Advent Week 1 I Scandalous Hope

Nov 30, 2025    Sam Kiser

What if the greatest story ever told doesn't begin with perfection, but with scandal? Matthew's genealogy of Jesus reads like a family reunion we'd rather skip—filled with prostitutes, adulterers, murderers, and outsiders. Yet this is precisely where the Christmas story begins. We discover that God doesn't airbrush history or edit out the embarrassing parts. Instead, He weaves redemption through the messiest chapters of human failure. From Tamar's deception to Rahab's profession, from Ruth's outsider status to David's adultery with Bathsheba, the lineage of Jesus is riddled with moral complexity. This isn't accidental—it's intentional. The gospel doesn't start with moral instruction or a list of heroes. It starts with broken people whom God used anyway. The thrill of hope isn't that we finally get our act together, but that God enters our chaos. Jesus didn't come to break the back of Caesar but to break the back of Satan and free us from sin. The problem isn't external—it's internal. We don't need a political revolution; we need a renovation of the heart. This Advent season, we're reminded that our story isn't over, our past isn't final, and our failures aren't fatal because Jesus stepped into the bloodline of humanity to redeem it from the inside out.