We Have
Seen His Star
Now when Jesus was born in Bethlehem of Judea
in the days of Herod the king, behold, there came
wise men form the East to Jerusalem, saying,
Where is He that is born King of the Jews? For we
have seen His star in the East, and we are come
to worship Him.
The wise men from the East were philosophers.
They belonged to a large and influential class
that included men of noble birth, and comprised
mush of the wealth and learning of their nation.
Among these were many who imposed on the
credulity of the people. Others were upright men
who studied the indications of Providence in
nature, and who were honored for their integrity
and wisdom. Of this character were the wise men
who came to Jesus.
The light of God is ever shining amid the
darkness of heathenism. As these magi studied the
starry heavens, and sought to fathom the mystery
hidden in their bright paths, they beheld the
glory of the Creator. Seeking clearer knowledge,
they turned to the Hebrew Scriptures. In their
own land were treasured prophetic writings that
predicted the coming of a divine teacher. Balaam
belonged to the magicians, though at one time a
prophet of God; by the Holy Spirit, he had
foretold the prosperity of Israel and the
appearing of the Messiah; and his prophecies had
been handed down by tradition from century to
century. But in the Old Testament, the Saviors
advent was more clearly revealed. The magi
learned with joy that His coming was near, and
that the whole world was to be filled with a
knowledge of the glory of the Lord.
The wise men had seen a mysterious light in the
heavens upon that night when the glory of God
flooded the hills of Bethlehem. As the light
faded, a luminous star appeared, and lingered in
the sky. It was not a fixed planet, and the
phenomenon excited the keenest interest. That
star was a distant company of shining angels, but
of this, the wise men were ignorant. Yet, they
were impressed that the star was of special
import to them. They consulted priests and
philosophers, and searched the scrolls of the
ancient records. The prophecy of Balaam had
declared, There shall come a Star out of
Jacob, and a Scepter shall rise out of Israel.
Numbers 24:17. Could this strange star have been
sent as a harbinger of the Promised One? The magi
had welcomed the light of this heaven-sent truth;
now it shed upon them in brighter rays. Through
dreams, they were instructed to go in search of
the newborn Prince.
As by faith Abraham went forth at the call of God,
not knowing whither he went (Hebrews
11:8); as by faith Israel followed the pillar of
cloud to the Promised Land, so did the Gentiles
go forth to find the promised Savior. The Eastern
country abounded in precious things, and the magi
did not set out empty-handed. It was the custom
to offer presents as an act of homage to princes
or other personages of rank, and the richest
gifts the land afforded were borne as an offering
to Him in whom all the families of the earth were
to be blessed. It was necessary to journey by
night in order to keep the star in view; but the
travelers beguiled the hours by repeating
traditional sayings and prophetic utterances
concerning the One they sought. At every pause
for rest, they searched the prophecies; and the
conviction deepened that they were divinely
guided. While they had the star before them as an
outward sign, they had also the inward evidence
of the Holy Spirit, which was impressing their
hearts, and inspiring them with hope. The journey,
though long, was a happy one to them.
They had reached the land of Israel, and are
descending the Mount of Olives, with Jerusalem in
sight, when, lo, the star guided them all the
weary way rests above the temple, and after a
season fades from their view. With eager steps,
they press onward, confidently expecting the
Messiahs birth to be the joyful burden of
every tongue. But their inquires are in vain.
Entering the holy city, they repair to the temple.
To their amazement, they find none who seems to
have a knowledge of the newborn king. Their
questions calls forth no expressions of joy, but
rather of surprise and fear, not unmingled with
contempt.
The priests are rehearsing traditions. They extol
their religion and their own piety, while they
denounce the Greeks and Romans as heathen, and
sinners above others. The wise men are not
idolaters, and in the sight of God, they stand
far higher than do these, His professed
worshipers; yet, they are looked upon by the Jews
as heathen. Even among the appointed guardians of
the Holy Oracles, their eager questionings touch
no cord of sympathy.
The arrival of the magi was quickly noised
throughout Jerusalem. Their strange errand
created excitement among the people, which
penetrated to the palace of King Herod. The wily
Edomite was aroused at the intimation of a
possible rival. Countless murders had stained his
pathway to the throne. Being of alien blood, he
was hated by the people over whom he ruled. His
only security was the favor of Rome. But this
prince had a higher claim. He was born to the
kingdom.
Herod suspected the priests of plotting with the
strangers to excite a popular tumult and unseat
him from the throne. He concealed his mistrust,
however, determined to thwart their schemes by
superior cunning. Summoning the chief priests and
the scribes, he questioned them as to the
teaching of their sacred books in regard to the
place of Messiahs birth.
This inquiry from the usurper of the throne, and
made at the request of strangers, stung the pride
of the Jewish teachers. The indifference which
they turned to the rolls of prophecy enraged the
jealous tyrant. He thought them trying to conceal
their knowledge of the matter. With an authority
they dared not disregard, he commanded them to
make close search, and to declare the birthplace
of their expected King. And they said unto
him, In Bethlehem of Judea: for thus it is
written by the prophet,
And
thou Bethlehem, land of Judah,
Art in nowise least among the princes of Judah:
For out of thee shall come forth a governor,
Which shall be shepherd of My people Israel.
R.V.
Herod now invited the magi to a private interview.
A tempest of wrath and fear was raging in his
heart, but he preserved a calm exterior, and
received the strangers courteously. He inquired
at what time the star had appeared, and professed
to hail with joy the intimation of the birth of
Christ. He bade his visitors, Search
diligently for the young child; and when ye have
found Him, bring me word again, that I may come
and worship Him also. So saying, he
dismissed them to go on their way to Bethlehem.
The priests and the elders of Jerusalem were not
as ignorant concerning the birth of Christ as
they pretended. The report of the angels
visit to the shepherds had been brought to
Jerusalem, but the rabbis had treated it as
unworthy of their notice. They themselves might
have found Jesus, and might have been ready to
lead the magi to His birthplace; but instead of
this, the wise men came to call their attention
to the birth of the Messiah. Where is the
King of the Jews? they said; for we
have seen His star in the East, and are come to
worship Him.
Now pride and envy closed the door against the
light. If the reports brought by the shepherds
and the wise men were credited, they would place
the high priests and rabbis in a most unenviable
position, disproving their claim to be the
exponents of the truth of God. These learned
teachers would not stoop to be instructed by
those whom they termed heathen. It could not be,
they said, that God had passed them by, to
communicate with ignorant shepherds or
uncircumcised Gentiles. They determined to show
their contempt for the reports that were exciting
King Herod and all Jerusalem. They would not even
go to Bethlehem to see whether these things were
so. And they led the people to regard the
interest in Jesus as a fanatical excitement. Here
began the rejection of Christ by the priests and
the rabbis. From this point, their pride and
stubbornness grew into a settled hatred of the
Savior. While God was opening the door to the
Gentiles, the Jewish leaders were closing the
door to themselves.
The wise departed alone from Jerusalem. The
shadows of night were falling as they left the
gates, but to their great joy, they again saw the
star, and were directed to Bethlehem. They had
received no such intimation of the lowly estate
of Jesus as was given to the shepherds. After the
long journey, they had been disappointed by the
indifference of the Jewish leaders, and had left
Jerusalem less confident than when they entered
the city. At Bethlehem, they found no royal guard
stationed to protect the newborn King. None of
the worlds honored men was in attendance.
Jesus was cradled in a manger. His parents,
uneducated peasants, were His only guardians.
Could this be He of whom it was written, that Hw
should raise up the tribes of Jacob,
and restore the preserved of Israel; that
He should be a light to the Gentiles,
and for salvation unto the end of the earth?
Isaiah 49:6.
When they were come into the house, they
saw the young child with Mary His mother, and
fell down, and worshiped Him. Beneath the
lowly guise of Jesus, they recognized the
presence of Divinity. They gave their hearts to
Him as their Savior, and then poured out their
gifts, - gold, frankincense, and myrrh.
What a faith was theirs!
It might have been said of the wise men from the
East, as afterward of the Roman centurion, I
have not found so great faith, no not in Israel.
Matthew 8:10.
The wise men had not penetrated Herods
design toward Jesus. When the object of their
journey was accomplished, they prepared to return
to Jerusalem, intending to acquaint him with
their success. But in a dream, they received a
divine message to hold no further communication
with him. Avoiding Jerusalem, they set out for
their own country by another route.
In like manner, Joseph received warning to flee
into Egypt with Mary and the child. And the angel
said, Be thou there until I bring thee word:
for Herod will seek the young child to destroy
Him. Joseph obeyed without delay, setting
out on the journey by night for greater security.
Through the wise men, God had called the
attention of the Jewish nation to the birth of
His Son. Their inquiries in Jerusalem, the
popular interest excited, and even the jealousy
of Herod, which completed the attention of the
priests and rabbis, directed minds to the
prophecies concerning the Messiah, and to the
great event that had just taken place.
Satan was bent on shutting out the divine light
from the world, and he used his utmost cunning to
destroy the Savior. But He who never slumbers nor
sleeps was watching over Hid beloved Son. He who
had rained manna from heaven for Israel and had
fed Elijah in the time of famine provided in a
heathen land refuge for Mary and the child Jesus.
And through the gifts of the magi from the
heathen country, the Lord supplied the means for
the journey into Egypt and the sojourn in a land
of strangers.
The magi had been among the first to welcome the
Redeemer. Their gift was the first that was laid
at His feet. And through that gift, what
privilege off ministry was theirs! The offering
from the heart that loves, God delights to honor,
giving it highest efficiency in service for Him.
If we have given our hearts to Jesus, we also
shall being gifts to Him. Our gold and silver,
our most precious earthly possessions, our
highest mental and spiritual endowments, will be
freely devoted to Him who loved us, and gave
Himself for us.
Herod
in Jerusalem impatiently awaited the return of
the wise men. As time passed, and they did not
appear, his suspicions were roused. The
unwillingness of the rabbis to point out the
Messiahs birthplace seemed to indicate that
they had penetrated his design, and that the magi
had purposely avoided him. He was maddened at the
thought. Craft had failed, but there was left the
resort of force. He would make an example of this
child-king. Those haughty Jews should see what
they might expect in their attempts to place a
monarch on the throne.
Soldiers were at once sent to Bethlehem, with
orders to put to death all the children of two
years and under. The quiet homes of the city of
David witnessed those scenes of horror that, six
hundred years before had been opened to the
prophet. In Ramah there was a voice heard,
lamentation, and weeping, and great mourning,
Rachel weeping for her children, and would not be
comforted, because they are not.
The calamity the Jews had brought upon themselves.
If they had been walking in faithfulness and
humility before God, He would in a signal manner
have made the wrath of the king harmless to them.
But they had separated themselves from God by
their sins, and had rejected the Holy Spirit,
which was their only shield. They had not studied
the Scriptures with a desire to conform to the
will of God. They had searched for prophecies
that could be interpreted to exalt themselves,
and to show how God despised all other nations.
It was their proud boast that the Messiah was to
come as a king, conquering His enemies, and
treading down the heathen in His wrath. Thus,
they had excited the hatred of their rulers.
Through their misrepresentation of Christs
mission, Satan had purposed to compass the
destruction of the Savior; but instead of this,
it returned upon their own heads.
This act of cruelty was one of the last that
darkened the reign of Herod. Soon after the
slaughter of the innocents, he was himself
compelled to yield to the doom which none can
turn aside. He died a fearful death.
Joseph, who was still in Egypt, was now bidden by
the angel of God to return to the land of Israel.
Regarding Jesus as the heir of Davids
throne, Joseph desired to make his home in
Bethlehem; but learning that Archelaus reigned in
Judea in his fathers stead, he feared that
the fathers designs against Christ might be
carried out by the son. Of all the sons of Herod,
Archelaus most resembled him in character.
Already his succession to the government had been
marked by a tumult in Jerusalem, and the
slaughter of thousands of Jews by the Roman
guards.
Again, Joseph was directed to a place of safety.
He returned to Nazareth, his former home, and
there for nearly thirty years Jesus dwelt, that
it might be fulfilled which was spoken by the
prophets, He shall be called a Nazarene.
Galilee was under the control of a son of Herod,
but it had a much larger admixture of foreign
inhabitants than Judea.
Thus, there was less interest in matters relating
especially to the Jews, and the claims of Jesus
would be less likely to excite the jealously of
those in power.
Such was
the Saviors reception when He came to earth.
There seemed to be no place or safety for the
infant Redeemer. God could not trust His beloved
Son with men, even while carrying forward His
work for their salvation. He commissioned angels
to attend Jesus and protect Him till He should
accomplish His mission on earth, and die by the
hands of those whom He came to save.
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