Matthew 1 | Kingdom Now: The Gospel of Matthew Begins

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I'm going to do my

best this morning the best I can.

But I ask you to pray for me.

I'm really not doing well.

And so,

just be praying that God gives me

clarity and coherency as we go through,

part of this
first chapter of look at Matthew.

We're starting this series
through the book of

Matthew is going to take us a long time,

because there's 28 chapters
in the book of Matthew.

And they are all full of things worthy
of our study and worthy of our time.

So it's going to take us quite a while
to get through it.

I've titled this series
Kingdom Now, based on

Jesus's teaching on prayer

and, in Matthew six.

Part of that prayer goes,

your kingdom come,

your will be done on earth
as it is in heaven.

And our desire is that the kingdom of God
would come in our midst, and we would be

able to live in the presence of the King,

even on this earth.

And so we're going to look at the book
of Matthew, desiring the kingdom

to come and see what Matthew has to say
about the kingdom of God.

That's unique to the book of Matthew that
framed the idea of the kingdom of God.

That's really unique to Matthew.

I want to spend a lot of this morning

giving you some background
on the Gospel of Matthew

to set the stage
for what it is we're going to read,

through these next many, many, many weeks.

And to do that,
I need to help us understand, as a church,

the four Gospels
and what's unique about Matthew,

these four gospels,
Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John,

they were written by four very distinct
people

with a distinct perspective and priority

in their recording of the life of Jesus.

Matthew was a disciple of Jesus
and an apostle.

Mark was an assistant to Peter
the Apostle, but he was not a disciple.

Luke was a Gentile doctor
and the author of both Luke and Acts.

But he was not a disciple of Jesus.

He was not an apostle.

And John, who was a disciple of Jesus
and an apostle.

So of the four Gospels, only
two of them were written by the disciples

Matthew and John.

Mark and Luke were not.

Luke did a lot of research

after the ascension of Jesus and records
what he learned from, the

from the disciples in personal interviews,
eyewitness interviews.

Mark was an assistant to Peter,
who was a disciple.

But of the four Gospels, only Matthew
and John

were disciples of Jesus
and the apostles of Christ.

And they each Matthew, Mark, Luke,
and John write

from a very different perspective
with the different priority.

Matthew's concern is to write to the Jews

about the royal line of Jesus,

and that it is the royal line
through David that

Matthew uses the

this idea of the the royalty, the royal

line of David, that Jesus comes from that
royal line en route to the juicers.

Over 130 references and referrals to
the Old Testament in the Book of Matthew.

And so it's very, very, very Jewish.

And if we're going to understand
in any depth

the book of Matthew, we have to understand
a lot of the Old Testament.

So as we go through this study,
I'll I'll draw a lot of that out.

Help us understand,
the depth of the Jewishness

and the Old Testament,
that, from which Matthew writes,

Mark,

as a different perspective.

Mark writes basically to the Romans,

Jews and Gentile Romans

and really presents Jesus as the servant.

Luke is different.

Luke presents Jesus as the Son of Man.

It's written specifically to Gentiles.

And so a lot of Jesus's humanity,
how he treats the poor

and and women and children
come out in the book of Luke.

And then John presents Jesus to the world,

and it talks about Jesus
as the Son of God, the Eternal One.

And so in Matthew,
we have this gospel written to the Jews.

In Mark
we have this gospel written to the Romans

in Luke, written to the Gentiles,
and in John written to the world.

And so they present Jesus in different.

It's like a different facet of a diamond.

They're all right.

It's just a different look at this.

Jesus, who is the Christ,
the eternal one, the Messiah.

In Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John,
three of them are very, very,

very similar to each other,
and we call them the synoptic

Gospels, Matthew, Mark, and Luke,
the Synoptic Gospels.

That means they share
a lot of the same information.

A lot of the what we'll read in
Matthew will also be recorded.

And Mark
and Luke for or very similar things.

For instance,

very famous message that Jesus preached
called the sermon on the Mount.

Matthew five six and seven,
very similarly is recorded in Luke,

but it's called the
The Sermon on the plain

because it it's just a different
perspective of that, of that message.

And so they're very similar information.

John is different.

John is not like the Synoptics at all.

John is a very unique,

presentation of Jesus
because it's written to the entire world.

There's not a single audience,
that John has in mind.

And so as we go through this, I just want
I want to help you be good Bible

students and understand that Matthew,
Mark, and Luke are the Synoptic Gospels.

John is is very, very different.

For instance, in the book of John

we have things that we don't have
in Matthew, Mark and Luke.

One of those is that in John,

John records for seven
I am statements of Jesus says

I'm the I'm the door, I'm the gate, I'm
the good shepherd.

I'm the resurrection,
the life, the seven I am statements.

And we don't have those anywhere else
in all of the Bible.

And so it's unique to itself.

So I just want to help you understand

a little bit about these four gospels
that will be, that will be study. And,

Matthew really

presents the kingdom of God in upside down
fashion.

Like says, look, I know you.

He was it.

He was a Jew himself.
It comes from the Hebrews.

And this
I know that we've been hoping for this

Messiah that would overthrow the Romans
and, and and,

you know, give us back
our national power and identity.

And I know that's what we were hoping
that the Messiah would be.

But but Jesus is the Messiah,
and he's doing a little bit differently.

Because I want to understand that.

I mean, that's how God works.

God rarely does things according to what
we think he ought to do things right?

Right.

Like he's like, I have my like,
let me be me.

God says, quit trying to be me.

I know what I'm doing.

My ways are higher than yours.

My thoughts are beyond yours.

And I'm
there's not a mistake in my economy.

Let me do my thing.

And so Matthew presents
Jesus and the kingdom of God.

That's unique
to Matthew in a way that this

this look, this is going to be upside
down from what you think.

And it's a

really unique perspective,
Matthew, as other name

that we know him in the Bible is Levi,
and there's some indication

that he comes from the
he may come from the tribe of Levi.

And if you know, biblical,

history in the 12 Tribes,

Levi was one of the 12 tribes
and Levi was the priestly tribe.

And so it could be that Matthew comes
from the priestly tribe.

And as such, Matthew should have been
a really, really, really good, devout Jew.

Really good religious
Jew should have been.

But he wasn't

at all, Matthew was a tax collector.

If any of you heard that that Matthew
was a tax collector, you've heard that.

And so tax collectors were
they were an oddity,

in, in, in the amongst

the Jews because, in the, in Israel,

the Roman government
was the ruling authority.

They were the occupying force.

They were the greatest military,
greatest empire in the world at the time.

And they had taken over
kind of this the, the

they were occupying the Promised Land.

So all these Hebrew,

these Jews were living
under the oppression of the Roman Empire.

And in order for the Roman Empire
to propagate

throughout the world,
they it cost a lot of money.

And the way they got
that money was through exorbitant taxes.

We know something about that.

And so the way they would collect
their taxes

is they would employ Jews

to collect taxes from their fellow Jews.

And so what you had were these
these Jews living in the land,

the promised land and their own people
are collecting taxes from them

to give to the occupying force,
so the occupying force could continue

to oppress them and take over,
you know, other parts of the world.

So tax collectors
were hated by their own people.

The interesting thing about tax
collectors, the only people who knew

how much tax the Roman authorities wanted
were the Romans and the tax collectors.

The people did it know.

So whatever the tax collector
said, that's what I owed.

Whether

whether

it was what the Romans said or not.

So here's what the tax collector did.

If the Romans said we need x,
Y, and z in taxes,

the tax collector had the authority
because you don't know how much Roman Rome

has wanted to say x,
Y, and z, and A, B and C,

and so they would take x, y and z

and give that to Rome, and they would keep
A, B and C for themselves.

And so they were thieves.

They had no integrity,
they were dishonest,

and they were really rich.

And so they're stuck.

I mean, unfortunately,
they were stuck in this no man's land

because they're all fellow Jews.

And he was hated.

Because how can you work
for the occupying force

and steal money from us
and get rich off of this?

And the Romans didn't really like him
because they were dirty Jews anyway.

And so they were stuck in this
no man's land.

They didn't have relationships.

They didn't have friends.

They didn't have, like a, a family
they were a part of.

It's very likely that their own family,
like, disowned them

because how could you live like that?
How could you do that?

After the Romans and a pressure on people.

And so they were in this,
this really, really, really tough spot.

And so the moment Jesus calls Matthew,

it was so transformative for Matthew

because he had been shunned
and discarded by his people.

He was simply used as a dog by the Romans.

And now you have this
Jesus who says there's

something about you that I value.

There's something about you
that's worth redeeming.

There's something about you,

that that I cherish.

Matthew had never experienced
that from anybody before.

And so the moment Matthew heard Jesus say,
Matthew, I want you to follow me.

It changed his whole world because now

somebody invited him into

a healthy relationship.

And so Matthew chose to follow Jesus,

and he never looked back.

It changed Matthew's identity
and it changed Matthew's direction.

And friends,
please hear me when I say this.

This is what is intended
when we give our life

to Jesus, to change our identity
and to change our direction.

Most people

want Jesus to come in their lives
to make their life better.

I want to add God to this part of my world
to make that better

and God says, that's not
that's not the point.

The point is this

I want you to add your life to me,

not me, to you,
because I want to change your identity.

I want to change your direction.

Do you understand that?

Like we don't add
Jesus to us to make stuff better,

we attach our life to him,

to change our identity
and to change our direction.

And that's what Matthew did.

And and this,
this is what discipleship is.

This is what being a Christian really is.

It's these four words I want you
to remember, belong, become, give and go,

belong, become, give and go.

This is what we'll see in Matthew.

That's what we see in all the disciples.

And every bit of the follow
Jesus in the in in the New Testament

we see these four things belong, become,
give and go.

They will join their lives to Christ.

They belong to the family of God.

And the expression of the family of God
in the world, the church they belong.

And because they belong to Christ,

they become something they weren't before.

Jesus says, if you, those in me

become a new creation, creations,
the old is gone.

The news comes.

So we become something we weren't before.

And when those two internal things happen,

they flesh themselves out
into external things.

I then give Matthew is going to leave

his tax collector booth, which means he's
going to leave his identity.

He's going to leave
his money is going to leave his position.

He's going to leave his power
is going to leave all of that behind.

And he's going to give all of that
to Jesus

because he belongs to the family of God.

He's becoming something
he never was before.

He's going to give of himself
in his resources,

and he's going to go on
behalf of the Kingdom

and tell other people about this
Jesus that radically transformed his life.

Of the disciples and apostles,

we don't know a lot throughout history
of where and how they end it.

We know about a few of them, but
a lot of them we just have church history,

to rely on that
history tells us that Matthew,

because he belonged to the family of God
and he became somebody he wasn't

previously, and he gave everything
in his life to the kingdom of God.

He then would go into Ethiopia

and become a martyr for the kingdom

belong, become give and go.

So if you're if you ever start wondering
like what's next in my spiritual journey,

just think about those four things
belong, become, give and go.

Do you belong to the family of God
and the local expression through?

Have you given yourself
to God and His family?

Are you becoming continually

becoming someone new?

Are you giving of that

which God has given you
to further his kingdom in the world?

And are you going on behalf of the Kingdom

to tell other people in your huddle
and those in your world about Christ?

Do you understand that? Yes.

Belong, become give and go.

That's the that's the
that's the process of a disciple.

And that's what we'll see in Matthew
over and over and see in all these

in the New Testament,
that to follow Jesus.

So I would just ask you, just
consider yourself for yourself right now.

Do you belong to the family of God
and the expression of God through the

in the world, through the church?

Are you becoming a new creation

like things are changing?

Are you giving sacrificially?

Are you going until another be about you?

Like where are you
and what's your next step?

This is how we grow up in our faith.

Matthew follow Jesus.

He left his former identity
and he did two things.

He opened his heart to Jesus
and he opened his his home to Jesus.

He opened his heart to Jesus,
and he opened his home to Jesus.

The soon after, Matthew decided

to follow this invitation of Jesus
to to apprentice after him.

We know in the Bible
that Matthew threw a party

and he's like, look, I've been an outcast
my whole life.

My own people didn't like me,
I didn't have a place.

And Jesus accepted me.

And he's making me a whole new person.

I'm going to throw a party and invite
my friends to to to be around Jesus.

I gotta tell my friends about him.

And so Matthew throws a party.

But who do you think Matthew
invited to his dinner party?

Yeah.

Who's going to be friends
with tax collectors?

Tax collectors?

There's one other group
that's friends with corrupt rich people.

Prostitutes?

Yeah, so that's what the Bible says.

He invited tax collectors
and prostitutes to a dinner party.

Because, after all, who's going to be
friends with corrupt, super rich people?

And so he throws this party
with all these tax collectors and process

because there's only ones that he's
connected to.

Think about it.

And he invites Jesus,

which let me just say,
this is a great evangelism strategy

to throw parties for people who don't know
Jesus and invite

some of us who do know Jesus to be there
to talk to them about Jesus.

Some of you are great invites

and some of your great party planners,
and some of you are great cooks.

And if you're a great party planner
and cook really good food, throw a

party and invite me.

Now listen,

I don't want to go to all your parties,

but some of you who are really good
cooks and bakers.

Yeah,

but so this is a great
this is a great event.

And so this is,
this is what hospitality is like.

In the first church, they used hospitality
to introduce people to their faith.

And so Matthew throws this party
and it's it's so typical.

The freaking religious people,
they're kind of standing on the outskirts

and they see Jesus and Matthew hanging out
with tax collectors and prostitutes,

and they're like, how can he do that?

Doesn't he know who these people are?

And Jesus confronts him and he says,
listen,

it's not the healthy who need a doctor.

It's the sick.

I've come to seek and save the lost.

Here's what I love about Jesus response.

It's pretty profound, he said.

I have come to seek and save you.

Religious people come to seek and condemn.

That's all they wanted to do.

They want to seek out
who's breaking the law and condemn him

for being lawbreakers.

This is the difference between, you know,

most religion and Christianity.

Religion wants to seek you out and condemn
you for all the wrong we've done.

Jesus wants to seek us out and save us.

But here's here's what we have to realize.

He wants to save us from our old sin life.

He says it's not the health
you need, doctor, but the sick.

Listen,
Jesus can't save anybody who doesn't first

admit they're sick.

They understand.

Like there has to be the acknowledgment.

I realize the way I'm living
is contrary to your standard.

That's sick.

It's sin. Sick.

I have to acknowledge my sin, sickness

before I can be saved from it.

There's a lot of talk amongst,

you know, church people, religious people.

I want to be careful
because I want to communicate this well.

But this idea that Jesus loves you

just like you are, and he just wants you
to experience his love.

We got to be real careful.

I think it's more along the lines
biblically that Jesus loves us, though

we are

not just as we are,
because if he just simply loved us

as we are, he wants us to know his love.

He would never have to die on the cross,

and they would never have
to be forgiveness of sin.

So he loves us, though we are.

The Bible says while we were sinners
separated from him, he loved us.

And so there has to be the acknowledgment
I don't I can't just add

Jesus to my sin life
and him make my life better.

There has

to be the acknowledgment there sin.

I have to repent of that
and there has to be a change.

That's what repentance
is, to turn and go the other way.

And so Jesus says, look, yes,
I've come to save people,

but I've come to save sick people
who admit they're sick.

You can't be saved.

It's until for some it you're sick.
Does it make sense?

You understand?

Have you ever heard that saying
that people who are nothing like

Jesus, like Jesus?

Let me say that again
because some of you missed it.

People who were nothing like Jesus liked
Jesus.

Matthew is nothing like Jesus,
but he sure liked Jesus.

And that is so true.

But Jesus didn't just want to be liked,
he wanted to heal people from their sin

like they couldn't.

Just can't like,
Jesus can't be a part of my life,

but I'm going to continue
in my sinful ways.

There has to be a dying of that.

And the fact

that Jesus heals
all of that makes me like him,

because he doesn't leave me in my old sin
ways.

You know, I'm

going to get to Matthew
one one in just a minute.

But one of the things I like about Matthew
is the only thing

Matthew tells us about himself
is that he was a tax collector.

He doesn't tell us much of the good,

the the fact that Matthew left everything

and sacrificed everything his position,
his power, his money, his wealth.

He doesn't tell us that Luke does it?

Matthew doesn't tell us about his,

you know, this great party he through
and invite all these people and Jesus.

He doesn't tell us that Luke does.

The only thing Matthew tells us is,
look, I used to be a tax collector.

And then Jesus and I love his humility.

He's not it's not self-deprecating.

He's just like, look, this is what was.

And I want to tell you who I was
because it's not who I am.

I was.

And then Jesus said, listen,
some of you have that very story.

And that is another great evangelism tool.

You some of you have a great I used to be
and then Jesus story,

the great thing about your personal story
is nobody can argue with it.

It's your story.

And some of you can say, I used to be.

And then Jesus.

And if you have a I used to be
and then Jesus story,

you need to tell your story

not to glorify who you used to be,
but to glorify and magnify

who Jesus is and the mercy
and grace of God to change you.

Does that make sense? You understand.

It's a great evangelism strategy.

I also like the fact that Matthew,
the tax collector,

I mean, these guys had to be so precise
and so detailed.

I mean, you know what CPAs are like,
right?

Like the all the details
and not a penny out.

And they just know all this that like,
I couldn't live like like,

but he was so detailed and so precise.

And that's exactly what God you like.

Here's what I know. God will read it.

God will you God will repurpose whatever,

whatever we're like.

God repurposes that.

If we allow him for his kingdom.

In other words,

when God was going to use Moses
to liberate

his people out of Egypt, he said, Moses,
what do you have in your hand right now?

Moses was like, I got a stick.
He goes, great, we'll use it.

When he went to David, he

said, David, you're going to be the one to
to lead my people.

There's a giant
we got to get rid of first.

What do you have in your hand?

And David said, well, I got a sling. God.

So great. We'll use that.

And so now Jesus was like, look,

I need some guys to follow me and record
this.

So. So, Matthew,
what do you have Matthew like?

Well, I got a real detailed mine
and a pen and a paper

and just like, well, that's great.

It's exactly what I need.

And the Gospel of Matthew is so precise
and so detailed.

So here's what I'm saying.

Whatever you are, whoever you are,

God wants to repurpose that for his
kingdom advancement, just like you are.

When I was young,

I thought, man,
I wish I could play the guitar.

That'd be so cool.

So I became a youth pastor
and I taught myself to play the guitar.

I say play the guitar.

That's a really generous statement.

I could strum a few chords,

but I thought, God,

if you would just give me a voice,
I would love to be like these guys.

I would love be able to sing like that
right?

Right.

Some of you think you can sing like that
and you

just.

It's like God's like, Carl,
I don't need you to sing.

I got plenty of singers.

I need people to tell stories.

So when I was young, my mom told me this.

She said, Carl,
you are a great storyteller.

I think what she was really saying
was, Carl, you can really tell great lies

and make people believe you.

Like, yeah,
I think that's really what she was saying.

And I remember when

she told me that I thought,
Big Lottie, duh, I'm a storyteller.

I tell you, listen,
there's usually there's not a young man

trying to understand his manhood
who was like, yes, I'm a storyteller.

That's.

But you know what I do every week?

I think God finally got a hold of me.

He said, Carl,
what do you do? I'm like, I tell stories.

He goes, right,

that's what I need.

So God takes whoever
we have repurposes it for his kid.

That's what he did with Matthew.

And so Matthew one one,

here's the big idea

when God writes the story,
nothing is a mistake.

When God writes the story,
nothing's a mistake.

Matthew is very concerned
with the genealogy of Jesus.

It's very important.

Matthew wants to drive home

the point to his Hebrew
learners, his Jewish learners, hearers

that Jesus is of the royal line of David,
that he has a legal right

to rule, has a legal right to the throne,

and so chapter one, verse one.

Yeah.

Chapter one, verse one,

the book of the genealogy of Jesus Christ,
the Son of David, the son of Abraham,

Matthew is driving home
the point of the royal line of Jesus

through King David to rule
and to reign his people.

There's three titles.

He speaks of Jesus in this one
verse of Jesus Christ.

We have to understand
Christ wasn't Jesus's last name.

There were.

There were a lot of Jesus's in
this time is a very common name.

He was probably called Jesus bar Joseph.

Jesus, the son of Joseph.

Christ is a title.

It's not a name.

Christ is the Greek

translation of the Hebrew Messiah,

which means the chosen one,
the Anointed One, the one that

all of Jewish history throughout
the Old Testament was looking forward to.

The coming of the Messiah.

So it's Jesus, the Christ.

That's what Matthew saying.

And then he uses these two other title,
the Son of David, the son of Abraham.

When he says, the son of David,
he's saying, Jesus is of the royal line

and the Son of Abraham,
he's of the racial line,

because the Jews knew that
their Messiah would be

of the royal line of David
and the racial line of the Jews.

And so right at the beginning, he's
saying this Jesus, he's

not just a good teacher, he's
not just a moral man.

He is of the royal line of David.

So he has a right to rule,
and he's of the racial line of Abraham.

He is the chosen one.

And then Matthew goes through from verses

one through 16, this listing of names.

And it just sounds like
it sounds like the telephone book.

We'll have telephone books and more.

Dewey, Dewey,
my dating myself, how old I am.

It sounds like just a list of names.

And what he's doing,
he's saying there's three sections.

He lists three sections in verses
one through 17.

And these three sections relate to three

eras of God's people, from the patriarchy

to the monarchy, from the monarchy
to the captivity to the captivity.

The activity from the Patriarch
Abraham to the monarchy David

from the monarchy,
David to the captivity in Babylon

and from the Captivity in Babylon
to the Nativity, the birth of Christ.

These are the three areas that Matthew
is detailing here, because why?

Because he's drawn the line from Jesus
all the way back through David,

the monarchy to Abraham, the patriarchy.

Draw on this line

and over and over.

Just look at these.

Look, I want
I I've thought through the names,

all the people here before
and I'm not going to do that

because it's going to take us
way too long.

But you can research that.

I've done
a lot of teaching on that myself.

But let me just give you an example.

So verse two,
Abraham was the father of Isaac,

and Isaac the father of Jacob, but Jacob
the father of Judah and his brothers,

and due
to the father Perez and Sarah by Tamar,

And Perez, the father of his reign,
who has run the father of Ram,

and ran the father of a minute,
in a minute as the father of nation.

And that's on the father of salmon,
who was a fisherman.

Skin and salmon,
the father of Boaz by Rahab, and Boaz

the father of Obed by Ruth, and oh,
by the father of Jesse, and Jesse,

the father of David the king, and David
was the father of Solomon,

by the wife of Uriah and Solomon,
and the father Rehoboam, or the father.

I bet all these people it just sounds like
one name after one name after winning.

But listen, what was our big idea?

When God writes the story,
nothing's a mistake.

These names here aren't just haphazard
names.

They're here for a reason.

These people are here for a reason
and purpose.

Nothing is here by mistake.

And what Matthew is doing,
and he's saying, look down in verse 17.

So all the generations from Abraham
to David, this is everything that he's

just talked through, all the generations
to Abraham, to David were 14 generations.

And from David to the deportation
of Babylon, 14 generations

after the deportation to Babylon,
to the Christ, 14 generations, he's

saying, from the patriarchy to monarchy,
14 from the market to captivity.

14 and from the captivity Tivity 14. Why?

If you look at the true history,
there's a lot more than 14 generations.

Matthew collapses it all down to 14, 14,

14. Why?

Okay, I'm glad you're here.

I'll tell you,

Matthew loves numbers.

He's very detailed.

Not if God writes the story.

Nothing's by a mistake.

Okay?

Numbers are important to Matthew,

and he wants to trace Jesus line
through back to King David the royal line.

And prove that Jesus has a right to rule

in Hebrew.

Before the Gospels were written,
it was all human.

They spoke Hebrew.

The Hebrew has no

vowels, only has consonants.

And so he wants to draw everybody's
attention back to David,

the Jesus from the line of David.

The name David would be spelled

in our world DVD,
because there's no vowels

in the ancient languages

every letter has had,
it had a numerical equivalent.

That's why in the book of revelation
says those you know with wisdom

will understand
that his number is six, six, six.

So every letter had a had
a numerical equivalent.

So, David,
the numerical equivalent of David d

equals four v equals six, d equals four.

What does that add up to 14.

And so when Matthew
was saying from the from the

patriarch to the monarchy 14 David

from the monarchy to captivity, 14 David

from the captivity activity.

14 David

do you see what he's doing?

His Jewish hearers
their minds would go automatically back to

Jesus really is of the royal line.

Jesus deserves to rule and to reign.

We can't deny it.

He's he's he's
he's over and over and over again.

Matthew is saying, Jesus is of the royal
line of David, over and over and over.

Listen, what appears to us to be haphazard
at of no value?

We have to understand that
when God is writing the story,

nothing is a mistake.

What appears in your life to be haphazard?

If God is writing your story,

it's not a mistake

to understand

this.

Nothing is there by accident.

And when you look through this list,

you see verse three,

Judah,
the father of Perez and Zera by Tamar.

You go down to verse five.

Sam of the father of bulls by Rahab
and boys, the father of Obed by Ruth.

You go down to verse six.

And David was the father of Solomon
by the wife of Uriah.

He uses four women in this genealogy.

This was very uncommon
in the Jewish mindset.

They wouldn't
use the women in their genealogy

because the line ran through the men.

So why is he using these four women?

Well, he's drawn our attention back to

Jesus and what God does in people.

Tamar.

But think about who these people are.

If you know their story.

Tamar,

that it's a story of incest.

In Genesis 38,

her father in law impregnates her

at her request.

She dresses up as a prostitute.

Rahab
was actually a prostitute in Jericho.

She attached her life

to the people of God,
was part of their liberation and

and her whole life was changed.

She belonged to them.

And then she became something.

But she started this prostitute, Ruth.

She wasn't Hebrew at all.

She was a moabite.

And they were despised, like there were
curses on the Moabites by God's people.

And Bathsheba,

your adultery of King David.

And this is who Matthew puts
in the lineage of Jesus.

Like these are ones
that you don't talk about

when the family gets together, right?

Like,

Why does he put them in their.

Sheep?

Matthew is saying,
look, God does things differently.

And if you come from

broken backgrounds,
you're the one God uses.

There were four things
that were really important to the Jews.

One of them was family responsibility.

And the story of Tamar, her father in law

shunned and neglected
his responsibility to his family.

It was horrible.

Sexual
purity is really important to the Jews.

So you put Rahab in there.

She was a prostitute.

That's like the opposite of sexual purity.

Racial purity
was really important to them.

So you put a moabite in there?

She's not Jewish at all.

And the head of the super proud history,
who they were as people.

And so then they
they put in the greatest mistake

of King David's life with Bathsheba.

That's a black spot on their history.

And so Matthew was saying, look,

when God's right in the story,
none of this is a mistake.

I know for them, at that time,
it looked like these were deal breakers.

Nothing's a deal
breaker, and God's right in the story.

Nothing.

He says God's doing stuff differently.

It's an upside down kingdom here, here.

Here's what I want.

So said the grace of God is evident
because he uses people with bad

backgrounds.

If you got a bad broken background,
if you got a dirty past,

you're in a great position
to be used of God.

Because when he
when you give him the authority

to write your story, nothing's a mistake.

And I love in in verse,

in verse 18,
now the birth of Jesus Christ.

No, what I see in that is Matthew saying,
there's all this stuff,

all that it looks to us
like a, like a list of names.

This is purposeful.

And there's all
kinds of junk in this list.

And now,

out of all this mess, Jesus.

Friends,
I want you to understand something

that whatever the mess is of your past,

Jesus

is the seed bed for Jesus,

for his complete renovation
and restoration

of everything
that's been broken and destroyed.

See, in Christ,

when you're in Christ,
your heritage doesn't define you.

Think of Jesus as heritage.

Right.

I mean, how many times have we used
this as a as a crutch? Wow.

You know, I just come from a family of,
you know, divorce, family.

I'm a child of a of an alcoholic.

And you know, I got this,

this, this whole thing
that's been in my family forever.

And I just can't I can't ever get past.

I can't get.

That's just an excuse.

Because in Christ, all things are new.

And you're.

Your heritage doesn't define you.

It identify in Jesus.

Do you understand this?

See, the truth
is that the heritage you receive

isn't as important
as the legacy you leave.

And that legacy

can be absolutely transformed.

Not by your effort

and not by your ability,
and not by yourself.

Will,

but by allowing Jesus
to rewrite your story.

So nothing, then, is a mistake.

Do you understand? Yes.

So that that's the
that's the intro to the book of Matthew.

And this is going to drive
everything that we go through from

for these next few months together.

We go through the book of Matthew.

So here's my request

this week.

Read Matthew one and read Matthew two.

The second half of Matthew

is the Christmas story, and so.

You've probably heard most of that.

And I might come back to it
around, around,

Christmas time.

But here's my plan
for the book of Matthew.

I'm not exactly sure how much we're going
to get through each week.

We're just going to

start reading through it
and talk through it and learn as we go.

Okay, so so just to get yourself ready,

read Matthew, want to read Matthew do
over and over

and over again.

And let God write your story.

Come before him with authenticity.

Admit what is out of line.

Confess your sin, repent,
and let God write your story

so nothing then becomes a mistake.

You got it.

And you pray with me, father.

Thank you, thank you,
thank you that you love us.

Thank you that.

That will allow you to write our story.

This.

There's no mistake.

Thank you that you repair

broken people and broken things.

Thank you that you restore.

Thank you that you make new.

Thank you.

That way back in the day,
you reached out to Matthew

and that he responded
and gave us this gospel.

That's amazing to me.

Father, I pray that we in

this place would respond.

Would belong to you and your kingdom.

That we would allow you to

to make us become that which we aren't.

Yeah. Yet

that we would give
and we would go on behalf of your kingdom

to those around us who don't know you.

That you would allow,

as you taught us to pray,
your kingdom to come in our midst.

Father,
thank you for what we're about to learn

as we go through this gospel page,
you'd open up your word to us.

That revive us.

That it would restore us.

That we would become new people
through it.

For that, father, we give you thanks.

You're a good God.

And your name I pray.

Amen.

I love you, I'm proud of you.

Thank you for being here.

Read Matthew one
and to invite your friends next week

and start deciding which of the
three services you're going to go to.

Most areas we had Rose
standing in the back of the first service.

They need to show up to the first one.

Some of you need to show up
to the last one.

You got it.

All right, let's sing.

Matthew 1 | Kingdom Now: The Gospel of Matthew Begins
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