, if you saw The Passion of the Christ, which was all in Aramaic and Latin, here’s a bit of Greek instead. But these writers assert that when Matthew quoted back from Isaiah in the Old Testament and his prophetic statement, “The virgin will be with child and will give birth to a son,” he used the word parthenos: “The word parthenos has only one meaning: virgin,” they write. Here’s why it’s an important point. First of all, as
we mentioned yesterday, we either accept what the Bible says about Jesus,
or we don’t. And if we don’t, then there’s no point to the study. This
Mel Gibson film would just be one more R-rated Hollywood blockbuster,
and Jesus was an unlucky teacher who offended the wrong people on Passover
weekend: nothing less, nothing more. “The virgin birth not only undergirds the doctrine of Christ’s deity, it also undergirds the doctrine of Christ’s sinlessness and His role as the world’s Savior. This is why the virgin birth is an absolutely essential doctrine.” We’re going to keep on studying in this radio series
the teaching that the story of Jesus doesn’t begin in a stable in Bethlehem.
Oh, He IS born there. He was a baby in a manger. He was in the womb for
nine months like all baby boys; there was blood and a placenta when He
was born; there was a circumcision eight days later. All of those things
are the same for every citizen of Planet Earth. But core to the Christian
message is that BEFORE Bethlehem, Jesus existed then too. When this world
was created, Jesus was there. In the courts of heaven before there was
an Adam and an Eve, Jesus was there. Before there were angels, Jesus was
there. Before the sun, moon, and stars came into being, Jesus was there.
In fact – and I plainly confess that I can’t grasp this one – you can
go back and back and back as far as there is anything to go back TO .
. . and Jesus is there. Just as God the Father has ALWAYS existed, Jesus
Christ has existed as well. “When we’ve been there ten thousand years, Bright shining as the sun, We’ve no less days to sing God’s praise, Than when we’d first begun.” I sing that song, and I love it, but I don’t comprehend
it. But even more difficult to grasp is the Bible statement that God the
Father AND God the Son – Jesus – have always existed on the LEFT-hand
side of that number line too. Infinity in THAT direction! “[Jesus] is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn over all creation.” We’ll dissect that word “firstborn” in a minute. “For by Him [Jesus] all things were created: things in heaven and on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or powers or rulers or authorities; all things were created by Him and for Him. He is before ALL THINGS, and in Him all things hold together.” Notice that Jesus was involved in the creating of all
things. You think about the fact that in this film, The Passion of the
Christ, the Lucifer character is silently there: in the garden, as Jesus
is whipped, as He painfully makes His way to the Cross. But we read here
that when Lucifer was created – as all angel beings were, of course –
Jesus was already there. In fact, Jesus created Lucifer, the being who
would plot His own death. “The Greek word translated ‘image’ is eikon,” they write. Referring to “He is the image of the invisible God.” They continue: “It means Jesus ‘is the express image of’ or ‘of IDENTICAL nature with’ God. Further, when Jesus is described as the firstborn over all creation, the word translated ‘firstborn’ is protokos and stands in contrast with ktizo (created). By using the word protokos, the Apostle Paul was emphasizing Christ’s preeminence, priority, and sovereignty over all creation as the context reveals.” So Jesus being “firstborn” over all creation simply
means that He rules over everything He has made. Friend, Jesus the Son
and God the Father are eternal. Equally eternal. That’s why it simply
misses the point for any Christian anywhere to play a blame game along
the lines of “who killed Christ”? Jesus wasn’t an unlucky revivalist preacher
who said the wrong thing once too often. He was the incarnate King of
the universe, now in human form, now a Man among us. He CAME here to die.
He and His co-equal Father determined eons before Eve ate the apple that
this is what they were going to do. And if you watch Mel Gibson’s movie
or any other Jesus film project and get the idea that here was just a
man who loved us enough to suffer pain, a man with the original martyr
complex, then you’ve missed the point. |
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