The five women in
Matthew’s genealogy: Bathsheba
A Series on
Advent
(Click on the link below to read the verses.)
2 Samuel 11; Matthew
1:1-17
[In
Matthew’s genealogy of Jesus, the Messiah, there are five women mentioned. All
of them were in some sense outsiders. In this Advent series we will be looking
at these five women to gain a better understanding of “the word who became
flesh and made his dwelling among us”.]
The 2012 movie, “Silver Linings Playbook”, is about a young man who is bipolar and was recently released from a mental institution into the care of his parents. While his main goal is to win back his ex-wife, he meets a young widow who offers to help him if he will enter a dance competition with her.
It’s a heartwarming story about relationships and
the struggles that people face who have a mental illness. The title of the
movie comes from a line spoken by the young man to his father.
“This is what I
believe to be true. You have to do everything you can and if you stay positive,
you have a chance at a silver lining.”
The story about Bathsheba has a silver lining but with
a much darker side. It started with David who was the King of Israel. While Israel’s
army went off to war, David stayed behind in Jerusalem.
One evening he couldn’t sleep, so he got up and walked around the roof of the palace. It was there that he saw a “very beautiful woman” taking a bath. Instead of turning away, he had someone inquire as to who she was.
Upon learning that she was “the daughter of Eliam and the wife of Uriah the Hittite”,
David sent messengers to bring her to the palace where he slept with her. Soon
afterwards, she sent David a message that she was pregnant.
In an effort to cover up what he had done, he had
Uriah return from the battlefield. Then David personally instructed him to go
home to be with his wife. But Uriah wouldn’t do it because the other fighting
men weren’t able to do the same.
So, the next day, David tried again. This time he had
Uriah eat and drink with him in the palace. He even got Uriah drunk. But once
again, Uriah would not sleep with his wife, Bathsheba.
Desperate, David had Uriah return to the battle with
written instructions for Joab, the head of the army. The letter told him to “Put Uriah out in front where the fighting is
fiercest. Then withdraw from him so he will be struck down and die.” Despite
Uriah’s good character, he was murdered.
For her part, the only thing that Bathsheba did
wrong was to be “very beautiful”. But
this was a culture where men had all the power and King David was the most
powerful man of all. To refuse him could have resulted in severe punishment.
How could anything redemptive come from this? David
knowingly slept with another man’s wife and then had her husband killed. And
yet, God is sovereign and somehow all of this mess fit into His plan of
redemption.
Included in Matthew’s genealogy of “Jesus the Messiah the son of
David, the son of Abraham”, is the following silver lining verse.
6 Jesse was the father of King David. David was the
father of Solomon (whose mother was Bathsheba, the widow of Uriah). Matthew
1 NLT
Like Bathsheba, God provides a silver lining for you and me. Even though we are sinful people, and our sin can result in terrible consequences – God can still bring about redemption through his son Jesus.
13 For he has rescued us from the dominion of
darkness and brought us into the kingdom of the Son he loves, 14 in
whom we have redemption, the forgiveness of sins. Colossians
1 NIV
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