It admits of the clearest possible internal proof-of course of 1 a cumulative kind-that the Spirit of God employed Matthew to present the Lord Jesus as “the Son of David, the Son of Abraham,” i.e. in descent from the two leading points of Jewish glory and promise. Mark is occupied with the “beginning of the gospel of Jesus Christ, the Son of God,” and thus naturally details the ministry, in all its varied circumstances, of One who was the ready, patient, and withal powerful servant of all the need that surrounded Him—of one whose dignity as the Son of God “could not be hid” in His least work here below. Next, the genealogy of Luke traces Jesus up to Adam, that is, as connected with the whole race, Gentiles no less than Jews, as Son of man and not merely the Messiah. These observations help to explain the comparatively large use of the Jewish prophets by the first of the Evangelists, while Luke, with equal propriety, depicts “ that holy thing,” born of the Virgin, who increased in wisdom and stature, and in favor with God and man; and Mark just as admirably, omits all notice of Christ’s parentage, His birth, His childhood, etc., and commences at once with the ministry of His forerunner and of Himself. Last of all, John gives a portrait of the Lord, in a point of view higher than the others, as the Word made flesh, who in the beginning was with God and was God, the true light, full of grace and truth. For this reason, as well as because the Jews are here regarded as merged in the universal darkness and death, no genealogy is given; His person and Divine relationship, not His human one, is the subject. It is not that the same truths are not recognized everywhere; for Jesus is owned as the Son of God in Matthew and as Son of David in John. Enough is afforded by every Evangelist to show an unbiassed soul, that He, whom they all described, was God manifested in the flesh. Nevertheless it remains true, that each has his own proper and peculiar line; that what has been already stated is the grand characteristic testimony of those inspired writers; and that in this lies the real key, not only to the differences of language in what are called parallel passages, but also, as I believe, to whatever is inserted or omitted in the several Gospels. The Holy Ghost may allude to other glories of the Lord, in a biography which is specially devoted to trace Him in one very prominent character; and with perfect wisdom He has thereby cut off the objection that the writers differed in their comparative estimate of the Lord. Not one of the Gospels, for instance, fails to notice His inflexible obedience, whatever the office sustained, whatever the light in which He was regarded. He could not but shine in this moral perfectness; yet even here the attentive reader may perceive that it is pre-eminently Luke, whose business it was to illustrate His real and untainted humanity, as the obedient “ Second Man,” the Lord from heaven, in contrast with the first man, rebellious Adam: in a word, as the woman’s Seed, rather than, as in Matthew, the true Messiah and rejected Emmanuel.
It is familiarly known that Matthew and Luke furnish two distinct pedigrees from David, the latter Nathan’s line, the former Solomon’s which was the elder, and of course, Jewishly, the more important branch. As was usual in legal genealogies the line of the husband is given by Matthew, who for the same reason records the supernatural dreams of Joseph; whereas in Luke Mary is everywhere the more prominent personage of the two, and accordingly, as showing the source of His human nature, the genealogy here given is that of His mother. Hence it is said by Luke, ὤν υίός, ὠς ἐνομἴςετο, τοῦ Ἰωσήφ, κ. τ. λ., that is, reputedly, or in the eye of the law, He was son of Joseph, but in fact, Mary’s, as had been carefully shown in the preceding chapters. Thus, it is plain that there is nothing contradictory in these various accounts; nay, that each is as and where it ought to be, and is found in that Gospel whose character demands it, and there only. The Messianic descent of Matthew would be out of place in Luke, as the last Adam genealogy of Luke would not suit the historian who speaks emphatically of the Messiah, His relation to the Jews, His rejection, and consequently the transition to a new dispensation, which was to go on in mystery and patience, before the Son of man returns to establish it in manifestation and power; of which last phase the prophets had treated. Luke, on the other hand, was inspired to develop the great principles of God’s grace towards man, and the broader moral grounds which they assume; and this is so true that, in the body of his gospel, events are grouped in their moral connections, not in their chronological sequence, save where this is required for the truth of the narrative.