Alastair's Adversaria - Biblical Reading and Reflections: November 18th (Isaiah 31 & Luke 3:23-38)
Episode Date: November 18, 2021Do not go down to Egypt! The genealogy of Jesus Christ. My reflections are searchable by Bible chapter here: https://audio.alastairadversaria.com/explore/. If you are interested in supporting this p...roject, please consider supporting my work on Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/zugzwanged), using my PayPal account (https://bit.ly/2RLaUcB), or buying books for my research on Amazon (https://www.amazon.co.uk/hz/wishlist/ls/36WVSWCK4X33O?ref_=wl_share). You can also listen to the audio of these episodes on iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/gb/podcast/alastairs-adversaria/id1416351035?mt=2.
Transcript
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Isaiah chapter 31, woe to those who go down to Egypt for help and rely on horses, who trust in chariots
because they are many, and in horsemen because they are very strong, but do not look to the
Holy One of Israel or consult the Lord. And yet he is wise and brings disaster. He does not call
back his words, but will arise against the house of the evildoers and against the helpers of those
who work iniquity. The Egyptians are man and not God, and their horses are flesh, and not spirit.
When the Lord stretches out his hand, the helper will stumble, and he who is helped will fall,
and they will all perish together.
For thus the Lord said to me, as a lion or a young lion growls over his prey,
and when a band of shepherds is called out against him, he is not terrified by their shouting,
or daunted at their noise, so the Lord of hosts will come down to fight on Mount Zion and on its hill,
like birds hovering, so the Lord of hosts will protect Jerusalem.
He will protect and deliver it.
spare and rescue it. Turn to him from whom people have deeply revolted, O children of Israel.
For in that day everyone shall cast away his idols of silver and his idols of gold,
which your hands have sinfully made for you, and the Assyrian shall fall by a sword,
not of man, and a sword, not of man, shall devour him, and he shall flee from the sword,
and his young men shall be put to forced labour. His rach shall pass away in terror,
and his officers desert the standard in panic, declares the Lord,
whose fire is in Zion and whose furnace is in Jerusalem.
Isaiah chapter 31 continues chapter 30's warnings against turning to Egypt for aid.
The Assyrians came against Judah in 7.01 BC,
defeated 46 of their fortified cities and besieged Jerusalem.
In the crisis, the leaders of Judah turned their gaze to the south to Egypt for aid.
Israel's history with Egypt justified profound weariness of such an alliance.
A former alliance with Egypt during the reign of Solomon had ended badly,
with Shishak of Egypt coming up against Jerusalem,
and plundering it in the reign of Rehoboam's son,
in addition to his harboring fugitives such as Hadad the Edomite
and Jeroboam the son of Nebat,
who would later be thorns in the side of the House of David.
During his reign, Solomon became the leading weapons trader in the region,
exporting Egyptian horses and chariots to the kings of the Hittites and the Arameans.
However, in forming a marriage alliance with Egypt and in going to Egypt for horses,
Solomon had broken key commandments given to the king in Deuteronomy.
In Deuteronomy chapter 17 verse 16, in one of the laws of the king, we read,
Only he must not acquire many horses for himself,
or cause the people to return to Egypt in order to acquire many horses,
since the Lord has said to you, you shall never return that way again.
Horses and chariots were essential elements of any powerful ancient Near Eastern war machine,
and Egypt was the best place to go to get them.
Chariots, the tanks of their day, were one of the reasons why the Israelites tribes in the plains
had struggled to dispossess the Canaanites in those regions of the land, who had iron chariots.
While much of Judah's terrain was not well suited for chariots, they were a prestige war machine,
and a large force of chariots and horses projected an image of power.
In the right conditions, they could be immensely powerful.
When Assyria came up against Judah, Senechariab had a great number of chariots.
When he marked Hezekiah and his forces at Jerusalem,
the Rabshchukai had implied that, even if the men of Judah were given many horses and chariots,
they wouldn't have the competence to ride them.
2 Kings chapter 18, verses 23 and 24.
Come now, make a wager with my master the king of Assyria.
I will give you 2,000 horses if you are able on your part to set riders.
on them. How then can you repulse a single captain among the least of my master's servants
when you trust in Egypt for chariots and for horsemen? This chapter opens with another
woe statement, building upon the message of the preceding chapter. Many in Judah had put their
hope in military might and weaponry to save them. If only, they reasoned, we had the latest chariots and
the finest horses, we will be able to resist the Assyrians. However, the Lord, who was supposed to be
their God and their king was utterly disregarded in their considerations. They put more store in
technology and human might than they did in the creator of the universe. Trusting in their own
shrewdness and real politic, they were unmindful of the wisdom of the Lord and of the certainty
of his word and counsel, and yet he would bring disaster upon them and their machinations
would not be able to withstand his plans. The Lord's purposes cannot be thwarted or frustrated.
He acts with sure power and in accordance with His holiness
against all evil, much as in his message concerning the ultimately frail humanity behind the terrifying
Cyro-Ephromite alliance in Chapter 7, the Lord seeks to demythologize the might of Egypt.
While Egypt was likely perceived as an immense and near irresistible power by many of Isaiah's
contemporaries, the Lord contrasts them with him, and their power with his power.
The contrast is nothing less than that between man and God, between the frailty of the flesh
and the immense power of the spirit.
If Judah relied upon Egypt for its deliverance,
it would find that Egypt would not be able to bear its weight.
When the Lord stretched out his hand in judgment,
Egypt would fail, as would Judah,
with a devastating outcome for both.
What is the alternative to looking to Egypt for aid?
From verse 4 to the end of the short chapter,
the Lord describes the help that he can provide to his people.
He compares himself to a lion that has taken a lamb,
even were a whole band of shepherds to come against him, they could not scare him off,
nor could they separate him from his prey.
When the Lord comes to fight at Mount Zion, he will display the same persistence and ferocity
in the face of all of their foes, protecting Zion from their clutches.
The second comparison is to hovering birds, presumably over their nests and young when a predator
comes near.
Besides the fearless persistence of the lion, the Lord will lovingly shield his people as the
mother bird might protect her chicks. Similar imagery is used in the Song of Moses in
Deuteronomy chapter 32 verses 9 to 12, but the Lord's portion is his people. Jacob is allotted heritage.
He found him in a desert land and in the howling waste of the wilderness he encircled him.
He cared for him. He kept him as the apple of his eye, like an eagle that stirs up its nest,
that flutters over its young, spreading out its wings, catching them, bearing them on its
opinions, the Lord alone guided him. No foreign God was with him. In such a manner the Lord would
deliver his people. The prophet exhorts the people to turn back to the Lord, repenting of their
iniquity. In verse 22 of the preceding chapter Isaiah had declared, then you will defile your carved
idols overlaid with silver and your gold-plated metal images. You will scatter them as unclean
things. You will say to them, be gone. In verse 7, the people's casting away of their idols is again
described. As the Lord defends and redeems his people, the futility, impotence and wickedness of idols
will become apparent to the people, and they will entirely reject them. The Lord himself,
not human power, would strike the Assyrians, causing them to flee. We might see the fulfillment
of this in chapter 37, verses 36 to 37. And the angel of the Lord went out and struck down
185,000 in the camp of the Assyrians. And when people arose early in the morning,
behold, these were all dead bodies. Then Senechrib king of Assyria departed and returned home
and lived at Nineveh. The Lord was described as the rock of Israel in verse 29 of the
preceding chapter. Assyria has its own rock, perhaps in Senechereb, perhaps in a mighty city,
or perhaps in a false god. However, their rock would pass away, while the rock of Israel would
stand unmoved. Again in the preceding chapter, Isaiah had spoken of a thousand men of Judah
fleeing before one on account of the people's sin. This possibly looked back to Deuteronomy
chapter 32 verse 30 in the Song of Moses. However, the verse that follows that contrasts the Lord's
people's source of strength with that of their enemies. For their rock is not as our rock,
our enemies are by themselves. The chapter concludes by speaking of the Lord's bond with Jerusalem,
but in terms of his fire that burns there,
we might think back here to the description of Jerusalem as Ariel
or altar at the beginning of chapter 29.
The fire and furnace of the Lord makes us think of the altar
and also of the consuming holiness of the Lord
that would destroy all that would violate the place of his dwelling.
A question to consider.
Verse 3 contrasts flesh and spirit.
Where else in the Old Testament might we get a sense of what this contrast involves?
Luke chapter 3
23 to 38
Jesus when he began his ministry
was about 30 years of age
being the son as was supposed
of Joseph the son of Helai
the son of Mathat
the son of Levi
the son of Melchai the son of Janai
the son of Joseph
the son of Matathias the son of Amos
the son of Naham the son of Esli
the son of Nagai
the son of Mayath
the son of Matthai the son of Samian
the son of Josek, the son of Jodah, the son of Joran, the son of Risa, the son of Zerubbable,
the son of Shielteal, the son of Neri, the son of Melchai, the son of Adai, the son of Kosam,
the son of Elmadim, the son of Er, the son of Joshua, the son of Eliezer, the son of Jorim,
the son of Mathat, the son of Levi, the son of Simeon, the son of Judah, the son of Joseph,
the son of Jonam, the son of Eliacim, the son of Melia, the son of Menna, the son of Matatha,
the son of Nathan, the son of David, the son of Jesse, the son of Obed, the son of Boaz,
the son of Sala, the son of Nashon, the son of Aminadab, the son of Admin, the son of Arnai, the son of Hezran,
the son of Perez, the son of Judah, the son of Jacob, the son of Isaac, the son of Abraham, the son of
The son of Nahor, the son of Seirag, the son of Rehou, the son of Pelech, the son of Iba, the son of Sheila,
the son of Caeanin, the son of Afaxad, the son of Shem, the son of Noah, the son of Lamaq, the son of
Jerod, the son of Mahalel, the son of Cianin, the son of Inos, the son of Seth, the son of Adam,
the son of God. Luke chapter 3, after the baptism of Jesus, ends with
genealogy. And it describes Jesus entering into his ministry at the age of 30 years old.
This is the same age that the priests would have begun their ministry. It's the same age as Joseph
begins to serve Pharaoh, that David becomes king. And Ezekiel in the 30th year, sees the heavens
opened and sees visions of God. So in all of these cases, we're seeing an entrance into some sort
of ministry, whether it's prophetic ministry in the case of Ezekiel, whether it's kingly ministry
in the case of David, whether it's the ministry of stewardship in the case of Joseph or the ministry
of the priests in the temple. There's a different setting of the genealogy here than we find in
Matthew. In Matthew it comes at the very beginning of the book in chapter 1 and it's set out in 42
generations divided into three sets of 14 and particularly emphasizing David and Abraham.
This doesn't introduce the gospel, but rather it occurs after the baptism and before the
temptation. However, it does frame this as a sort of beginning of sorts. It's the beginning of
Jesus' ministry, and it lies between two key events. The father's statement of Jesus' sonship leads
into this. Now, this genealogy is also interesting in other ways. It moves backwards,
rather than forwards. Most of the genealogies that we have in Scripture start off with the
oldest figure, and then move forward to more recent times. This starts off with Christ and then
moves backwards and it goes back to the very very beginning to Abraham as the son of God
there's a cosmic scope that opens up here genealogy serve a number of different purposes
one of the things that they do is to gather large periods of time together and large
stories are condensed within a genealogy we have a sense of the different figures who
are involved and the legacy that a person might be bearing in what they're doing
typically the further you go back in a genealogy the more it becomes a matter of diminishing returns
if we go back far enough just about anyone can be seen as a descendant from some great ancestor
because their genealogy has spread so wide and has been so mixed in with other peoples
which of us is not descended from adam or from noah while this is the case however
jesus in the beginning of his ministry is related to these figures in a different way he
holds their destiny within himself. Jesus takes the destiny of the whole human race and he's going to
live it out and bring it to its head. So it's not just that he has the blood of Adam in him. All of us
are descended from Adam. No, it's the fact that Jesus will achieve for the human race what Adam once
lost and failed to achieve. When we look at this genealogy and compare it with Matthew, there are
a number of problems though. It seems as if very few names are shared in common.
certainly once we get past David.
Even the numbers of names are very different.
Matthew structures his genealogy according to 314s,
whereas Luke is a genealogy of 77.
Some have suggested that Matthews is the genealogy of Joseph,
whereas the genealogy in Luke is that of Mary.
But in both cases, it's Joseph that is connected with the genealogy of David in particular,
and there's no reason to believe that Mary was descended from David.
For the numbers of the names, we should not worry that much about that.
The genealogies are not necessarily comprehensive.
They don't necessarily include every single figure.
Luke's could be a lot more extensive than Matthews in this regard.
Other suggestions include the possibility that one is a sort of royal line,
and the other is a father-son line of genealogy.
If, for instance, you were to trace the kings of the United Kingdom
and go all the way back and trace the genealogy,
you would get a different list from the list of those who sat on the throne in order.
And Matthew seems to follow this line of royal succession,
whereas Luke departs from it quite radically.
So maybe that's part of what's going on.
Both Matthew and Luke seem to have some structuring device for their genealogy.
Matthews is very apparent.
It has the three sets of 14,
and it's divided according to key events and key characters,
Abraham, David, the descent into Babylon.
And Luke's does not have quite so clear a pattern, but yet it is 77 names, and these can be
broken into 11 lists of seven names, and there are key names at specific points. David starts
the seventh list of seven names. Abraham starts the ninth, Enoch the 11th. Perhaps with the focus
upon the number seven, we're supposed to hear Jubilee themes. Seven, seven times seven, 70 or 70 times
or maybe in this case 77 are all numbers that have that sort of resonance and perhaps that's part of what Luke is trying to do here to frame what Jesus is doing as a Jubilee type event it's also interesting that it goes back while this is a feature found in common with other genealogies at the time most of the genealogies of scripture move forward from father to son all the way down rather than from son to father that movement from son to father is most common when we see someone's pedigreeks
set out, that they are someone who has title to a particular office or role.
Perhaps seeing as this comes at the beginning of Jesus' ministry, we're supposed to see it in this light.
However, although it is important for Luke and elsewhere in the Gospels that Jesus is traced
through David, that he belongs to the Davidic line, he comes through Nathan, which is surprising.
In Matthew, it's Solomon.
In seeking clues to try and understand the reason for this, some have observed Zachariah Chapter 12,
and seen there the possibility of Nathan's line being set apart from the rest of the House of David,
and I will pour out on the House of David and the inhabitants of Jerusalem a spirit of grace and pleased for mercy,
so that when they look on me, on him whom they have pierced, they shall mourn for him, as one mourns for an only son,
and weep bitterly over him, as one weeps over a firstborn.
On that day the morning in Jerusalem will be as great as the mourning for Haddad Rimon, in the plains of Meghido.
The land shall mourn, each family.
family by itself, the family of the house of David by itself, and their wives by themselves,
the family of the house of Nathan by itself, and their wives by themselves, the family of the house
of Levi by itself, and their wives by themselves, the family of the Shimiites by itself, and
their wives by themselves, and all the families that are left, each by itself, and their
wives by themselves. Perhaps there is a particular significance to the line of Nathan, but if
there is, I don't have an idea what it could be. A further interest
detail is the absence of the name of Jechaniah or Jehoiachin from Luke as the father of
Sheelteel whereas he is present in the gospel of Matthew. Luke mentions a different father for
Sheel Teal. Now this might be in part related to Jeremiah chapter 22 verse 30 where there's a curse
upon Jechaniah. Thus says the Lord write this man down as childless a man who shall not succeed in his
days for none of his offspring shall succeed in sitting on the throne of David and ruling again
in Judah. Yet we do hear that in First Chronicles chapter 3 verses 16 to 17, he did have a son.
The descendants of Jehoiakim, Jechoniah his son, Zedekhiah his son, and the sons of Jechoniah,
the captive, Sheel Teal, his son. Now Sheel teal may have been adopted, and the differences
between the two genealogies may be explained this way. One way or another, these genealogies
are complex, and we have to resort to some difficult explanation to reconcile them,
have to think in terms of leverant marriage or in terms of adoption or in terms of a royal line and a natural biological line or in terms of mary's line and joseph's line there are many different options of various merits
jews's genealogy and ancestry are complex containing many stories that have not been told to us this of course is true of most people's genealogies the important thing is that the son of god has taken his stand in history he has come in the middle of his own
He's the one who takes the human race and its story upon himself, and he stands as part of a line of promise, running from Abraham, through the patriarchs, to David, and down through the history of Israel, and being fulfilled at that moment in history.
The Christmas Carol talks about the hopes and fears of all the years being met in Bethlehem that night, and one of the things that the genealogy of Luke is doing is showing us that the hopes and fears of all the years are met in the figure of Jesus Christ.
that at this juncture in history, this weight is coming upon his shoulders just as he's about to go out and start his ministry.
He is the one who's bearing the weight of the world.
The entire fate of humanity has come down to him.
He is parallel in this respect to Adam.
This will help us to see in the account of the temptation of Christ a contrast with the temptation of Adam, which he failed in the garden.
Jesus succeeds in the wilderness.
The genealogy ends with the words the Son of God.
Adam was the one who had God as his father.
In a particular way, God formed him out of the dust of the earth.
But Christ, in the events immediately preceding this,
has been declared to be the son of God by the father's voice speaking from heaven.
You are my beloved son.
And in what follows, Jesus is being tested concerning his sonship by Satan in the wilderness.
So the theme of divine sonship is another crucial part of Luke's genealogy
and why he has it in this way and in this place.
A question to consider.
Thinking about the genealogies of the Old and New Testament,
can you think of some of the various purposes
that they are performing in their different locations?
