“But they shall serve the LORD their God, and David their king, whom I will raise up unto them.” (Jer 30:9 AV)
The specifics of this verse are understood in different ways. Some take David to be literally David. Some teach that as Christ rules the entire world during His 1,000-year reign, David will rule Israel once again. Others take David to be the house of David as represented by Jesus Christ. Either way works. What is important for this morning’s consideration is the whole promise of the resurrection. In particular, the resurrection of the house of David. The promise of the resurrection of the king of Israel is important here. It implies that the king of Israel must die. Otherwise, there would be no resurrection. The sign of the resurrection is perhaps the most important of all signs given to the Jews that Jesus is the Christ and that He is the fulfillment of the promise made to David. The resurrection from the dead is the ultimate of all miracles. If Jesus can raise from the dead, then He must be God. This was Paul’s argument. He made that argument soundly! That we serve a risen Savior is the greatest of all miracles that mankind has, or ever will, witness!
Sometimes, when I read of a prophecy concerning Jesus Christ, I wonder how the Jewish nation missed it. However, we have the luxury of hindsight. It would have taken a tremendous amount of faith to believe all the signs that were given to them. Sometimes we are a bit too hard on those who rejected Christ, thinking we might have done differently. Perhaps not. We have the completed Bible. We have secular historians who verify the events of the life of Jesus. They did not. The resurrection was one event that is not faithfully recorded in independent and secular sources. And for good reason. If they were to document the resurrection as a verifiable event, they would have had to witness it. To support the report of many who testified of it would be to invite the end of the Roman empire. This happened anyway. From their perspective, there was great risk by recording the resurrection as fact if they were not amiable to the gospel.
The promise above is a promise not to be understated. The Old Testament is filled with promises and prophecies much like the one above. It is not a direct statement regarding the resurrection of the Messiah, but rather, strongly implied. The promise is applied by extrapolation. If the House of David is to rise, that must include the Messiah. Reason would have ended where the prophecy directed. So, what does that mean for the N.T. saint? We know the end from the beginning. We can see the promise above and see when it was fulfilled. What hope does that have for us? Namely this. There are still promises yet to be fulfilled. Many of them apply to the saints and the church. What we can do is pray and ask the Holy Spirit to open our spiritual eyes to the things yet to come. We have promises that we can hang our hats on. We have hope of things not yet seen. We know what we know, and what we don’t know as yet cannot be comprehended until we see it. Therefore, what is not known can be a comfort to us. We have the same promise of resurrection. Let us be reminded of a truth spoken of in both the Old and New Testaments. “But as it is written, Eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither have entered into the heart of man, the things which God hath prepared for them that love him.” (1Co 2:9 AV)