SKELETONS IN THE FAMILY CLOSET (Part I)
During
six decades of life, I have discovered that all too often we judge one another,
not by the “content of our character” (as Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
suggested), but by the pedigree of our family tree. To wit, most of the ‘Who’s Who’ publications produced
by our society are focused on familial bloodlines and material acquisitions,
and their resultant power and prestige. In America, the very bluest of the ‘blood-bloods’
proudly trace their ancestry to passengers on The Mayflower, the ship that
arrived in 1620 at Plymouth Rock, Massachusetts. Ironically, those present on that ship were
not necessarily the crème de la crème of European society, but many of its religious
and social castaways. Such is life.
Most
families boast on their best and brightest.
But when we delve beneath the surface of any family lineage, we are apt
to discover deep dark secrets that only a few dare to mention in public
discourse. It does not matter whether our
surnames are Rockefeller or Rothschild, DuPont or Vanderbilt, Mellon or
Carnegie, Douglas or Tubman, Garvey or King, McClendon or Bass, there are
people in our family tree who foster embarrassment. These are real life situations we would love
to forget.
Such
is the case with the family of the greatest human being who ever walked the
face of this earth. Did you know that
JESUS CHRIST was the product of a demonstrably disgraceful and unsavory family
tree? When we preach about him, we typically
refer to the great patriarchs and august kings in his bloodline: Abraham,
Isaac, Jacob, David, Solomon. But consider this. After Jesus called Philip to be one of twelve
disciples, Philip ran immediately to Nathaniel and testified: “We have found
Him of whom Moses in the law, and also the prophets wrote – Jesus of Nazareth,
the son of Joseph.” Nathaniel’s response
was fascinating: “Can anything good come out of Nazareth?” (John 1:43-46, NKJV) It was a cynical question, but an insightful
one as well, for our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ, eventually entered the
earth realm by way of a veritable family mess!
I
will elaborate later in much greater detail, but the mere fact that Jesus achieved
a completely righteous and victorious life in
spite of whatever came before is indisputable evidence that it does not
matter where you and I have come from…it only
matters where we are headed!
Let’s
take a look at Jesus’ family tree, shall we?
He was the Son of God, but
he was also the son of man. Admittedly, in the interest of full
disclosure, Jesus did have some ‘good guys’ in his family tree: righteous people
like Hezekiah, Boaz, Ruth, and others. NEVERTHELESS…suffice
it say that there were numerous individuals who caused Jesus to have ‘issues’
in his family DNA. In fact, if Jesus
were running for president of the United States in our time, the international press
would have a field day! Paparazzi would
stalk him; reporters would push microphones in his face; all would interrogate
him about his family background. Jesus
Christ came through a mess!
Even Abraham,
the beloved father of the faith, who lived 42 generations before in Jesus’
family, had some serious issues.
Although he initially demonstrated unreserved faith in God, he later doubted
God’s promise of a son and heir, causing him to go into Hagar (his wife Sarah’s
handmaiden) to father a child. Arguably,
this poor decision resulted in ongoing political conflict between the offspring
of Isaac and the descendants of Ishmael, divisive ripples that continue to this
very day. Jesus Christ came through a
mess!
Abraham’s
grandson, Jacob, was so partial that his favoritism toward Joseph (along with
his son’s dreams) caused eleven brothers to abandon him to be sold into Egyptian
slavery. And even though God providentially
blessed this family through Joseph, who rose to the position of prime minister
in Egypt, if the truth be told, it was his father Jacob’s partiality and poor
judgment that caused the Israelites to eventually become slaves in Egypt for over
400 years. Jesus Christ came through a
mess!
Jacob’s
son Judah, an ancestor of Jesus, the Lion of the Tribe of Judah, disobeyed God
and married a Canaanite woman outside of the Jewish faith. Eventually, Judah ended up in hot water
because Tamar, his daughter-in-law, dressed up like a prostitute and had a
sexual encounter with him. The end result
was twin sons, who had such bad blood against each other that they ended up
fighting inside of the womb. The Bible
recounts that Perez, the twin son who was the ancestor of Jesus, wrestled with
his brother inside the womb. As a result of that conflict, Perez was born first
and received the inheritance. Jesus came
through a mess!
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