(Continued from the previous post…)
With sinister precision, it leads these pagan worshipers right to Jesus—a child vulnerable and helpless, protected only by a poor carpenter and his wife. The astrologers, Herod’s unwitting dupes, likely would have reported back to the vengeful monarch, leading to the child’s destruction.
There are some fundamental flaws in this reasoning:
(1) The Magi evidently recognized the divinity of Jesus, and came with the intention of worshipping Him. Why would Satan lead a bunch of people to go and worship the future divine King?
(2) Their intentions were obviously genuine, and they found the newborn King, and worship Him. So the purpose for which they set out was accomplished. Then they are warned by God not to return to Herod. They were obviously righteous enough to receive such divine communication. If the whole thing was a trap set up by the devil, why didn’t God warn them not to go in the first place? Why did He wait until they had completed their journey, found the newborn King, worshipped him, offered him their gifts, told an awful lot of other people about it as well, and then warn them not to go back to Herod?
(3) The whole thrust of the story, as told by Matthew, is intended to convey the idea that these were a bunch of righteous guys who were led by God to the destination of the divine King, with the aim of witnessing to the world of the birth of the newborn King. This is not unlike the story of the shepherds who received a similar message (Luke 2:8-20); and likewise the prophecies of Simon and Anna (Luke 2:25-38). All of these have had one obvious purpose, to testify of the birth of the divine King. The experience of the magi fits perfectly into this pattern. It would be as absurd to suggest that the magi were led to the Christ child by the devil, as it would be to suggest that the shepherds, Simon, and Anna were led to the child by the devil!
But God intervenes through a dream and sends them back home by another route.
God could have given them that warning from the start. There is no reason why He shouldn’t have, if they were being led by the devil.
The “star,” then, must have been a device of God’s enemy Satan, who would go to any lengths to harm the Messiah. How ironic that the “star” and astrologers are portrayed in Nativity scenes as emissaries of God!—Matthew 2:9-12.
My reading of all of that is very different. My understanding of the whole story is that it was the will of God by this means to inform the civic and religious rulers of Jerusalem that the Christ child has been born, and thus allow them the freedom to act out the evil (or good) that is in their hearts (as well as bearing further witness to the world of the future King). That has been the pattern of God’s dealings with mankind.
Still, Satan does not give up. His pawn in the matter, King Herod, orders that all infants in Bethlehem under two years of age be killed. But Satan cannot win a battle against Jehovah. Matthew notes that God had long ago foreseen even this vicious slaughter of innocent children. Jehovah countered Satan again, warning Joseph through an angel to flee to Egypt for safety. Matthew reports that some time later Joseph again moved his little family and finally settled them in Nazareth, where Jesus grew up with his younger brothers and sisters.—Matthew 2:13-23; 13:55, 56.
There is no logical basis for any of this reasoning.
amgid