“The Family of God”
BIBLE READING :Matthew 1-4
This amazing opening to the New Testament contains
so many important things! We are
familiar with most of them. But if there
is a part of this beginning to the gospel we pay the least amount of attention
to, it is surely the very first part of it, the geneaologies. Closer examination of these and those in
Mark’s gospel show that Matthew was establishing the legal ancestry of Jesus
and Mark his bloodline. That is
consistent with what is Matthew’s evident method of presenting Jesus to the
Jewish nation as the legal fulfillment of the promised Messiah.
But do these ancestral lists hold much interest for
us non Jews, apart from appreciating their original intent which importance
should not be overlooked or minimized?
Jesus had no blood connection to His father Joseph, yet this is how the
New Testament begins.
Many of us have family to which we have no blood
connection but who are as important to us as Joseph was to Jesus. We don’t have any need to establish pedigree,
but we regard an adopted child with as much love and acceptance as we do a
biological child. And that works many
directions as with blended families, “step-children,” “step parents,” “step
brothers and sisters,” etc.
Unless a person has close involvement with such
situations, they may not understand, but here in this section of scripture is a
reminder to consider these relationships and learn to at least recognize their
importance in those families that are so constructed.
A preacher friend of mine adopted three children
and was surprised when his wife became pregnant with a biological child they
thought would not be possible. When this
family visited places they would sometimes be asked, “which one is the REAL
one?” My friend would reply, “this one is real, the others are
plastic.” A gentle rebuke of how the
question, which should never be asked, was phrased.
Witnessing that happen, left me with a sensibility
to the kinds of familial relationships that are so abundant around us.
And reminds us that “we are all the children of
Abraham” (Galatians 3:7) through faith in Jesus Christ.
We are all “adopted” sons of God (Romans
8:15). None of us are “plastic.” We are all real. We take great consolation in this
relationship which was established when the legal criteria were met. That’s how adoption works. The New Testament makes quite clear that this
adoption is made real when we come to the place that we are “in Christ”
(Eph.1:3; Gal.3:26,27).
The document that confirms this relationship,
authored by the Holy Spirit Himself through those He inspired, becomes the
witness of our adoption (Romans 8:16).
We are the family of God.
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