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The star of Bethlehem
In the past I’ve usually preached from Luke’s accounts of the birth of Jesus where we see Mary encountering the angel, the drama of Zechariah the priest and Elizabeth having a parallel miraculous conception.
The journey to Bethlehem and the shepherds arriving to worship the new born Jesus, saviour of the world.
In the past I’ve usually preached from Luke’s accounts of the birth of Jesus where we see Mary encountering the angel, the drama of Zechariah the priest and Elizabeth having a parallel miraculous conception.
The journey to Bethlehem and the shepherds arriving to worship the new born Jesus, saviour of the world.
More likely is the fact that the planets Jupiter and Saturn were in conjunction with each other three times in 7 BC.
Since Jupiter was the ‘royal’ or kingly planet, and Saturn was sometimes thought to represent the Jews, the conclusion was obvious: a new king of the Jews was about to be born.
We cannot be certain if this was why the ‘wise and learned men’ came from the East.
But, even if it wasn’t, nothing is more likely than that thoughtful astronomers or astrologers (the two went together in the ancient world), noticing strange events in the heavens, would search out their earthly counterparts.
If, as it appears, they were also wealthy, they would have no major difficulty in making the journey.
So this year, I’m excited to explore Matthew’s account.
I believe each is completely true and accurate, after all it’s been given to us by God himself.
Luke and Matthew just speak of the birth of Jesus from two different perspectives.
And this passage leaves us with many questions
Who are the Magi?
Why would Herod want to hunt down a child?
What was the star of Bethlehem?
A meteroite or commet?
An astronomical occurrence?
Something burning in our atmosphere?
How did it lead them to Bethlehem?
It’s a star, in space, how can this lead to a place?
What about the gifts?
What weird gifts to give to a baby.
Why would the wisemen bring these gifts.
Who is this child to be given all this attention?
What does this passage even mean to me today?
So many questions
So before leaping in, let’s root it in our experience.
I want you to think about something amazing which you have seen in your life.
Is there a moment where you saw pure beauty.
Was it a sun set, was it the grand canyon, the derbyshire sales, or Yorkshire Moors?
...
For me, it was when I went on tour in a Jazz band to Austria.
It was the first time I’d ever seen such an incredible sight.
I remember turning to my atheist friend and saying “and you tell me your looking for proof of God’s existence - just look at those mountains.
How could they have ‘just happened’?
Have you ever seen something amazing in the night sky?
Perhaps it was one of the blood moons we’ve had over the last decade, or spotting the international space station.
I remember my Dad taking me out into the back garden when I was about 10, and we used his rotating star map to locate each of the stars.
I did it with our josh this Summer, but I used an app displaying the nights star above us
There’s something mysterious about creation.
So many questions, so much beauty
So let’s look at some of those questions.
I’m focusing on the second part of our reading today.
Who are the Magi?
in fact nothing suggests to us here that they are Kings.
There are many legends which have grown up around the wisemen, but the word Matthew uses is the Magi which means magicians or astrologers.
We usually refer to them as wisemen because they were considered wise because they could read the stars, and interpret the world at a more spiritual level.
And they probably came from the capital of Magi and mistics in the known world, that being babylon, or persia, modern day Iraq.
Do you remember the two prophesies in this passage.
One from Isaiah and one from Micah.
Both of them were prophets 740 years before Jesus was born.
They both prophesied about the exile of the Israelite people, about the destruction of Jerusalem, being made slaves and forced to work in Babylon.
They also gave God’s promise of then being brought back by God many years later.
These prophesies were passed down from generation to generation, and when the exile happened, a young jewish man who’d been torn away from his home and his family, called Daniel ended up being trained as a magi.
Yes, I’m talking about the same man Daniel who later thrown into the Lions den.
He survived and was made the chief of the Magi.
So the Magi here, knew the prophecy because of Daniel.
Why would Herod want to hunt down a child?
Of course, Herod was the King of the Jews, although he himself wasn’t born a Jew and was made King by the Romans, so in many ways he already had limited power.
The people didn’t respect him properly, they only feared him because of the Romans.
Now, a prophecy from before the exile which tore the Jewish nation apart, looked like it might be fulfilled.
Whether he believed the prophecy or not is irrelevant, because he knew that the people believed the prophecy, and that was enough for him to rally an army to kill all boys up to the age of 2, in the hopes of squashing the rumour of fulfilled prophecy which challenged his kingship
What was the star of Bethlehem?
More likely is the fact that the planets Jupiter and Saturn were in conjunction with each other three times in 7 BC.
Since Jupiter was the ‘royal’ or kingly planet, and Saturn was sometimes thought to represent the Jews, the conclusion was obvious: a new king of the Jews was about to be born.
We cannot be certain if this was why the ‘wise and learned men’ came from the East.
But, even if it wasn’t, nothing is more likely than that thoughtful astronomers or astrologers (the two went together in the ancient world), noticing strange events in the heavens, would search out their earthly counterparts.
If, as it appears, they were also wealthy, they would have no major difficulty in making the journey.
The star is perhaps intended to remind the reader of the Balaam prophecy of Num.
24:17: “A star shall come forth out of Jacob, and a scepter shall rise out of Israel.”
That this was viewed as a messianic prophecy is evidenced not only by the Dead Sea Scrolls
How did it lead them to Bethlehem?
Without having seen it, we can’t really know.
However as men who dedicated their lives to reading the stars, they knew the prophecies of Isaiah and Micah, of numbers and many of the other prophecies which Daniel had passed onto the Babylonians.
The location in the Old testament is clear.
That the messiah, the anointed one chosen by God to save the world, had to be born in Bethlehem, the small town associated with the greatest King Israel had ever seen, King David.
His heir to the throne, who was to be ruler of the Jews, and the world for the rest of time.
What about the gifts?
If you knew where the Messiah, the Lord of all, the saviour of the world was - would you go to see him.
I wonder what you’d bring?
The wisemen brought gifts of Gold, Myrrh and Frankincense
Gold - the symbol of his kingship, that Jesus is born to be King.
You may remember that to save Jesus from Herod’s plot to assassinate him, an angel tells Mary and Joseph to flee to Egypt.
How could this poor family afford that journey?
Perhaps it was with this gold.
Myrrh - is an expensive fragrant oil used mostly for anointing bodies.
Not your usual gift to give a baby.
But it points to the death of this man, the death of Jesus which would change human history forever
Frankincense - is a mineral, a fragrance burnt on the alter to God.
It represented the communication and offering to a distant God.
The God, Yahweh, who had loved and created the world, but who had been rejected by his creation and who had been distant from the world for hundreds of years, only speaking through a few prophets.
Frankincense represented a bridge between heaven and earth.
Of course, that is exactly what Jesus came to do.
We reject him every time we mess up, every time we say ‘not your way God, but mine’.
It’s like we walked so far from God that a chasm formed.
A chasm we could never cross, a distance we could never jump.
This side of the chasm, we can’t live in true freedom, we can’t live the way we were created to live.
I believe God created the world and made it good
And as the creator, if we’re looking for truth, for the best way to live, the Bible tells us that it’s in him.
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