Grace, grace, the
sound is sweet; through grace we see the mercy seat
Grace, grace, God’s
gift so free, inviting all at Calv’ry’s tree
Grace, grace, no
outcast there; God’s table now for all to share
In the list of names given in Matthew we find a few
surprises. They are declarations of
God’s grace. Two of those names are
people who were not Jews. How did they
get in there? Grace is how. God had chosen Abraham and given him great
promises. The greatest was that his seed
would bless the whole world. Salvation
was from the Jews, but salvation was not only for the Jews. All the families of earth would be blessed by
that Seed. The extension of God’s grace to all mankind through the Jews is
found repeatedly in the Old Testament and seen clearly in the genealogy of
Christ.
For their overwhelming wickedness and lack of repentance at
the preaching of the patriarchs, God had consigned the Canaanite civilization
to destruction. Their perversity was not
to corrupt God’s people and they had to go.
The time for their repentance was past and their judgment day had
come. The same thing will be true for
the entire unrepentant and unbelieving world at the second advent of
Christ. But there was one of these
doomed Canaanites who did believe. Her
name was Rahab. Here is her simple
testimony, “For the Lord your God, He is God in heaven above and on the earth
beneath.” With that statement of faith
she was saved from Canaan’s destruction.
She married an Israelite man who was in the ancestry of Christ and
became the great-great-etc grandmother of Jesus.
Matthew then records another outsider in Jesus’
ancestry. Her name was Ruth. She was of the people of Moab. They were cousins to the Jews, but not close
cousins. They were idolaters and had
treated the Israelites very badly during the Exodus. There were frequent wars between the
nations. Moabites were banned from
temple worship for ten generations. But
there was Ruth. Ruth had faith. She said, “Your God will be my God.” She was
received into Bethlehem, the future birthplace of Christ, and married a
faithful Israelite, Boaz, who is a picture of Christ the kinsman Redeemer. She became David’s great grandmother. God in grace both gave her a witness and accepted
her faith. That is the great message of
Advent. God sent His Son into the world
to save the lost.
Grace, grace,
beautiful gift, sent by the Father above
Grace, grace,
wonderful gift, sent by the Father of Love
Visit my website at www.davidccraig.net for inspiring Christian
books.
You may also find some of my selected daily devotions at http://blog.febc.org/
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