We all pretty much know that this genealogy is surprising for its risque people in the lineage, and women at that. They are not the kind of names you would immediately think to boast on at your next family reunion. We have Rahab the prostitute, Tamar the 'roadside prostitute,' and then there's Ruth, the Moabitess (a forbidden interracial marriage) and of course Mary, the one seemingly pregnant out of wedlock.
But what draws me most is not these women, but rather the way God does things out of order. We start out with Abraham, an honored man of the Lord who was promised a Messiah through his lineage. And in those days, the role of the first-born son was a very special and important place in the culture, receiving the family honors. So by all expectations, the genealogy SHOULD read, "Abraham was the father of Ishmael, Ishmael the father of...." But it doesn't read that way. Ishmael was Abraham's firstborn, but not through the promise. He was the firstborn according to law, but not according to faith (Galatians 4:21ff). So the genealogy does not include him.
Next we read about Isaac. We'll give grace for the fist round. So it SHOULD read, "Abraham was the father of
Next in line it should read that "Abraham was the father
So you would think Judah would be the righteous choice, but he didn't exactly have a clean record either. According to the customs of the times, he was obligated to give Tamar his youngest son, for her first husband, one of Judah's older sons, had died prematurely. But the boy grew to a man and Judah did not fulfill his obligation to Tamar. So she disguised herself as a prostitute and seduced her father-in-law. When she became pregnant, Judah in his indignation wanted to punish Tamar for her actions. But then she demonstrated to him that it was actually he who was the father. Negligent. Promiscuous. Hypocrite. These would be adequate words to describe Judah. The difference was that Judah was penitent. Perhaps this was the reason for the Messianic lineage to go through Judah, but not necessarily.
So on again, "Abraham was the father of
The bottom line is this, life doesn't turn out the way it is "supposed to." God doesn't fit in a box. He is not predictable. He is not domesticated. I like the title of one book I saw in a bookstore, "Your God is too Safe." And that's a good lesson to learn.
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Memorized:
Mt 1:1-11 on Dec 14, 2009
Mt 1:12-17 on Dec 15
Mt 1:18-25 on Dec 16
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