When we attempt to grasp the meaning of Christmas today we approach a
conceptual event loaded with 2000 years of traditions, cultural baggage, misconceptions,
faux images, and layered worldviews. It’s difficult to pull back the layers and
see the event in the way first century Jews would have understood it. I think
there are three primary ways – all interrelated – in which one would have
understood the Christmas story: 1) coming of the Messiah, 2) fulfillment of
Yahweh’s covenant to Abraham, and 3) the end of exile. I want to focus on the
latter because I think it was the most relevant to the first century Jew.
The Babylonian exile (597-539 BCE) was one of the most important events
in the history of Israel. It was seen as the time when Yahweh had abandoned his
people because of their sins, allowing gentile enemies to conquer the Promised
Land, destroy the house of God, and rule over Yahweh’s people. Yet God through
his prophets had promised an eventual end to this exile and salvation for
Israel from its enemies. Indeed, the Israelites did eventually return to
Palestine, but while the physical exile had ended, the Jewish people believed
that the spiritual exile had not ended. While Yahweh had returned his people to
their homeland, there were things that indicated that the exile was not yet
over. What things? For one, Israel was still being ruled over by pagan gentiles
(first the Persians, then the Greeks, the Syrians, and, in the first century,
the Romans). For another, the Temple had not been rebuilt to its former glory.
Most importantly, many of the prophecies of Deutero-Isaiah had yet to be
fulfilled, particularly those that foretold the return of Yahweh to his people.
So what was preventing the complete ending of exile? The answer was sin against
God. The very thing that caused exile in the first place. The first century Jews
believed that exile continued because God had not yet fully forgiven Israel for
its corporate sin.
So note the proclamation of Gabriel to Zechariah concerning John the
Baptist in Luke 1:16-17 (cf. Mark 1:1-3):
“He will bring back many of the people of Israel to the Lord their God.
And he will go on before the Lord, in the spirit and power of Elijah, to turn
the hearts of the parents to their children and the disobedient to the wisdom
of the righteous—to make ready a people prepared for the Lord.”
This prophecy concerns the corporate forgiveness of the corporate sin
of Israel still in exile. This is about Israel repenting of their sins because
Yahweh (the Lord) is returning to his people as he promised that he would (Isaiah
40:3; Malachi 3:1-2). This is about the end of exile.
Now note the prophecy of Zechariah at the birth of John (Luke 1:68-79):
“Praise be to the Lord, the God of Israel, because he has
come to his people and redeemed them. He has raised up a horn of
salvation for us in the house of his servant David (as he said
through his holy prophets of long ago), salvation from our
enemies and from the hand of all who hate us — to show mercy to our ancestors and
to remember his holy covenant, the oath he swore to our father Abraham: to
rescue us from the hand of our enemies, and to enable us to serve him without
fear in holiness and righteousness before him all our days. And
you, my child, will be called a prophet of the Most High; for you will
go on before the Lord to prepare the way for him, to give his
people the knowledge of salvation through the forgiveness of their sins,
because of the tender mercy of our God, by which the rising sun will
come to us from heaven to shine on those living in darkness and
in the shadow of death, to guide our feet into the path of peace.”
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