Then Herod, when he had privately called the wise
men, carefully inquired of them what time the star appeared. And he sent them
to Bethlehem and said, “Go and search diligently for the young Child, and when
you have found Him, bring me word again, so that I may come and worship Him
also.”
Matthew 2:7-8, Modern English Version (MEV)
So, did you notice that King Herod privately called in the wise men, meaning none of the Jewish leaders were present? It should be obvious that he wanted to get to this newborn King of the Jews before the Jews did, and it should also be quite obvious it wasn't because he wanted to worship Him. The plot here is so obvious it probably wouldn’t even make a decent grade B movie.
Robert Hawker adds these words:
And he sent them to Bethlehem, and said, Go and
search diligently for the young child; and when ye have found him, bring me
word again, that I may come and worship him also.
I would beg the Reader to pause over those
verses, for several interesting circumstances of improvement arise from them.
What an awful picture is here drawn of the human heart, in the character of
Herod! He was now an old man; had long reigned; and this young prince just
born, supposing all that Herod might suppose of an earthly monarchy could not,
in the nature of things, hastily arise to oppose him. And yet with what deep
artifice and hypocrisy did he cover over the cruel design he had formed of
murdering the newborn stranger. Look at the chief priests and scribes also.
Though they saw, as well as Herod, with what earnestness and labor the wise men
from the East had come, a vast journey to worship the king of the Jews yet they
who were Jews, felt no concern about the glorious area of his birth; though
their Prophets had so plainly declared both the place and the time of his
coming. The wise men were told where they might find Christ; but none of the
priests or scribes, it should seem, went with them to see him. But, Reader! do
not fail to remark a circumstance yet more interesting than either; surely, it
must have been the Lord, by his providence, over-ruling things, that so Jesus
might remain in safety, until a more convenient season for his flight into Egypt
should arrive.
Matthew 2:7-8, Modern English Version (MEV)
So, did you notice that King Herod privately called in the wise men, meaning none of the Jewish leaders were present? It should be obvious that he wanted to get to this newborn King of the Jews before the Jews did, and it should also be quite obvious it wasn't because he wanted to worship Him. The plot here is so obvious it probably wouldn’t even make a decent grade B movie.
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