Passage: Matthew 2:19-23
Title: "Nazareth: Disrupted and Despised"
Contextual Note: Matthew is carefully presenting evidence proving that Jesus is the Messianic King who was announced by the prophets and longed for by the people of Israel. God’s Word had disrupted the long silence, along with the people’s expectations and assumptions about the Savior.
Outline:
Joseph’s fourth dream (2:19-21)a) Herod (the illegitimate king) died and Jesus (the legitimate King) lived (19)
b) God divinely initiates the preservation of Jesus (20)
c) God divinely guides the preservation of Jesus (20)
d) God divinely ordains the destination of Jesus (21)
Joseph’s fifth dream (2:22)a) God meets Joseph in his fear to direct his steps (22)
b) Fear and worry are not beyond the scope of God’s sovereign control
c) God uses wicked people to accomplish his divine purposes
Settling in obscurity (2:23)a) Nazareth was a despised village of low esteem (John 1:43-46; 7:42, 52)
b) Contrasted with Bethlehem (the city of David)
c) Obscurity & apparent insignificance are no hindrance to God’s purposes
d) Jesus came to be identified with the lowly and despised (cf. Pss 22:6-8, 13; 69:8, 20-21; Isa 11:1; 49:7; 53:2-3, 8; Dan 9:26; Phil 2:5-10)
Main idea:
God purposefully disrupts in order to fulfill his every promise, so that sinful humanity might experience his grace through Christ.
Application:
Lay down your idolatrous desires to be glorious apart from Christ and receive the lifegiving Word of affirmation that shatters the chains of insignificance and irrelevance that keep us clinging to the false realities of manmade saviors.
Discussion Questions:
1. If God has numbered our days (Ps 90:12; 139:16) and promised to care for us (Matthew 6:25-33; Romans 8:32), why are we so prone to fear, anxiety, and worry? Where are you wearing yourself out trying to preserve your safety and security?
2. How would your life look different if you relinquished fear and entrusted your present and future to God’s good (and promised) care?
3. PARENTS: Talk to your kids about how God used Joseph to care for Jesus so that God’s plans would be accomplished. Help them see that God uses parents to care for and lead children to accomplish his plans in their lives.
4. Your fears are potential doorways of intimacy with God. Rather than stuffing them, take them boldly and honestly to the Lord and ask him to meet you in the midst of them with his comfort, his guidance, and his provision.
5. Our pride is a greater threat to our joy and peace than obscurity. God does not need you to elevate yourself to accomplish his purposes in your life. Are you striving to gain an identity, or resting in the identity you have been given in Christ? Where are you not “simply obeying” what God has made clear?
6. Who do you considered “lowly” and “despised”? How might you identify with the outcast and neglected (Romans 12:16)? Read 1 Corinthians 1 and rejoice that God has chosen to glorify himself through that which is low. Rest in his ability to glorify himself in and through your life as you live in humble faith and simple obedience.