Biblical Illustrator The book of the generation. 1. It is a proof of the reality of Christ's humanity.2. It suggests the relation of Christ's work to the whole human race. 3. It marks the importance of the birth of Christ as a historical epoch. Let it remind us also (1) (2) (G. Brooks.) 2. A holy use (1) (2) (3) (R. Ward.)
1. A man's beginnings, a man's ancestors, have something to do with both his character and his life. 2. Christ was the sacred heir of all the ancient world. 3. The genealogy reminds us how all the past was preparing for Jesus. 4. But more than all, the generations of Jesus Christ show us the birth of the new world, and the new time, and the new institutions, which are to end in the perfect glory of the Father and the perfect blessedness of the race. (W. H. Davison.)
2. Sin has tainted the blood of the best races of men, and frequently makes itself manifest. 3. God's grace can flow through very crooked human channels. 4. No man stands alone.
2. It connects Jesus and His teachings with all God's revelations and promises which had been given before. It binds up, as in one sheaf, all generations of the church in one uniform moral system. 3. The Lord's ancestral roll serves to identify Him in closer connection and sympathy with the race whom, as their God, lie came to redeem. 4. The account of those who were Christ's ancestry before His first advent suggest the anxious inquiry, whether our names are written in the Book of Life as members of His spiritual family. (J. B. Owen, M. A.)
2. He is a Jew. 3. He is a king. (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (Dr. Bonar.)The text appears at first sight like a valley of dry bones without any life or fertility, or a rugged pass that leads to green pastures. Nevertheless, there are important lessons in it respecting the human race and its relation to the Lord Jesus Christ. I. It shows THE COMMON ORIGIN OF THE RACE. St. Luke traces the ancestry of Jesus to Adam — the head of the race. II. THE PHYSICAL CONNECTION OF THE RACE. Having sprung from a common head, there must be a physical connection between the various members. (1) (2) III. THE COMMON SAVIOUR OF THE RACE. IV. THE MORAL DISTINCTION OF THE RACE. What a mixture of good and bad there is in the genealogy! (W. Edwards.)
2. He has a human ancestry. 3. He has a Jewish ancestry. 4. He has a Gentile ancestry. 5. He has a royal ancestry. 6. He has a lowly ancestry. 7. He has a holy ancestry. 8. He has an imperfect ancestry. 9. He has a mortal ancestry. 10. He has an immortal. (Dr. Bonar.)Joseph and Mary were one thing by right of inheritance, another by present condition. They were successors to the kingdom of Israel, but were poor. Why does God permit the righteous to be deprived of their right and to be brought to poverty? 1. Because thus He will prove them. 2. Because worldly abundance is not so fit for them. 3. That He may crown them with future blessedness more abundantly. 4. That He may let us see how careful He is of us when we are in need. 5. How content were Joseph and Mary in their low estate. 6. The way to heaven is by adversity. (R. Ward.)
II. That the mental perplexities of the good arise often FROM THE WANT OF INSIGHT INTO THE DIVINE MOVEMENTS. The cycles of God's providence are too vast for our limited capacities. III. That God graciously REMOVES THE HONEST SCRUPLES OF THE RIGHTEOUS. Joseph's mental difficulties were removed (1) (2) (3) IV. That this mysterious conception and noble birth came to pass IN ACCORDANCE WITH PROPHETIC PREDICTION (Isaiah 7:14-16). V. Joseph's belief in the angelic communication, and OBEDIENCE TO THE DIVINE COMMAND. Faith essential to willing and unreserved obedience, and to the removal of mental difficulties. (W. Edwards.)
2. His merciful determination. 3. We need the tempering of justice with mercy, and mercy with justice. (R. Ward.)Nothing so clearly discovers a spiritual man as his treatment of an erring brother. ( Augustine.)
1. Behold sin with regard to God. 2. Behold sin in its names. 3. Behold the effects of sin. 4. That Christ derives from this work His highest title. II. Consider IN WHAT MANNER HE SAVES HIS PEOPLE FROM THEIR SINS. 1. He redeems them by price. 2. He saves them by power. 3. He saves from the guilt of sin. 4. He saves from the love of sin. (W. Jay.)In old times God was known by names of power, of nature, of majesty; but His name of mercy was reserved till now. (Bishop J. Taylor.)
II. HIS WORK. 1. Whom He saves — "His people." 2. From what He saves — "their sins." 3. How He saves. By His atonement He saves them virtually; by His spirit, vitally; by His grace, constantly; by His power, eternally. Remarks: (1) (2) (3) (E. Oakes.)
1. He saves His people from the penalty of their sins. 2. From the dominion and practice of sin. 3. In the end He saves from the very existence of sin. 4. And from the painful remembrance of their sins. II. THE NAME OUR LORD IS TO BEAR IN CONSEQUENCE OF THIS WORK OF SALVATION. Learn from this — 1. The character in which God most delights to regard His Son. 2. It shows us that He would have us regard Him chiefly as a Saviour. 3. This name may have been given to Christ to endear Him the more to our hearts. 4. We see here beyond all dispute the real nature and design of Christ's religion. (C. Bradley.)
1. The signification of the name. 2. The appointment of the name. Not left to men's choice. II. THE REASON FOR THE NAME. Some would rather that He had come to save them from poverty, pains, death; not knowing that to save from sins is to save from all these. (J. Bennet, D. D.) I. A WORK OF MOST BLESSED PURPOSE. 1. Sin is itself the greatest of all miseries. It is (1) (2) (3) (4) II. A WORK OF VAST MAGNITUDE. Its magnitude realized by dwelling — 1. On the multitudes of the saved. 2. On the nature of the salvation. 3. On the fact that this salvation is wrought by Jesus personally. (U. R. Thomas.)
II. JESUS IS THE SAVIOUR AND HIS WORK CONSTITUTES OUR SALVATION. 1. This word teaches us that salvation is Divine. Because Divine it is (1) (2) (3) 2. He who gives this salvation stands in solitary grandeur — "He." Nowhere else can we find salvation. 3. The name gives an immutable pledge that we shall be saved. III. The text informs us OF WHAT THIS SALVATION CONSISTS. "From their sins." Not from the wrath of God primarily. 1. From the guilt, curse, condemnation of sin. 2. From our love, habit, practice of sin. 3. It is not salvation from an abstraction, but from selfishness and self-will. IV. THE CHARACTER OF THE PEOPLE OF GOD. His people; peculiar, chosen, royal. Are you saved from sins? (J. Donovan.)
1. The presumption of the fact from the infinite wisdom and goodness of God, who never provides a cause unequal to the effect. 2. The declaration of the fact, "He is able to save them to the uttermost," etc. II. Jesus is a WILLING Saviour. III. Jesus is a LIVING Saviour. IV. Jesus is a PRESENT Saviour. V. Jesus is a PERSONAL Saviour. VI. Jesus is a SYMPATHIZING Saviour." (G. H. Smyth.) I. Let me call your attention to the SAVIOUR. Jesus is Divine; He saves His people from their sins. Not the word, not the ordinances, but Jesus Himself saves. II. Look at the SALVATION. 1. Jesus saves from sin by bestowing forgiveness — full forgiveness, free, immediate. 2. Jesus saves His people from the pollution of sin; not in their sins, but from their sins. III. Let us look at the SAVED. "He shall save His people." Who are His people? They must have been at one time in their sins. Therefore no one need despair. (W. M. Taylor, D. D.)
(Christopher Sutton.)
(W. Jay.)
1. To live with man. 2. With man, to die for him. 3. With man, to rise from the dead for him. 4. With man, to ascend and intercede for him. II. GOD IS WITH HIS PEOPLE. 1. He is with them in their lives. 2. In their labours. 3. In their trials and afflictions. 4. In their worship. In death and in glory. (C. H. Wetherbe.)
1. The occurrence was of a preternatural character. To raise us from degradation Christ Himself must be sinless. Evil had descended. How was this fatal entail to be cut off? The virgin birth was the answer. 2. Christ's birth marked the entrance into the sphere of sense and time of One who had existed from eternity. 3. No other birth has ever involved such important consequences to the human race. II. The CONTRAST between the real and the apparent importance of Christ's birth. The kingdom of God had entered into history without observation. Caesar's palace seemed to be more important to the world than the manger. The apparent is not always the real. III. What is the PRACTICAL MEANING of this birth to us, and what relation have we to Him who, for the love of us, was born of the virgin? (Canon Liddon.)
II. God was preparing the world for the coming of Emmanuel. III. The world could not produce the Emmanuel. IV. As the Emmanuel was the goal of ancient, so He is the starting-point of modern history. (J. C. Jones)
(J. C. Jones.)
2. The Mediator was to come in the purity and the power of sinless human character. 3. We, as a part of the human world, must join in this longing of human hearts for a Christ. 4. When this yearning of mankind was taken up into the guidance and inspiration of God it became prophecy. 5. These things are a declaration of the one fact which lies, central and life-giving, at the heart of all our Christian thoughts and hopes. 6. We come short of the full grandeur of the gospel when we take the clause, "God with us," as signifying only one among us — a Deity moving among individuals, outside of them all, and, however friendly and gracious, still an external Person, saving them only by a work wrought all above them. 7. Then, too, it will begin to appear what Christ's own people may be, acknowledging their membership, confirmed and alive in His body. (Bishop Huntingdon,.)Let Him be one of us, that we may be one in Him. (J. C. Jones.)
II. We know, too, from the incarnation and doctrine of Christ, that God is with us, not as individuals merely, BUT WITH OUR WORLD, and that also in the way of special grace. He is in the world, not to exhibit His power merely, but that the world of men may be redeemed, etc. III. In Christ we see that God was with us, IN OUR VERY NATURE, to accomplish our redemption. IV. Though ascended into heaven, HE is STILL "GOD WITH US," by the invisible but mighty influence which He exerts. V. God is with us, in condescension and special grace, DURING THE WHOLE COURSE OF DISCIPLINE to which He subjects us. Is Christ our Emmanuel? (R. Watson.)
(Beecher.)In what sense is Christ GoD WITH US? In His incarnation united to our nature — God with man — God in man. He is God with us to comfort, enlighten, protect, and defend us in time of temptation and trial, and in the hour of death, and God with us, and in us, and we with and in Him to all eternity. (A. Clarke. LL. D.)Behold at once the deepest mystery and the richest mercy. By the light of nature we see the eternal as a God above us: by the light of the law we see Him as a God against us; but, by the light of the gospel, we see Him as a God with us, reconciled to us, at peace with us, interested for us, interceding in our behalf. Thanks be to God for His unspeakable gift! (Dr. Hughes.) The Biblical Illustrator, Electronic Database. Copyright © 2002, 2003, 2006, 2011 by Biblesoft, Inc. All rights reserved. Used by permission. BibleSoft.com Bible Hub |