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JESUS'
BIRTH AND CHILDHOOD

Lecture Objectives:
To show that the
incidents surrounding the birth of Jesus Christ were not ordinary. That His
birth was the subject of men who lived centuries before Him. That the events
and incidents relating to His birth are not myth, but are based on reliable
historical fact.
References:
2 Peter 1.16ff;
Matthew 1; Luke 3; Isaiah 9/6; Gen.12.1-3; Micah 5.2
Questions For Focus:
1. What is a myth?
2. Are
"beginning facts" crucial to the authenticity of Christianity?
3. What two sources
have any validity at all?
4. What is the
significance of "42 generations" to the birth of Jesus?
5. What incidents
played a part in the "foreknowledge" of the birth of Christ?
6. What
circumstances relating to His advent were contrary to His birth's taking place
at all?

I. INTRODUCTION
How do you feel when you meet someone who was born in your hometown, who was
in the same size of family, went to your school, have some of the same friends
as you have, etc? But, how do you feel when that person is elevated by some
circumstance like a friend who becomes president of a country? You can
identify with Jesus through some common experiences. But, several significant
circumstances elevate Him beyond the ordinary.
II. HIS BIRTH
- Surface facts
surrounding the birth of Jesus.
 | He was born in
the reign of the Roman Emperor Augustus (43 B.C. - 14 A.D.).
 | He was born in
the Jewish city of Bethlehem of Judea.
 | He was the
first born of a family of four other brothers and some unnamed sisters.
 | His mother and
father were named Mary and Joseph.
 | The Jewish King
Herod considered the infant Jesus a future threat to his throne and
enacted a campaign to kill him. |
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Read these New
Testament passages in the left column and match them with the five facts
just listed on the birth of Jesus in the right column.
 | Luke 2.4-5 Fact
1
 | Luke 2.4 Fact 2
 | Matthew 2.1-3;
16 Fact 3
 | Luke 2.1 Fact 4
 | Luke 2.6-7;
Mark 6.3 Fact 5 |
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Deeper facts
surrounding the birth of Jesus
 | His birth had
been predicted in detail centuries earlier by Old Testament prophets.
 | His birth, as
well as the pregnancy of His mother, was entirely natural and ordinary.
 | His ordinary
birth began in an extraordinary way.
 | His
extraordinary predicted birth and conception add credence to the latter
claims of divine uniqueness.
 | His
extraordinary birth is consistent with later extraordinary activities. |
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Reaffirm for
yourself by examining the historical evidence. Examine the scripture and the
statement.
 | Matthew 11.1-5
- (Matthew 1.1; 5.6) - It was predicted an extraordinary descendent
would be born of Jesse/David, who lived over 1,000 years B.C.
 | Micah 5.2 -
(Matthew 2.1,5,6) - It was predicted in the 8th century B.C. that God's
ruler was to be born in Bethlehem.
 | Isaiah 7.14 -
(Matthew 1.22-23) - It was predicted in 740 B.C. that His mother was to
be a virgin and His name would be called Immanuel.
 | Isaiah 9.6-7 -
It was predicted that the child would be born with divine designation.
 | Matthew 1.18-23
- His conception was extraordinary, a divine act of God.
 | Luke 2.8-14ff -
Matthew 2.1-12 - His birth was celebrated in extraordinary ways. |
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III. HIS GROWING UP
YEARS
- If there were
extraordinary events surrounding His birth, His childhood is passed over
with little mention. However, from age 12 through 30 these were not dormant
years. Jesus was learning like us all during this time.
- Some things he was
learning:
 | He was
developing like other children (Luke 2.40,51). wisdom intellectually
stature physically God religiously man socially
 | Luke 4.16 -
Learning to read.
 | John 8.6 -
Learning to write.
 | Mark 6.3 -
Learning His trade.
 | Learning to
observe His world.
 | "Fox"
- Matthew 8.12
 | "Lilies/poppies"
- Luke 12.27
 | Farmers -
Luke 8
 | Neighbors
who loose things - Luke 15 |
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 | Luke 6.3 -
Learning to live in a family. |
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Every parent and
child can find direction and encouragement in the model childhood of Jesus.
IV. CONCLUSIONS
- In the ordinary
aspects of Jesus' birth and childhood each of us can find identity,
familiarity, even approachability to Jesus. He is like us, one with ius and
could easily become a friend or brother.
- In the
extraordinary aspect of Jesus' birth, we are confronted with the thought of
deity. We are called to look out of ourselves, to look beyond the ordinary,
and to look up to someone who was the suggested qualities of deity. Such
qualities inspire us to awe, by one who speaks with spiritual authority.
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