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If you have your Bibles, turn
with me to Luke chapter 20. Luke chapter 20, and we'll take as
our sermon text this morning, verses 39 through 44. Luke chapter 20, starting in
verse 39. Hear the word of the Lord. Then
some of the scribes answered, Teacher, you have spoken well.
But they no longer dared to ask him any questions. But he said
to them, how can they say that the Christ is David's son? For
David himself says in the book of Psalms, the Lord said to my
Lord, sit at my right hand until I make your enemies your footstool.
Thus, David thus calls him Lord. So how is he his son? Let's go
to the Lord in prayer. Father God, we thank you for
your Word and we thank you for revealing your Son to us. God,
just by virtue of the things that you've made and the internal
witness of our own conscience, we can know that there is a God
and that we can know something of our own sin and feel the guilt
and the fear of having to give an account to you because of
sin. But there's no hope apart from
your word which reveals Christ to us. And we pray this morning
that you would, by your spirit, that you would illumine this
text, help us to understand its truth, and help us to see Christ
more clearly, and to see important aspects of who he is that we
might more fully trust in the things that he has done for us
and for our salvation. And so we pray that you would
exalt Christ in our midst this morning, and that you would bless
our time in the word, and make it fruitful. God, fruitful for
eternity. Help us to grow. We pray that
you would be glorified in us, and we pray all of this in Christ's
name, amen. In the Old Testament scriptures,
one designation that we have of God that is central and very
important is God's self-designation as Lord. God declares Himself
to be the Lord. In fact, this is so common that
we alternate, even in our prayers and in our conversations about
God, of referring to God as the Lord or God, alternatively. And
we have examples in Scripture where God reveals himself to
Moses in Exodus chapter 3 verse 15. He says, In the Hebrew, in
the original tongue in which these words were
uttered to Moses and the people of God, God is revealing his
own name, Yahweh. We used to refer to him more
commonly as Jehovah. This is almost a personal name
for God that is distinctly given and revealed to Israel. But in
our translations of the Bible, this name Jehovah is closely
associated with Lord. Whenever you see the word Lord
in all capitals in the Old Testament, It is an English translation
of that Hebrew word for Jehovah or Yahweh. But this is a tradition
that goes back before even the time of Christ. As the Hebrew
scriptures were translated into other languages, into Greek,
that word for Jehovah or Yahweh is translated as Lord, and so
there's a close association. Lord, it draws to mind for Jesus
and his disciples and for his first hearers, those who would
have first read the book of Luke, the word Lord has these rich
Old Testament associations. This is the God who revealed
himself to Moses at Sinai, at the burning bush and at Sinai.
This is the covenant Lord who rescued his people from slavery
into Egypt and gave them good laws and brought them into a
land that was abundantly fertile and blessed them in all kinds
of ways. This is the God of the patriarchs
who is the Lord. In Deuteronomy 6, verse 4, the
most basic confession of faith for the Old Testament people
of God and for the Jewish people is given and it is, Hear O Israel,
the Lord our God, the Lord is one. And so we see again the
importance of this idea. In the New Testament, one of
the basic confessions of New Testament Christianity for the
people of God who are the New Testament church comprised of
both Jews and Gentiles is to associate Jesus with this Lord
who is the Lord of creation and the Lord, the covenant Lord of
His people. And in Romans 10 verse 9, Paul
says, if you confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord and
believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you
will be saved. So right at the heart of what
it means to have faith in Jesus and to make the good confession
that results in salvation, that it goes along with our salvation,
is to call Jesus Lord, to confess that he is the Lord. 1 Corinthians
12.3 Paul says, again, no one speaking in the Spirit of God
ever says Jesus is accursed and no one can say Jesus is a Lord
except in the Holy Spirit. So this is again this teaching
that before we can ever confess with the mouth and with the heart
that Jesus is Lord and make a credible profession of faith, God has
to do a prior work of His Spirit within our hearts so that we
are born again. And so that's what Paul's referring
to here is that in the Holy Spirit we're able, we're enabled to
confess that Jesus is Lord. But once we have the Holy Spirit,
we're unable to say anything that contradicts that. because
now we're firmly convinced that Jesus is Lord. In Philippians
2, verses 9 through 11, listen to the way that Jesus Christ,
in particular, although the New Testament does reveal God to
be one God in three persons, and so we confess that the Lord
is Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, we see that in Philippians 2,
it is in particular the Son, it is Jesus, who is called Lord. Therefore God has highly exalted
him and bestowed on him the name that is above every name so that
at the name of Jesus every knee should bow in heaven and on earth
and under the earth and every tongue confess. So what is the
name that has been given to Christ and that is that which is bestowed
on him that is highly exalted. Paul's referring to these things.
Well, we confess it with our tongues that Jesus Christ is
Lord to the glory of God the Father. So the Father is mentioned
here, and yet it's Jesus Christ in particular who is called Lord.
And so this is really at the heart of Christianity is a recognition
that the divine Lord, the Lord our God, that has revealed himself
throughout the Old Testament that this is who Jesus is. And making this connection is
very important for us. It's a question that's been asked ever since
the very beginning of Jesus' earthly ministry. Jesus himself
posed this question famously in the middle of Mark's Gospel.
He asked his disciples, who do people say that I am? And then
he asked them, but who do you say that I am? And this is Peter's
response is to say that Jesus is the Christ. And so that is
another important confession that Jesus is the Christ, which
is to say that Jesus is David's son. He is the one that's been
promised long ago that's going to come as a part of the Davidic
dynasty. He's going to be a natural descendant
of King David whom God is going to make to be a king forever,
to rule over all of the enemies of the people of God. and is
going to be established on an everlasting throne. So, Peter
and the disciples confess that Jesus is Christ. Jesus himself,
he raises this important question though here in Luke chapter 20.
That the one who is the Christ is also the Lord. And that he
is both, Jesus himself. But you need to ask yourself
this morning, who do you say that Jesus is? Is he merely an
influential and historically significant religious figure?
Do you merely learn important lessons about how to get along
with your fellow man and how to think about God rightly or
how to worship Him? Or is He both the Savior of mankind,
the Christ, who was long ago prophesied, the Messiah? Is He the Lord God Himself? Important
questions that Jesus asks and answers, I think, by implication
in our passage. And the first thing that I want
for us to consider is There are two things that really Jesus
explicitly draws our attention to from his quotation of Psalm
110 and that is that the Christ is David's son and the Christ
is David's Lord. So let's begin with the Christ
as David's son. Jesus says here, how can they
say the Christ is David's son? Now Jesus isn't denying that
the Christ is going to be David's son. It's not something that
you can deny. It's something that's very explicit
in the Old Testament revelation and is a part of the hope of
God's people as they think about all of their problems. Their
earthly oppressors, their earthly problems, and their spiritual
oppression that they're under and their spiritual problem of
sin. They're looking for salvation,
for deliverance from everything that is wrong. And all of that
hope is invested by God. It's invested in one central
personal figure. It's this king who is to come
and he is David's son. And he is the Christ. This is
the Savior. The Savior is David's son. That much is assumed here in
our text. And it's rightly assumed by both
Jesus and his hearers. But maybe that's not something
that you have assumed. So we need to lay the foundation for
this in the Old Testament. And all of this begins really,
it begins much further back in Genesis 3.15. It begins with
the blessings that are given to the twelve sons where we have
Judah having a prophecy proclaimed in the context of his blessing.
that from his descendants will come a ruler who will deceptor
and who will rule over the people of God and over his brothers,
the other tribes of Israel. But I just want to begin in 2
Samuel 7. And if you read 2 Samuel 7 verses
12 and 13, you see the promise that's first made explicitly
to David. And there the Lord says to David
that when your days are fulfilled and you lie down with your fathers,
I will raise up your offspring after you who shall come from
your body. And so when we say the son of
David, you have to understand that we're not talking about
one who is exclusively his biological son, but one who is going to
be a descendant of David. The language in scripture can
refer to, the son of David can refer to His immediate son, we
could refer to Solomon, but I think that when we take a look at Solomon's
life and we have his life in view in his own kingdom, it's
clear that Solomon is not the Christ. And so after that, God's
people are expecting a descendant or a son of David to come. And
from the very beginning, when God made this promise in 2 Samuel
chapter 7, He said that He will raise up this offspring who will
come after you. It will come from your own body.
And God promises this, I will establish his kingdom. It will
be a kingdom that God himself establishes. He, the son of David,
shall build a house for my name and I will establish the throne
of his kingdom forever. So from that point forward throughout
the Old Testament era and on into the historical context surrounding
Jesus earthly ministry, God's people are looking for a Davidic
king. Now the last of the kings to
rule over Judah was killed. His sons were killed before his
very eyes and then his eyes were gouged out and he was led away
into exile. And then there were no more kings. And yet God's
people continued to hope and the prophets who prophesied during
the time of exile, spoke of David. They would use David's name,
but they would speak of David in the future tense and make it
clear they were referring to this descendant of David. And
I'll just give you one example for the sake of time. Jeremiah
23 verses 5 and 6. Behold, the days are coming,
declares the Lord, when I will raise up for David a righteous
branch and he shall reign as king. and deal wisely, and shall
execute justice and righteousness in the land. In his days Judah
will be saved, and Israel will dwell securely. And this is the
name by which he will be called. The Lord is our righteousness."
And so even here you see this connection between David's son
and the Lord. He will be called the Lord, is
our righteousness. There's some kind of connection
here. Even as the Lord is the one to make this promise, there's
a connection between the one to come and the Lord himself.
But in any case, God's people are right to expect the Savior
to come in the line of David. And if you look back, and we'll
come to this in a moment, but we look back in the genealogies,
that are given. This is the reason why genealogies
are so significant in the Old Testament. It's because they're
keeping careful track of who is a son of David. It's one of
the main functions of genealogy. They want to know what are the
possibilities here? Who are the people who might
be Messiah? Who might be the Savior? Well,
so the Christ is David's son, and that much is established
in the Old Testament. It's assumed by both Jesus and
the scribes that he's speaking to, but where he challenges their
understanding is in verse 42. David goes on to say, in verse
41, how can they say that the Christ is David's son? Why is
this a problem? 4, verse 42 says, Four, David himself says in the
book of Psalms, the Lord said to my Lord, sit at my right hand
until I make your enemies your footstool. And so there are three
things I want you to see here and notice from Psalm 110. The
first is that the Christ is called Lord. David, and you have to
think about what's being said here, David is the one who has
written Psalm 110. We read this at the beginning
of our service this morning. Psalm 10, verse one, David, David
himself, the author of the psalm, says, the Lord, who is, you know,
obviously he's referring to the Lord, who is God, as we've established. God himself has revealed himself
as the Lord. But he says, the Lord said to my Lord. And then follows, it's a messianic
song. It's a psalm that points to the
Christ. To the one who's going to reign forever and be a savior
to his people. And David is simply pointing
out here that the one who is to come, the one who is to be
his own descendant, to be made king over an eternal kingdom,
David is willing to extend that title of Lord to this figure.
And this is striking. And Jesus himself says, how can
this be? How can any righteous king, and
David symbolizes the high point, in the kingdom of Israel to that
time. He was the prototypical king, the great king who expanded
Israel's holdings and had victories and was the one who was considered
to be the exemplary king among God's people. And yet he says,
how can any righteous king call a mere man Lord in this way? This is strange, and it's clear,
I think, that David is extending to the Christ, is extending a
kind of reverence that is really only properly to be given to
God alone. There is a mystery here in the
Old Testament that is fully revealed in the New Testament, and that
is that the one who is going to be born a man in the line
of David is God in the flesh. And so he is himself the Lord. But you imagine just what a bombshell
this would have been when Jesus dropped this on the scribes to
say, the one that you're looking after to be an earthly king is
going to be worshiped as God. So he is David's son. The Christ
is David's son, but he's also David's Lord. Notice the second
thing. Not only is the Christ called Lord here by David in
Psalm 110, but the Christ is said to rule and to save with the power and
authority of God himself. And I take that from the words
here, sit at my right hand until I make your enemies your footstool.
And as you continue reading in context, this this work of the
Christ to save and to rule over the nations and to save the people
from among the nations that he's going to do this from this position
of sitting at the right hand of God. What does that What does
that language symbolize or what does it imply, God's right hand? Well, let me read to you several
references from elsewhere in the Old Testament that help us
to understand the significance of that language, right hand.
In Isaiah 48, 13, the Lord says, My right hand laid the foundation
of the earth, and My right hand spread out the heavens. When
I call to them, they stand forth together. And so, the creative
power of God, when He first made everything that is, that was
said to be something accomplished by His right hand. Also in Psalm
74, verses 10 and 11. How long, O God, is the foe to
scoff? Is the enemy to revile your name
forever? Why do you hold back your hand,
your right hand? Take it from the fold of your
garment and destroy them. So it's by God's right hand that
His divine power is leveraged against the enemy and destroys
those who stand opposed to God and His purposes. Psalm 44, 3.
For not by their own sword did they win the land, speaking of
the people of God's conquest of the promised land, nor did
their own arms save them, but your right hand and your arm
and the light of your face, for you delighted in them. So it's
very clear, I think, that when the Christ sits at the right
hand of the Father, he is exercising this divine power and authority
the power and authority of God to rule and to save. Third, we
notice in these verses that the Christ will rule until all his
enemies are defeated. It's interesting here, and I'd
have you notice how his enemies are still active even when the
Christ is given divine authority and is exercising this divine
power over all. He's sitting at the right hand
of the Father or the Lord, and yet he is doing this as, what's
implied here is the enemies are still active. And it's going
to be a process by which Christ comes to rule over them in such
a way to have the victory over them so completely that he's
made them his footstool. Now this kind of language is
striking. If you can think about this in
the terms of warfare and of conflict and we see I think all the way
back in Genesis 315 where God promised that a seed of the woman
would crush the head of the seed of the serpent and the imagery
of of God's saviors, of his kings, or the Christ, not just having
victory, but having such a victory where he will stand upon the
head of his enemy, where he will crush the head of the serpent.
And here, the Lord will make the enemies of this son of David
into a footstool, so his foot will be upon them. as it were. And so you see the rich biblical
imagery that reminds us that Christ will rule until all his
enemies are defeated and will be finally victorious. So we have here this teaching
that Christ is David's son, that Christ is also David's Lord. And this ought to be, this is
one of those passages and this is one of those lines of thoughts
that for us as God's people, contemplate who Jesus is, in
one sense, it's totally impractical. You know, if you're the kind
of person who's always like, give me something to do, give me something
to do, pastor. If I'm reading my scripture,
I'm just skipping over things until I see this is my responsibility
as a Christian believer. Then we miss over so much of
what God would have us not to do, but to believe. and not to
set our will to, but to set our heart upon, to understand with
our mind who Jesus is so that our love for him would be deepened,
that we would stand in awe of his power and his glory and his
majesty. And that is the practical impact
of a passage like this to increase not only our understanding of
Christ, but our confidence in him, that he is no mere religious
teacher, that the one that we confess to be Christ. He's our
Savior. We confess that He is the Lord. That He exercises all of the
power and authority of God and sits at God's right hand because
He Himself is God. And He is God come in the flesh.
And of course, the final point to be made here is that Jesus
is the Christ. And we see this, I'll just limit
to a few references to Luke in conclusion, but we see this throughout
the New Testament teaching, connecting Jesus to all of these promises
that are spoken of in the Old Testament. And so, for example,
in Luke chapter 1, when the angel Gabriel came to Mary, he said to her,
it mentions here in verse 27, that she was that the angel came to a virgin,
betrothed to a man whose name was Joseph, of the house of David."
It's the significance of Jesus being the son of David. And again
and again you see this in the words that come in Luke's gospel. In Zechariah's prophecy we see
this in verse 69. In verse 68, blessed be the Lord,
the God of Israel, for he has visited and redeemed his people
and has raised up a horn of salvation for us in the house of his servant
David. And of course this is in reference
to Jesus. In chapter 2 verse 4, Joseph
also went up from Galilee, from the town of Nazareth to Judea,
to the city of David, which is called Bethlehem because he was
of the house and lineage of David. We have to consider these references
and if we go forward to chapter 18 verse 35, Jesus passes beside
a blind man who was sitting by the roadside begging. And what
did he cry out? He cried out, Jesus, son of David,
have mercy on me. Because only in connection with
his identity as the son of David can Jesus give mercy. Can he
save his people from their sins? And so Jesus is the son of David. In chapter 2, going back to chapter
2 in verse 11, For unto you is born this day in the city of
David, and notice this, a Savior who is Christ the Lord. And so
this is really, as a Christian people, this is an important
confession that we make, that Jesus is both the Christ, he
is the one who has come in the flesh, a son of David, to save
his people, to defeat his enemies, to reign forever. We have a great
deal of hope and confidence in him, but the only way that he
could accomplish his purposes, is if he does these things by
the power of God and if he himself is the Lord our God. And so we
confess that Jesus, our Savior, is Christ the Lord. Let us pray
together. Father God, we thank you that
you have sent Jesus, a Savior, who is Christ the Lord. And we
pray that you would, God, that you would incline our hearts
to sing his praise. We pray that you would help us
to give all glory, laud, and honor to this one who is great
David's greater son, and who is the eternal son of God, the
second person of the Godhead come in the flesh. It's a profound
mystery, the person of Christ. But God, we gladly confess it
to be true, and all of our hope is in this. This is who Jesus
is. Because he is who you tell us
that he is, God, we have great hope. We pray that as your people
that we would not only embrace this truth in our own hearts,
that we would commend it gladly to others, encouraging them to
believe in Jesus, a Savior who is Christ the Lord, and believing
in him that they would have life in his name. We pray all of this
in Christ's name. Amen.
David's Son, the Lord
Series Luke
| Sermon ID | 922241433132905 |
| Duration | 27:38 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday - AM |
| Bible Text | Luke 20:39-44 |
| Language | English |
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