God's Sovereignty, Our Brokenness

God’s Sovereignty and Man’s Imperfection
Each Gospel approaches the story of Jesus a bit differently. In his account, Matthew doesn’t open with a star or a stable, but with genealogy. That long list of names quietly proclaims one of Scripture’s most surprising truths: the Savior of the world entered history through a line of broken and flawed people. Maybe there is no greater mystery—or greater comfort—than this: God sovereignly works through the messy, imperfect stories of ordinary people to accomplish His extraordinary purposes.
Matthew intentionally highlights this messiness. Tamar’s story is marked by personal tragedy, deception, and painful family dysfunction. Rahab, a prostitute from a pagan nation, acted in courageous faith when everything was at stake. Ruth, a Moabite outsider, chose to follow Israel’s God instead of returning to the comfort of her homeland. David—Israel’s greatest king—was also the man who committed adultery, conspiracy, and murder. And Manasseh was a king whose evil was so severe it nearly destroyed Judah.
These are not the names you expect in the family line of the Messiah. Yet God does not hide them; He includes them. And in doing so, He reveals a profound mystery: God never approves of sin, yet He is never defeated by it. Human decisions—good, bad, and devastating—remain real. But God’s sovereign purpose moves forward with absolute certainty.
That’s why Matthew keeps repeating the phrase, “This was to fulfill what the Lord had spoken…”
The virgin birth? Fulfilled.
Bethlehem as the birthplace? Fulfilled.
The flight to Egypt? Fulfilled.
Even the grief in Ramah? Fulfilled.
These fulfilled prophecies are not random connections—they are purposeful declarations that nothing, not even human brokenness and failure, could derail God’s plan to bring Christ into the world.
This truth does not minimize our responsibility; it magnifies it. Because God works through imperfect people, we never treat sin lightly. Grace is not an excuse to live carelessly; grace is the motivation to pursue Christ wholeheartedly. We strive for holiness, not to earn God’s favor, but because His grace has already been poured out on us.
Your failures do not define you. But your calling—to emulate Christ, to grow in godliness, to walk faithfully—is real and weighty; and God Himself empowers it. As Paul reminds us in Philippians, we can “forget what is behind and press on toward the goal God has set before us.”
As you reflect on the fact that God wove the messy choices of kings, outsiders, sinners, and wanderers into the story that led to Christ, remember this: God can certainly work within your story to advance His purposes - to bring hope to those around you through your redemption story, and to glorify Him through your life.
By Paky Kramer







