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Christmas sermon 2013: The visit of the Magi

Introduction

Although the visit of the Magi took place at least 2 years after Jesus’ birth it isn’t wrong to preach a Christmas sermon based on the incident, because still, the narrative is about Jesus’ birth. In it, Matthew introduces us to 3 kinds of people and how each one of them responded to the news about the messianic birth. Each response reveals to us the kind of person they were.

Read Matthew 2:1-12

1. The king

A. Herod’s response was carnal. The NT says he was an insecure, tyrant and a murderous leader.

B. He perceived Jesus’ birth as a threat. He attempted to kill the child and when failed destroyed all the boys in Bethlehem.

C. Herod was very close to the truth but missed it because his carnal mindset stood in between him and the Messiah.

2. The Scribes

A. The scribes were apathetic. The fact that Bethlehem was only 6 miles away from Jerusalem and none of them paid a visit confirms this.

B. The scribes were a group formed of Pharisees and Sadducees. They were interpreters of scripture.

C. The most passionate is often not the one with the most knowledge of Scripture but the one who has learned to live accordingly.

3. The Magi

A. Unlike Herod and the scribes who had access to scripture, the Magi responded to the sign with their hearts wide open.

B. Although they were the most intelligent people of the day did not hesitate to acknowledge Jesus’  superiority.

C. Still, Matthew writes the Magi worshiped Jesus because what matters most is the manner in which they responded to their discovery.

Conclusion

Jesus is God’s incarnated word (John 1:14). In the light of it how we respond to God’s word is the same way we would respond to Jesus if he was born among us today. Let me draw 3 implications in conclusion.

The carnal Christian –  Like Herod, he is worried about earthly things only. They resist correction, crave power, and see others as a threat.

The apathetic Christian –  He has the head knowledge of scripture. But he takes God’s word for granted, likes to show off their head knowledge, quick to judge others.

The open-heartened Christian – Although may not possess a lot of head knowledge about scripture he is open to correction. Christ is the Lord of his life.


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