The Hope of the Ages—Matthew 1:1-17
Some biographies begin with the birth of their subject. Others begin with his parents, or even his grandparents. But Matthew begins his Gospel, his story of Jesus, with a list of more than forty generations. Many of these names have stories that go with them. Abraham leaving for a foreign land that God promised to give him. Abraham preparing to offer Isaac on an altar on Mount Moriah. Isaac's son Jacob tricking him into giving him his brother's blessing. Jacob wrestling at night with God. Judah's nasty sins. Judah offering himself as a slave so that his brother Benjamin could go free. David killing Goliath. David murdering Uriah. Solomon the wise. Solomon the power-hungry idolotrous polygamist. Manassah's sin, and Manassah's repentence.
All of these people had something they were hoping for, someone they were hoping for, and they died with their hopes not yet fulfilled. But Matthew's point is that all the hopes of God's people — Abraham's hopes, Isaac's hopes, Jacob's hopes, David's hopes, Solomon's hopes, Tamar's hopes, Rahab's hopes, Ruth's hopes, and the hopes of the lesser known men and women who came after the exile — all of the hopes of God's people have come true in Jesus, the Christ.