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Robert Hawker

Luke 3:23

Luke 3:23
Robert Hawker February, 4 2016 3 min read
730 Articles 1 Sermon 30 Books
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February, 4 2016
Robert Hawker
Robert Hawker 3 min read
730 articles 1 sermons 30 books
What does the Bible say about Jesus' early life?

The Bible indicates that Jesus lived in obscurity for about thirty years, preparing for His public ministry while fulfilling God's law.

The biblical account of Jesus' early life, primarily found in Luke 3:23, reveals that He began His public ministry around the age of thirty. This significant period before His ministry, though not detailed in Scripture, is believed to have been crucial for His obedience to God's law and preparation for the redemptive work He was sent to accomplish. During those thirty years, Jesus exemplified a life of holiness, adherence to God's commands, and perfect righteousness, fulfilling His role as our surety and mediator. His private life was essential, as it laid the foundation for the great work of salvation that would follow.

Luke 3:23

Why is the thirty years of Jesus' life important for Christians?

The thirty years of Jesus' life are vital because they reflect His perfect obedience and preparation for the atonement.

For Christians, the thirty years of Jesus' life are significant not merely as a historical account but as a testament of His obedience and preparation for atonement. Although these years are largely silent in Scripture, they are understood to represent a life fully aligned with God's will and a model of holiness and purity. This period was essential for Jesus to fulfill all righteousness, making Him a fitting Savior. His life exhibited the characteristics that qualify Him to bear the sins of His people, acting as both the law-fulfiller and sin offering, which deepens the understanding of His full and redemptive mission.

Luke 3:23

How do we know Jesus was without sin?

Jesus is affirmed to be without sin through scriptural references that declare His perfection and holiness.

The doctrine of Jesus' sinlessness is supported by various scriptural affirmations of His divine nature and behavior. As stated in the biblical text, He did not commit sin and no deceit was found in His mouth (1 Peter 2:22). This perfection is critical to understanding His role as the ultimate sacrifice for humanity's sins. His sinlessness is essential to His identity as the Savior, qualifying Him to bear the sins of others without needing atonement for His own. This truth strengthens the believer's assurance in the effectiveness of Christ's redemptive work.

1 Peter 2:22

"And Jesus himself began to be about thirty years of age."—Luke iii. 23.

— Luke 3:23

How marvellous in all things are the ways of God to us! Was Jesus indeed in the world, and the world made by him, and the world knew him not? And did he remain hid away, and unknown for the first thirty years of his life? Did the Son of God come on earth to do away sin by the sacrifice of himself, and yet enter not upon the full purpose of his mission until so large a portion of his life upon earth had passed away? Oh! wonder-working God! how true it is, that thy ways are not our ways, nor thy thoughts our thoughts! Yet,my soul, though thy Jesus did not engage in his public ministry, in the more open display of it by his miracles and preaching, yet surely those thirty years were of vast importance on the score of redemption. No doubt Jesus spent them in obedience to his Father's law, manifesting a life of holiness and purity, suited and corresponding to the immaculate perfection of his nature, "who did no sin, neither was guile found in his mouth." Convinced as I am, my honoured Lord, that the body which thy Father gave thee, and the human nature which thou didst assume for the purpose of salvation, was not produced in the ordinary method of generation, but by the miraculous influence of the Holy Ghost, so am I equally convinced that during the whole of thy life, from the manger to the cross, every act, hnd word, and thought of thine, manifested that thou wast holy, harmless, undefiled, separate from sinners, and made higher than the heavens. And shall I not also believe, that these thirty years were of some sweet, though to us secret importance, in thy covenant engagements as our surety? Can I suppose, that the thirty years of my Redeemer's life, before his being publicly made known to Israel, were spent in doing nothing with relation to the great work which he came purposely to do? Did not those seasons minister also to the cancelling the sin of his people, taking away the curse by bearing it, and by dying for it; and may we not suppose that God the Father had an eye to every minute act in the life of his dear Son, whom he had called to the work of salvation; and given as a covenant to his people, to be their head and mediator; their law-fulfiler and sin offering? Precious Lord! silent as the scriptures are on this great portion of thy life, yet is not their silence a call upon thy people to meditate on the subject? Give me grace, then, my honoured Lord, to be often contemplating the infinite condescension of Jesus in this part, as well as in others, in which thou must have endured such a contradiction of sinners against thyself." And let not this be the smallest improvement of this sweet and interesting view of my Lord, that when I call to mind how thy holy soul must have felt, during the thirty years, from the open displays of sin, in the blasphemies and daring defiances of God, the reproaches of the ungodly, and the torrent of evil all around; yet nothing stopped the gracious purposes of thine heart, in executing the errand on which thy whole mind was bent, "in dying, the just for the unjust, to bring sinners unto God!"

From Poor Man's Evening Portions by Robert Hawker.
Robert Hawker
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Devotionals

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