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My text tonight was read by Scott Brown, Matthew 1, verses 20 to
23.
You know, I love rescue movies.
You know why I like them?
Because the good guys win.
I like that part.
I identify with the people who are in danger, and I want them to be rescued.
And this evening, we're going to see, essentially, the divine rescue plan.
Here's the question tonight.
I only have one, unlike Pastor Mike with his seven questions.
I have one question, but I have four answers, and no, it's not multiple choice.
They're all correct, because they're all Jesus.
Here's the question.
Who can save sinners?
Four answers.
Again, all of them center around Jesus.
Answer number one, only one, the only one who did not need
to be saved himself.
To be a rescuer, you need to be somebody who doesn't need to be saved.
Makes sense.
Jesus was, as the text says in verse 20, Matthew 1, verse 20,
born of a virgin.
And we'll discuss why that is so vital, and why that
makes him not needful of being saved.
Verse 20,
Now, we read in
verse
19, Scott read, I didn't, that Joseph and
Mary were betrothed.
Well, that means more than engaged.
You know, we typically think, well, they were kind of engaged, but it's more than that.
Because in order for the wedding not to be consummated, there had to be a divorce.
So, we don't really have a parallel between betrothal and what we do in our
culture, but betrothal was far more serious than just getting engaged.
I mean, people get engaged, and then they don't get married, and they don't have to go down and file for divorce.
Joseph and Mary were seen by everyone in the culture as virtually married.
The only difference is, they didn't live together, in our understanding of that term, with all that goes with
living together.
And then, Mary is found with child.
It would be a scandal back then.
And you can be sure that Joseph is brokenhearted.
In fact, that's why he kind of considers what to do, and he thinks,
well, I'll quietly divorce her.
Meaning, I'm going to divorce her, but I'm not going to make a big deal out of it.
I'm not going to make a big issue out of it.
Because Mary, in his mind, had to have been, what?
Unfaithful.
Otherwise, how did she get pregnant?
And under the Old Testament law, she was worthy of stoning, because they would have seen her as being an
adulteress.
And even though the law had changed some, so that they didn't stone people
for that anymore, she still would have been seen as an outcast, a single
mom, with nobody to support her.
But the angel in Joseph's dream tells him that the child is from the Holy Spirit.
Now, again, just think about Joseph for a moment.
I don't think Joseph gets enough credit.
What kind of man did he have to be?
He had to be strong -willed.
He had to be strong spiritually, because what do you think everybody's saying?
I mean, we know what people were saying, because they say it later on in Jesus's life, that he was
not born with a... that Joseph wasn't his father.
But Joseph had to be strong enough to believe what he'd seen in this dream.
He had to believe what God, through this angel, had told him.
So let's connect the dots for a second.
How is it that being born of a virgin means that Jesus does not need salvation?
Because being born of a virgin means he's born without a sin nature.
That sin nature is passed down through the Father, thus fulfilling the
curse, or continuing the curse, that was pronounced
on Satan in the Garden of Eden.
If you recall Genesis 3 .15, I will put enmity between you, Satan,
and the woman Eve, and between your offspring, by which he meant
unbelievers, and her offspring, children,
he shall bruise your head, meaning this descendant of a woman
would put an end to Satan, and you shall bruise his heel.
Jesus was the only human being in history ever to be born
without a sin nature.
And you say, what about Adam and Eve?
Not born.
Okay, a little trivia action there.
He's the only one in history to be born of a virgin.
And what does that mean that he's born?
It means that he's truly human.
The Bible tells us that he grew, that he got hungry, that he grew tired, that he learned.
In fact, our Confession of Faith says this, when the fullness of time was come, Jesus took upon himself
man's nature.
In other words, the divine took on a second nature, that of a human being, with all the essential
properties and common infirmities thereof, yet without sin.
I was thinking about that, common infirmities.
Like what?
Common cold is the first thing that came to mind, but I won't go down that road.
But Jesus is without sin, unlike all of us.
He always did, thought, and said everything that was perfectly pleasing to his Father.
I can't even say that I did, said, and thought everything that was perfect in terms of my human
father, let alone God the Father.
But when Jesus was crucified, when he was nailed to the cross, he was a sinless,
spotless, perfect sacrifice.
One who did not need to be saved, but died in the place of others.
Everyone who would ever believe.
He said that himself.
John 6, verse 40.
For this is the will of my Father, that everyone who looks on the Son, by that he didn't just mean see him, he
meant believe on him.
And he says it, and believes in him, should have eternal life, and I will raise him up on the
last day.
Well, what does that mean?
It means that if you trust in Christ, that he will raise you up on that last day, that day of
judgment, you will go to heaven.
Our second answer to the question, who
can save sinners?
The second answer, only one who is sent by the Father.
Only one who is sent by the Father.
Verse 21.
She will bear a son, and you shall call his name Jesus.
For he will save his people from their sins.
And you say, well, how does that say that he's sent from the Father?
Simple.
That word there, Jesus, means Yahweh saves.
There's only one way God can save.
There's only one way the covenant -keeping, faithful, loving God, who is Yahweh, can
save.
And that's actually by doing something.
And make no mistake, Jesus entering into our world was a rescue mission.
We are sinners.
We fail to do as God commands.
Personal, perfect, perpetual obedience.
That's the standard.
Each one of us is required to obey the law of God to the letter.
No exceptions.
No mistakes.
No syndromes.
Perfect, perpetual, and personal obedience.
We can't, and we don't.
From our mother's womb, we are inclined towards sin.
We sin by nature, and by choice.
Now about Jesus.
Talking about how we can know that God sent him.
Listen to part of his high priestly prayer, also the covenant of redemption, in John
17, verses 3 -6.
And this is eternal life, Jesus says.
That they know you, the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom you
have sent.
I glorified you on earth, having accomplished the work, listen, that you gave me to do.
Well, when was that?
Before creation.
And now, Father, glorify me in your own presence with the glory that I had with you, listen, before
the world existed.
I have manifested your name to the people whom you gave me out of the world.
Yours they were, and you gave them to me.
And they have kept your word.
Most famous verse in the Bible, of course, John 3 -16.
God so loved the world that he gave his only son.
That whoever believes in him should not perish, but have eternal life.
Only the one who did not need to be saved himself, Jesus.
And only one who is sent by the Father, Jesus.
Answer number three.
Only one who is truly God.
Truly God.
Again, from verse 20.
Joseph is told that this one is from the Holy Spirit.
This baby, this son, Jesus, is from the Holy Spirit.
Well, how could a virgin conceive?
Only by the power of God could such a miracle happen.
Luke 1, verses 34 and 35.
And Mary said to the angel, How will this be, since I am a virgin?
In other words, how am I going to conceive?
That's impossible.
And the angel answered her, The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power of the Most High will
overshadow you.
Therefore, the child to be born will be called Holy, the Son of
God.
Mary had been told before Jesus was conceived, and now Joseph
has been told that he is from the Holy Spirit.
Also look at verse 21, and you'll see that Jesus is going
to save who?
His people.
Well, for them to be his people, these are the people of God as we just discussed in John chapter
17.
God the Father chose them, he gives them to the Son.
He's saving his people, the people of God.
Our confession says this, it says, It pleased God in his eternal purpose to choose
and ordain the Lord Jesus, his only begotten Son, unto whom he did from
all eternity give a people to be his seed and to be by him in time redeemed,
called, justified, sanctified, and glorified.
Jesus did not come to save every person on the planet, but he came to
save his people.
If you believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, he came to save you.
He came to rescue you.
He came to save the elect, those whom God chose before creation.
Those whom God would, as we just read, call, justify, sanctify, and one
day glorify.
That is to say, take them to heaven.
Only God can possess God's people, right?
That's logical.
Only God can claim control over God's people.
They are his sheep, his elect.
Verses 22 and 23 of Matthew chapter 1.
All this took place to fulfill.
What the Lord had spoken by the prophet, the prophet Isaiah in Isaiah 7 .14.
Behold, the virgin shall conceive and bear a son, and they shall call his name
Emmanuel, which means God with us.
And that's exactly right.
God, even though it was read in John chapter 1, the second
person of the Trinity, the Word, the eternal Word has come among us, has taken on human
flesh.
Here's the miracle that we celebrate at Christmas, that the eternally begotten second person of the Trinity,
truly God, took to himself a human nature so that he's truly man while
remaining truly God.
Answer number four.
Who can save?
Only one who can bear the guilt of others.
Again, look at verse 21.
From their sins.
Our sins, which I said that we commit, create a debt that we cannot pay.
Puritan John Flavel said this.
He says, as priest, talking about Jesus, had he not been a man, he
could have shed no blood.
Right?
If he'd never become human, he couldn't have shed his blood.
And if not God, it had not been adequate value for us.
If he had just died, if he just lived a perfect life and died as a man, he wouldn't
have infinite value.
His death would not have infinite value.
So he couldn't have redeemed all of us.
John 19 verse 30 says this.
When Jesus had received the sour wine, he said, it is finished.
And he bowed his head and gave up his spirit.
That's on the cross.
Well, what did he mean?
When he said, What did he mean?
The work that the Father had sent him to do was done.
Finished.
Completed.
God sent him to save the people of God from their sin.
Jesus had done that.
He paid the price in full.
Pastor Mike read this verse this morning.
John 10.
Or this passage.
Verses 17 and 18.
For this reason the Father loves me.
Because I laid down my life that I may take it up again.
What was he saying there?
That he was voluntarily, sacrificially, giving up his life.
Why?
Because he intended, by his own power, just as he raised Lazarus from the grave, he was going to raise
himself from the grave.
The man Christ Jesus, his humanity could die.
His humanity could suffer.
But his divinity, his godness as it were,.
Could not die.
So he waited.
The divine waited until the human had spent three days in the grave
and then he raised him from the dead.
Listen to Romans 3 verses 24 and 25 talking about
believers.
Are justified by his grace as a gift through the redemption that is in Christ
Jesus, whom God put forward as a propitiation by his blood
to be received by faith.
Meaning a satisfaction so that the penalty for our sin.
Paid by the blood,.
By the death of Jesus Christ.
All of our sins, as Paul wrote in 2 Corinthians 5 verse 21, all of our
sins placed on Jesus.
He paid the price on the cross.
And what do we get in return?
His righteousness imputed to us.
The righteousness that we don't have.
The obedience that we don't have because we disobey, because we sin, because we don't do what
we're committed.
We get that righteousness.
Through faith.
That's exactly what he said.
To be received by faith.
It's the instrument of faith by which we appropriate that great forgiveness and that great
obedience.
It's by his life,.
Death,.
And resurrection.
By trusting in that,.
That we are saved.
Commentator Hendrickson said this.
He said,.
To be saved.
Means to be emancipated from the greatest evil.
The guilt,.
Pollution,.
Power,.
And punishment of sin.
That's great.
To have all of our sins forgiven.
But it goes on.
Also,.
To be placed in possession of the greatest good.
We get the greatest good.
That's the gift of Christmas.
We're going to be exchanging gifts, but the greatest gift is that our sins
are forgiven and that we get that obedience that we need.
That great good that we need to enter heaven.
This is the greatest rescue mission in history.
We,.
Hopeless, helpless,.
Like the worst victims in any kind of movie you could imagine.
And we have the greatest hero, the greatest champion in the Lord Jesus Christ.
Let's pray.
Father, thank you for the gospel of Jesus Christ.
We thank you for the reality that the second
person of the Trinity added to himself human flesh, dwelled among
us, lived a perfect life, went to the cross voluntarily and sacrificially
paid for the sins of everyone who would ever believe, and then
triumphantly rose on the third day.
Father, what a glorious message of hope.
And that is why we celebrate Christmas.
Father, we thank you for the gift of the son.
We thank you for the life he led.
Father,.
I pray that everyone here would believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, that they might
have the greatest gift of all time.
In Jesus name we pray.
Amen.