Redeemer Church
Jan 4th
Micah 7:18NKJV
- Be Thou My Vision
1 John 4:10–11NKJV
Matthew 11:28–30NKJV
- Turn Your Eyes Upon Jesus
Matthew 6:5–13ESV
Hosea 11:1ESV
Exodus 4:22ESV
Matthew 3:17ESV
Jeremiah 31:16–17ESV
- Yet Not I But Through Christ In Me
Jude 25NKJV
- Text: Matthew 2:13–23PRAYER TIME1. Where We’ve Been in MatthewWe have been moving carefully through the opening chapters of Gospel according to MatthewMatthew has been doing something very intentional.So far, we have seen:Jesus’ royal genealogy (Matt 1:1–17): He is the true Son of David, heir to the throne.The virgin conception (1:18–25): He is not merely a human king, but Immanuel—God with us.The visit of the Magi (2:1–12): Gentiles recognize what Israel’s king refuses to see—the King has arrived.Herod’s fear: The first response to Jesus’ kingship is not worship, but hostility.Matthew has been answering one dominant question:Who is this child, and why does His coming provoke such extreme reactions?That question has been building. And now, in our passage this morning, it intensifies.Today we will be looking at Matthew 2:13-23Please stand for the reading of God’s word.This is God’s word(Thanks be to God)2. When the Promised King Must RunThere is something unsettling about this scene.We expect a king to arrive with power, stability, and visible triumph.Instead, Matthew shows us:A warning in the nightA father waking his family in fearA desperate flight across a borderA tyrant murdering childrenAnd the Messiah… running for His lifeThis raises a tension we are meant to feel:How can the promised King of Israel begin His reign as a refugee?Matthew does not resolve that question immediately. He wants us to walk through the darkness before we see the glory.3. Watching the Story UnfoldI. A King Preserved by Obedient Faith (vv. 13–15)God speaks again—quietly, personally, providentiallyvs 13aAnother dreamAn angel of the Lord appeared to him in a dreamAnother commandvs 13bAnother immediate obedience by Josephvs 14Joseph does not argue.He does not delay.He gets up and obeys.This couldn’t have been easyKnowing that the king of your people wants your son deadfleeing to another country to protect your familyNot knowing how long it will take...Faith often looks less like heroism and more like quiet, costly obedience.Egypt: A shocking destinationWhy Egypt?Is it random??For Israel, Egypt is:A place of slavery400+ yearsA place of exileA place God once delivered them fromAnd yet—God sends His Son into Egypt.Egypt is not random.Then Matthew drops a line that changes everything:Vs 15 - “This was to fulfill what the Lord had spoken by the prophet, ‘Out of Egypt I called my son.’” (v. 15)This quotation comes from Hosea 11:1.II. Jesus as the True Israel of God (v. 15)This is where Matthew slows us down—and where we must think big pictureA. Hosea 11:1 in its original context
Hosea 11:1 ESV When Israel was a child, I loved him, and out of Egypt I called my son.Hosea is not predicting the Messiah in the narrow sense. He is looking backward:“When Israel was a child, I loved him, and out of Egypt I called my son.”Hosea is speaking of the Exodus—God redeeming Israel, His “son,” from slavery.So why does Matthew apply this to Jesus?B. Matthew’s theological claimMatthew is saying:Jesus recapitulates the entire story of Israel—He isn’t simply the fulfillment of Israel’s promises...but where Israel failed, Jesus succeeds.Israel is called God’s “son” (Exod 4:22)Exodus 4:22 ESV Then you shall say to Pharaoh, ‘Thus says the Lord, Israel is my firstborn son,Jesus is called God’s beloved SonMatthew 3:17 ESV and behold, a voice from heaven said, “This is my beloved Son, with whom I am well pleased.”Israel goes into Egypt and comes out rebelliousJesus goes into Egypt and comes out obedientIsrael fails in the wildernessJesus triumphs in the wilderness💡 Jesus is not merely part of Israel’s story—He is Israel as one faithful Son.As John Calvin observed:“Christ in Himself gathered up the whole body of the Church, that He might be the true seed of Abraham.”This matters profoundly:Our covenant standing before God does not rest on our obedience...EXPAND......covenant of Redemption with God and ChristJesus fulfills the covenant where Israel—and we—have failedIII. A King Opposed by the World (vv. 16–18)Read vv16-18Herod’s response is chilling:...Deception turns into fury...Fear turns into violencePower turns into murderThe slaughter of the innocents echoes Pharaoh...Once again:A tyrant fears a delivererChildren die as a resultBUT, what we cannot miss...God’s redemptive plan moves forward anywayMatthew quotes Jeremiah 31:15—Rachel weeping for her children.In Jeremiah 31 Rachel is poetically portrayed as weeping from her tomb near Ramah.She was the Matriarch of Benjamin and JosephTribes deeply connected to the norther kingdom and later devastationRamah was a staging point where exiles were gathered before being deported to BabylonRachel’s tears symbolize Israel’s covenant curse from Duet 28Loss of children, land, and their freedom because of their sinBUT Jeremiah 31 does not end with weepingRight after verse 15 comes a promise.Jeremiah 31:16–17 ESV Thus says the Lord: “Keep your voice from weeping, and your eyes from tears, for there is a reward for your work, declares the Lord, and they shall come back from the land of the enemy. There is hope for your future, declares the Lord, and your children shall come back to their own country.Then this chapter climaxes in the New Covenant promiseJeremiah 31:31–34 ESV “Behold, the days are coming, declares the Lord, when I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel and the house of Judah, not like the covenant that I made with their fathers on the day when I took them by the hand to bring them out of the land of Egypt, my covenant that they broke, though I was their husband, declares the Lord. For this is the covenant that I will make with the house of Israel after those days, declares the Lord: I will put my law within them, and I will write it on their hearts. And I will be their God, and they shall be my people. And no longer shall each one teach his neighbor and each his brother, saying, ‘Know the Lord,’ for they shall all know me, from the least of them to the greatest, declares the Lord. For I will forgive their iniquity, and I will remember their sin no more.”Rachel weeps and mourns, but redemption is coming!Here, Matthew applies this text from Jeremiah, to Herod’s massacre of the infants in BethlehemMatthew is not claiming that Jeremiah predicted what Herod would do.Rather he is sayingThat same covenantal sorrow that Israel experienced in exile has reached its darkest timeand is now about to be reversed.Bethlehem sits in the territory historically associated with RachelOnce again:Mothers are losing their childrenA tyrant is ruling over the peopleGod’s people are suffering under foreign oppressionThe pattern returns here in Matthew,BUT this time a deliverer is already present.This is where Matthew’s account is profoundly Christ-centeredJesusDriven into Egypt - replaying Israel’s historyReturns as the true SonStands as the embodiment of faithful IsraelRachel’s tears can have consolationThe one who would:Bear the curseEstablish the New CovenantEnd the exile of sin and deathIs now alive in Bethlehem.I believe that we can draw a few points of rich theology from this:1. God does not minimize real sufferingWeeping, sorrow, mourning, suffering,He doesn’t say that the suffering isn’t real, or is no big dealHe sees the suffering of his people.2. God does not abandon his covenant people in their griefGod is always present, always loving, and always good3. God typically brings redemption THROUGH not around deep sorrowRachel weeps, but her children are about to be restored FOREVER!I think we can also see here from Herod’s reactionThe coming of Christ exposes the darkness of the world.As R.C. Sproul said:“The presence of Christ does not create evil; it reveals it.”Little apologetics lesson for you.Debate with Cliffe about God creating evil...Student says that if there is a child with cancerGod either caused it, or he didn’t.if he didn’t cause it, 2 options,either wanted it to happen or he didn’tif he didn’t, that implies that he did nothing to prevent it....asks how you reconcile that with a good benevolent GodHis answer was spot onA . Evil proves that God exists1. If there is no God, Objective morals do not exist2. Evil exists, of course it does we all know it3. Because Evil exists, objective morals have to exist4. because objective morals exist, God existsIf you you really get frustrated with Evil, you can’t say, there is no God because of EvilThen you have a real problem....what you exp as evil isn’tRelative, arbitraryB. Gen 3 records the fallWe are born into an unfair, messed up worldWe basically told God to get lost,God partially honored our request and allows us to live how we see fit, and chaos erupts.C. Wraps it up by saying let’s go into the hospital room with the little boy dying of cancer.Come on my atheist friend, stand on one side, I will stand on the other.What is your solution??No solutionTough luck kid, fate, destiny, chanceI look at this child and say.…IV. A King Who Dwells With the Lowly (vv. 19–23)Read 19-23Herod dies.Kings always do.But God’s purposes continue.Joseph obeys again, but now must settle in Nazareth—a despised place.It is said, “Can anything good come out of Nazareth?”And yet Matthew says:“So that what was spoken by the prophets might be fulfilled, that he would be called a Nazarene.”Many scholars have debated what this meansThis is not a single quotation—I believe that it is a theme:The Messiah will be despisedRejectedOverlookedThe King of Glory grows up in obscurity.Only now, after walking through fear, exile, sorrow, and obscurity, does the central truth emerge:Jesus is the true Son of God—the faithful Israel—who enters our exile, bears our suffering, and secures our redemption.5. ApplicationsFor BelieversYour salvation rests on Christ’s obedience, not yoursGod’s purposes are often advanced through hidden faithfulnessObedience may lead into hardship—but never outside God’s covenant careIf Jesus is the promised see, true Israel, then you are secure in HimLet’s pray.
Redeemer Church
4 members • 1 follower