From Genesis to Revelation: Christ Revealed in Scripture
The foremost theme of our discussion revolves around the significance of Old Testament prophecies concerning the advent of Jesus Christ, particularly His first coming as a humble infant in Bethlehem. This evening, we shall embark on an exploration of scriptural passages that illuminate the prophetic nature of the Old Testament and its critical connection to the New Testament revelation of Christ. We will elucidate how the narratives and prophecies found within the Old Testament are not relics of a bygone era, but rather, integral components of the overarching divine narrative that culminates in the person and work of Jesus. Our examination will include an in-depth analysis of passages such as Genesis 3:15, which proclaims the promise of redemption, and Isaiah 7:14, heralding the miraculous virgin birth. As we navigate through these sacred texts, we aim to deepen our understanding of the continuity of God's redemptive plan, affirming that from Genesis to Revelation, the entirety of Scripture is inexorably intertwined with the message of salvation through Christ.
Takeaways:
- In our December series, we will explore Old Testament prophecies concerning the coming of Jesus Christ.
- The Book of Joshua will be revisited in January, following our December examination of Scriptures.
- Jesus's birth as prophesied in the Old Testament is a testament to God's unwavering promise.
- The concept of Emmanuel, meaning 'God with us', highlights the personal relationship available through Christ.
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This podcast is produced by Ralph Estep, Jr., host of Financially Confident Christian, a daily podcast on Christian Finance you can find it at https://www.financiallyconfidentchristian.com
00:00 - Untitled
00:16 - Introduction to the Sermon
01:03 - The Transition to the Study of Prophecies
10:06 - The Seed of the Woman: A Promise of Redemption
19:01 - Understanding the Gospel: The Importance of the Resurrection
24:11 - The Prophecy of Emmanuel
30:41 - The Implications of Christmas
Hello and welcome to the Middletown Baptist Church Podcast, where we are proclaiming the truth to the world.
Speaker AMy name is Pastor Josh, and I want to thank you for listening to this podcast.
Speaker AI hope that this podcast can be a blessing to you and strengthen you in the word of God.
Speaker ANow, come along.
Speaker ALet's look into the Bible and see what God has for us here today.
Speaker BWell, as many of you know, a while ago we had started a new study in the Book of Joshua.
Speaker BAnd I typically like to finish books before we move on.
Speaker BBut I'm going to make a deal with you all.
Speaker BI'm going to say this.
Speaker BWe're going to pause in the Book of Joshua.
Speaker BWe're at the end of chapter four.
Speaker BAnd if you can promise me that you'll remember what happened in the first four chapters, we're going to take a break here for the month of December and come back in January and study the Book of Joshua.
Speaker BThey crossed the river Jordan and it's a good stopping place.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker BWe're going to now follow them in January as they get into the land of Canaan and all of the conquests there.
Speaker BBut what I thought would be appropriate here for the month of December on Sunday nights and Wednesday nights is to look into scriptures, specifically the Old Testament, and see what the Old Testament has to say about the coming of Jesus Christ, particularly his first coming in the fact that he came as a baby in the manger there in Bethlehem.
Speaker BAs you well know, that that was prophesied in the Old Testament actually where he would be born, how he would be born, what would the circumstances be like after he was born.
Speaker BThe Old Testament is full of prophecies that are fulfilled in Jesus Christ in many ways.
Speaker BAnd I thought that that was an important study that we all should follow, because a lot of times people think that the Old Testament something for, you know, other people, not for us as Christians.
Speaker BAs Christians, we're in the New Testament, in which there are a lot of things in the New Testament, many things in the New Testament that we have to learn and understand.
Speaker BAnd we know that we are part of the New Covenant, we are part of the church age.
Speaker BBut at the same time, the Old Testament points to Jesus Christ.
Speaker BAnd it gives us the surety that from Genesis to Revelation, God's word is true and it's complete.
Speaker BAnd so I wanted to take you to a passage of Scripture as we look at this.
Speaker BAnd when we think of Christmas, we think of what we think of Luke 2.
Speaker BWell, I'm not going to take you to Luke 2 yet.
Speaker BI'm going to take you to Luke 24.
Speaker BYou say Luke 24.
Speaker BThat's the end.
Speaker BWhy are we studying Luke 24 when we're talking about Jesus coming?
Speaker BWell, it's actually Jesus talking in resurrected form, right?
Speaker BSo this is after Jesus died on the cross.
Speaker BThis is Jesus as he's speaking in the the fellas to the road of Emmaus.
Speaker BAnd most of you know the story Matthew chapter 24, Jesus has resurrected.
Speaker BAnd we have these two followers of Jesus, these two disciples of Jesus that are walking.
Speaker BAnd we see that they have lost hope.
Speaker BWe see that they are disappointed.
Speaker BAnd we see that after Jesus was crucified, many of his followers were crushed.
Speaker BTheir hope was that the Messiah would free them from the tyranny of Rome right then and there and restore the kingdom right then.
Speaker BAnd when Jesus did not meet their immediate expectations, they were confused, they were disheartened.
Speaker BAnd we see that there In Luke chapter 24, we see them saying, don't you know what's going on?
Speaker BAnd Jesus asked them, well, what's going on?
Speaker BVerse 19.
Speaker BAnd he said unto them, what things?
Speaker BAnd they said unto him, concerning Jesus of Nazareth, which was a prophet, mighty indeed, and word before God and all people, and how the chief priests and our rulers delivered him to be condemned to death and have crucified him.
Speaker BAnd then verse 21 really is where their heart is.
Speaker BThey said, but we trusted that it had been he which should have redeemed Israel.
Speaker BTheir hope was that he was immediately at that time, going to redeem Israel.
Speaker BAnd when he did not, in their minds accomplish that in the way that they expected, they were disheartened.
Speaker BThey said, we believed, we trusted.
Speaker BAnd now we're confused.
Speaker BNow we don't know what's going to happen.
Speaker BAnd he says, and beside this to today is the third day since these things were done, meaning if he was going to do something, he would have done it by now.
Speaker BThat was where they were.
Speaker BThat's where their understanding was.
Speaker BAnd so what happens here is that Jesus in their minds does not fulfill what he promised or in their minds not fulfilling their expectations.
Speaker BAnd I want you to see here in verse 25 what Jesus's reaction is.
Speaker BThen he said unto them, o fools, and slow of heart to believe.
Speaker BAll the prophets have spoken, not Christ, to have suffered these things to enter into his glory, meaning this.
Speaker BYou don't know what the prophets have said.
Speaker BYou don't understand that this is part of God's plan.
Speaker BYou don't understand that Jesus told you that this was what was going to happen.
Speaker BNow, again, remember, in context, these guys, their eyes are blinded to this being Jesus.
Speaker BAnd so they don't understand that this is Jesus standing right before them.
Speaker BBut Jesus is telling them, hey, you should have known this was going to happen.
Speaker BThis was all part of God's plan from the very beginning.
Speaker BHe Sundays in verse 27, and beginning at Moses, for them, that's when the beginning happened, when the law was instituted, when they had exited Egypt.
Speaker BAnd he says at the beginning, at Moses and all the prophets, he expounded unto them in all the Scriptures, the things concerning himself.
Speaker BSo Jesus says, okay, I'm going to tell you about me.
Speaker BWell, Jesus doesn't use the New Testament.
Speaker BWhy?
Speaker BBecause the New Testament wasn't there.
Speaker BSo what did he do?
Speaker BHe went back all the way to the beginning.
Speaker BHe went all the way back to the Old Testament.
Speaker BFor them it wasn't the Old Testament, but for us it's the Old Testament.
Speaker BAnd he says that he expounds out to them in all the Scriptures the things concerning himself, meaning he went to the, what we call the Old Testament to prove what Jesus was all about, to prove what God's plan was for him.
Speaker BAnd so I think that if Jesus does this, I think it's important for us to go back and to see where Jesus is inserted in the Old Testament.
Speaker BAnd I would venture to say that really all of the Old Testament is pointing to Jesus.
Speaker BIt's pointing to his life, his ministry, his death, his resurrection, ultimately his rule and reign as he returns in his second coming.
Speaker BAnd I think it's important for us as Christians to have a framework of understanding that Genesis to Revelation is a story about Jesus.
Speaker BIt's not a story that we tell children to entertain them, even though stories in the Old Testament do entertain us.
Speaker BI love the stories of the Old Testament, but it's more than that.
Speaker BThe prophecies that are there point us back to the surety of knowing that God keeps his Word.
Speaker BWhere does it start?
Speaker BWhere, where is Jesus first mentioned?
Speaker BWell, some would argue that Jesus is mentioned in Genesis 1:1, and I would, I would agree to that.
Speaker BWhere it says in the beginning God created the heaven and the earth.
Speaker BWe, we know that Jesus is God.
Speaker BJohn 1.
Speaker BIn the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.
Speaker BBut I, I would also say that the Gospel specifically mentioning Jesus is mentioned in Genesis 3:15.
Speaker BSo we're going to go back to Genesis.
Speaker BWe're going to go back to the very beginning.
Speaker BAnd I want us to look at some of These prophecies that we know as we have the full scope of Scripture, reveal the truth of who Jesus is and what he has done and the promise of God in our lives today.
Speaker BSo Genesis, chapter three.
Speaker BMost of you know the context, if you were here a while ago.
Speaker BWe went all the way through the book of Genesis.
Speaker BWe went verse by verse through the book of Genesis.
Speaker BAnd it's an amazing study.
Speaker BBut many of you know that in Genesis 3, we see what we call the fall of man.
Speaker BWe see Adam and Eve sin.
Speaker BAnd we see really the effects of sin, the curse, verse 14.
Speaker BAnd the Lord God said unto the serpent, because thou has done this, thou art cursed above cattle and above every beast of the field.
Speaker BUpon thy belly shalt thou go, and thus shall thou eat all the days of thy life.
Speaker BAnd so we know that temptation came to the garden through Satan.
Speaker BSatan comes and tempts Eve.
Speaker BAnd we know that Eve is deceived, and we know that Adam is part of it.
Speaker BAnd therefore they partake in sin.
Speaker BThey partake in the original lie that they can become God.
Speaker BAnd so from that moment on, that is why this earth is full of pain and suffering.
Speaker BA lot of people will look to God for the cause of pain and suffering.
Speaker BThey will look to God for the cause behind sickness and evil.
Speaker BBut we see the reason why we live in a broken world, the reason why we struggle with these things in our life, both physically, spiritually, emotionally, is because of the sin that entered into the world through the temptation of the evil one.
Speaker BAnd so in verse 15, God says to the enemy, to Satan, I will put enmity between thee and the woman and between thy seed and her seed.
Speaker BSo this is a picture of the division of good and evil.
Speaker BThis is the picture of what we're going to see throughout all of Scripture.
Speaker BThis.
Speaker BThis battle, the struggle that's going to be out there.
Speaker BUltimately, we know that it is not equal sides.
Speaker BThere's a lot of people that teach good and evil are like 50, 50.
Speaker BAnd there's this equal battle that God and Satan are.
Speaker BAre in this struggle back and forth.
Speaker BAnd that's not really what we see here.
Speaker BWe see that there is a struggle, but we know that God is completely sovereign over the evil one.
Speaker BThat's what it says at the end of verse 15.
Speaker BThis is called the proto Evangelion, which means the first mention of the gospel or the first mention of evangelism, the first mention of a messiah that is to come.
Speaker BAnd it says in verse 15, it shall bruise thy head, meaning the seed of a woman.
Speaker BShall bruise thy head, meaning kill you and thou shalt bruise his heel, meaning there will be an action, an effort from the evil one to take control, to try to defeat God.
Speaker BAnd we know that through Scripture.
Speaker BBut we also know that there is a promise here that Jesus would come.
Speaker BAnd as Jesus is the seed of the woman, come and destroy evil and ultimately restore all things to good.
Speaker BAnd so that's the first mention of Jesus and the Gospel there in the book of Genesis.
Speaker BNow I want you to see more about that because the Messiah, as he is called, would be the seed of the woman.
Speaker BAnd we see that reference throughout the New Testament.
Speaker BAnd I want us to see a few of the references to that there in the New Testament.
Speaker BSo I hope you have your Bible fingers ready to go to search through Scriptures.
Speaker BIf not, some of you have your phones or your tablets, I would encourage you always to check.
Speaker BDon't take me for granted.
Speaker BBe a berean and follow us.
Speaker BAnd so in Genesis 3:15, we see that there is this promise of the seed of the woman that would come and destroy the enemy.
Speaker BWell, let's see some of the references in the New Testament.
Speaker BRomans, chapter 16.
Speaker BWe're going to get that in our study in Romans.
Speaker BBut we see that there's New Testament citations to that very same passage, really throughout the New Testament, these New Testament citations of Genesis 3:15 are seen.
Speaker BOne example would be in Romans chapter 16, verse 20.
Speaker BAnd we're going to see that Jesus is the seed of the woman.
Speaker BAnd this speaks to many things.
Speaker BThis speaks to the virgin birth, which we're going to talk about later on.
Speaker BThis speaks to how Jesus is distinct.
Speaker BHe's different.
Speaker BHe's the firstborn, he's the only begotten son.
Speaker BAnd we know that that's a unique element of Jesus that no one else can claim.
Speaker BNo one else can claim that title.
Speaker BSo it says in Romans, chapter 16, verse 20.
Speaker BAnd the God of peace, the God of peace, the Prince of peace, shall bruise Satan under your feet shortly.
Speaker BThe grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you.
Speaker BAnd so this speaks to this understanding that we that are identified in Christ can be part of the victory.
Speaker BEven though we're not the ones in the work of the victory, we get to be part of it.
Speaker BWhy, as it says there, the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ is with us.
Speaker BAnd so we will be part of the victory in the fact that the seed of the woman Jesus shall bruise Satan under your feet shortly, as it says here.
Speaker BSo that's one reference to Genesis 3:15, a completion of that circle of Genesis 3:15, Jesus the one who is coming to destroy the evil.
Speaker BAnd this is a circular motion back to Romans 16:20, that Jesus is that one, and relationship with him gives us the victory as well.
Speaker BAnother passage of Scripture that deals with this similar spot would be Galatians Chapter 4, Galatians, Chapter 4.
Speaker BThis speaks of us as Christians being heirs to God's grace.
Speaker BAnd so we're part of the victory.
Speaker BAnd I think that's why it's so important to understand this.
Speaker BYes, we know Jesus is going to be victorious, but if you are in Christ, you are part of that victory as well.
Speaker BAnd so we can be excited about these things.
Speaker BAnd so In Galatians chapter 4, verse 4, it speaks of us being the children we were once in bondage under the elements of this world.
Speaker BWe were part of, as it says there, the seed of evil.
Speaker BWe were at enmity with God.
Speaker BThe Bible says that we were children of this world.
Speaker BWe are children of the evil one.
Speaker BBut when the fullness of time was come, God sent forth his son made of a woman, the seed of a woman made under the law, verse 5, to redeem them that were under the law, that we might receive the adoption of sons.
Speaker BAnd because you are sons, God has sent forth the spirit of his son into your hearts.
Speaker BCrying Abba, Father.
Speaker BAgain, another connection between Jesus being the seed of the woman and what that means for us.
Speaker BJesus being born of a virgin.
Speaker BJesus coming to this earth, not being bound by the law.
Speaker BWhy?
Speaker BBecause he didn't come to destroy the law.
Speaker BHe came to fulfill the law.
Speaker BAnd Jesus kept the law perfectly so that we who cannot keep the law can be part of the family of God.
Speaker BWhat an amazing truth that is.
Speaker BOkay, another New Testament verse.
Speaker BOkay, I told you we're going to be looking at this.
Speaker BAnd I told you that the New Testament is full of Old Testament references.
Speaker BHebrews, chapter 2, Hebrews, chapter 2, verse 14.
Speaker BThis is speaking of Jesus being our high priest.
Speaker BAnd there's so much to be said about Jesus being our high priest.
Speaker BWe know that we have a high priest who has been identified in our struggles.
Speaker BWe know without sin.
Speaker BAnd that's what makes Jesus distinct.
Speaker BBut remember, what was the Old Testament role of a priest?
Speaker BThe Old Testament role of a priest was to connect people to God, the mediator, so to speak.
Speaker BWe know that as Christians now, we have what's called priesthood of all believers, meaning we that are in Christ can access God directly.
Speaker BAnd so we know that we have a merciful high priest.
Speaker BAnd so in Hebrews chapter 2, verse 14.
Speaker BIt says, for as much then as the children are partakers of flesh and blood, he also himself likewise took part of the same, that through death he might destroy him that had the power of death.
Speaker BThat is the devil.
Speaker BSo the Bible says.
Speaker BYes, Jesus came like us, in the flesh, seed of the woman, lived a life.
Speaker BBut he came for a different purpose.
Speaker BOur purpose is to glorify him and trust in him.
Speaker BHis purpose was, as it says there, through death, he might destroy him that had the power of death.
Speaker BAs brother Jeff saying this morning, born to die.
Speaker BIt was Jesus's purpose to come, to be in the flesh, to fulfill the plan of God, to fulfill the law.
Speaker BWhy?
Speaker BSo that he.
Speaker BHe could die to destroy him that had the power of death.
Speaker BIt was only because of Jesus's perfection.
Speaker BIt was only because of Jesus's godhood that he could come and distinctly be different than anybody else that has ever walked this planet.
Speaker BHe's the seed of the woman.
Speaker BAnd that's where we see Jesus there in Genesis, chapter.
Speaker B3, verse 15.
Speaker BOne last passage of Scripture, and then we'll go to another thought.
Speaker BRevelation, chapter 12, revelation, chapter 12.
Speaker BWho knew we were going to start in Genesis and go all the way to Revelation?
Speaker BI did.
Speaker BBut you did.
Speaker BRevelation, chapter 12.
Speaker BWe.
Speaker BWe see the full picture from the very beginning.
Speaker BSin comes into the world.
Speaker BGod's plan for sin is sending the seed of the woman to come and crush the head of Satan.
Speaker BAnd we see that struggle happening for all of these years.
Speaker BAnd though sometimes it does seem to the human eye that good is losing to evil, that.
Speaker BThat sometimes for us, it seems like man.
Speaker BWhy isn't God just doing it?
Speaker BWhy doesn't God just crush the head of the serpent?
Speaker BWell, there's a lot of reasons why and there's a lot of opinions why.
Speaker BI can tell you one of the reasons why is because.
Speaker BBecause God is merciful.
Speaker BGod is patient.
Speaker BHe's waiting and giving us opportunity and giving generation after generation opportunities to come to Him.
Speaker BBut there will be a time when completely there will be that judgment and no longer will there be a choice to honor God.
Speaker BWe know that there will be a time when every tongue will confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, either through judgment or through faith.
Speaker BAnd so in Revelation, chapter 12, verse 9, we see this reference to this war, this, this great war against the dragon.
Speaker BNow, I know that some of you are like Revelation, we're getting down the rabbit trail.
Speaker BWell, we're not going to go fully into the whole end times discussion right now, but we See here In Revelation, chapter 12, verse 9, it says, and the great dragon was cast out, that old serpent called the devil and Satan, which deceived the whole world.
Speaker BHe was cast out, out into the earth, and his angels were cast out with him.
Speaker BAnother reference there in verse 17 of that same chapter, it says, and the dragon was wroth with the women and went to make war with the remnant of her seed, which kept commandments of God and have the testimony of Jesus Christ.
Speaker BEventually.
Speaker BThis is the foretelling of the eventual destruction of Satan.
Speaker BAnd we know his end.
Speaker BHis demise is that through a lot of fighting, through a lot of opposition, he is cast into the bottomless pit.
Speaker BWe.
Speaker BWe know that he will be completely defeated.
Speaker BAnd I would even venture to say that he already is defeated because of the work of Jesus Christ on the cross, when he said, it is finished.
Speaker BBut the complete work of him being thrown away and never to come back again is coming.
Speaker BAnd that's a day that we long for.
Speaker BBut that's all seen in Genesis 3:15.
Speaker BJesus coming to this earth.
Speaker BIt was mentioned at the very beginning.
Speaker BAnd Jesus came with a purpose.
Speaker BAnd that was the purpose of coming to defeat evil, to defeat death.
Speaker BI love the passage of Scripture in First Corinthians.
Speaker BWe're going to just get a whole systematic theology here today, and we might hit every single book of the Bible.
Speaker BI don't know.
Speaker BBut First Corinthians, chapter 15.
Speaker BIf, if you want to study the importance of the resurrection, I, I would say that probably one of the best places to go is First Corinthians, chapter 15, because it speaks to how the resurrection of Jesus Christ is vital to what we are preaching in the Gospel.
Speaker BThe word gospel is thrown around a lot today.
Speaker BThere's the social gospel, there's the American gospel.
Speaker BAll really the word gospel means is good news.
Speaker BAnd so when we talk about the gospel, we have to be very clear about what we're talking about.
Speaker BThe Gospel of Jesus Christ.
Speaker BWell, what is the Gospel of Jesus Christ?
Speaker BWe.
Speaker BWell, if you're just a good person, God will love you and grant you forgiveness.
Speaker BThat's not what the Bible says the gospel is.
Speaker BThe gospel is, is if you're just passionate about something, if you're just religious, if you're just spiritual, God will save you.
Speaker BThe Bible says.
Speaker BNo, the Bible says there is one way to heaven.
Speaker BJohn 14:6, I am the way, the truth and the life.
Speaker BJesus says that no man cometh unto the Father, but through Jesus Christ.
Speaker BBut in First Corinthians, chapter 15, Paul explains what the gospel really is verse three.
Speaker BHe says, For I delivered unto you first of all that which I also received.
Speaker BHow?
Speaker BThat Jesus died for our sins according to the Scriptures, and that he was buried and that he rose again the third day according to the Scriptures.
Speaker BAnd so the Bible says, really what we know as the Gospel is that Jesus came.
Speaker BHe lived that perfect life.
Speaker BHe died on the cross for our sins.
Speaker BHe was buried and he rose again.
Speaker BThe resurrection is so important.
Speaker BAnd later on, what we see is Paul says that if we do not preach the resurrection, we are in.
Speaker BWe are in waste.
Speaker BIt is vain.
Speaker BVerse 12 of 1 Corinthians, chapter 15.
Speaker BNow, if Christ be preached that he rose from the dead, how say some of you that there is no resurrection of the dead?
Speaker BBut if there be no resurrection of the dead, then is Christ not risen.
Speaker BAnd if Christ be not risen, then are preaching vain and your faith is also vain.
Speaker BHe says, without the resurrection of Jesus Christ, without the complete message of the Gospel, everything that we do is in vain.
Speaker BGoing to church is in vain if we are not doing it in the spirit and the teaching of the Gospel of Jesus Christ completely with the resurrection.
Speaker BSo we must teach the complete, complete, revealed message of Jesus Christ.
Speaker BThere's so many other passages of Scripture in the Old Testament that speak to this.
Speaker BThe Messiah would be resurrected.
Speaker BI mean, the Old Testament speaks of that all the way through.
Speaker BPsalm 16 speaks of the resurrection of Jesus Christ, that Messiah would bring the new covenant, that the Messiah would be forsaken and pierced for our sins.
Speaker BDid you know that's in the Old Testament?
Speaker BOh, I. I gotta show you this.
Speaker BOkay, I got to show you this.
Speaker BIn Psalm 22, some of you know where I'm going with this.
Speaker BSome of you are great scholars of scripture and you know where I'm going.
Speaker BBut back in the Book of Psalms.
Speaker BPrior to the Roman Empire, prior to anyone knowing about the typical way of crucifixion in the Roman Empire, we see Psalm 22, which many call a Messianic psalm.
Speaker BAnd, and this is a foretelling, a prophecy of what the Messiah would do and what he would say and what people would do to him.
Speaker BAnd we won't go through the whole chapter here in Psalm 22, but I do think it's important to see what it's saying here.
Speaker BIt says in verse one, my God, my God, why hast thou forsaken?
Speaker BWhy art thou so far from helping me?
Speaker BAnd from the words of my roaring?
Speaker BSo this is a reference.
Speaker BObviously you could say that this is literally David talking, which it is, but it's also a messianic prophecy of what Jesus says on the cross.
Speaker BMy God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?
Speaker BOh, my God.
Speaker BI cry in the daytime, but thou hearest not in night season.
Speaker BAnd I am not silent, but thou art holy and thou inhabitants.
Speaker BThe praise of Israel.
Speaker BIt goes on further and talks more about the.
Speaker BThe, I would say is the crucifixion here.
Speaker BMy strength, verse 15.
Speaker BMy strength is dried up like a potsherd.
Speaker BMy tongue cleaveth to my jaws.
Speaker BThou has brought me into the dust of death.
Speaker BWe.
Speaker BWe see here that this speaks to Jesus's thirst that we see on.
Speaker BOn the cross.
Speaker BAnd over and over again, over and over again.
Speaker BIn this passage of scripture, we see references.
Speaker BBut in this passage of Scripture, it speaks to him being pierced, that he was bruised.
Speaker BIn Isaiah 53, he was bruised.
Speaker BFor our iniquities, he was.
Speaker BHe was pierced.
Speaker BAnd so this is all reference to what Jesus would do as our Savior.
Speaker BAnd I think about this often.
Speaker BI think about how often we just go through the Old Testament and we just take these verses and we don't connect them.
Speaker BWe don't have the dots connected to the fact that this is all talking about what Jesus would do for us and who we are in him.
Speaker BAnd so when we get to this Christmas season, I want us to think about fulfilled prophecy.
Speaker BThere's a lot of other things that we could think of.
Speaker BObviously that the Messiah would be born of a version.
Speaker BMany of you know the reference there.
Speaker BWe'll turn there, and that's really where we're going to spend the.
Speaker BLast few minutes here.
Speaker BIsaiah 7:14.
Speaker BWhen, if you come back Wednesday night, we're going to talk a little bit more about some of the prophecies here at Christmas and the.
Speaker BAnd the foretelling of when Jesus would come, how he would come, where he would come.
Speaker BBut we.
Speaker BWe know that in Isaiah 7:14, we believe that this is a reference to the Messiah.
Speaker BAnd this is therefore the Lord himself shall give you a sign.
Speaker BBehold, a virgin shall conceive and bear a son, and shall call his name Emmanuel.
Speaker BNow, we could talk a lot about that verse, but one of the things I want to point out is that word Emmanuel.
Speaker BWhat does that word, Emmanuel mean?
Speaker BMost of you know God with us.
Speaker BThis is an understanding that God is not just in heaven, away from us, which many people believe that God is distant, that he's far away, that.
Speaker BThat he is not able to be accessed.
Speaker BBut here in this prophecy, we know that Jesus would Come, he would be born of a virgin.
Speaker BWe know that in Luke 1 and Luke 2 he was born of Mary, who at that time was just betrothed to be with Joseph.
Speaker BBut in that we see how Jesus would be born, who would be born to, and really what would his character be?
Speaker BAnd his character would be Emmanuel, God with us, God in the flesh.
Speaker BWhy is that so unique?
Speaker BWhy is that different?
Speaker BWell, the Bible teaches that Jesus came to have a personal relationship with those that follow Him.
Speaker BIt's not deism.
Speaker BDeism is that God exists.
Speaker BHe set the world in motion as the great clock Maker.
Speaker BBut he doesn't care about our personal lives.
Speaker BHe doesn't want to be involved with the day to day of our, our human struggle.
Speaker BBut the Bible says it's the complete opposite.
Speaker BWe have a high priest who feels our struggles, who has been betrayed and he has care for us.
Speaker BAnd he, he cries with the brokenhearted.
Speaker BHe, he knows what we have struggled with, but yet he is the answer to all of our problems when we come to him and have that personal relationship with him.
Speaker BI hope that Jesus is real to you.
Speaker BI hope that he's not just a fairy tale or something that you trust in as a good luck charm or something that somebody else that you know trust in and, and you can appreciate that.
Speaker BNo, it's so much deeper that, that he is my God.
Speaker BI, I know there was times in my life where I struggled with that.
Speaker BI, I went off to college and I was really challenged with a lot of questions.
Speaker BIf you believe this, how can this be true?
Speaker BOr if God is real, then why does he fill in the blank?
Speaker BAnd I remember being at college and thinking, I don't have answers for this.
Speaker BTo, to my shame, I, I, I was just like, I don't know, you know what I did?
Speaker BI, I called my dad, which is not a bad place to turn because my dad's one of the strongest Christians I know.
Speaker BAnd I said, dad, what do we believe about?
Speaker BAnd you know, he goes, well, I can tell you what I believe, but I want you to know what you believe.
Speaker BRight?
Speaker BAnd there's that idea there that I can't just adopt what someone else believes if I don't truly understand it and believe it myself.
Speaker BSo it's not just my dad's God or my pastor's God, but he's my God, that he is God with me, God with us.
Speaker BHe's personal and he intends to have that intentional walk with us.
Speaker BJust as we draw nigh to God, he draws near to us.
Speaker BAnd so this prophecy here in Isaiah 7, 14.
Speaker BIs, is fulfilled obviously in the New Testament.
Speaker BAnd, and many people actually today are arguing whether or not this is a necessity for the truth.
Speaker BLike if we deny the virgin birth, if we deny this, can we still be Christians?
Speaker BAnd I would say that this is a doctrine that we must stand on.
Speaker BIt's being attacked today.
Speaker BA lot of, A lot of the things that we assume to be just what is the essentials of our faith are being attacked today.
Speaker BAnd we as Christians have to stand true to that.
Speaker BWe have to say that, say if the Bible says it, we have to believe it.
Speaker BWe can't be critical to what the word of God says, even if it goes beyond our comprehension.
Speaker BBecause, by the way, God works miracles.
Speaker BWe have to believe.
Speaker BIf we don't believe that God works miracles, we're.
Speaker BWe're missing the point of the Bible because Genesis to Revelation, all of this is a miracle.
Speaker BMy salvation is a miracle.
Speaker BSo if I don't believe that God can work miracles, I. E. The virgin birth, I don't believe that God can save a broken, sinful person, because my salvation is a miracle.
Speaker BYour salvation is a miracle.
Speaker BThe fact that God can take a person whose good works are like filthy rags and change us and take his robes and put them on us and give us eternal life, that's a miracle in itself.
Speaker BAnd so when we talk about a Christmas miracle, Christmas miracle, obviously, is the whole story of Jesus, not just his birth.
Speaker BEven though that's a miracle in and of itself that we must trust by faith.
Speaker BSomeone says, scientifically, prove to me how Jesus was born that way.
Speaker BI cannot.
Speaker BIt was a work of God beyond my comprehension, just like all the other miracles.
Speaker BYou cannot explain a miracle.
Speaker BSome people say, well, that's blind faith.
Speaker BWell, I don't want to call it blind faith.
Speaker BIt's faith and believing that God is good.
Speaker BAnd folks, a lot of people will not go to heaven because they can't wrap their mind around the supernatural.
Speaker BThey can't wrap their mind around believing that something is bigger than them.
Speaker BAnd we all, to some degree, have to take a step of faith.
Speaker BNo matter where we're at in our belief system, everyone takes something by faith.
Speaker BHow did we get here?
Speaker BI believe we got here because God created us.
Speaker BWell, the atheist says, well, no, we got here through the Big Bang.
Speaker BWe got here through just accidents that have happened.
Speaker BOkay, were you there?
Speaker BWell, no.
Speaker BSo both of us are taking the creation of this world by faith.
Speaker BAnd we have to come down to what has the most proof, what gives us the best answers.
Speaker BAnd for me, the big questions of morality, of destiny, of purpose, all of these things are best answered through the story of Jesus, through the story of the word of God.
Speaker BAnd so that's why it's so important to talk about these things at Christmas.
Speaker BThe.
Speaker BThe Christmas story can be very romanticized.
Speaker BI mean, watch a movie and it.
Speaker BIt's, you know, everything's so nice, and baby Jesus is so clean, and he's.
Speaker BHe's perfect in every way.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BAnd we think, oh, that's a nice story, and it is a wonderful story.
Speaker BBut at the same time, we have to think of truly, like I was mentioning this morning, we have to truly think about the implications of Christmas, because really, it's just Jesus coming to this earth to die for us, born to die upon Calvary.
Speaker BAnd so think about these prophecies as we go.
Speaker BWe're going to go through a lot of them.
Speaker BWe're going to go through the classic one that many of you know, Isaiah 9, 6, and talk about what that all means.
Speaker BBut ultimately, we see that Jesus is the scarlet thread, if you will, throughout all of the Bible.
Speaker BAnd if you want to take the Bible in without Jesus, you're removing the glaring mark of God in his word.
Speaker BThe Book of Hebrews says that basically everything from the Old Testament system to the sacrificial system, all these things are just shadowy pictures to show us who Jesus is.
Speaker BAnd so today we have to come back to that.
Speaker BWe have to say that we believe what we believe.
Speaker BWhy?
Speaker BBecause of the Bible.
Speaker BNot because it makes sense to me, not because I have proof.
Speaker BEven though it's amazing to know that every single archaeological find about Scripture, about the Bible, about the Holy Land, has never contradicted the word of God.
Speaker BThat's a good thing.
Speaker BBut we shouldn't have to say, I have to see it then to believe it.
Speaker BGod has given us enough proof to believe, and it just only strengthens the argument to know that nothing can contradict what God's word has said.
Speaker BAnd that's a whole other argument for another day.
Speaker BAnd I'd love to talk to you about that, but I will conclude there.
Speaker BBut what I will say is this.
Speaker BDuring the Christmas season, let us not just go through the Christmas story just as a blanket.
Speaker BWell, that's a beautiful story.
Speaker BWe hear it every year and we just gloss over it.
Speaker BLet's think about the implications of.
Speaker BOf God's foretelling of this and Jesus coming and fulfilling all of that, and ultimately the gospel being the centerpiece of what we preach.
Speaker BThe Christmas season is an awesome time to preach the gospel because maybe someone is more open to hearing stories about Jesus, maybe they're not.
Speaker BBut at the end of the day, we have a responsibility to preach the gospel, not just in the Christmas season, but all year long because we get the opportunity to look to Jesus and thank him every day for his coming to this earth.
Speaker BBut it's the complete story that we need to think about.
Speaker BSo we'll come back and talk about more.
Speaker BWe're going to address Isaiah 9, we're going to address Isaiah 53, which is another passage of scripture that speaks of Jesus.
Speaker BAnd so I would encourage you to follow along with us.
Speaker BWe're going to be doing this series on Sunday nights and on Wednesday nights and so just through the month of December and and if you have any questions or you have one particular prophecy that you're interested in talking about, come talk to me.
Speaker BI'd love to work through that and see how many New Testament verses we can look up in the middle of that.
Speaker BSo thank you so much for your time and your attention.
Speaker AThank you again for listening to the Middletown Baptist Church podcast.
Speaker AI hope that this sermon has been a blessing for you.
Speaker AIf you would like to find out more information about our church or this sermon, you can find us at middletownbaptistchurch.org or find us on Facebook or YouTube.
Speaker AYou can also email me directly at Josh Massaroiddletownbaptistchurch dot com if you've enjoyed this podcast, please subscribe and follow along for future podcast and updates.
Speaker AThank you so much.
Speaker AGod bless.
Speaker AHave a wonderful day.