Sermon Tone Analysis

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Hidden in Plain Sight
Since the fall, God had been trying to revive his original goal for Eden: to live with both his divine and human family on earth.
God had told Adam and Eve to be fruitful and multiply, thereby spreading God’s good rule over the rest of the planet.
God wanted the whole earth to be a place where heaven and earth met, where humanity could enjoy the divine, and where the divine could enjoy earth and humanity.
We know how that went.
A History of Failure
Humanity sinned and was expelled from God’s presence.
Eden was shut down.
The divine enemy, the Serpent, was banished—cast or cut down—from God’s presence to earth, the place where death reigns, where life is not everlasting.
He became lord of the dead, and therefore had claim to every human being who would ever live—because they sin, and sin’s wages is death (Rom.
6:23).
After the flood, God had repeated the goal of Eden to Noah and his family: be fruitful and multiply.
It was a do-over.
Instead, humanity rebelled.
Rather than obey God and spread the knowledge and rule of God everywhere, they would build a tower where God could come to them.
Failure again.
God wouldn’t go for it.
He mixed up the nations’ languages and turned the nations over to his divine council to rule.
Then he decided to start over with a new human family—through Abraham and Sarah.
He would get back to the other nations—through Abraham’s descendants—once his kingdom rule was revived (Gen.
12:3).
This, too, was a failure.
So was the next attempt, bringing Israel out of Egypt, then to Sinai, and then finally to the Promised Land.
Israel failed.
Eventually God raised up David, and then Solomon.
But after Solomon died, Israel followed other gods and the Israelites turned on each other.
God had to expel them from the Promised Land in exile.
The human story, apart from God’s presence, is the story of failure.
This is because humanity is lost since the fall.
All humans are imperfect and estranged from God.
No human leader could be trusted with starting and maintaining God’s kingdom.
They would resist loyalty to God alone.
They would go their own way.
Humans would sin, fail, and join the lord of the dead, God’s great enemy.
But God’s vision of sharing the blessing of being steward-kings over a new Eden couldn’t happen without humans.
And the only way humans would ever be able to hold up their end of God’s plan would be for them to be made new again.
The curse of the fall must be lifted.
And for that, God had a plan.
The Solution—and a Problem
God needed a man who was more than man—someone who could resist temptation, who would always obey, who was fit for kingship, who could reverse the curse of death by dying and then rising again by his own power.
All of that could happen in only one way: God himself would become man.
God would fulfill his own plan, as a man, for all humankind, and restore Eden.
Only when humans were forgiven and made divine like Jesus through resurrection power (1 John 3:1–3) could Eden be a reality.
But there was a problem.
If the plan were discovered​—​that the man who was God was here to die and rise again to ensure that God’s original vision would be restored​—​the forces of darkness wouldn’t fall for it.
This is precisely what Paul said in a letter to the Corinthian church:
But we speak the hidden wisdom of God in a mystery, which God predestined before the ages for our glory, which none of the rulers of this age knew.
For if they had known it, they would not have crucified the Lord of glory.
(1 Cor.
2:7–8 LEB)
Who is Paul talking about?
The word rulers can refer to human authorities—such as Pontius Pilate and the Jewish leaders—but Paul also has divine, demonic powers in view (Eph.
2:2).
God’s enemies, human and divine, had to be kept in the dark.
Everything depended on the death and resurrection of the God-man.
But how do you keep that a secret?
The Cryptic Messiah
The God-man upon whom the restoration of Eden depended was, of course, the messiah—Jesus of Nazareth.
But did it surprise you that I suggested that the messianic plan was secret?
Can’t we just read the Old Testament and see the whole plan?
No, we can’t.
Believe it or not, there is no verse in the Old Testament that uses the word messiah of a man who was actually God and who would die for the sins of humanity.
Not even Isaiah 53:11 with its portrait of a “suffering servant.”
The word messiah never appears in that chapter, and elsewhere in Isaiah, the “servant” refers to the nation of Israel, not an individual savior (Isa.
41:8; 44:1–2, 21; 45:4; 48:20; 49:3).
And the word messiah, which means “anointed,” nearly always refers only to David or one of his descendants who reigned as king after him.
Actually, the proof of what I’m saying—that the profile of a divine messiah who would die and rise again is hard to find in the Old Testament—is apparent in the New Testament.
Think of how the disciples responded to Jesus when he told them he was going to Jerusalem to die.
The announcement mystified and distressed them (Matt.
17:22–23; Mark 9:30–32).
They didn’t respond by saying, “Oh, right, we read that in the Scriptures.”
Peter even rebuked Jesus for saying it (Matt.
16:21–23).
The disciples had no sense, no inkling, of this new plan of God’s.
They thought of Jesus only as the son of David and rightful heir to his throne, someone who performed miracles just as the Old Testament prophets did.
Even after the resurrection, the disciples had to have their minds supernaturally opened to see a suffering messiah.
After Jesus had risen from the dead, he appeared to them and said:
“These are my words that I spoke to you while I was still with you, that everything written about me in the Law of Moses and the Prophets and Psalms must be fulfilled.”
Then he opened their minds to understand the Scriptures.
(Luke 24:44–45)
The “new plan” of God’s—that he would die and then rise from the dead to reverse the curse of the fall—isn’t at all evident in the Old Testament.
Instead, clues are scattered throughout the Old Testament in dozens of places.
Never is it all revealed in one place.
The messianic profile is only clear in hindsight—and even then only to someone who already knows what to look for and expect.
Intelligent supernatural evil beings, of course, knew the prophesied son of David had arrived (Matt.
8:28–29; Luke 4:31–35).
That much they could grasp from the Old Testament.
But nothing the demons ever say creates the impression that they understood Jesus was come to earth to die and rise again, reversing the curse.
As Paul said, had they and Satan understood that, they would never have moved people like Judas to betray Jesus to those who wanted him dead.
The Devil and those aligned with him are lots of things, but they aren’t morons.
They were duped into killing Jesus, just as God had planned.
They launched the series of events that would lead to their own demise.
It was divinely designed misdirection.
Parts of the Profile
In hindsight, we can see the pieces of the messianic profile with more clarity than the disciples could.
While there is no verse that describes a divine messianic son of David dying and rising to reverse the curse, those threads run throughout the Old Testament.
Having already seen how the plan played out, you can find a thread and start following patterns.
For example, ask, “Who is the son of God?” The answer isn’t “Jesus” in the Old Testament.
Adam was God’s son—he was the first man.
Israel is called God’s son (Ex.
4:23; Hos.
11:1).
The Israelite king is called God’s son (Ps.
2:7).
In the New Testament, Jesus is “the second Adam” and the “Son of God” (Rom.
1:4; 1 Cor.
15:45; 2 Cor.
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