Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Matthew 1; Luke 1 Part 2 • Dr. Gaye Strathearn • Jan. 2 - Jan. 8
Episode Date: December 28, 2022Dr. Gaye Strathearn continues to examine the importance of Mary, Elizabeth, Zacharias, and John the Baptist as examples of discipleship and covenant service.Please rate and review the podcast!Show Not...es (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.coApple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/follow-him-a-come-follow-me-podcast/id1545433056Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/15G9TTz8yLp0dQyEcBQ8BYThanks to the follow HIM team:Shannon Sorensen: Executive Producer, SponsorDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: Marketing, SponsorLisa Spice: Client Relations, Editor, Show NotesJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignWill Stoughton: Video EditorKrystal Roberts: Translation Team, English & French Transcripts, WebsiteAriel Cuadra: Spanish TranscriptsIgor Willians: Portuguese Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com
Transcript
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Welcome to part two, Dr. Gay Stratham, Matthew chapter one and Luke chapter one.
The next thing I like is verses 46 down to verse 55. This has a technical term
it's known as the Magnificut. Magnificut is just Latin for means to magnify
and it's given that name because in these verses we have Mary's response to this great
experience in her life. How did Mary feel about this? So kind of come with me as we kind of go
through this. Mary says, my soul doth magnify the Lord. My spirit hath rejoiced in God my Savior.
For he hath regarded the lower state of his handmaiden.
In other words, he's picked me.
I'm a nowhere person from a nowhere place.
Why does he pick me?
But because he has behold from henceforth
all generations shall call me blessed
for he that is mighty,
had done to me great things
and holy is his name.
And his mercy is on them that fear him
from generation to generation.
Now, both Hebrew and Greek,
the word fear is not like a Halloween
fear, but it is the fear of entering the presence of God because we understand and reverence
that he is something so much more than us. And the other thing I like about here is
Mary acknowledging God's mercy. I don't know about you, but I've heard it said a couple of times or more, that the God
of the Old Testament is a God of justice, the God of the New Testament is a God of mercy.
And I don't like that, because if you read the Old Testament carefully, what are the people
there think of him?
Repeatedly, they're talking about his mercy. And Mary, as young as she is, is
acknowledging that God is a God of mercy. He has showed strength with his arm. He
has scattered the proud and the imagination of their hearts. He has put down the
mighty from their seats, perhaps those who thought that the Messiah would come
through their lineage or through their family, and he has exalted them of low degree.
Me, he has filled the hungry with good things and the rich he has sent empty away.
He has helped his servant Israel in remembrance of his mercy, as he spake of our father's
Abraham and to his seed forever.
To me I'm seeing here is Mary, even as young as she may have been.
She has a sense of the Abrahamic covenant and what that means.
And she's the realization that what is happening here is
and she's going to be a part of the fulfillment of the Abrahamic covenant.
But look at these contrasts between the strong, the rich,
and the people of Lower State.
This sets up, as I mentioned before, the Gospel of Luke, where God is going to choose the poor, the women, the people of Lower State,
to play a part in the rolling forth of the Kingdom of God.
His message is for all people, and in this story here of Mary,
we see all of that taking place in really beautiful and powerful ways, I think.
I want to put Mary's magnificat next to Nephi's psalm in 2nd Nephi 4 and was surprised how similar they were. Both of them say they're highly favored.
Mary in a state of exaltation
and Nephi in a state of O'Retched Man that I am,
but both of them went to God in those circumstances,
which I loved.
And when I circled the pronoun that Mary's not saying,
I, I, I, I, she's saying he's done this, he's done this, he's done this.
And Nephi does the same thing. He has preserved me upon the waters of the DP, has done this,
he has done this, and I thought, isn't that interesting to see where they went in times of
both great joy and in times of feeling wretched as Nephi did, they both went to God and found strength there.
I love that because this morning as I was thinking through this,
I guess it hasn't jumped out to me before.
It goes on then and talks about the birth of John the Baptist
and then we get Zechariah.
Also gives this Benedictus, this praising of God in his experience.
And he's also doing things like emphasizing God's mercy
and the covenant and Abraham and seeing what's happening,
not just with Jesus, but with John,
how we also have this fulfillment of the Abrahamic covenant.
So as I think about this and think about,
okay, what am I going to learn from Mary about
what it means to be a disciple of Jesus Christ?
I think the last thing that a principle of discipleship I think about here is, how do
I praise God of all of the great things that he has done in my life. Are there ways that I sing his praises
from the rooftops to all who can hear?
And I've thought about that and kind of thought, okay,
so maybe I should sit down and write down
or declare publicly to anyone within the sound of my voice
that God is good, that he knows me, even though I'm a no one, that he has a plan for me. And if I can just have the faith in him and his omnipotence and
that he sees things in eternal ways that I can't get my head around.
Am I willing to step up to the plate and be like Mary and say to him,
here I am Lord, if you need someone to help in some way in this kingdom of God. Pick me. And I'm preparing myself to be able to do that. But declaring to all that I draw my line in the stand, here I stand.
I am a disciple of Jesus Christ. I choose Him. Even though I don't know all of the answers,
I have lots of questions, but it's that stepping up
and saying, I'm willing to be a part of this kingdom.
I want to be a part of this kingdom
and use me in whatever way I can do,
even in just minuscule ways,
to help the kingdom move along, the kingdom of God here on earth.
I can do a better job at finding ways to praise God for all the blessings that has come into my life.
That's beautiful, Gaye, and Mary isn't shy about it, is she? She is willing to tell Elizabeth
all that she feels in her heart. I love that the Lord brought them together and how validating that Elizabeth is.
Once is this to me that the mother of my Lord should come to me and then Mary does not hold back on how she feels. I think that's beautiful.
And then you mentioned Zacharias. I'm noticing this theme of the Holy Ghost again.
Really important in Luke. There it is in verse 15, again in verse 35, verse 41, verse 67, every character of Luke
chapter 1 is filled with the Holy Ghost at some point.
And the idea of mercy comes through also, it's repeated, even in John's Benedictine.
I'm trying to do what you asked us to do and say, okay, why is Luke starting this way?
And maybe something that Luke is preparing us for is this isn't going to be the story you think
it's going to be.
The Lord isn't going to use the characters you think
he's going to use, he's going to use people
that are going to surprise you.
Because so far, everyone who's been used
is a surprise, this older couple, this young girl.
Maybe Luke chapter one prepares us for the rest of Luke,
which is watch out for
surprises. Because God knows you and He'll find you wherever you are or whatever your situation.
Am I ready to step up and say yes? I've always loved this baby blessing from Zacharias to John.
He's had nine months of not speaking to think about it, so it better be good. And it is, especially when he speaks to John himself, thou child, this is verse 76,
thou child shall be called the prophet of the highest.
Go before the face of the Lord to prepare his ways.
And he says, through the tender mercy of our God, this is verse 78, the sunrise,
have visited us. I just, what a beautiful baby blessing.
How tender that Zacharias came around.
I don't know exactly why he was struck dumb
because he didn't believe, but he does now.
Yeah, and sometimes I think God is going to hold us accountable,
but often he does that in ways that allows us to learn
and grow in the process.
I don't know about Structum Y, that particular happened to Elma the Younger as well and to other people.
But I have wondered whether not being able to hear or speak means that your other senses are heightened heightened and whether this allows for Alma the Younger or for Zekarice the spiritual sense,
even though he's righteous, to be heightened to a new level.
The other thing I think is really fun about this is, in my mind, verse 59, so this is
the eighth day after John is born, the family all gathers together and because this is an important ritual
in Judaism. It is a time when we see it as like a baby blessing, yes, but this is for
the young child to be circumcised and this is when he's going to get his name given
it. Everybody expects that it's going to be zaccharized after his dad, but one of the things that I love is that
doctrine and covenants 84 suggests that there's something else really quite
subpernal happening during this time that Luke doesn't mention. In 84 verse 28, it
says talking about John and how he leaped in the womb, for he was baptized while
he was yet in his childhood and was ordained by the angel of God. At the time, he was
8 days old. So this is happening at the same time as his circumcision and being given
his name. So at 8 days, and he is ordained unto this power to overthrow the kingdom
of the Jews to make straight the way for the Lord before the face of his people and to
prepare them for the coming of the Lord in whose hand is given all power. This was a sacred sacred, supernly important experience for both John and his parents.
This always brings up an interesting question of John the Baptist.
I think I've read commentaries that say, does that mean his ordained to the priesthood
or was it more ordained in a more general sense to this forerunner Elias calling that
he's going to have. Did his father give him the priesthood or did he get that from the angel or was the ordaining more of a different kind of ordaining? What do you think?
I think that's a really good question. I think Latter-day Saints today have a more specialized interpretation of the word ordain that was used in antiquity.
We attach it very much with priesthood and receiving priesthood to a priesthood office.
But in the scriptures that's used much more broadly, Eldermakonki talking about 84, he
says it's not talking about, or being ordained to the priesthood, but it's talking about to what follows, to this power in terms of the larger experience. I mean,
Paul uses the word that's translated as ordained and the word in Greek literary is the raising
of hand. So we would understand that as sustaining rather than ordaining. So it's a much broader
term than what we use today. That's helpful. Thank you. I think what kind of fun for me is to think of John who
was filled with the Holy Ghost even from his mother's womb in verse 15. It just seems like he hits
the ground running and it seems like when Jesus shows his apostles they were like, wait, what are we
doing? And then Peter was constantly being tutored and corrected
and all of them were, I suppose,
but it's not a greater profit than John,
because he just, he knew from the beginning
what was going on.
And I get that sense that the apostles
had a slower learning curve.
And I think, and this is just my reading of it,
for Jesus, John was kind of like his rock of Gibraltar.
He could trust John, that John would be there, that John would be supporting, that John
would be sending his disciples, because he receives disciples before Jesus does and sending
them off to Jesus and things like that.
And it seems to me that we have this growing learning curve for the other disciples.
And it doesn't seem to be until after the death of John the Baptist
that we begin to see Peter step up to the plate. So we have John's death and then you see Peter
being willing to jump out of the boat and walk towards Jesus. And then we see Peter giving his
Caesar-eye fill-up-, thou art the Christ situation.
So it seems to me, at least on some level,
once John's gone, Jesus needs these apostles to step up.
I like that.
To help him, to be there for him.
How interesting that Elizabeth was there to be the rock for Mary
and that John is there to be the rock for Jesus,
the relationship continues.
It's wonderful. There's a Joseph in the Hierum. I don't know if that applies, but it's interesting
the parish that he sent them in. I don't know why I've never seen these two parallel stories before
in Luke, but he wants these two babies connected. That's just fantastic. You think I'd seen this after
a couple of decades teaching that you wouldn't be able to show
me something brand new, but here I was focusing on the couple instead of the babies.
When I taught, I always focused on Elizabeth and Zacharias and Mary and didn't focus on
these two babies being told in parallel stories.
So I'm going to use that in my classes from here on out. Really grateful. And look how Luke finishes the story of John in verse 80 and the child grew and
waxed strong in spirit.
So where do we see something similar to that at the end of to chapter two with
Jesus, he increased in words,
the man's stature and faith with God and men.
The language isn't the same, but the idea, he grew, he waxed strong in the spirit
and was in the deserts till the day
of his showing unto Israel.
When I see that word waxed, I always think of it,
I don't know what the Greek is for waxed,
but it always helps me to think of when you go
to Navu or to a historic site,
and they show how they would dip a string into the wax
and then let it dry and then dip it in again
and then let it dry.
And it was this little layer by layer growth.
And that always helps me when I think of the wax strong
but it grew slowly.
One of the things that I think is often a topic
is their understanding of what the Messiah was going to do.
Was it to deliver political Israel,
or was it to deliver the House of Israel? I've always loved verse 77, this part of the
Benedictus, I guess, to give knowledge of salvation unto his people. What's saving from the Romans?
Salvation unto his people by the remission of their sins. I mean, that's the kind of salvation that is coming.
And I think that's interesting that remission of sins
is specifically mentioned.
They're not redeeming Israel in the sense of from the Romans.
I put my margin, not military conquest,
but remission of sins.
We've got tougher enemies than the Romans.
Whenever I teach New Testament, I like to kind of spend some time looking at the development
of Messianic thought in Judaism, what they were thinking about.
And there's this passage from the Psalms of Solomon, which is a mid-first century BC
document.
And I love this because it gives me a sense of just before Jesus was born, what are they
thinking about when they're thinking about Messiah?
Let me read it to you.
Behold, O Lord, and raise up their king, the son of David, at the time which you choose,
O God, to rule over Israel, your servant, anded him with strength to shatter unjust rulers, to purge Jerusalem
from nations that trample her down to destruction, in the wisdom of righteousness to thrust out
sinners from the inheritance, to crush all their substance with an iron rod, to destroy the
lawless nations with the word of his mouth, very revelation language.
And he will gather together a holy people,
whom he will lead in righteousness,
and he will not allow injustice to lodge anymore
in their midst, and no one, knowing evil, will dwell with them.
Blessed are the ones of those days
in that they will see the good things of the Lord,
which he will perform for the generation that is to come under the rod of discipline of the Lord's anointed or the Lord's mashiak.
So there's a couple of things here, so the Messiah is going to be a king, he's going to be a son of David,
Mary acknowledges those, as Gabriel talks about him. Strength to shatter unjust
rulers, I think that that's political, but it also could be in the Old Testament, the
unjust spiritual rulers of Israel, to thrust out the sinners because they're gathering
together, this Messiah is going to create a society of holy people, which is
interesting to me because holy people is the word saints, a group of people who are holy
and he will lead them in righteousness. So these are the kind of things so that there's
this sense of, it's not just getting rid of political enemies, but it's creating something
wonderful, a holy people who dwell in righteousness.
There's elements of that. It's a positive thing. We would think about it in terms of trying
to establish Zion, and righteousness where Christ can come and rule over his people again.
Well, okay, this has been wonderful. I've got notes all over the place for Luke one, and
now I'm excited to look at Matthew one. You said that Luke was kind of written Gentiles, rich poor for everybody and what kind of
unique approach, or if there is one, does Matthew take in Matthew chapter one?
Yeah, that's a really good question.
Matthew is different from Luke.
Like both of them are telling the story of Jesus, but they're doing it for different reasons
because of their audience.
Matthew seems to have been written to a Jewish Christian audience,
who is in some tension or had recently split with the synagogue.
So in Matthew's editorial passages,
the synagogue is referred to as their synagogue, or your synagogue,
quite a bit in Matthew. He's the only one of the four gospels that mentions a church. So that's
probably set in contrast to the synagogue. He refers to their scribes when Mark uses thus scribes.
when Mark uses thuscribes. And some people have argued that this represents a time
during the Jamnian period, about 70 AD to 100 AD
when Judaism is seeking to redefine itself
after the destruction of the temple.
But honestly, there are enough rifts going on in Judaism
that it probably could happen any of the times,
but there does seem to be their intention.
So, one of the things that Matthew is trying to do is to, this is really important him,
is to show that Jesus is the fulfillment of prophecy in the Old Testament.
It's almost as if he's sometimes saying, okay, Jesus did this.
Hang on a minute, let me go find a scripture that works with that.
And then it says, and get grabbed high, as it is written.
And then he puts it in.
But it's really important to show those connections.
Also, it shows the importance of the patriarchal line.
As we'll see in chapter one,
he begins his gospel with the genealogy of Jesus.
And we'll want to talk about this in some time.
And he's going to portray Jesus as the new Moses.
And that kind of comes out a little bit after chapter 1, so we probably won't talk too
much about that.
But there are two other things that I think are really important for what we're going
to discuss today. Although he is writing to a Jewish audience,
I think it's clear that he's trying to also convince
that audience to accept the Gentile mission.
In the time of Paul, this question of Gentiles
in the church, honestly, we could read over this quickly,
but this is something that threatens to split
the church in two between Jewish Christians and Gentile Christians, and it's something
that Paul is really struggling with.
So that's going to be an important thing.
He's saying to the Jewish audience, Gentiles belong in this as well, and we should welcome
them into it.
So there's a couple of ways that this happens. Eusebius, who was a really important Christian historian,
he writes in the fourth century,
but when he's talking about Matthew's gospel,
he says in his history of the church.
Matthew had begun by preaching to the Hebrews,
and when he made up his mind to go to others too,
he committed his own gospel to writing in
his native tongue.
So there's a sense of his responsibility initially, I'm writing to Jews, but then he says,
okay, I'm going to expand it.
We don't know very little if anything about Matthew and his teaching to the Gentiles,
but I think it's reflected in his gospel.
So for example, I'll just say these briefly
and then maybe we can talk about them in more detail. When Matthew has his gospel, it's a very
patriarchal genealogy which would expect, except that there are four women in it, which is
totally unexpected. Ruth, Tamar, Rahab, and the wife of Uriasas who is Basheba. All four of these Gentile women. So at least at some level it's saying look
Jesus comes through the
lineage that we would expect through
David and Abraham, but we wouldn't have Jesus. We wouldn't have the Messiah without the influence of women, Gentile women.
So if they're part of the beginning of Christianity, then surely they should be allowed to be part of the church.
Matthew tapped to two and the wise men, at least from Matthew's perspective, these are Gentiles, and they play a really, really important role. And then we have places like Matthew 8 and Matthew 15,
where the faith of Gentiles is just absolutely incredible.
And in fact, in chapter 8,
after the healing of the centurion servant or child,
we read, and this is unique to Matthew.
He's the one that puts this words together
with the centurion servant child.
When Jesus heard it of the faith, he marveled and
said unto them that followed, verily I say unto you, I have not found so great faith no not in
Israel. And I say unto you that many shall come from the east and west and shall sit down with
Abraham and Isaac and Jacob in the kingdom of heaven. But the children of the kingdom shall be
cast out into outer darkness and there shall be weeping and nationally of teeth. So again, Matthew is editing and to create this,
to say there are many people who expect that they should be in the Kingdom of Heaven,
but the Gentiles are going to be there, and some are going to be disappointed because of this great
faith that they have. And then the other thing that I want to just kind of give a heads up for now is
Matthew also seems to be writing to address a question or a concern that some
in Judaism seem to be asking. And that is where is this God who made a covenant with us?
He promised that if we made a covenant, that we would be his people,
that we would be a treasured nation to him,
he promised that he would go before us with our enemies and fight our battles and be our divine warrior.
So what happened?
How did we get overtaken by the Greeks and now the Romans? Where is God? Why
isn't he fighting our battles for us now? Has he abandoned us? Is he really there? Part of Matthew's
answer to this is you better believe it. So let me just show you a couple of verses, one's from chapter one,
and then one's from the end of the book. This is a part that we're all familiar with and we'll
put it in more context later, but when the angel is speaking to Joseph, he's going to quote a passage
from Isaiah chapter 714, and we're all familiar with this. Now this is done that might be fulfilled which was spoken of the Lord by the prophet Isaiah saying
Behold a virgin shall be with child and shall bring forth a son and they shall call his name Emmanuel
Which is being interpreted?
God is with us now jump over to the end of Matthew, Matthew chapter 28 and we're
probably I think more familiar with verse 19 but we often stop quoting it in the
middle of verse 20 but it's the part after that that I'm interested in but I
put it in context. So this is the resurrected Jesus on the Mount of Olives and
he's talking to his 12 and this is the last thing that we have him
saying to them at least in Matthew's Gospel.
Go ye therefore and teach all nations baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son of the Holy Ghost.
Teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you and then notice this language and low.
I am with you always.
This is a literary device known as an inclusio. So if a parickopy or a passage starts with
an idea or words that are the same and where it ends with those words that are the idea or the words
themselves are the same, that's a device and inclusion means it is kind of bringing
together everything in between. Everything in between is then meant to illustrate or to
prove these inclusions that God is with His people. So that suggests to me that when Matthew
is writing this, he is also responding to those who say, God's abandoned us. Where is he?
Why is it he with us? Matthew is writing his gospel at least in part to say, God has not
In part to say, God has not abandoned His people. And the evidence that He is not abandoned His people is that He sent His Son Jesus Christ.
Everything in Matthew's gospel is to reinforce the coming of Jesus and to show that God continues
to be with him, his people, even as he says
at the end, even though he's resurrected and he's leaving him in mortality, he's still
not going to abandon them.
He will continue to be with them even when he's left mortality.
I think that's beautiful.
That is those two bookend verses.
That's Matthew 1, Matthew 1.23, and Matthew 28, 20.
That's really cool.
God with us, I am with you always.
I think just about every high council room in the church has that painting with the great
commission in it.
That's the caption, I guess.
That's so for me, the question also is, if we're thinking about what does this mean for
me, do people today have the same questions?
Where is God? Has He abandoned me? I thought I joined the church, I made covenants, where
are those provenants for me? I think Matthew is teaching us that the answer will be the
same. As individuals, if we take Matthew seriously, what's the evidence for me that God has not
abandoned me, but that He continues to be with me?
And as a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, one of my answers to
that is the evidence that God has not abandoned me or this generation is the restoration of
the gospel, that He continues to talk to us through
prophets, seers and revelators. He continues to give us guidance for the things that are
affecting us in this life. God has not abandoned us because God and His Son return to the Prophet
Joseph. Rather than walking away from the restoration, I want to hang
on to it with everything that I've got because that's what connects me with this promise.
And I think the other answer I would say, what's the evidence in my life that God has for an individual,
not just a community, is that he hears my prayers and he answers me in very personal ways. And I cannot,
I cannot reject or forget or push those things away and think that they're just kind of
happenstance. This is the evidence of a loving God who's heavily invested in me personally. And I'm sure there are
other ways to think about it as well. So the definition of Emanuel, which is interpreted
God with us, and then low I am with you, and the weekly reminder we get that they may always have his spirit to be with them. There's no aloneness in the gospel
There is a promise of being with you and remember elder hayphon pointing that out in one of his books
I just love that promise of the sacrament table of
Being with you. There's not an aloneness
I'm glad you said that about Matthew now and and now I can think of, as you said,
the restoration promising the same thing. It's beautiful, and when I saw that, that has really changed
the way I've thought about Matthew's gospel. I mean, I've always loved Matthew's gospel, even though
it's not everyone's favorites, it's one of mine, so that just deepened it even more for me.
The book starts with that part that, as we're reading the Old Testament is probably the
part we skip the most. All of those Lincoln genealogies that come along. How many begats do I have to
go through here? Yeah, there's a few actually. But one of the things that I learned from the Old
Testament that those genealogies are really important because they help to connect
us with the original story, with the divine. They help to connect us with God. Matthew writing to
a Hebrew audience is going to pick on it. So it shouldn't surprise us that there's a genealogy front and center. And in fact, the first two words in Matthew chapter
one is the Book of Genesis. We've got it translated as the Book of Generation, but the word is Genesis. And
I'm not sure that that's happened, Stance. I think that Matthew, like John, is wanting to connect
you, like John is wanting to connect this Christian story as an extension of the creation back in Genesis, where God created the world and now he's creating a community, a kingdom of
God on earth type of thing.
And I think that this is one way that Matthew does it.
That for his original readers, they would pick up probably a little bit more
quickly than what we do because we don't live in that same sphere and time.
So this is the book of Genesis of Jesus Christ, the son of David and the son of Abraham.
Again for his audience it's really, really important for Matthew to connect the story of Jesus with two of the most
prominent important people in Jewish history. King David, Jesus comes as a Messiah, he's a descendant
of David as prophesied, that David's house would last forever. And Jesus is renews that. But also the son of Abraham. Remember
that Luke had gone back to Adam because it was important to his audience, but for Matthew
and his audience, it's the connection with Abraham, the covenant of Abraham. That is
an important connector for understanding who this Jesus is as Matthew tries
to explain him to his audience. These are the biggest names in their history. David, Abraham, Isaac,
Jacob, it doesn't get any bigger. You'd kind of expect a little bit of Moses in there too, but
he doesn't make it in this way, but Moses is prominent in other ways in Matthew's gospel.
He doesn't make it in this way, but Moses is prominent in other ways in Matthew's gospel. Jesus is the new Moses as well.
It's clearly that Matthew has not just crafted this chapter, but he's crafted this geneology
and he's crafted it around the number 14.
So he's broken Isolate history down into three major places.
From Abraham to David, he's put in 14 generations there. He's in verse 17
here and then he's got from David until the exile Babylon and he's included 14 generations there as
well, even though the time from Abraham to David was a lot longer than from David to the exile. He's still staying with 14.
And then from the carrying away the exile Babylon to Christ another 14 generations, even
though he's had to miss out lots of kings to make it 14. Why is he doing this? And I don't
think that there's only one answer, but some things to maybe consider is that for a Hebrew audience, the number
14 is particularly important on a number of levels. Jews have this thing called Gammatria
where in Hebrew, unlike English, numbers don't have separate symbols to letters. In Hebrew,
it's the letters that are the numbers. So their first letter,
alif is number one, bait is number two. This means that for them words have numerical significance.
Somebody has noticed that a name David adds up to 14. The Dalat for, the Vav-6 and then the Dalat for is then 14. So is Matthew intentional here in
crafting this genealogy in this symmetry of 14 generations, 14 generations, 14 generations?
Is that a way of reinforcing the importance of Jesus' connection to David and the extension
of the Davidic covenant?
That may be the case.
It's not explicit, but it may be one way.
The number seven is also very, very important.
Creation and dispensations and everything.
Is there six periods of seven which would indicate that there is an anticipation of a
seventh that is being ushered in by Christ and the kingdom of God? That has been brought up by
people as well. We don't know exactly what Matthew was thinking, but there's some possibilities
looking at it. It is crafted on purpose. The numbers are important to him. Yeah, for whatever reason.
important to him. Yeah, for whatever reason. I have a comment here from our friends and colleagues Kelli Ogden and Andy Skinner in their book, Verse by Verse the Four Gospels. This is what they
said by using the number 14 Matthew emphasized Jesus's perfection and Messiah ship as well as his
direct descent from King David. Sometimes as here, genealogies might be telescoped or condensed to match a desired
number of which an author is particularly fond. So like you said, we really want to make this fit
14. One of the things that I'd love to share with my class is that photo in the Bethlehem grotto
underneath the church of the nativity. If you go down the spot where the traditional spot of the birth of Christ is marked by a 14-pointed star to go back to this Matthew 117.
So whatever he's doing it, he does like balance. Matthew likes balance. This is kind of balanced.
Can I just say one other thing about the women here in this genealogy? People have said, well, there are four women because fill in the blank.
But here's the reason why I emphasize their Gentile nature.
Tamar was a Canaanite. We never talk about her in Seminary.
Verse 5 talks about Rahab. Then Bowas of Obed of Ruth.
They're familiar with the stories of Rahab and Ruth, both of whom were Gentiles.
Rahab was a Canaanite, Ruth was a Moabetite, Tamar was also a Canaanite, but then noticed verse 6,
and Jesse Begett David the King, and David the King sat Begett Solomon, of her that had been the
wife of Euryah's. This again is where I stop and ask a question.
I'm going, why not to decide that way? We all know that the wife of Urias is Bathsheba. So why not just
say Blinkenbeth Shabre? Well, I wonder whether because we don't know the lineage of Bathsheba, but she was
married to Uriah and in the Old Testament, Yoraya is called Yoraya,
the Hittite. Even though this might not work perfectly, Matthew is wanting to emphasize
the gentileness of this woman who we all know as Bathsheba, but because he says it this
way, I think it again emphasized the gentile nature of the four women here. So that's
why I go that way.
A reader during Matthew's day who is saying,
I don't want Gentiles to be part of this,
should start off the book going,
Gentiles are already part of our story
and have been for a long time.
Yeah, and we wouldn't be at this place without these women
and the impact they had of the part they played in
the lineage. There's an idea that even sinners have a part to play in this coming forth.
Even sinners can do things to help move along the kingdom of God because God is omnipotent
and he uses imperfect people like me to help this work. And here's an example of that as well.
That's what I like about it.
It's like you don't have to have a perfect lineage.
Your pedigree charts and everything can have all sorts of interesting characters in it.
And we need them all.
But it doesn't determine what you're going to do and be.
That's right.
Now the birth of Jesus Christ was on this wise when his mother Mary was espoused to Joseph
before they came together she was found with child of the Holy Ghost.
Now one of the things that I like about seeing the story in Luke and seeing it separately in Matthew
is we're reminded in Luke of Mary and the importance of the
story for her, but Matthew has a different audience again. His emphasis here is on Joseph. He also has
a part to play. It's not the same as Mary's, so I'm trying to think about Joseph here. So verse 19, then Joseph her husband being a just man. Now I want to
stop there and think about that. So the word here is for just is Dickeyasune. Joseph her husband
being a righteous man. I think that's really important. We talked a little bit about Mary and her
forerodination and those kinds of things, but Joseph shouldn't be just in the
background here. I think if we look at both of these and their emphasis on their
righteousness suggest to me that even though this was undoubtedly an arranged marriage, that they were equally yoked together spiritually.
They were both righteous beings or people.
And that also makes sense to me,
that God would want to send his son to a home
and to a family that is based in righteousness
like we saw with Zechariah and Elizabeth.
And I think then we see some evidence of his righteousness.
He's not willing to make a public example of Mary. He was kind to her
and wasn't going to divorce her even privately because that would cause real heartache for her.
And the fact that he also, in Matthew's gospel,
he's the one receiving dreams and revelations.
While he thought on these things,
the angel of the Lord appeared unto him in a dream,
saying, Joseph, they are son of David,
fear not to take unto thee, Mary thy wife,
for that which is conceived of her is of the holy ghost.
I wonder what he was thinking on that. He's heard the story, but is conceived in her of the holy
ghost, and he is told that she shall bring forth a son and they shall call his name Jesus,
specifically here, for he shall save his people from their sins. I love to think about that idea of Joseph and Mary
being equally yoke together in this great enterprise that they're embarked in. And this is the only
time we're going to hear of Joseph. He kind of falls off the edge of the earth and we don't hear
from him again. So I think it's important that we remember that aspect while we have the opportunity to do so.
Elder Holland talked about Joseph once in a,
the talk I think was 1995 and he,
I think it was called always remember him
and he talked about certain things
that we could think about during the sacrament.
And Elder Holland said, I'll get as close as I can,
that we could think of Jesus's unpretentious
father, and we could be reminded that quiet, unpretentious people have moved this work
forward from the beginning.
And then Elder Holland said, if you feel like you are serving almost anonymously, so did
one of the best men who ever lived about Joseph.
Yeah, I think it's good to hear from him
and to think about him as it is to think about Mary.
Now, I also want to kind of go to
what the angel tells Joseph in a little bit more detail,
specifically quotes Isaiah 7, 14.
Now, a couple of things here, number one,
I love it when scripture, interpret scripture. Yeah, that's really helpful.
This is one of those places that Gabriel is interpreting Isaiah 714 to be a reference for
Mary and the birth of Jesus. Now the reason I want to point this out is because that's not probably what Isaiah is doing when he uses this verse
back in Isaiah 7. And I think this is a really good place to help us think about original context
and our interpretation of it. So one of the reasons why I think at least for Isaiah's audience that this could not be a reference just to this future
event of Mary and Jesus is how it's used in Isaiah 7, 14. So if you want to kind of follow
me here to that verse, because if we look at the rest of chapter 7 and you learnt this last
year but just kind of putting it in this context, What we have here is that Ahaz is the king of Judah, and the king of Syria and Israel are
trying to force him to enter into an alliance, a political alliance, so that they can fight
against this Assyrian war machine that is coming down. A has wants to make peace with the King of Assyria himself,
but he's feeling the pressure here of what these are two are doing.
And Isaiah comes to him and says,
look, don't be afraid of them.
And in verse four, he says,
for these two users, the symbolism,
they're smoking firebrands.
They're on the way out.
That's what smoke is after the flame is out, they're smoking.
And then Isaiah says to Ahas, ask for a sign
that I am speaking of the Lord.
And Ahas says, well, I can't ask for a sign.
I'm not going to ask for a sign.
We know that.
We're told that. Don't ask for a sign for a wicked
and adulterous generation, ask for a sign. And I don't know whether a has knew that or not
But when the prophet of the Lord is saying ask for sign. Yeah, I have is going
I don't and maybe he's thinking well if I ask for a sign that I'm gonna have to listen to him and I don't know
Yeah, that's right
But Isaiah keeps pushing him pushing ask for sign ask for sign. No, no, okay
Well, I'm gonna give you one anyway.
I'll give you the sign.
And the sign he gives to Ahaz is this,
behold, a version shall conceive and bear a sign and call his name Emmanuel.
If we were to only read this from the perspective of this is talking about Mary and Jesus,
then that sign wouldn't make no sense whatsoever because the
Assyrians are coming. And if they've got to wait 700 years until the sign is
giving, then Ahaz is not going to trust Isaiah. So this is one of these places
where the immediate context is something to do with a young woman having a child,
perhaps according to chapter eight, it's Isaiah's own wife, and that's going to be evidence that A has to trust Isaiah as a
prophet, but that doesn't work if we only see it in terms of that there's only one way
to interpret Scripture.
So two quotes, one's from Elder Holland and one's from then Elder Oaks, and talking about
this passage here and seeing
it in terms of dual fulfillment. So Elder Holland says, the dual or parallel fulfillment of this
prophecy comes in the realization that Isaiah's wife, a pure and good young woman, symbolically
representing another pure woman, did bring forth a son. This boy's birth was a type and shadow of the greater and later fulfillment of that prophecy,
the virgin birth of the Lord Jesus Christ.
The dual fulfillment here is particularly interesting in light of the fact that Isaiah's
wife apparently was of the royal line of David.
Isaiah's son is thus the type, the prefiguring of the greater immangual, Jesus Christ,
the ultimate king who would be born of a literal virgin. And then Elder Oaks, the book of Isaiah
contains numerous prophecies that seem to have multiple fulfilments. One seems to involve the
people of Isaiah's day or circumstances of the next generation. Another meaning often symbolic
seems to refer
to events in the meridian of time when Drieslam was destroyed and had people scattered after
the crucifixion of the Son of God. Still another meaning or fulfillment of the same prophecy
seems to relate to events attending the second coming of the Saviour.
So this is just a reminder to me, to always dig deeper. Don't think just because I've heard, oh, this verse means this,
that I'm satisfied with that. It's the breadth and depth and nuance of Scripture that makes
studying the Scripture a lifetime pursuit of excitement for me. This is just one example of that.
And Matthew had no problem. It sounds like he probably knows it's original context,
but he's saying, hey, I'm going to use it
to talk about Jesus as well, because it fits.
Yeah, and he's going to use the Septuagint,
the Greek version, not the Hebrew version,
because the Greek version has Parthenos version,
the Hebrew version has Alma, which just means a young girl.
Oh, okay.
So that's going to be important for him.
When I teach Isaiah, I like to say,
Isaiah 7 is the prophecy.
Isaiah 8 is the first fulfillment.
I went in to the prophetess.
She conceived in Berson, Isaiah 8, 3.
And then Isaiah 9 is the next fulfillment.
Unto us a child is born unto us.
A son is given.
The government shall be upon the shoulder speaking of Christmas.
So it sounds like I call them current events and coming events.
Sometimes a current event will foreshadow a coming event.
Yeah, that one is fun to teach because when you really figure out which nations and everything
it makes no sense, as you said.
Yeah, just wait 700 years and we'll all be okay.
And then you can trust, but that wouldn't work for him, yeah. Can I just shift gears just a little
bit here? Scholars are going to argue that the story of Jesus' birth in Matthew and in Luke
are not historical, but they're just kind of mythological to set up a story.
And they say, there's no historical value in them because if you were reading these stories
for the first time, would you think that they were telling the same story?
They're very, very different.
We didn't get into chapters 2 of Matthew or Luke, but there's
shepherds in tomb, in Luke, there's wise men here. The emphasis is on Joseph here, it's on Mary
and there is this really talking about the historical birth narrative. And I've been interested in
something that I learned from a very fine Catholic scholar,
Joseph Fitzmire, who soon passed away, and he was very aware of this discussion in scholarship
about the stories and the not historical nature of them. And he went through and he said sometimes in effect you can be looking at the minutia that you can
miss the panorama before you. He went through the stories and he said, well they're very,
very different stories but what do they have in common? And he made a list. If I can
share that list with you, I think it's important. He's going to argue that in both Matthew and Luke,
both of them agree that Jesus' birth
is related to the reign of Herod, the great.
So that puts it in a historical context.
They both agree that Mary, his mother to be,
is a virgin engaged to Joseph,
but they have not yet come to live together.
They both agree that Joseph is the house of David. They both agree
that an angel from heaven came announcing the birth of Jesus. They agree that Jesus is
recognized himself to be a son of David. They both agree that his conception is to take
place through the Holy Spirit. They both agree that Joseph is not the father. I want to come back to that one.
They both agree that Jesus is the name Jesus is imposed by heaven prior to his birth.
They both agree that the angel identifies Jesus as savior.
They both agree that Jesus is born after Mary and Joseph come to live together.
They both agree that he's born in Bethlehem
and they both agree that Jesus settles
with Mary and Joseph in Nazareth and Galilee later on.
So as I kind of sift through this list,
which I really appreciate,
the one thing that comes to my mind is,
is there anything that is fundamentally important to the story of Jesus as the Son of God
that they don't agree on? And the answer to me is no. They agree it's a virgin birth. They agree
that he's the Son of God. They agree that he's here of salvation. They agree that he's the Savior.
All of those really, really important things, they're on the same page with.
And whether there's wise men or shepherds is not nearly as important, is that Jesus is
the Son of David, he's the Son of God, and that he's come to be a Savior and bring salvation
to his people.
I think that that's really important to think through.
That's a good way to put those two stories together. I like that.
They probably didn't know they would be put together in the same book, but they complement
each other so well. Right.
Two pieces of a puzzle. In the most important areas, as you said,
yeah, most fundamental areas. One other thing, this idea that they agree
that Joseph is not involved in conception,
so he's not the dead.
So I want to share a story if that's okay.
When I was first came to BYU as a student, it was Christmas time, and I love Christmas
time, like most of us do.
I was watching a program on TV about Christmas, as part of that program they were interviewing
a leader from another Christian tradition and he said something that has just stuck with
me ever since. He said as best as I can recall why don't we just stop kidding ourselves and admit that Joseph
was Jesus' father? Now, when I heard that, I almost fell off the couch and go, what? This
is a religious leader. I mean, I knew that scholars say it would say things like that, but
this was a religious leader. And I don't want to criticize him, but I guess I have done that,
and I apologize for that, but I share the story because it caused me to start thinking. So it was a
catalyst for my thoughts on this matter. We do this often in the church. Why is it important that
Jesus had Mary as a mother, a mortal, and God as a father. And if we were to take out the fact that God was Jesus' father and just admit that Joseph was it,
then my first thought, well, what would that mean to Christ's attaining sacrifice?
If God isn't His father, the atonement doesn't work.
But then I went next step further and then thought, well, what happens if we took Mary out of the equation?
The attainment of Jesus Christ also wouldn't work.
And I don't think we often think about it that way, but there's part of Jesus being mortal.
A part of him having the experiences of a mortal experience, suffering, pain, death, hungry, sleep, tight, all of those
kinds of things is also part of the atoning sacrifice. If we're thinking about Christ's
Atonement, the author of Hebrews in chapter 4, we have not a high priest that cannot be
touched with the feeling of our infirmities, but was in all points tempted like as we are,
even though he wasn't without sin. But then verse 16 is what jumps out for me. Let us therefore
having a high priest or a Messiah who has marries a mother. Let us therefore come boldly to the throne of his grace. So, and the Greek word here for boldly means,
let us come with confidence to the throne of grace
that we may obtain mercy and find grace to help in time of need.
I love that imagery.
It is because Jesus' mother is Mary
that in a very real way, we have a connection with him
that he knows us, he doesn't just know us intellectually, but he knows our experiences
because he has experienced us, all of the trials and the difficulties of what a mortal
life is all about.
And sometimes in Christian dialogue, we have this tension and this struggle.
Where do we put our emphasis? Is Jesus God or is He human?
And we want Him to be God because all of the things that He can do as a God
to enable the entomment to work.
But we also want Him to be human because it's His humaneness that allows us to connect with Him
in a powerful, important way.
I hope that as we go through and spend this new year looking for and studying the New Testament,
that we're going to absolutely look for Jesus is the Son of God, Jesus is God.
That's fundamentally important, but I hope in the process that we don't lose the
Mary side of this Son of God that we have and see Him. So can I just share two examples? These are
my favorites and again, you can talk about them in more detail much later. Please do. Okay. So the
first one is in Matthew 8. So I'll just start in Matthew. These are
really interesting verses the way Matthew's crafted them. But we've got somebody coming to Jesus
in verse 19 who says, Master, I will follow the withers, so whoever they'll go. So in other words,
he's saying, I want to be a disciple. And Jesus stops and says, and he doesn't say, oh yes, that's great.
But it's the great master teacher. He say, I turn to him.
The foxes have holes, and the bird of the air have nests.
But the son of man hath not where to lay his head.
Now, we could read over that very quickly, but just thinking through what this might mean about Jesus,
and the mortal side of Jesus.
It's human side, yeah. Do you understand the cost of what it means to follow me?
This is not just a free ride. And following me means that you're going to be an attendant teacher.
Foxes have holes, birds have homes, but I don't have a house to live. I don't have one of those
basic comforts. Are you willing to give up that as well if you're going to follow me, to give
all things, to sacrifice all things, to come and follow me, or are you a disciple with a butt clause? I will follow you butt and then fill
in the blank. I see that as a verse that helps to see a little bit of a window into Jesus.
And then the other one that I'd like to share is John chapter 6. And we're all familiar
with this. This is the bread of life sermon sermon that Jesus gives, magnificent. In fact,
in John's gospel, there is no sacrament in John's gospel at the end, but this is the sacramental
chapter where he talks about the importance of the sacrament. Go to verse 66. One of the greatest
sermons Jesus gives, from that time many of his disciples went back and walked no more with him.
Notice the poignancy. Then Jesus said unto the twelve, will you also go away? Are you also going
to abandon me? Can you feel the pathos of that question? That Jesus feels the rejection?
At some level. Are you also going to do for this? And this is when I
love Peter. Bless Peter steps up to the plate and says, Lord, to whom shall we go
for thou hast the words of eternal life? And we believe and are sure that thou art
the Christ, the Son of the living God. Bum bum bum bum. I love that about Peter, but it also reiterates to me that Jesus, even as God, has experienced
the difficulties of mortal life. And if I take the time to read, trying to appreciate
that aspect of him as well, there's a connection there that I think is really important for
me as an individual as
I struggle the things of mortality as well.
Gay, we have a wonderful opportunity this year to study the New Testament.
Hey, man.
What would you say to our audience who are excited to study the New Testament, but they've
spent most of their time in the Book of Mormon maybe.
And they gave the Old Testament a try last year and it was maybe difficult for them. Now I know you're a student of the Bible. What would you say to
those who really want to give the New Testament a try this year? I am very pleased
that we get to study the New Testament and I think blessings be upon the heads
of everybody who worked through the Old Testament last year as well. The Old Testament is wonderful
and I love it as well. So why study the New Testament? First thing, the Prophet Joseph said,
speaking of the Bible, he who reads it oftenest will like it best. I'm going to say that again because I want that to sick in.
He who reads it oftenest will like it best.
There's a part of me that would say, why do we love the Book of Mormon and part of that
answer is because we read it.
We pay a price to get to know it.
My encouragement is and my experience would be that the same thing happens as we take the time to
really study the New Testament. So my mum used to have us as children
memorized quotes and I didn't like doing it very much as a kid but I've lived long
enough to see and appreciate the value of it. One of the quotes that she had us memorized was by Leonardo
Da Vinci and it goes something like this, knowledge of a thing engenders love of it. The more perfect
the knowledge, the more fervent the love. I love that quote now because that has been my experience.
because that has been my experience. I've had the blessing to be able to study the Bible for many years,
professionally as well as individually.
And the more I have learned about it,
the more my love of it and its message has deepened.
It's much more nuanced now than it has been.
And I'm not there yet.
I anticipate for the however much longer I have in
this life that I'm going to continue to learn new things and see principles and applications that
I didn't see because I've paid the price to study it. So that's the first thing. It's a great book.
We believe the Bible to be the Word of God as far as this translated correctly. So where am I going
to put my emphasis on that? We believe the Bible to be the Word of God or on as far as this translated correctly. So where am I going to put my emphasis on that we believe the Bible to be the Buddha God or on as far as this translated correctly?
I choose to put it on the first part of it because then it means it's important to me
in my busy life I should make time for the biblical record. The other thing I think
is important. It's it from the Bible that we get the historical experience of Jesus' mortal life.
We don't get that so much in the book of Mormon, although we get plenty of other wonderful
things.
But his mortal ministry, that's from the New Testament.
For no other reason, I think that that should be a motivation for us to read.
And then even though Acts and Paul, well Paul in particular can be a little
bit more difficult because it's not narrative, one of the things that I love about the epistles is
seeing people imperfect people like me who still have a place in the kingdom of God. Peter, how many times was Jesus pulling
his hair out at Peter? But look what Peter became because Jesus saw in Peter not
who he was in my opinion, but who he could become. And I take real hope from that.
And whether it's Peter or Thomas or Judas or whether it's Paul, I don't matter.
These are people like me, people that I can relate to and seeing them work through their
struggles to come to know and to understand and to apply their knowledge of Jesus Christ
and His attaining sacrifice.
For no other reason, for those two, I think it's well worth the time
and the effort to do it. What a fantastic first day in the new testament,
John, this has been just wonderful. I'm excited. It'll be overall too quick. I have a feeling
we'll be in the book of Revelation in the blink of an eye. So I'm going to take advantage
of this time to be in this wonderful book this year. We want to thank Dr.
Gay Strathren for being with us today. She's just been phenomenal. We want to thank her for time
and her expertise. We want to thank our executive producer Shannon Sornson. We want to thank our
sponsors David and Verla Sornson and of course we want to remember our founder, the late Steve Sornson.
We hope all of you will join us next week.
We have another episode coming up.
New Testament, follow him.
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