commentary Matthew 18

1 At the same time came the disciples unto Jesus, saying, Who is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven? 2 And Jesus called a little child unto him, and set him in the midst of them, 3 And said, Verily I say unto you, Except ye be converted, and become as little children, ye shall not enter into the kingdom of heaven. 4 Whosoever therefore shall humble himself as this little child, the same is greatest in the kingdom of heaven.

     In accord with Matthew’s style, this entire chapter is dedicated to one general topic, offenses in the Kingdom. As they walked along, the disciples privately disputed among themselves which would be Jesus’ top lieutenant. Jesus however, perceived their thoughts (Mark 9:33-37; Luke 9:46-48). Again the disciples reveal their temporal, physical concept of Messiah’s kingdom. Who would sit on His right hand and who would be second? Which of them was most likely to jostle himself to the forefront and become chief? They had heard Him give the keys of the Kingdom to Peter (Mat 16:19), but what did that mean?

     Jesus loved to teach with parables and object lessons, and here He uses a child to teach the important Kingdom attitude of trust, humility and lack of worldly ambition that is necessary for faith, forgiveness and leadership. The disciples connected greatness with position (Mark 9:35), but Jesus taught that true greatness is humbly serving others in love (Gal 5:13). Apparently the lesson was not immediately learned, for some time later James and John came to Jesus and asked Him for positions on His right and left when He began to reign in His kingdom (Mat 20:20-24).

     Jesus made greatness achievable by any common person! You don’t have to be smart, charismatic, wise, etc in order to be great in the Kingdom of Christ. As He had taught in the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus says that humility and meekness are the greatest and most important characteristics in a Christian. How very different that is from the world’s idea of greatness! Except ye be converted, and become as little children, ye shall not enter the kingdom of heaven. The Greek word literally means to turn oneself around (Mat 16:23); but here it means to change or revert to being a child in attitude.

     With different symbolism but in similar purpose, Jesus told Nicodemus: Except a man be born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God (John 3:3). Simple belief, trust, humility, lack of ambition, teachable, not giving or taking offense, obedient and innocent (1Cor 14:20), those are qualities that stand out in the Kingdom of Christ. It is even more important in this day and age to approach the Scriptures in child-like simplicity and honesty, rightly dividing the Word of Truth in reverence and fear. So many have taken the lawyer’s approach to the Scriptures and have made it teach what they want to hear (2Tim 4:3).   

     The attitudes of selfishness, pride and self-conceit have no place in the churches of Christ and especially not in leadership positions. Humility and meekness are the prime yet paradoxical qualities of the Christian leader (2Tim 2:24-25). A man may possess gifts of great value to the Kingdom of heaven, but without these his worth to feed the flock of Christ will plummet. One of the best examples of following Jesus’ teaching were the early Anabaptists. They took His words in child-like simplicity and lived them as children – even their enemies remarked concerning their lack of graft and guile. So simple was their hermeneutic that Poole claims (disdainfully and erroneously) that Anabaptists would take to the streets and play with children’s toys (see his note on Mat 18:4).

5 And whoso shall receive one such little child in my name receiveth me. 6 But whoso shall offend one of these little ones which believe in me, it were better for him that a millstone were hanged about his neck, and that he were drowned in the depth of the sea.

     To receive another is to accept and assist him (Rom 16:2; Mat 25:40; Mark 9:41) and to offend another is to cause him to stumble or sin (1Cor 8:13). Causing a child to fall away or reject the Gospel is serious business. Parents take note. God gave you children to bring up in His ways (Eph 6:4) and not as slaves for your rule. You will be held accountable for how you treat and train your children, for in these years their consciences are being tuned and adjusted to certain values and customs that are largely based on your actions and experiences. Parents who damage their sons and daughters spiritually will be punished.

     The ignoble death here described may seem hyperbole, but if we understand the depths of the sea to refer to the abyss of hell and the great weight of a millstone to refer to man’s guilt of sin, this is no exaggeration. The second death lasts forever and is far worse than dying physically. It is a serious sin to cause another to fall away from Christ, whether it be a person young in faith or years. Especially grievous however, is to corrupt or commit evil against a child. Wicked acts such as child molestation, abortion, cruelty and murder will certainly cause God’s full and rightful measure of justice to fall.

7 Woe unto the world because of offences! for it must needs be that offences come; but woe to that man by whom the offence cometh!

     The world is filled with offences, stumblingblocks and difficulties that impede the personal development of evangelical faith. One of the worst and most common offenders however, is the tongue. Only the perfect manwill offend not in word (James 3:2). There are not many of those among us! Nevertheless, the Christian should make every effort to avoid being a courier of offenses (Luke 17:1). Sinful acts, malicious words, anger, deceptive logic and false teaching are just a few of the ways we can be a stumblingblock to others in their walk of faith. If there are eternal reward for doing good to others, then it is logical that there are eternal punishments for doing bad to others.

     The sin in offending another is to hurt his spiritual life. Just hurting someone’s feelings or bruising his ego is not necessarily an offense in the Biblical sense, for the preaching of the cross will offend! (1Cor 1:23; Gal 5:11). Jesus is a stumblingstone and rock of offence (Rom 9:33; 1Pet 2:8) to many because they are not willing to accept the Word of Truth. Jesus offended the Pharisees when He pointed out their hypocrisy and did not apologize for it (Mat 15:12). In fact, the real offense would be to let a person live in sin on account of not hurting his feelings. Jesus also offended the Canaanite woman, but then rewarded her for responding so honorably (Mat 15:21-28). Many reject His message because it offends them (Mat 11:6). As the end approaches, even more will be offended, and shall betray one another (Mat 24:10).

     In reading this chapter, remember that the words “offense” and “offend” have two levels of meaning. The first level of offense is to hurt someone’s feelings, but the second level is to cause someone to sin. While the Christian should try to not offend at either level, to cause someone to sin is a grave offense.

8 Wherefore if thy hand or thy foot offend thee, cut them off, and cast them from thee: it is better for thee to enter into life halt or maimed, rather than having two hands or two feet to be cast into everlasting fire. 9 And if thine eye offend thee, pluck it out, and cast it from thee: it is better for thee to enter into life with one eye, rather than having two eyes to be cast into hell fire.

     The Christian must take care to walk so as not to offend. He must also be careful to not allow himself to be offended. Jesus says, “If something or someone tries to offend you, cut them off, and cast them from thee.” Offenses are serious because they play with your soul. Drastic, urgent steps must be taken. The natural impulse is the opposite – a person offended tends nurse his wounded spirit and cultivate the offense, coddling it and indulging in self-pity. “Cut it off! Pluck it out! Cast it away!” Jesus warns, “Do not let offenses keep you from eternal life.” Offenses cannot be used as an excuse for stumbling. If someone throws a stone in your path, you can choose to walk around the stone, or stumble upon it. Recognizing the offense is the first step to avoid falling. Jesus gave a similar analogy in Mat 5:29-30.

     Jesus’ example is salutary. They called him a liar and a son of Satan, they said He had a demon and was mad. They mocked Him, abused Him and scoffed at His teaching. Yet, Jesus never took offense, never responded with anger, resentment, irritation or bitterness. His attitude was, Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do (Luke 23:34). Jesus showed how to respond to an offense when Peter (without even knowing it) tempted Him with the idea of not dying on the cross. Get thee behind Me Satan, Jesus told Peter, Thou art an offence unto Me (Mat 16:23). Notice that He recognized the offense and its true source, and then He cut it off and cast it from Him. In honestly following His example we find the formula that will make it very difficult to be offended unto sin!

     Many times an “offense” is felt which was never intended (as in the case of Peter), for the Devil is adept at manipulating your mind! These imaginary, perceived offenses have just as much power to make you fall as a real offense. The steps to avoid them are exactly the same in both cases. Recognize and cut them off. Do not let them hinder your path and cause you to sin. The agape man is not easily provoked, thinketh no evil (1Cor 13:5). That means he doesn’t imagine bad motives in the actions of his brother, nor does he work to surmise the thoughts behind his brother’s words; instead he bears, believes, hopes and endures all things (1Cor 13:7).

     Everlasting fire. Given the exceedingly strong language, how can some say there is no place of eternal punishment? The clearest teacher on Hell was Christ, yet non-hell advocates manipulate Him:  “Jesus Christ came to save us,” they say, “He is kind, He is Love; He would never send someone to eternal punishment.” What then to make of these verses? Is Jesus also a liar? He described Hell as a fire that never shall be quenched (Mark 9:43), a place of unending torment (Luke 16:22-24), where their worm dieth not (Mark 9:48) and the smoke of their torment ascendeth up for ever and ever (Rev 14:10-11). The parable at the end of this chapter sees the wicked servant being delivered to the tormentors until he repays his debt of $200,000,000 (Mat 18:34).

     The real reason people claim to not believe in Hell is because they do not want it to exist. Some are honest enough to admit that. Nevertheless, the Scriptures are not vague on the subject. If heaven is to be continually experienced, it only makes sense that hell will also be a continuing existence. The soul of man, whether wicked or evil, will never cease to exist. No-hell advocates attempt to teach otherwise, using hand-picked verses and human logic to arrive at a conclusion they have pre-chosen to believe. Do not be deceived; avoid profane and vain babblings, and oppositions of science (knowledge) falsely so called (1Tim 6:20). The Scriptures are not hard to read!

     It is critical that we define Bible terms by the Scriptures and not by human thought and reason, which is the error of those who teach that hell is not eternal punishment. Throughout the Scriptures, hell is described as a place of unending torment of the wicked. Those who force their own definitions upon Scriptural terms (like “death” and “eternity” and “soul”) in order to countermand those passages are spreading heresy and falsehood.

10 Take heed that ye despise not one of these little ones; for I say unto you, That in heaven their angels do always behold the face of my Father which is in heaven.

     Jesus has a tender affection and concern for children! Let us learn from His example. And why not? The simple, innocent, trusting faith of a child is exactly what God wants of all people. Jesus was always kind to children and went out of His way to include them in His day. In the next chapter, the disciples rebuked parents who brought their children to Jesus, but He told them, Suffer little children, and forbid them not to come unto Me: for of such is the Kingdom of Heaven (Mat 19:13-14; Mark 10:13-16).

     The story is told of evangelist Dwight Moody remarking to his wife after a particular service, “Two and one-half persons were saved tonight.”

     “Oh,” she replied, “Two adults and one child.”

     “No,” he said, “Two children and one adult.” The adult’s time to serve God was half gone, but the children had a full life for God ahead.

     Their angels do always behold the face of my Father. See Ps 34:7. Apparently children do have guardian angels with immediate access to God, so His love for them is more than just a statement of feeling. He actively helps them according to His will and great wisdom. Why then do children experience awful acts and crimes? That is a difficult question. Especially in times of war and hardship, children suffer most. What we do know is that God is all-wise and all-good, and that He acts and intercedes in the world’s affairs according to His purpose and character. Certainly those who acknowledge Him are more likely to experience His miraculous graces, but even “good” people suffer unjustly. There is a balance which only God knows between supernatural intercession and allowing the natural world to unfold as He created it. This passage shows that offenses against children do not go un-noticed by God! The day is coming when the deeds of men, evil or good, will be rewarded.

     The topic of children does not end with this verse. The story which follows is told with children in mind (see verse 14).

11 For the Son of man is come to save that which was lost.

     The disciples had not yet grasped the kind of Kingdom that the Messiah was beginning. They expected a temporal, earthly kingdom, but Jesus was establishing a spiritual and eternal Kingdom. He came to save the souls of the lost. In the Greek this word is a verb (apollumi) meaning “to destroy, die, lose, perish.” Jesus is speaking of their spiritual condition before God. They (with us) had all gone astray, each one taking his own way instead of following the Shepherd (Is 53:6). They were lost, destroyed, perished. Until Christ, there was just one law of the soul – the law of sin and death which ruled over Man because all have sinned, and the wages of sin is death of the soul. Not physical, literal death, but soul corruption, soul destruction, soul estrangement from God. Satan is the one responsible for instigating man to commit these offenses that have separated him from his Creator. Therefore is he called Apollyon (noun form of same Greek word) in Rev 9:11.

      By His death, Jesus established a new law, the law of the Spirit of life (Rom 8:2) which is able to save us from the first law of sin and death that reigned alone until Christ and continues to reign even in the Age of Grace over all those who do not choose Him (Rom 5:21). The Son of man is come to seek and to save that which was lost (Luke 19:10, cf Luke 15:24). This statement comes in the middle of Jesus’ warning about offenses, serving as a preamble to the parable of the lost sheep. I therefore infer His thought to be, “Take heed to not cause even one child to go astray, for I came to save that which was lost. Do not work against Me!”

12 How think ye? if a man have an hundred sheep, and one of them be gone astray, doth he not leave the ninety and nine, and goeth into the mountains, and seeketh that which is gone astray? 13 And if so be that he find it, verily I say unto you, he rejoiceth more of that sheep, than of the ninety and nine which went not astray. 14 Even so it is not the will of your Father which is in heaven, that one of these little ones should perish.

     This beautiful parable is recorded only in the book of Matthew, although a variation is found in Luke 15:4-7. The picture is drawn upon a background of two themes: Jesus’ great care for children and being offended unto falling away. The concern and care of the Father for these offended souls, whether a spiritual child in the faith or a physical child in years, is lovingly portrayed.

     The Father has never willed the loss of even one soul, nor has it ever been His fault that one is lost. There is just one way to become lost – by choosing to follow the desires of Self instead of God’s purpose in creating you. Jesus pursues every soul that has gone astray; He goes into the mountains calling, calling; listening for the faintest response. The large problem is that Mankind in general is not interested (see the parable of the Sower in Mat 13). Calvinist doctrine is revealed false by this point and parable, for it cannot help but teach that God did not will the salvation of all, but only the “elect.”  

     A similar picture appears in Rev 3:20, where Jesus is standing at the door, knocking, knocking; asking for us to open the door and let Him. He will not force His way upon us, for salvation is free and voluntary. Many will not answer His gentle knock at the door. These are the lost and perished. At the beginning, God created human beings with a mind capable of understanding, deciding and choosing just one of two ways: to walk God’s road to life or Satan’s road to death. These eternal states are described in the Scriptures in various ways: light or darkness, heaven or hell, life or death, communion or separation, saved or lost.

     The parable of the lost sheep illustrates the great concern and care that God has for every soul, from the little child that Jesus was holding in His arms at that very moment (Mark 9:36) to the cruelest criminal. He is not willing that even one should perish (2Pet 3:9) and what joy erupts in heaven when one sinner repents! See similar in Luke 15:4-7.

     An earthly shepherd must leave his flock to search for one gone astray, but the omnipresent heavenly Shepherd will never leave His own (John 10:26-28). While He is pleased with all of them, an additional happiness excites the angels in heaven when one that was lost is found! It is for this that the Son of man came, to seek and to save that which was lost (Luke 19:10), so of course He is overjoyed to see a soul turn from Self and error to follow Him and Truth. How inspiring and beautiful to think that all Heaven is cheering for the sinner, that he will win the race and crown after all. The Father and the Son, the angels and the saints that have gone on before; all are waiting, helping, hoping for the sinner to repent and choose the new law of liberty in Christ.

15 Moreover if thy brother shall trespass against thee, go and tell him his fault between thee and him alone: if he shall hear thee, thou hast gained thy brother. 16 But if he will not hear thee, then take with thee one or two more, that in the mouth of two or three witnesses every word may be established. 17 And if he shall neglect to hear them, tell it unto the church: but if he neglect to hear the church, let him be unto thee as an heathen man and a publican.

     Everybody will experience offenses while passing through this life (see v6-9), but what if the offender is a brother in the church? Matthew alone records Jesus’ teaching on this subject, which anticipates the establishment of the church as a body of Christ-followers. The word church (ekklesia) occurs only twice in the Gospels (Mat 16:18; 18:17). At the time, the disciples could not have understood the full meaning of His words.

     Resolving an offense between church members requires serious humility and wisdom (1Cor 6:4-7). Many times one offense leads to a counter-offense which starts a virtual feud between brothers (Pro 18:19). Surely it is not a coincidence that this chapter on offenses begins with Jesus teaching the most important principle concerning the taking and giving of offenses, which is that the mature Christian will walk always in child-like humility and lack of selfish ambitions. A famous preacher once received a letter from a certain detractor who accused him of many things. After pondering the matter, the evangelist wrote a return letter in which he simply said, “Thank you for your letter. As for your accusations, I assure you that I know of even worse things that I have done that you forgot to mention.” Amazing humility. This man knew that the key to forgiving offenses is found in self-abasement and humbleness of mind. It is impossible to offend a person who has no pride and selfishness. That’s why Jesus, our foremost example of humility (Php 2:8), never took offense when people mistreated Him. The apostle Paul found that when he made himself weak and nothing, it was then that he became strongest (2Cor 12:10). He knew that no good thing dwelled in his flesh (Rom 7:18), so there was nothing there that could be offended.

     It is crucial to recognize that Jesus does not give the three-step formula in this passage as the first action of an offended brother, but rather as his last recourse. It is what he must do if he cannot throw off, forgive and forget his brother’s offense as outlined in verses 7-9. Maybe the offense is a real sin, but maybe it was innocent and unintentional, a misunderstanding. And maybe it is one of those “sins not unto death” that the offended brother can pray to God on behalf of the other person (1John 5:16-17). If the offense is a sin unto death, it must be resolved according to Jesus’ rule. 

     First, the offended brother is instructed to go to the one who has offended him and discuss the issue. Surprisingly, almost always the offended brother thinks the order should be reversed. So he waits for the offending brother to come to him and ask forgiveness. And meanwhile, he simmers in offense and unforgiveness. Typically, he is not slow to tell others of his mistreatment! He is however, very slow to go to the one person who can remedy the situation, preferring to harbor a righteous grudge that can grow unto life-killing proportions (Heb 12:15).

    The reason Jesus instructed the offended brother to go to the offender is made obvious when we realize that many times the offense was not a real one, but either a misunderstanding or incomplete knowledge of the situation. The offender cannot correct an offense that he doesn’t even know he has committed. There is deep wisdom in Jesus putting the burden of reconciliation and forgiveness upon the offended brother: Go and tell him his fault between thee and him alone. Criticism and telling others of the “offense” must be avoided. While it is proper and wise for the offended brother to seek counsel from a church leader before approaching the one who has sinned against him, he may not spread the fault to others. In the absence of extreme circumstances, I believe church leaders should follow Jesus’ pattern here and assist the offended brother to go alone to the one who has offended him, for whether the offense was real or perceived, there is no better way to resolve the issue than by confidential, open discussion between the two parties alone.

     If the offender will not accept reproof, nor will he acknowledge any error on his part, then the offended brother should take one or two brethren with him and attempt to correct the offender again. If that attempt fails, the matter must be brought before the church, and if he ignores the church, he is to be avoided and regarded as a sinner (Rom 16:17, 2Thes 3:6, 14). This last step is disciplinary, meaning excommunication from the church. A heathen man and a publican has rejected Truth and is living in unrepentant sin. These must be excommunicated from the congregation if and when they continue unrepentant and rebellious in spite of the church’s gentle, loving attempts at reconciliation. Love is the guiding principle for all church discipline; it is brotherly love, not pride or ill-will, that must move us to correct wrongful behavior in a fellow member. In joining a church body operating in mutual brotherly love, we are asking for correction and submitting ourselves to the care of the brotherhood.

     I believe that in the vast majority of cases, an offended brother need not even recurr to these steps. He has the ability on his own to resolve that offense, whether it be real or imagined, as long as it be not a sin unto death. Forgive and forget! And just like that, the offense-bomb has been disarmed. Unfortunately, in practice its often not quite that easy. In principle though, the strong brother should be able to cast off even hurtful offenses on his own, just as the Apostle Paul did with nasty brethren in the Corinthian church.

     Remember this, that unresolved offenses always involve spiritual immaturity, either on the side of the offender or on the side of the offended, or even on both sides. That statement will quite probably be challenged by some, for influential and apparently very righteous church members are sometimes offended. I, nevertheless, remain convinced of that statement’s truthfulness and will defer the reader to draw his own conclusions.

     Every person has within himself the ability to grow into spiritual maturity by forgiving the offender, but he has no real control over the other party. To that end, it is beneficial to recognize three categories of offenses:

  • The intentional offense. This is a malicious action or word which intends to harm another. 
  • The unintentional offense. This is an action or word which another believes to be malicious.
  • The well-intentioned offense. This is a corrective action or word by which another is offended.

     Regardless of the category, the offended person has only one correct response, and that is to forgive. Forgiveness is, however, much easier if he is able to rationally justify that the offense was unintentional, or perhaps well-intentioned. A brother once gave me some unsolicited advice on training my children which I thought was wrong, unfair and hurtful. But I was able to cast off the offense by telling myself that he didn’t know my situation, and that his reproof was well-intentioned. He wasn’t being malicious, but it felt pretty harsh! It helped me to learn to take criticism in humility, for that is beneficial to spiritual growth. Again, that is much easier said than done! The bare fact is that most of us would rather be spoiled by praise than helped by critical words. Solomon wrote, Rebuke a wise man, and he will love thee (Pro 9:8).

     Some seem to believe that God placed them on this earth for the sole purpose of correcting others’ faults. To these, I would point out the vast amount of warnings against judging others by your own standards and convictions! Every servant is held to the standard of his master, not to the standard of a fellow-servant (Rom 14:4). Do not come between God and his servant in trying to remove a speck from his eye! Secondly, the person who feels he must correct everyone’s faults invariably ignores (or does not know) all the facts of the situation, nor does he know what is going on within the person. In going about correcting the offenses of others there is great opportunity to commit a serious offense yourself! Forgive and forget first; if that is not possible, THEN go to your brother.

     The story is told of a man traveling in a crowded bus through a certain city, when a rather dazed-looking father with two children boarded and sat down just across the aisle. The father immediately plopped down in the window seat and stared out the window, while his two children began to get rowdy and loud. The situation worsened and soon everyone on the bus was exasperated. The children continued fighting and the father continued to ignore them, until finally the man could take it no more.

     “Sir,” he said, tapping the man on the shoulder, “Don’t you see that your children are disturbing everyone on this bus? Aren’t you going to do something? What kind of father are you?”

     The father jumped at the touch and looked around. He looked at his children, and he saw everyone nodding their approval to the man’s intercessions. “Excuse me, I’m sorry,” he said in a low voice. “We’ve just left the hospital. My wife passed away this afternoon, and I guess we just don’t know how to act.”

     Can you imagine the silence in that bus? Suddenly everyone realized why the father was staring out the window and why the children were being so rowdy. What had been a great offense to them suddenly changed into thoughts of sympathy and understanding, and they were sorry to have stomped all over the poor family’s grief. The Christian who is able to give grace to an offending brother rather than judge him by outward appearances demonstrates that he is a spiritual mature individual. Likewise the Christian who is tempted to take offense demonstrates his spiritual maturity by not thinking more of himself than what he ought to think (Rom 12:3).

     When someone commits an offense, you have three options:

  • Reject the feelings of offense and simply forgive the offender. Jesus did this when Peter offended him in Mat 16:23.
  • Receive the feelings of offense and harbor them in your heart. Absalom did this when David offended him.
  • Go to the person who committed the offense, and correct him. Paul did this when Peter offended the Gentile Christians (Gal 2:11).

     Again, except for clear cases of sins unto death, option one is to be highly preferred, even before option three, which is the three-step formula of Mat 18:15-17. Obviously, option two is never valid for the Christian, but many have chosen it. Bitterness is the result, which is a serious sin unto death that can affect many, even if the original offense was unintentional! The whole bus-load of passengers was offended by the apparently neglectful father, but they had wrongly read the situation! This is so often true in many occasions of offense in churches today. We criticize and judge, we believe gossip and stories, we take sides and participate – all without complete knowledge of the situation. There is a better way, the way of love as described in 1Cor 13. Give grace to the brother that offends, give no offence to others (2Cor 6:3).

18 Verily I say unto you, Whatsoever ye shall bind on earth shall be bound in heaven: and whatsoever ye shall loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven.

     Earlier, Jesus said this to Peter after he professed to believe that Jesus was the Christ, but here He speaks to all the disciples. In both instances, the topic is the church (Mat 16:18; Mat 18:17), an institution not yet known to the disciples. Outside of these two passages, the word church (ekklesia) occurs nowhere else in the Gospels. The words bind and loose, meanwhile, were used by the Jews in applications of the Law, declaring something either to be allowable or to be unlawful (compare 1Cor 7:27). Thus, Jesus affirms that in His Kingdom, the churches would be charged with interpreting and applying the Scriptures, and also to discipline the disobedient and rebellious. The ekklesia, according to its usage in the Septuagint, refers to the congregation, or assembly of the people. Never, in either the NT or the Greek OT, does ekklesia refer to an assembly of elders, the Sanhedrin, or other official ministerial council. So in giving authority to the church body, Jesus excluded those authority structures. He even defines the minimum size for a church – two people!  

     These verses must never be construed to mean that heaven will support whatever the church decides on a matter. The great variety of churches and doctrines make that an impossible idea. Some do not believe homosexuality is a sin; does heaven support their determination? Second, such an idea would deny the absolute authority of the Scriptures, for each church could essentially establish its own heaven-supported principles. Proof that this notion is erroneous is shown by reading the Acts and Epistles of the Apostles, whose writings demonstrate they never thought Jesus had given them or the churches that authority. Everywhere in the NT we are impressed with the fact that the Apostles moved and operated as Heaven dictated, not vice versa.

     I further see these verses as a solemn reminder that a church’s “binding and loosing” decisions on earth must correspond to heavenly principles and laws. After all, Jesus is the head; the body needs to be ever searching to bind itself to His mind and will. And that is exactly how the Apostles acted in the NT church. The NASB translation directly supports this idea: Whatever you bind on earth shall have been bound in heaven; and whatever you loose on earth shall have been loosed in heaven. A church must carefully and wisely establish their decisions, interpretations and applications of the Scriptures to agree with what has already been established in heaven. To bind and loose, in both the Jewish and Christian sense, is a declaratory action rather than a self-originated mandate. What the churches of Christ declare to be bound or loosed on earth was first so mandated by heaven. If it be otherwise, that church is operating outside of its authority and its actions are invalid.

     The harmonization of these twin statements, is that in Mat 16:19 Jesus spoke to the disciples alone and affirmed that the Holy Spirit would underwrite the acts of the Apostles such that the correct and perfect foundation of the Church of Christ might be laid. He further certified that the decisions of the Apostles would have heavenly authority and that they must (and will) bind and loose in accordance with what has been bound in heaven. Therefore, Jesus endorsed the Scriptures (all written by His Apostles) as divinely inspired and authoritative, to be accepted as His own words and doctrine. However, in Mat 18:18 the context shows Jesus speaking more broadly to churches down through the ages to our present time. The foundational principles and doctrines of the Kingdom have been established by the Apostles in the NT Scriptures, and He now gives a two-fold charge to the churches: they are given the authority to discipline their members and they are held responsible to be sure that their decisions agree with heavenly-established Scriptures.

    This exposes the twin extremes that both Catholic and Protestant churches have taken. The first extreme follows the Roman Catholic Church’s precedent of investing the clerical body with the authority to bind and loose. To these, the individual church becomes “the Church,” and the standards and doctrines she has decided are sacrosanct and “bound in heaven.” They rule over their members in strictitude and discipline, forcing tithe of mint and cummin while omitting the weightier matters. In effect, they shut up the Kingdom of heaven against men (Mat 23:13) and act as lords over God’s heritage (1Pet 5:3; Mark 10:42-44). But the other extreme is no less erroneous! These are the churches that will not bind and loose in their membership. Sins of flesh and spirit sit on their pews glaringly uncorrected, growing ever more blatant and atrocious.

     Again, Jesus here gives authority to the churches for application of the Truth and discipline; not as the churches deem best, but according to heaven-set principles. Note that the topic is not the universal Church of Christ, but the local church body, even if there are as few as two members. The core meaning of John 20:23 parallels the meaning of verse 18.

19 Again I say unto you, That if two of you shall agree on earth as touching any thing that they shall ask, it shall be done for them of my Father which is in heaven. 20 For where two or three are gathered together in my name, there am I in the midst of them.

     The promise that the Father will give to His children their every petition is repeated in all the Gospels (Mat 21:22; Luke 11:9; John 16:23). However, certain conditions must be met. Jesus does not give a blank check to any two or three who ask in His name! (see also John 14:13-14). As proof of this fact, remember that the Apostles’ had just failed to receive their petition that God cast out a demon from the deaf and dumb lad. Neither did the apostle Paul receive his petition that God remove the thorn in his flesh. In spite of the church’s prayers, the apostle James was imprisoned and beheaded just a few years after Jesus ascended into heaven. Here are the conditions:

  • If we ask anything according to His will, He heareth us (1John 5:14).
  • Whatsoever we ask, we receive of Him, because we keep His commandments (1John 3:22).
  • If ye abide in Me, and My words abide in you, ye shall ask what ye will, and it shall be done unto you (John 15:7).
  • Let him ask in faith, nothing wavering…let not that man think that he shall receive anything of the Lord  (James 1:5-7).
  • Ye ask and receive not, because ye ask amiss, that ye may consume it upon your lusts (James 4:3).

     Our God is all-good, all-wise and all-powerful. His will and ways are far beyond our comprehension (Is 55:9). Being good, He will not give us something that will harm us (Mat 7:9-11). Being all-powerful, He will make the bad things of life to result in our spiritual good (Rom 8:28; Is 61:3). God designed time and human experience to follow its “natural” course, but He does interject in subtle ways to adjust it. Very rarely does He operate in obviously supernatural actions that do not follow the natural laws under which He made the universe to function, for that would undermine the very concept of walking by Faith.  

      Jesus gives the unmistakable impression that there is added power when the church in union prays to the Father. The verse begins, Again I say unto you, by which we understand that He is restating the thought of the previous verses. Two or three gathered in Christ’s name is a church, and Jesus promises to attend every assembly of believers! This promise has blessed many in persecuted countries, in prison cells and in times of trial and tribulation.

     The picture of Jesus being spiritually present with a church body in prayer to the Father mirrors the appropriate avenue for effective prayer, Whatsoever ye shall ask of the Father in My name, He may give it you (John 15:16). The church prays to the Father, but in agreement with the will of Christ, who Himself is present as they pray. Obviously, the church does not have perfect knowledge of Christ’s will, and so she relies also upon the Holy Spirit to guide her prayers (Rom 8:26). There is power in the prayers of a unified church, that is the truth of these verses. When the prayers of the saints ascend up to heaven mingled with the incense of Christ, then the hand of God acts upon the earth in power (see Rev 8:3-5).

21 Then came Peter to him, and said, Lord, how oft shall my brother sin against me, and I forgive him? till seven times? 22 Jesus saith unto him, I say not unto thee, Until seven times: but, Until seventy times seven.

     Evidently the disciples were pondering Jesus’ formula for resolving offenses. How often must they forgive the offender (Mat 18:15)? Peter, apparently wishing to fix the bounds of duty to forgive, suggests seven times as a generous limit. Jesus surprises them all, Not until seven times: but until seventy times seven – 490 times! And even then He was not speaking literally, for the one who keeps track of his brother’s offenses has not forgiven from the heart (Mat 18:35). God does not stop forgiving us at number 491 either, if we are constant to confess to Him (1John 1:9).

    Compare Jesus’ command to forgive those that offend us until seventy times seven with rebellious and worldly Lamech, who boasted that he would revenge those who offend him seventy and seven fold (Gen 4:24). Forgiving our fellow man his trespasses is a commandment that even supersedes the worship of God (Mat 5:23-24), for God’s forgiveness is contingent upon us forgiving others (Mat 6:14; Mark 11:25). The following parable illustrates this truth very clearly.

    The NIV translates seventy times seven as “seventy-seven times.” That translation is not due to differences in manuscripts, but is the view of English translators. In my opinion “seventy-seven” does not comport well with the context. Jesus is making the point that we must always forgive our brother when he sins against us. He does this in a demonstrable way, taking Peter’s suggestion (seven) and making a large number that is not meant to be taken literally. While both translations are well out of range to literal interpretation, seventy times seven better fits the intent of Jesus’ teaching. In another occasion, Jesus said we must forgive our brother even if he sins against us seven times in one day (Luke 17:4).

23 Therefore is the kingdom of heaven likened unto a certain king, which would take account of his servants. 24 And when he had begun to reckon, one was brought unto him, which owed him ten thousand talents. 25 But forasmuch as he had not to pay, his lord commanded him to be sold, and his wife, and children, and all that he had, and payment to be made. 26 The servant therefore fell down, and worshipped him, saying, Lord, have patience with me, and I will pay thee all. 27 Then the lord of that servant was moved with compassion, and loosed him, and forgave him the debt. 28 But the same servant went out, and found one of his fellowservants, which owed him an hundred pence: and he laid hands on him, and took him by the throat, saying, Pay me that thou owest. 29 And his fellowservant fell down at his feet, and besought him, saying, Have patience with me, and I will pay thee all. 30 And he would not: but went and cast him into prison, till he should pay the debt. 31 So when his fellowservants saw what was done, they were very sorry, and came and told unto their lord all that was done. 32 Then his lord, after that he had called him, said unto him, O thou wicked servant, I forgave thee all that debt, because thou desiredst me: 33 Shouldest not thou also have had compassion on thy fellowservant, even as I had pity on thee? 34 And his lord was wroth, and delivered him to the tormentors, till he should pay all that was due unto him.

     This parable, recorded solely in the gospel of Matthew, teaches that God forgives man based upon his forgiveness of others (Mat 6:12-15; Mark 11:25-26; Luke 17:3-4). The huge debt of sin which God will forgive those who ask is represented by the sum of ten thousand talents, the Greek is, “a myriad talents.” It is a debt far beyond any hope of repayment. Compare this with the fellowservant’s debt of an hundred pence (denarion). A denarius was equal to about one day’s work (Mat 20:2). The servant’s debt of ten thousand talents is 600,000 times larger than his fellow-servant’s debt of a hundred pence. It is like someone owing you $100 while you owe someone else $60,000,000! Such does our debt of sin compare to the debts our fellow-man owes us.

     The great benevolence, kindness, mercy and compassion of this King stand in sharp contrast to the character of His servant. These attributes of God are why it is possible for man to be saved, for not one man is capable of repaying the great debt his sin has incurred.

      Especially evident in this parable is the inconsistency in Calvinism’s teaching of once saved, always saved. The Lord initially forgave, but later re-imposed the full debt when the servant failed to demonstrate like compassion, and was subsequently delivered to the tormentors till he should pay all that was due. Those who believe that hell is not eternal are also found to be on the wrong side of Scripture here (see note Mat 18:8).

     Selling the servant’s wife and children to be slaves was not an uncommon way of repaying a debt, and here it parallels the debt incurred by the sin of Adam, by which the posterity of Adam was sold to Satan. For all have sinned, and therefore all are debtors to God and destined for justice and torment. Consistent with that picture is the later scene of the servant being delivered to the tormentors, which is an uncomfortable reference to Satan and his place of hell.

35 So likewise shall my heavenly Father do also unto you, if ye from your hearts forgive not every one his brother their trespasses.

     There is a particular phrase in this verse that I believe is the cause of many cases of unforgiveness and bitterness in persons. If ye from your hearts forgive not every one his brother their trespasses. So often people say they have forgiven, but their speech and actions betray them. They have not forgiven from the heart. True forgiveness, although not equal to forgetting, is much more than repeating the words. It is a constant, continual releasing of the offender from the offense he has committed. Sometimes a person must forgive daily, or even multiple times in a day – that is forgiveness “from the heart.”

     Forgiveness is not free; it will cost you dearly. That’s because forgiveness is a commitment to pay the debt of the offender yourself, just as the King in this parable himself paid the debt that his servant had incurred. Whether it be a debt of money or any other offense, the cost of forgiveness is never less than the cost of the offense! If a person is able to grasp that truth, forgiveness from the heart is more easily attained. Jesus paid your debt of sin – incurred by you offending His righteous laws; so also you must pay the debts incurred by your brothers’ trespasses against you. In practice, that means you may not hold that debt against your brother any longer. You have agreed to pay that debt yourself! Nor may you bring it up again to remind him of his trespass; you have marked it “paid in full.” That is what Christ has done for you, so that is what you must do for others. This is the solemn and sober, yet beautiful and amazing truth of the parable.

     This parable is often cited by theologians in the great debate to define the Atonement of Christ. Some view the Atonement as a Ransom transaction whereby Christ freed Mankind from the clutches of Satan by paying the debt of Mankind’s sin (Mat 20:28). Others view the Atonement as a Substitutionary transaction whereby Christ was punished for Mankind’s offenses and thereby satisfied God’s justice (Rom 4:25). Both views have support in the Scriptures and demonstrate that the actions whereby God and man were reconciled are complex and profound. The most important Old Testament type on the matter was the Day of Atonement, which itself was a very detailed and elaborate ceremony centered upon two goats. The first was offered up as a sin offering and its blood taken into the Holy of Holies, but the second goat had the sins of the people laid upon it and was left to roam in the wilderness, forever the sin-bearer (see note Heb 9:7).

commentary Matthew 17

1 And after six days Jesus taketh Peter, James, and John his brother, and bringeth them up into an high mountain apart,

     From the parallel passages we learn that Jesus left the multitude below and went up into the mountain to pray (Luke 9:28-36), and that Peter spoke only because he was afraid (Mark 9:2-9). It is likely that the Transfiguration took place late at night, for the three disciples were heavy with sleep (Luke 9:32), and didn’t return until the next day (Luke 9:37). It was Jesus’ custom to pray during the night, sometimes alone and sometimes with a few of His disciples (Mat 14:23; 26:36; Luke 6:12; Mark 1:35). At night, this experience would have been greatly enhanced. 

     While Matthew and Mark say the Transfiguration was 6 days after Peter’s confession, Luke says it was about an eight days after (Luke 9:28). Perhaps Matthew counted by the Jewish system (evening to evening) and Luke by the Roman (midnight to midnight). Or maybe Matthew counted exclusive of the first and/or last day(s) while Luke counted inclusive. The Gospels rarely give such specific times, so undoubtedly there is a reason they do so here. Perhaps it serves to pinpoint the Confession upon a Sabbath and the Transfiguration upon the first day of the week. The six days indicate that one week had passed (Luke 13:14; John 12:1), and the Sabbath would be the obvious anchor day for the Apostles’ memory of Peter’s confession in the region of Caesarea Philippi. All Jewish life revolved around the Sabbath. The day of the Transfiguration however, would have occurred on the first day of the week, for the journey into the mountain could not have been undertaken upon a Sabbath. They probably began their ascent on the afternoon of the Sabbath, walking only the prescribed one mile limit on that day and finishing the climb after dusk. They returned the next day (Luke 9:37), which means that the Transfiguration would have occurred during the night (Luke 9:32) upon the first day of the week. Perhaps it took place at daybreak in anticipation of His resurrection, for that is the symbolic meaning of the eighth day which Luke references. 

     While the purpose of the transfiguration was primarily prophetic, it surely served to confirm Jesus’ secret admission to the twelve that He was the Messiah (Mat 16:16-17). The Jews sought a heavenly sign from Jesus (Mat 16:1; Luke 11:16), but He chose to give that sign to just three of His disciples. Even then they were instructed to hold it in strict confidence until after His resurrection, for He could not yet explain the full details of His Kingdom and reign. Nevertheless, it must have been deeply confirming for the disciples to see Jesus conversing with Moses and Elijah and to feel the Shekinah cloud of God’s presence on the mount, followed by the Voice saying, This is My beloved Son, hear Him.   

     Jesus took the same three disciples with Him to the Garden of Gethsemane the night before His death (Mat 26:37), where, as they did at the Transfiguration, they again struggled with sleep (Mat 26:40; Luke 9:32). And earlier, these three were exclusively present when Jesus raised the young girl to life (Mark 5:37). They come first in every NT list of the Apostles (Mat 10:2). Peter writes personally of his transfiguration experience in his epistle (2Pet 1:16-18).

2 And was transfigured before them: and his face did shine as the sun, and his raiment was white as the light.

     The Greek word for transfigured is metamorphoo, from which the English word “metamorphosis” derives. Was He actually transformed into His heavenly body, or was it a natural miracle? His face became brilliant as the sun, and His clothes were glowing white and bright. As He prayed, the disciples saw Him in a new way (Luke 9:29). The description matches the apostle John’s vision in Rev 1:16; 10:1. The disciples had seen Jesus heal impossibly sick folks, control the forces of nature, walk on water, create food and even raise the dead to life. This sign seems on a level even above those, showing His ability to converse with Moses and Elijah.

3 And, behold, there appeared unto them Moses and Elias talking with him.

     Moses and Elijah, two of the greatest men in all of the Old Covenant, suddenly materialized to the disciples’ eyes. How they were identified we can only guess (compare Acts 1:10). Moses the Lawgiver was the single-most important person in the Jewish religion, while Elijah was the mightiest of the prophets and was widely expected to appear in person before the Messiah came. No two men worked more miracles than did Moses and Elijah, yet put together their miracles could never attain to the power and authority of Jesus Christ. They were top in the Jewish religion, but Jesus is exalted far above them by God’s words from heaven: This is My beloved Son… hear ye HIM.

     Elijah and Moses conversed with Jesus about His departure (Luke 9:31). The appearance of long-dead men at the Transfiguration supports my thought that this event makes a prophetic parallel to the Resurrection, for it was then that the souls of the righteous dead under the Old Covenant were liberated from Sheol. The subject of their conversation was the manner of Jesus’ death, foreshadowed and foretold in the Law and the Prophets (Luke 24:44-48). Was Jesus explaining to them the same details He told the disciples after His resurrection?

     Moses and Elijah departed this earth in distinctively unique fashion. Their dead bodies were never seen, for the Scriptures say that God Himself buried Moses and Elijah was taken up alive into heaven by a whirlwind. Before Christ descended into Sheol (Hades) and spoiled the strong man’s house, the souls of all the dead apparently waited together, although there may have been separate areas for the good and bad (see Luke 16:26). Evidently Moses and Elijah did not go into Sheol, God having taken them to Paradise (not eternal heaven, but the intermediate place of bliss with Christ and the saints) on the certain knowledge that Jesus would redeem them through His death. The prophet Samuel on the other hand, died and existed in Sheol, if we correctly understand him to say that he and king Saul would see each other in their grave (1Sam 28:19). After His resurrection Jesus ascended into heaven with the souls of the righteous dead that Satan held captive in Sheol (Mat 27:51-53; Eph 4:8-10; Dan 12:1-3). Now when a Christian dies he goes immediately to be with Christ in Paradise.

     While the departures of Christ, Moses and Elijah share similarities in that they are unique in history, the contrasts between them are even greater. Moses and Elijah departed this life and world easily, with none of the shame, pain and turmoil that Christ endured. Nor did Moses and Elijah resurrect from the dead with a glorified, immortal body. Christ was the first to rise from the dead; the rest must wait until the end.

4 Then answered Peter, and said unto Jesus, Lord, it is good for us to be here: if thou wilt, let us make here three tabernacles; one for thee, and one for Moses, and one for Elias. 5 While he yet spake, behold, a bright cloud overshadowed them: and behold a voice out of the cloud, which said, This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased; hear ye him.

     Ever an impulsive person, Peter was frightened by the manifestations and spoke without really thinking about what he was saying (Luke 9:33; Mark 9:6). Perhaps unconsciously, he put Moses, Elijah and Jesus on the same level by offering to make them each a tabernacle. God however, exalted Jesus above them, “This One is My beloved Son, hear HIM” (compare Acts 7:37). Heavenly words were expressed at Jesus’ baptism (Mat 3:17) and again just a few days before His death (John 12:28).

     For those willing to accept it, the Transfiguration illustrates the superiority of the New Law of Christ over the Old Mosaic Covenant. Moses and Elijah have God’s approbation, but now we must hear and obey the beloved Son of God. The bright cloud is a visible representation of Almighty God, as in the Old Covenant when He manifested His power by speaking from a cloud (Ex 19:9; 24:16; 34:5; 40:34; Lev 16:2; 1Kings 8:10; Eze 1:4). A pillar of cloud also led the children of Israel daily during their forty-year journey (Ex 13:21). Someday, Jesus will return to earth in a cloud (Luke 21:27; Acts 1:9; Rev 10:1; 11:12; 14:14). Those beautiful white clouds that appear in the sky from time to time remind us of that promise.

     The bright cloud overshadowed the disciples and descended upon them. They became exceedingly afraid as they entered into the cloud (Luke 9:34).

6 And when the disciples heard it, they fell on their face, and were sore afraid. 7 And Jesus came and touched them, and said, Arise, and be not afraid. 8 And when they had lifted up their eyes, they saw no man, save Jesus only. 9 And as they came down from the mountain, Jesus charged them, saying, Tell the vision to no man, until the Son of man be risen again from the dead.

     It is normal to experience fear and weakness when the Lord appears (Ex 3:6; Dan 10:8-12). As in the case of Daniel, the disciples were comforted by a supernatural touch. Looking up, they saw that the cloud was gone, as were Moses and Elijah. Jesus appeared to them in His normal, human form.

     Jesus warned the disciples to not speak of the vision until after His death and resurrection, but they did not really understand. Knowledge of Jesus’ earthly mission was withheld from them at this time. They heard His words and perhaps envisioned Him dying sometime far in the future, after successful leading Israel as a physical King for many years. Surely they wondered what He meant by rising again (Mark 9:10), but might have thought as Martha did later, that He spoke of the general resurrection (John 11:24). Certainly they did not imagine their Messiah dying on a Roman cross in just a few months and literally rising from the dead soon after! See also Mark 9:31-32 and Luke 9:43-45. Yet Jesus’ words came back to them in stunning clarity after His resurrection, when their eyes were opened to understand the real meaning of the Kingdom reign of Christ.

     Was this only a vision, or was it an actual experience? The Greek word is often used of a night vision, but not always (see Acts 7:31). None of the accounts hint that the disciples were dreaming and Luke’s account seems to emphasize that they were fully awake (Luke 9:32). I believe it was a real experience and is only called a vision because it was a supernatural confirmation that Jesus was the Messiah. This was their foremost thought as they descended the mountain the next day.

10 And his disciples asked him, saying, Why then say the scribes that Elias must first come? 11 And Jesus answered and said unto them, Elias truly shall first come, and restore all things. 12 But I say unto you, That Elias is come already, and they knew him not, but have done unto him whatsoever they listed. Likewise shall also the Son of man suffer of them. 13 Then the disciples understood that he spake unto them of John the Baptist.

     The Transfiguration had cast all doubt from the disciples’ minds. Jesus the Nazarene was truly the Messiah of God. They did question however, why the Jewish doctors of the Law said that Elijah must come before the Messiah. Their belief was correctly based on Mal 4:5-6, but Jesus explained that John the Baptist was the fulfillment of that prophecy. Not that Elijah was reborn as John (see note John 1:21), but that he would act in the spirit and power of Elias, which were the angel’s prophetic words to his parents (Luke 1:17). By saying Elias would restore all things, Jesus alluded to Mal 4:5-6 in agreement with the Pharisees’ interpretation. And He had already told His disciples that John was Elijah, but they could not receive it (Mat 11:7-14).

     Many Pre-millennialists cannot receive it either, insisting that Elijah must return again to earth before Jesus’ Second Coming. What a sad illustration of not accepting Jesus words! I say unto you that Elias is come already (Mat 17:12). Shockingly, the Pre-millennialists derive their idea from the same prophecy that Jesus alluded to here, Behold, I will send you Elijah the Prophet before the coming of the great and dreadful day of the Lord. And he shall turn the heart of the fathers to the children, and the heart of the children to the fathers, lest I come and smite the earth with a curse (Mal 4:5-6). Pre-millennialists say that Jesus’ first coming was not so great and dreadful, and so this must refer to His second coming. Their reasonings ignore this glaring problem: Jesus told His disciples that Malachi’s prophecy was fulfilled in the person of John the Baptist (cf Mal 4:6; Mat 17:11).

14 And when they were come to the multitude, there came to him a certain man, kneeling down to him, and saying,

     The remarkable account of the Apostles’ inability to cast out a demon is found in all of the Synoptic Gospels (see Mark 9:14-29; Luke 9:37-42). Only Mark relates the initial meeting. Returning from the mount, Jesus saw a great multitude surrounding the nine Apostles, who were engaged in deep dispute with the Jewish scribes. When the people saw Christ, they all ran to meet Him in great excitement and expectation. Jesus focused his attention immediately on the scribes, asking what they were questioning His disciples about. At that, the troubled father made his petition (Mark 9:14-17).

     Apparently these Jewish leaders were involved in bringing the demon-possessed boy. But what were their motives? Did they purposely arrive with the boy in Jesus’ absence in order to test the disciples? Had they already tried and failed to cast out the demon themselves? The Gospels do not answer those minor questions and even the greater ones involving the disciples’ inability to cast out the demon are unclear. However, there is a definite parallel in this account to Jesus casting out and defeating Satan (see note on Mark 9:15). There is also a visual parallel to Moses descending Mount Sinai and discovering turmoil and chaos in the multitude. Jesus was probably still in the regions of Caesarea Philippi (Mat 16:13) and as far as we know this His only journey there. Many then, had likely never seen Him in person. However, His fame surely the main topic of the town.

15 Lord, have mercy on my son: for he is lunatick, and sore vexed: for ofttimes he falleth into the fire, and oft into the water. 16 And I brought him to thy disciples, and they could not cure him.

     This was a most serious, disturbing condition. Luke the physician says: A spirit taketh him, and he suddenly crieth out; and it teareth him that he foameth again, and bruising him hardly departeth from him (Luke 9:39). Some say this was a strange case of epilepsy, but Jesus indicates that an invisible spiritual power was the actual cause of his suffering – a demon was tormenting him. It would seize him at the worst moment, causing him to fall into the fire or into the water. He would foam at the mouth, grind his teeth in agony and go completely stiff (Mark 9:18). The father testified this was his only son (Luke 9:38) and that he had been in this state since a child (Mark 9:21). 

     The Apostles were known to be able to cast out demons (Mat 10:1), but to their surprise the demon ignored them when in the name of Christ they commanded it to leave (Luke 10:17). Confusion reigned. This particular detail correlates with Jesus being the only one strong enough to cast out Satan (Mat 12:29; Luke 11:22). See our notes in the next verses.

17 Then Jesus answered and said, O faithless and perverse generation, how long shall I be with you? how long shall I suffer you? bring him hither to me. 18 And Jesus rebuked the devil; and he departed out of him: and the child was cured from that very hour.

     Jesus responded to the man’s story in strong language: O faithless and perverse generation. But who is He rebuking? The man, His disciples, or the scribes? Some say Jesus would never call His disciples by that phrase, yet He called Peter by an even worse name (Mat 16:23). Nevertheless, I tend to think that Jesus was not talking to His disciples, but to the scribes and the unbelieving man. In this case the Apostles did not have sufficient authority, but it was not their fault (Mark 9:29). The man however, admitted his unbelief and we know that the scribes did not believe on Him.

     As they brought the boy to Jesus, the demon suddenly tare him; and he fell on the ground, and wallowed foaming (Mark 9:20; Luke 9:42). There was no question that the boy was demon-possessed and that the disciples had been unable to cure him. Even the father’s petition revealed the doubts in his mind: If thou canst do anything, have compassion (Mark 9:21-22). And Jesus answered, If thou canst believe, all things are possible (Mark 9:23). To his credit, the father responded well in acknowledging his lack of faith and said with tears, Lord, I believe; help thou mine unbelief (Mark 9:24). Then Jesus commanded the foul spirit to come out of him and enter no more (Mark 9:25). Immediately he was cured. It was a powerful, irrefutable and very public display of His authority.

     It was also a stark reprimand of the unbelieving Jewish race, which the prophets called a stiff-necked and perverse generation (Ex 32:9; Deut 32:5). And many others are also of that mind (see Php 2:15). A new term provides emphasis: O faithless (apistos) generation. In the Epistles, that word is used frequently and almost exclusively of unbelievers. It occurs only twice in the Gospels outside of this account (John 20:27; Luke 12:46). To be faithless is to have heard and understood the Word, but then consciously and willfully refuse it (Rom 10:17). Why would God ever heal under such circumstances? In the next verses however, the disciples are also faulted for their unbelief (apistia).

19 Then came the disciples to Jesus apart, and said, Why could not we cast him out? 20 And Jesus said unto them, Because of your unbelief: for verily I say unto you, If ye have faith as a grain of mustard seed, ye shall say unto this mountain, Remove hence to yonder place; and it shall remove; and nothing shall be impossible unto you.

     The disciples had been given power over evil spirits (Mat 10:8) and had cast out demons before (Luke 10:17). Why then could they not cast out this one? Jesus said it was because of their unbelief, but also that this type of demon could not be cast out except by prayer and fasting. How was it that the disciples failed to believe? If they would have had faith as a grain of mustard seed…nothing would be impossible unto them. This is not easy to understand. A grain of mustard seed is very, very small (Mark 4:31). Did they have no faith? Clarke proposes that this faith as a grain of mustard seed actually refers to great faith instead of little faith. That idea would help resolve the question, but it does not seem to correctly define that phrase (see also Mat 13:31; Luke 17:6).    

      Because of your unbelief (apistia)…if ye have faith (pistis). The two words are antonyms. Jesus did not many mighty works in his hometown because of their unbelief (Mat 13:58). Unbelief is as much disobedience as it is disbelieving (see Heb 3:12; 3:19), but the Apostles were neither of these. Rather, it was upon the fifth and last stage of faith where they failed: Trust and Perseverance (see note on Mat 14:31). Remember the example of the Caananite woman of great faith (Mat 15:21-29) who persevered in astutely petitioning Christ. Her faith was demonstrated by her persistent, humble actions!. Did the disciples ask in similar evidential faith? Perhaps that is why Jesus said, This kind goeth not out but by prayer and fasting. A lengthier and fervent demonstration of faith was required, just as the Caananite woman had done.

     Equating “faith” with “belief” will lead to confusion and interpretational errors. Saving faith must step beyond belief to conscious assent, demonstration and perseverance. Abraham heard and believed God’s call to leave his home and he stepped out in obedience and proved it. Then he persevered and trusted God for the rest of his life in obeying his call. That’s biblical faith. To say that the disciples simply did not believe enough in order to cast out the demon is to deny the obvious. They knew and believed Jesus to be the Messiah of God, and they had already performed many miracles in that name. Their apistia was not in disbelieving, but in not trusting (Mat 14:31). This can be also be seen in Mat 21:21-22.

21 Howbeit this kind goeth not out but by prayer and fasting.

    Are there different degrees of demon-possession? Or are some demons stronger than others? Is prayer and fasting necessary of the healer, the individual, or affected others? And why did Jesus draw attention to the father’s lack of faith? (Mark 9:23-24).

     On many occasions, Jesus reinforced His teaching with particular actions or events in order to emphasize His point or to carry it into discussion. That was true for the Canaanite woman and for Peter’s confession, just to mention two recent examples. It could also be true of this event, and I note in particular the parallel to Jesus casting Satan out of heaven which resulted in the hope of salvation for Mankind (Rev 12:9; Mat 12:29; John 12:31). The demon-possessed son would be the fallen, sinful race of Man, wholly and hopelessly in Satan’s power. Like the poor boy, no work or effort of man could save him from his deplorable condition. Only the merciful act of the Son of God could free him from the terrible grip of the deceiver. The religious leaders could only pontificate and question, the multitude could only observe sadly the frightful state of the child. Even those closest to God could not cast out the foul spirit from the man! So too it is with sin. There is no name under heaven whereby we might be saved, other than Christ (Acts 4:12). Jesus was the only Power that could cast out this particular demon.

     The young man had been owned by this unclean spirit “of a child.” Man’s hopeless condition as a sinner without a Savior began with Adam and ended with Christ wresting from Satan the certificates of ownership which he held against every man on account of their sins. Sin gave Satan the ability to influence man, and he threw some into the fire and some into the water. His goal is to wreck and destroy every good thing that God created and since man is the ultimate in God’s creation Satan has devoted most of his time to corrupt and destroy their souls so that they must share his eternal fate in the Lake of Fire.

     The father suffered with the son in his infirmity and was equally blessed by the healing. The son was in constant danger of harming himself on account of the demon, who would take him suddenly, cruelly and often. The father could not leave the boy for even one moment. Additionally, the son was deaf and dumb (Mark 9:25), so the troubled father spoke for them both: If Thou canst do anything, have compassion on us and help us (Mark 9:22). The two were in desperate need, for the long years of suffering had left them both exhausted, doubting and fainting in spirit. This makes another parallel to man’s hopeless state before the Savior died (Rom 5:6-8; Eph 2:4-5), and Jesus made it even more obvious by noting the man’s doubts. Yet the father did well in acknowledging that, crying out, Lord, I believe; help thou mine unbelief. Here is the only prayer that can free a man from the grasp of the strong man! Complete acknowledgement of one’s inadequacy, and complete reliance upon Christ.

     When Jesus saw the man’s sincerity He rebuked the unclean spirit and it left him, but it rent him sore and threw him into such convulsions that he lay as one dead. Jesus however, took him by that hand, and he arose (Mark 9:26-27). This is an illustration of the great battle for man’s soul in the spirit realm. Christ spoke the true words of His authority and Satan was thrown out and no place was found for him. Meanwhile, the dead man was raised to a new life that will never end (Rom 6:6-11).

     This kind goeth not out but by prayer and fasting. Keeping to the above analogy, this would signify the prayers and fastings of Jesus in making a way for Man’s salvation. He fasted in the desert for forty days (Mat 4:2) and He prayed in the garden until drops of sweat as blood fell to the ground (Luke 22:44), interceding for Mankind with strong crying and tears unto Him that was able to save Him from death (Heb 5:7). Christ’s intercessory work and sacrifice accomplished Man’s healing; no other power could do that.

     Returning to our initial questions, why were the disciples unable to cast out this unclean spirit? Given Jesus’ final words on the topic, I believe the answer is intertwined with God creating Man with freedom of will. God does not heal or save a person who does not want to be healed or saved! Yet, being deaf and dumb, this boy could not express is desire to be saved and may not even have been mentally capable to do so. Meanwhile, the doubting father was hindering the effort by his unbelief. Intercession was needed, prayer and fasting that would bring the father and son to desire healing and believe that God is able to heal. Jesus says that anything we ask in His name He will do (John 14:13-14), but we must meet the conditions.

     Jesus however, has all power in Himself. He can command the demons and they must obey! By prayer and fasting. With these words, Jesus shows that intercessory prayer is a very powerful force in helping to change the life of another. Intercession will move the hand of God to work in a person’s heart, bringing circumstances into his life that will push him towards choosing faith. God designed man with reason and choice which He will not over-rule those, but His power is so great that He is able to achieve His purposes anyway. Even the heart of a king is in His hand, and He turneth it withersoever He will (Pro 21:1).

   For more on demon-possession, see note on Mat 8:28.

22 And while they abode in Galilee, Jesus said unto them, The Son of man shall be betrayed into the hands of men: 23 And they shall kill him, and the third day he shall be raised again. And they were exceeding sorry.

     It was only a few months before Jesus’ death. He must carefully prepare His disciples for that event (Mat 16:21; 20:18). They did not understand His words, but were afraid to ask Him (Mark 9:32). Was He speaking literally, or in a parable again? The last time Peter tried to disagree, Jesus had rebuked him. So they held their peace and wondered what it all meant (Luke 18:34). Jesus knew the best way to make His resurrection believable and convincing for all those who read and heard about it (Luke 24:44). This was part of that plan. Had they known and understood fully, would not the disciples have been taken as collaborators in a secret plan, only pretending that He had died and risen again?

24 And when they were come to Capernaum, they that received tribute money came to Peter, and said, Doth not your master pay tribute? 25 He saith, Yes. And when he was come into the house, Jesus prevented him, saying, What thinkest thou, Simon? of whom do the kings of the earth take custom or tribute? of their own children, or of strangers? 26 Peter saith unto him, Of strangers. Jesus saith unto him, Then are the children free.

     This little event is related only by Matthew, who happened to be a tax collector before following Jesus. The Greek word translated tribute is actually a piece of money, a didrachmon. It is found only in this verse. The tax was almost certainly the annual half-shekel contribution collected by the Jews for Temple expenses (Ex 30:13-16; 2Chr 24:6). Evidently this tax was not strictly compulsory, but it was expected of every Jewish male. In Moses’ day, this collection was made at the temple, but in Jesus’ time it appears that the leaders of each village were put in charge of collecting it. It is also possible that this tax was for the local synagogue, not the temple in Jerusalem. Whatever the case, the tax collectors came to Peter’s house (where Jesus had been staying for the last few years) to see why Jesus had not paid his yearly didrachmon.

     Before Peter could even tell Jesus about the tax, Jesus demonstrated His omniscience by bringing up the subject first. By children, Jesus means those of the king’s family; and the strangers are subjects of the king. All nations raise taxes from their citizens, but the king and his family is normally exempt from paying taxes. Jesus, being the son of the King of the temple, should be exempt from paying that tax, yet He acknowledged that the Pharisees would be greatly offended by that suggestion! 

     Jesus followed the Law of Moses as any other devout Jew, although the picture of the true sacrificial Lamb offering a lamb to the priest for a sacrifice to God is deeply ironic. His humility and servant-attitude stands out in these observances of temple requirements (like paying the half-shekel temple tax), for He had authored and ordained them Himself. Jesus was the object of the Law’s acts of worship and devotion. The whole scenario contrasts sharply with the disciples’ argument about who would be the greatest in the Kingdom in the following verses.

27 Notwithstanding, lest we should offend them, go thou to the sea, and cast an hook, and take up the fish that first cometh up; and when thou hast opened his mouth, thou shalt find a piece of money: that take, and give unto them for me and thee.

     The piece of money was a specific coin, the stater, which was equal to twice the didrachmon. Why did Jesus pay for only Himself and Peter? They were in Capernaum, in Peter’s house, and evidently the tax was collected based on where people lived. Jesus had lived with Peter in Capernaum for a couple years now. Jesus paid for Me and thee, even though He should have been free – He was the Son of the One who lived in the temple.

     Throughout His life, Jesus never used His miraculous powers for selfish means, like providing bread for Himself or turning stones into money to be used for food, clothing and shelter. This miracle is the closest Jesus ever came to using His unlimited power for personal gain and it gives just a glimpse of what it means to say that Jesus was human and yet God. On earth, Jesus was fully God, but He limited Himself to live and experience a human life as it pertains to pain and suffering. Being God, He was omniscient, omnipresent and omnipotent; being man He did not use those powers to eliminate or alleviate the normal life of a man. 

     Instead of simply handing over to Peter the tax money, Jesus required a task of him in order to obtain the promise. And that is an integral part of saving faith. Before hearing and believing can be called biblical faith, it must be correctly acted upon. His instructions are not difficult to understand nor hard to carry out (Mat 11:30), but they are essential nonetheless.

     Lest we should offend them. Yet, on other occasions He did not refrain from offending them when speaking the truth (Mat 15:12; John 6:60-66). There may be a lesson in these examples. There is a time to speak and a time to keep silence (Ecc 3:7). Jesus revealed the truth to Peter and His people have heard it also. But the Pharisees had been trying to kill Him for this very thing:  because that thou, being a man, makest thyself God (John 10:33). Jesus spoke the truth boldly and plainly, and many were offended in Him. This is one time when He chose to remain silent.

     Churches should wisely use these examples in their interactions with the world societies and authorities. Like our great Master and Savior, the Christian’s conduct should be always guided by humility, peaceable living and simplicity, but also in boldness and fervency of the truth.

commentary Matthew 16

1 The Pharisees also with the Sadducees came, and tempting desired him that he would shew them a sign from heaven.

     Either these men had followed Jesus around since the events of the previous chapter (Mat 15:1), or they were part of a second delegation sent from Jerusalem to keep an eye on Him. The religious Jewish elite were forever seeking a sign (see note on Mat 12:38), but their motives were evil (Luke 11:29; John 6:30; Mark 8:11). The parallel account says that Jesus sighed deeply in His spirit (Mark 8:12), being grieved at the hardness of their hearts (Mark 3:5) and saddened that they would not accept the many signs they had seen Him do throughout His ministry (Mat 11:20-21).

     Clarke describes the religious differences of the Pharisees and Sadducees in his commentary on Mat 16:1. By the time of Christ, the Jews had splintered into many religious sects. The three most popular were the Herodians, Pharisees and Sadducees. The latter two were enemies, yet here they united their efforts to destroy Jesus.

2 He answered and said unto them, When it is evening, ye say, It will be fair weather: for the sky is red. 3 And in the morning, It will be foul weather to day: for the sky is red and lowring. O ye hypocrites, ye can discern the face of the sky; but can ye not discern the signs of the times? 4 A wicked and adulterous generation seeketh after a sign; and there shall no sign be given unto it, but the sign of the prophet Jonas. And he left them, and departed.

     The Jews had asked Him earlier for a sign and Jesus had answered them similarly (cf Mat 12:39; Mat 16:4). The greatest sign would come later, when He rose from the dead, but the apostate religious leaders rejected that one too. John describes another occasion when the Jews demanded proof of His authority (see John 6:30-35).

     As was His frequent custom, Jesus gave the Jews a parable to think about, ending with, Can ye not discern the signs of this time? (see Luke 12:54-56). The Jewish apostasy was fully developed and the harvest over-ripe and spoiling (Joel 3:13), but the people were oblivious to the dark clouds gathering on the horizon. Their leaders were hypocritical and immoral, the flock was deceived and degenerate. Though outwardly they appeared holy and religious, within they were dead and depraved (Mat 23:27). They had rejected the many incontrovertible proofs of His identity – His authority and doctrine, His miracles of healing, His power over nature and spirits. The time-period of Daniel’s 490 year prediction to Messiah the Prince was blinking red (Dan 9:25-26); the prophecies of Old Testament were being fulfilled. The signs were all there, waiting for the wise to see, interpret and know their time. 

     The Jewish leaders could interpret signs in the physical skies, but not the signs that the Holy Scriptures had given them. In the land of Judea apparently, a red sky at evening means good weather in the morning, but a red sky in the morning means bad weather. Let the churches of Christ heed this lesson and study to discern the signs of their own times, for the skies are dark and lowering with deception and wickedness rising to never-seen heights (Luke 12:54-56). Someday the cup of iniquity will be filled to the brim, like the wickedness of the Jews in the time of Christ (Mat 23:32). Be alert and watch in prayer (Mark 13:35; 1Pet 4:7), for the end will come suddenly and unexpectedly (Luke 21:8; 2Pet 3:10).

5 And when his disciples were come to the other side, they had forgotten to take bread. 6 Then Jesus said unto them, Take heed and beware of the leaven of the Pharisees and of the Sadducees. 7 And they reasoned among themselves, saying, It is because we have taken no bread.

     Jesus often used normal life experiences to teach a spiritual lesson (Mark 8:15; Luke 12:1). The physical bread became a way to teach a spiritual truth. Leaven is a type of sin (Ex 12:15; Mat 13:33) spreading quietly and unseen through a group of people until all are infected. Just a little leaven spreads easily through a large loaf of bread (1Cor 5:6-7). The Jewish leaders’ teaching was based on a man-made religious system, an image only of the original Mosaic covenant. The Jewish population had been led astray by their false teaching, only a remanant were prepared and willing to accept their own Messiah.

     The symbolism in Jesus’ statement was entirely missed by the disciples, who were thinking physically while He was speaking spiritually. To us the figurative intent is quite clear, but the disciples’ spiritual minds had not yet developed. In many ways they were still like the Pharisees, looking for a physical Messiah who would lead them in triumph over the Romans and rule in power and political might. The day would come when their eyes were opened to the truths of the Gospel.

8 Which when Jesus perceived, he said unto them, O ye of little faith, why reason ye among yourselves, because ye have brought no bread? 9 Do ye not yet understand, neither remember the five loaves of the five thousand, and how many baskets ye took up? 10 Neither the seven loaves of the four thousand, and how many baskets ye took up? 11 How is it that ye do not understand that I spake it not to you concerning bread, that ye should beware of the leaven of the Pharisees and of the Sadducees? 12 Then understood they how that he bade them not beware of the leaven of bread, but of the doctrine of the Pharisees and of the Sadducees.

     Jesus had twice demonstrated that He could abundantly meet the disciples’ physical needs, so they should not have thought He was speaking about literal bread. Yet they failed to understand that He was speaking spiritually. Their error is a warning to all, be careful to read the Scriptures as God intended. Be sure to tune your mind to learn the spiritual truths of the Kingdom that Jesus was preaching. Yes, we live in this physical world and we must apply the Truth to our everyday lives, but the real meat of the Gospel is righteousness, and peace and joy in the Holy Ghost (Rom 14:17). And Jesus did not leave His followers without help in this regard, but sent them the Holy Spirit to help the seekers of truth to understand His teachings (John 14:26; 16:13-14).

     The chief leaven of the Pharisees was hypocrisy (Mat 23:1-4). They taught righteousness, but lived wickedly. Outwardly, they appeared to be godly, but inwardly they were corrupted by extortion and excess (Mat 23:25). Today, there are many other flavors of spiritual leaven and all are poisonous to the soul. We must be careful to study and preach the pure, unadulterated Word of God. Nothing added, nothing subtracted. All good flour held together with the oil of the Spirit and baked in the fire. That will produce the unleavened bread of holiness, a shewbread which is acceptable unto God (Ex 25:30).

13 When Jesus came into the coasts of Caesarea Philippi, he asked his disciples, saying, Whom do men say that I the Son of man am? 14 And they said, Some say that thou art John the Baptist: some, Elias; and others, Jeremias, or one of the prophets.

     This episode marks a change in Jesus’ ministry. His fame had spread throughout the land of Israel, aided by miracles and doctrines without rival in the history of the world. His mission was close to being accomplished and the time of His death was drawing nigh. It was time to prepare His disciples for it (Mat 16:21). They must believe that He was the Messiah and to this end Jesus elicited Peter’s confession. While some of the multitudes did believe Jesus to be the Messiah, it seems that a majority in Israel did not think so. They thought Him to be some other prophet of old whose soul was reborn in the body of Jesus. This idea is called “the transmigration of souls,” which some Jews, Herod included, apparently believed to be true (Mat 14:1-2).

15 He saith unto them, But whom say ye that I am? 16 And Simon Peter answered and said, Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God.

     Peter’s emphatic statement that Jesus was the Messiah of God is marked in all four gospels (Mark 8:29; Luke 9:20; John 6:69). The words seem to flow immediately from his mind; clear, strong and certain. An impulsive character, Peter was quick to speak, and sometimes suffered for it. Until this time, Jesus had not corrected the Apostles’ erroneous Jewish ideas concerning the Messiah, but now He will teach that the Messiah came to suffer, die and rise again (Mat 16:21). Jesus knew men’s hearts, so He did not ask the disciples what people thought of Him for His own benefit, but to stimulate their minds to make a sincere confession of faith that He was the Son of God, the Messiah sent to save men.

     Christ is the Greek word for the Hebrew word Messiah, which means “the anointed one.” Jesus rarely said out-right that He was the Messiah, the Son of God. Instead, he let people deduce His identity from His works and words (John 10:24-25). How can it be that all the Jews did not immediately and unequivocally hail this miracle worker and teacher of good as their long-sought Messiah? Most seemed to waver in doubt and skepticism (John 7:31) due to His physical poverty and to His deep humility. He avoided all fame and honor of men, and this was just not acceptable for their Messiah!

17 And Jesus answered and said unto him, Blessed art thou, Simon Barjona: for flesh and blood hath not revealed it unto thee, but my Father which is in heaven.

     Flesh and blood is a Biblical euphemism for “Man.” Nobody told Peter that Jesus the Nazarene was the Messiah. He came to that belief on his own, by allowing his spirit to listen to the works of God. The Pharisees would not believe because they would not listen. Jesus made reference to this dichotomy in Mat 11:25, when He thanked God for allowing the poor and humble to understand, while hiding knowledge from the humanly wise (see also Mat 13:14).

     I do not think that Jesus means to say that human reason can never lead one to belief in God, although it is true that Reason can be a stumblingblock to the believing component of Faith. Some cannot understand why a good God permits evil in the world, and so will not believe in Him because of their inability to reconcile that in their minds. Yet some are brought to belief in God through their study of material science, or by pondering the concepts of good and evil.

     Believing in Christ is a conscious assent of the mind, but the level of one’s faith is not determined by the strength of his human reason! Some of the most fervently loyal and active Christians were men with little exposure to “human knowledge.” True, saving faith must be more than a logical conclusion of belief of mind. It must extend to actions (see note on Mat 14:31). The disciples had left all to follow their belief that Jesus was the Christ (Mark 10:28). Every soul that comes to Christ has first been drawn by the Spirit (John 6:44), yet that revealing (apokalupto) happens in the mind.     

     Simon Barjona, or, Simon son of Jonah (John 1:42). Interestingly, Peter’s gospel (Mark) omits this glowing commendation. The Apostles were the most humble, unpretentious men this world has ever known. Men who would rather record their faults and short-comings than their achievements and strengths (2Cor 12:10). And that is an impressive proof of the authenticity of their record, being a feature without precedent in human history.

18 And I say also unto thee, That thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build my church; and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it.

     Peter said, Thou art the Christ, and Jesus responded, Thou art Peter. Another play on words follows: Thou art Petros, and upon this petra I will build my Church. Petra means a large rock, while Petros is a small rock. The Catholics base their doctrine of apostolic succession and popery upon these verses. Yet the real subject is not Peter, but Christ and His coming Church. Jesus is drawing a picture of Himself building a city so mightily and immovably fastened upon a rock that enemy attacks will never prevail against it, no, even though they come from the Devil’s hell. The keys to open the gates of this fabulous city He gives to Peter, who will be the first to preach the Gospel and the human instrument that will formally open the door of salvation to the Gentiles.

     This is the first occurrence of the word church (ekklesia) in the Scriptures. Outside of Mat 18:17, it is not found elsewhere in the four Gospels. The Apostles however, used ekklesia often in the rest of the New Testament, usually in reference to individual churches and not as Christ did here in referring to the universal, timeless Church of God. Jesus spoke of the coming Kingdom of heaven using various terms and parables, yet apart from the above-mentioned private times with His disciples, He seems to have avoided this word, ekklesia.

     The reason is probably due to that word’s usage in the Greek Scriptures of the Jews, where ekklesia is the standard term for the religious assembly or congregation of the Jews. Imagine the outrage of the Jews if they had heard Jesus say, I will build My ekklesia. As if He were saying, “The time of the Jewish ekklesia has ended (Acts 7:38); now I will build My ekklesia, and the gates of hell shall never prevail against it.” While that inference is perfectly true, He could not say it publicly without damaging His mission. And so Jesus forbade His disciples to spread this teaching before His death (v20). Nevertheless, they would spread this Gospel throughout the lands of the Gentiles until the Church of Christ was firmly established. It is similar to the prophet’s picture of a stone, cut without hands, smiting the image and growing into a great mountain that filled the whole earth (Dan 2:34-35). The New Covenant is made up of spiritual Jews from every nation under heaven (Gal 6:16; Col 3:11; Rom 2:29; Php 3:3). 

     The Church of Jesus Christ likened to a city built upon a rock is imagery consistent with other Scriptures (Acts 4:11; 1Cor 3:11; 1Pet 2:4-7; Heb 11:10; Mat 7:24). The chief rock or corner stone is Christ, but the Apostles are called foundation stones in the Church (Eph 2:20; Rev 21:14). Peter had a special place in this foundation as the next verse will show, but the principal rock of the Church is Jesus Christ (1Cor 10:4). Peter’s confession that Jesus the Nazarene is Christ the Son of the Living God is a relevant truth for each believer. Upon this rock, this confession, Christ is building His Church. A person’s first, essential work in salvation is to believe that Jesus is the Christ (John 6:29). So while Jesus does give Peter a place in the foundation of Christianity, the significant truth is Peter’s confession that Jesus is truly the Son of God.

     The gates of hell (hades). This is an Old Testament expression, although not found in this exact English form. The Greek of the Septuagint in Isa 38:10, the gates of the grave, is virtually identical. And the gates of death in Job 38:17; Ps 9:13; 107:18 is also similar. The phrase seems to be a figurative expression for Satan’s powers of spiritual wickedness and his evil plots to destroy and corrupt Christ’s Kingdom. It also anticipates the triumph of Christ over death and Hades. He offers every person the opportunity to participate in that glorious triumph.

19 And I will give unto thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven: and whatsoever thou shalt bind on earth shall be bound in heaven: and whatsoever thou shalt loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven.

     The subject of Jesus’ ministry was the New Covenant that God was making with Man, that Kingdom of heaven He had been preaching which was even then at hand (Mat 4:17; Mat 10:7). The seven parables of chapter 13 described the Kingdom under various perspectives. Now, Jesus tells the disciples that He is giving to Peter the keys that will open the gates of the Kingdom to the world. Peter would be the first to proclaim Jesus’ resurrection to the Jews (Act 2:14) and he would also be the first to minister salvation to the Gentiles. The keys belong to Jesus (Rev 3:7) and He gives them to Peter (and the other Apostles) to lay the foundations of His new building of heaven. Under the control and inspiration of the Holy Spirit, the Apostles would write the Scriptures that would establish the correct and true parameters for the Church’s determinations of binding and loosing in the Kingdom. They were the hands by which the new Church would be established for all nations. Their exemplary faith and lives have greatly inspired later men of God.

     Bind and loose are common Jewish words that rabbis used to judge actions as lawful or unlawful in regards to the Old Covenant Law. Here, Jesus endorsed Peter and the rest of the Apostles to teach and establish the laws of His Kingdom Church after His death and ascension into heaven. This fiat cannot be limited to Peter in exclusion of the other Apostles, for Peter spoke for them all in declaring, Thou art the Christ. It is only logical then that Christ’s proclamation is received by all as well. Yet, in naming Peter as chief recipient of the keys, Jesus foretold the opening of His Kingdom to the Gentiles by way of revelation to Peter, who saw in a vision unlawful meats made lawful (Act 11:5-10) and who first witnessed the Spirit coming to the Gentile family of Cornelius.

     Outside of Christ’s work at Calvary, the inclusion of the Gentiles into the Kingdom of heaven was the most difficult undertaking within God’s new plan for Man, yet Jesus entrusted that work to the Apostles. Christ hereby certified that the decisions of the Apostles have the backing of heavenly authority. In affirming that whatever His Apostles bind on earth will agree with what has been bound in heaven, Jesus endorsed the Scriptures (all written by His Apostles) as divinely authoritative. Christ’s words here are powerful and clear. We are to accept His Apostles’ teaching as His own. He had breathed upon them the Holy Spirit (John 20:22) and they moved and spoke under His control (John 20:23).

     Some expositors however, teach that this verse gives individual churches (or her leaders) the authority to bind and loose; that is, later human leaders of the churches are empowered to decide what is lawful and what is not. However, to think that Jesus was speaking to later churches when He was actually addressing Peter is a risky extrapolation. Furthermore, the early churches after the times of the Apostles did not act in that manner. And if this idea were true, the Catholic Church of the middle ages was right and the reformers were malcontents. True, individual churches do make right-versus-wrong decisions, but only in applying and enforcing Bible principles that have already been “bound and loosed” by the Apostles. Thinking that Christ gave His authority to churches was the very error of the popes. The Scriptures are the revealed will of God for the churches and they explain what has been bound and loosed in heaven.

     So the responsibility of the churches is to acquaint themselves with the Scriptures written by the Apostles and require their members to follow them. Circumstances and situations will possibly require considerations and decisions by the churches, and if this is what these expositors understand by “binding and loosing” then we agree. But to teach that in giving Peter the keys of the kingdom Christ was effectively imparting to church leaders His authority stretches sound interpretation. Jesus and the disciples were alone praying (Luke 9:18) when He brought up this subject, and He charged them to keep it in strict confidence until after His departure (Mat 16:20). Although this was written for our benefit, He was speaking to the Apostles. True to history, they would lay the eternal foundations of His Kingdom with their teaching and martyred lives. Extending this unique authority and power to all church leaders would make Scripture re-writable and uncertain. There are many false leaders willing to be tools of the devil in making their own “binding and loosing” determinations of good and evil.

     The Scriptures show that a church has the authority to require their members to follow the commandments of the Scriptures. Jesus addressed that topic in Mat 18:17-18 in language very similar to the present passage. He says, Whatever you bind on earth shall have been bound in heaven; and whatever you loose on earth shall have been loosed in heaven (NASB). In this case Jesus did speak to the churches and the link between these two passages is that while with Peter’s confession Christ confirms the authority of the Apostles in establishing the Church of Christ, the latter is a solemn reminder to the churches that all “binding and loosing” decisions on earth must be made in correspondence with heaven-set principles and laws.

     Obviously, the Apostles were were fallible men. So it is significant and important that Jesus, by the Holy Spirit’s guiding, underwrote the acts of the Apostles such that the correct and perfect foundation might be laid (Is 54:11-14). How confirming that is! We hold the will of God in our hands when we read the Holy Scriptures. Amen.

20 Then charged he his disciples that they should tell no man that he was Jesus the Christ. 21 From that time forth began Jesus to shew unto his disciples, how that he must go unto Jerusalem, and suffer many things of the elders and chief priests and scribes, and be killed, and be raised again the third day.

     For much of Jesus’ time on earth, He avoided being publicly known as the Messiah (Mat 9:30; Mat 12:16). One reason for that was because of the Jewish misconception of their Messiah’s mission. Even now, Peter would try to rebuke Him for predicting His death! Nevertheless, it was important for them to understand His true mission, for the time of His sacrifice was approaching. He had walked the earth proclaiming the Gospel of the Kingdom for 3 years and in about 6 months He must go to Jerusalem (Luke 13:33) to be killed by the Jewish leaders (Luke 9:22). Jesus knew beforehand every detail of His future and He adjusted His earthly experiences accordingly. After His death, the Apostles would show by many infallible proofs that Jesus Christ, risen from the dead and ascended into heaven, was the Messiah long promised by God (Act 4:10).

22 Then Peter took him, and began to rebuke him, saying, Be it far from thee, Lord: this shall not be unto thee. 23 But he turned, and said unto Peter, Get thee behind me, Satan: thou art an offence unto me: for thou savourest not the things that be of God, but those that be of men.

     This is an extremely interesting and instructive detail. Peter, perhaps basking in Christ’s approbation, took the initiative to give Jesus bad, even sinful, advice. Amazingly, Peter was one minute the mouthpiece of the Spirit and the next he was the mouthpiece of Satan. Some scholars do not see it this way and would translate Satan to be adversary, thereby softening Jesus’ charge. Yet the Greek word is always translated Satan in the NT. And the temptation in Peter’s words are equal to Satan’s reasoning in the desert, when he greatly tempted Jesus to avoid the disgraceful chore for which He had come into the world. Christ responded to Peter and Satan in almost identical words (compare Mat 4:10 and Mat 16:23). Peter was not the devil, nor did he yet understand Christ’s mission, but his words were the devil’s words. 

     Reading the parallel account in Mark 8:33 it appears that Peter had taken Jesus aside to counsel Him, but Jesus turned back to His disciples and rebuked Peter publicly. Catholics, who crown Peter as their first “Vicar of the Son of God,” are perturbed by Jesus’ blunt words. Jesus had just elevated Peter very high; now He lowers him quite to the bottom. And from now until after Jesus’ resurrection Peter will make several gaffes: foolishly suggesting to build 3 temples at the transfiguration, protesting when Jesus tried to wash his feet, cutting off the high priest’s servant’s ear, and denying the Lord three times at His trial. Yet Peter was a powerful figure in boldness and integrity in spreading the Gospel.

     There are lessons for Christians in this exchange. Do not blindly trust any man to be your spiritual leader, for good men and bad have been used as tools in in the spiritual battles and doubts of others during this test of life. Remember the man of God who lost his life for listening to the old prophet of God (1Kings 13). We must be aware and astute to discern between right and wrong exposition and advice! As with Peter, good Christians might speak the very words of truth at one point, but then counsel entirely contrary to the will of God in a later instance. For as with Peter, counselors are not privileged to know the future, nor do they know the route that God has designed for you. It is disconcerting to realize that a fellow Christian may give false counsel, but it is even worse to deny that as a possibility.

     An example of a bad man being used by God to speak truth can be seen in John 11:47-53. Caiaphas knew not that he prophesied Jesus’ death and commended His mission when he spoke to the Jews. How powerful and confirming to see God turn the king’s heart whithersoever He will (Pro 21:1; Ps 2:4; 1Cor 3:19). The lesson here is the importance of being attuned to the Father, as Jesus was, so that we may correctly discern the true path. Jesus knew that Peter’s words were wrong for Him and He rejected them immediately.

24 Then said Jesus unto his disciples, If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me.

     Death to self. Death to my will. Death to my wishes, dreams and desires. The cross was certainly not Jesus’ wish, neither will your cross be your wish. Nevertheless, “If you want to follow Me, you must take up that undesired cross and carry it to the bitter end. If you try to save your life by discarding your cross, you will end up losing your spiritual, eternal life.”

     Strong words! Difficult words! Yet they are saving words.

     The songwriter comforts us, “The cross that He gave may be heavy, but it never outweighs His grace.” Jesus carried His cross up Mount Calvary, knowing all the time that at any moment He had the power to abort the mission, call for ten thousand angels to destroy those wicked men, and avoid the suffering, abuse and separation. So too at any time a Christian may discard his own cross, give up and avoid the suffering, persecution and separation from worldly pleasures. But like our Savior, let us carry our crosses with perseverance on to the finish line, keeping always in sight the future joy that is set before us (Heb 12:1-2).

     Be warned that this is where Satan most actively tries to subvert the Gospel of Christ. And his strategies are arrayed against the whole spectrum of the human will. For some Satan uses deception, clouding the issues with questions and emotional experiences aimed at making your own personal will seem to be God’s will. He will try to deceive you into thinking that your new cross is God’s, when it is actually only your man-made article. Like Jesus to Peter, you must not let such thoughts dwell in your heart for one moment; “Get thee behind me Satan! Thou art an offence unto me!” Many have deceived themselves into thinking they are following Christ when they are actually following their own wills (Mat 7:22-23). Remember that Jesus’ cross was difficult, sorrowful and lowly. And we are called to follow Him. If we are truly walking in His path, we should expect the same experiences (John 15:20). Denying self is refusing anything that might hinder you from doing all that Christ asks of you. It is rarely a simple, easy choice; Jesus even likens it to hating yourself (Luke 14:26-27).

     Another tool Satan has used to wreck a Christian’s will is to attack him with discouragement and depression. Health issues, family disagreements, financial difficulties, untimely deaths, etc. are things that often bring Satan in an all-out attempt to get Christians to give up their faith in Christ and fall into bitterness and defeat. Unfortunately, many false teachers in the churches contribute directly to the devil’s success in this area, teaching that once he is saved a Christian should expect to live happily ever after. Not true! According to our Master’s own words, suffering and self-denial are universal traits of His followers.

     Do not believe those who say that this world is not such a gloomy place and that the physical Christian life is all joy, peace, and happiness. The Scriptures and the historical record of Christ’s true followers teach a very opposite truth. If there is, nor has there been, no suffering and struggle in your life, be concerned. Maybe the devil is not bothering you because you already belong to him! The Apostle James says we should rejoice in our tribulations and suffering, recognizing that the yielding of a man’s will to God’s is effecting a better person (James 1:2-4). It is sad that many churches today understand perfectly the terrible cross that Christ bore, but of their own cross they are next to completely ignorant, nor do they want to hear about it (2Tim 4:3-4).       

     Notice the three steps to being Jesus’ disciple and receiving the reward of eternal life: 1) If any wills to follow Me. 2) Let him deny his own Self. 3) Take up his cross, and follow Me. These are crucial steps that must be taken in order to arrive at the goal. You cannot stop after the first step. The parallel accounts in Luke 9:24-26; Mark 8:34-38 are similar in demanding our total obedience to the commandments of Christ. Many however, are demonstrating by their very lives that they believe this solemn command to be nothing but a nice-sounding metaphor. They are gambling with their own soul. What will it cost you to become a Christian? It will cost you…everything. And it must begin and end with the rejection of your will – its wishes and loves – to follow instead the will of Christ as laid out in the Holy Scriptures.

25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?

     Jesus repeated this simple, sober proverb on several occasions. He spake the same words to His disciples just before sending them out two by two into the cities of Israel (Mat 10:39), and again in the Olivet Discourse (Luke 17:33) and once more in the week of His death (John 12:25). It is appropriately linked with the three-fold injunction of the previous verse to follow Christ at the cost of following Self. The words life and soul in these two verses derive from the same Greek word, psuche. While that word can refer to earthly life, this passage (as well as others) gives psuche an immortal dimension, for clearly Jesus here refers to spiritual life as opposed to physical life. Pnuema corresponds to the spirit and immortal soul as well, while zoe is the more general word for life. These three Greek words correspond to the Hebrew words nephesh, ruwach and chay.

     Here we learn the true value of the human soul and what that should mean to the way we live. The first part of this duplet intones the impossibility of a man saving his own soul. Whosoever will try to save it will end up losing it. Man cannot save his soul because every man has sinned, and sin causes guilt requiring punishment. The second part explains how a man’s soul can be saved:  by losing one’s life for the sake of Christ. John describes it as “hating one’s own life” (John 12:25). Not that literal, physical death is required to be saved, but that one must deny Self so that Christ’s will can shine forth from his life! Our attitude must always be: Christ first and always, regardless of the consequences to my self, my will, my very life. Essentially, one gains Life by living in the denial of Self.

     Something must be lost in order to gain eternal life and that something is our natural way of life:  our ambitions, our desires, our wills, our natural pleasures and loves, our personal preferences, our inner earthly joys. These must be sacrificed in order to gain that jewel of priceless measure, eternal life! Sometimes it is the smaller sacrifices that are the hardest to make.

     The opposite is that man who would gain the whole world, and lose his own soul.  These are men who have lived for themselves, some gaining riches, some glory and fame, some just cheap pleasures. Jesus says a person might gain the entire world and yet that success would pale in comparison to what a saved soul will gain in eternity! And to think that every person, from the least to the greatest, has the opportunity and ability to attain a prize worth more than all the world’s amenities and pleasures put together! Yet some church members try to do as little as possible to gain this possession – they “ride the fence,” getting as close to the world as possible. Is the risk worth it? What shall a man give in exchange for his soul?

     The truth is a simple choice: live a life of Self now and lose a life Eternal, or lose a life of Self now and gain a life Eternal. Sadly, many value their souls as very, very cheap. Judas sold his soul for thirty pieces of silver, Esau for only a bowl of soup. The carnal Christian forfeits his soul for a short time of Selfish living. The true worth of a human soul? Priceless. It is to be regarded as more valuable than the whole world. Let us never forget that our mission is to win souls for Christ. The best of our lives, our talents, our gifts, our money and time should be invested in gaining pounds for the Kingdom (Luke 19:13).

     There is simply nothing so important and so valuable as your soul. It is a sobering possession. The parallel accounts adds, Whosoever therefore shall be ashamed of Me and My words in this adulterous and sinful generation; of him shall the Son of man be ashamed, when He cometh in the glory of His Father with the holy angels (Mark 8:38). Who would choose to possess the entire world for 50 years in exchange for afterward enduring unending torment at the hands of the most evil, demented individual in the universe?

27 For the Son of man shall come in the glory of his Father with his angels; and then he shall reward every man according to his works.

     Some souls will gain eternal life, but many others will throw it away. The Great White Throne Judgment at the end of Kingdom of Christ on earth will gather every nation, kindred and tongue before God. There, He shall reward every man according to his works (Mat 25:31-34). In the Greek, the word reward (apodidomi) means to recompense or render what is due, whether good or bad (see 2Tim 4:14; Rev 18:6). Let no man deceive you by saying obedience is not an integral part of saving faith! Works must accompany belief or there is no saving faith. The Gentile woman of the previous chapter was commended for her faith, which Jesus called great because of her powerful actions (Mat 15:28). It is absurdity to think that belief alone will earn a heavenly reward. The Bible teaches otherwise. True faith must have accompanying works, or it is dead, useless, unsaving (James 2:20). Obviously, our works cannot earn salvation either. Saving, evangelical faith is Belief, Acceptance, Obedience and Trust working together (see note on Mat 14:31).

     While Christ rewards those who work well for Him by showering them with amazing gifts and joys, but how does Satan reward those who work well for him? By weighing them down with even more bitterness, torments and sadness! What a terrible difference.

28 Verily I say unto you, There be some standing here, which shall not taste of death, till they see the Son of man coming in his kingdom.

     Verse 27 closed the topic of the great loss of souls at the end of the Kingdom on earth, when Jesus will come with His angels to judge every man (see also 2Cor 5:10). Verse 28 however, retrocedes to describe the beginning of that Kingdom on earth, for it would be odd to speak of the end of a Kingdom that had not yet officially begun. Jesus made the consummation of the Kingdom of exigent concern to His disciples by predicting its establishment in their own lifetime.

     Some scholars, and most notably the Preterists, make v27-28 refer to the same end-of-the-age event. Yet a straightforward reading of the passage places both verses in the greater context of sacrificing all in order to enter the Kingdom of God. The moment is coming, Christ says, when the secrets of men will be made known and the Kingdom will be purged of all things wicked (Rom 2:16; Luke 9:26). This Kingdom had not yet begun, but it was so near that some standing in the multitude listening to His words would be alive to witness the remarkable and earth-changing events of its coming to Mankind. The common element in these two verses is the Kingdom of Christ, the Age of Grace that Jesus came to establish and the two events serve to bookend the earthly aspect of that Kingdom. Preterist doctrine notwithstanding, Jesus has not yet rewarded every man according to his works.

     Some say Jesus was speaking of His Transfiguration in verse 28, but the connection is vague and purpose-less. True, the Transfiguration is the next event related in this Gospel, but how is that related to Christ coming in His kingdom? As with the Preterist interpretation, the basis for this idea is to make v27-28 refer to the same event. Yet, why is it considered strange that Jesus would speak of both the beginning and ending of the earth-bound Kingdom in adjacent verses? Jesus had just told the disciples that Peter would open the door to the Kingdom and that it would be built to prevail over the attacks of hell (Mat 16:18-19).  

     The Preterist heresy makes this passage (and Mat 26:64; Mark 14:62, etc) refer to a Second Coming that supposedly took place in AD 70 at the destruction of Jerusalem. Jesus spoke of the Kingdom of God frequently and always in reference to the people of His covenant (Eph 3:15). It would be a never-ending Kingdom of souls that He would inaugurate with His death. In His parables of the Kingdom of God, Jesus sometimes described the earth-bound churches of Christ and sometimes the future heavenly Church. Here it is natural that Jesus speak of the coming of the earthly aspect of the Kingdom of God (Luke 9:27), and then connect the nearness of that occasion with the lives of the disciples. It is the normal and easy understanding of this passage. To interpret it otherwise signifies an ulterior motive, another agenda.

     Some have utilized the final phrase to enlarge a point of doubt: some of those who are standing here will not taste death until they see the Kingdom of God after it has come with power (Mark 9:1, NASB; Luke 9:27). Jesus made a similar statement upon sending the twelve to preach the coming Kingdom, Ye shall not have gone over the cities of Israel, till the Son of man be come (Mat 10:23). A series of crucial events brought the Kingdom of Christ to earth with power. It all began with the preaching of John, followed by Jesus’ baptism and ministry of miracles and teaching. Then came the most important events of Christ’s death, resurrection and ascension to the heavenly Throne. These were followed by such essential events as the coming of the Spirit at Pentecost, the entrance of the Gentiles into the Kingdom and the writing of the Holy Scriptures. In that vein, Jesus continues His mission message, the Kingdom of heaven is at hand (Mat 4:17; Mat 10:7), by noting that some in audience would live to see it come with power. In his epistle, Peter also speaks of the power and coming of Christ in connection with His first coming (2Pet 1:16).

commentary Matthew 15

1 Then came to Jesus scribes and Pharisees, which were of Jerusalem, saying, 2 Why do thy disciples transgress the tradition of the elders? for they wash not their hands when they eat bread.

     Jesus’ miracles and teaching gained such fame that the Jewish religious leaders in Jerusalem sent a delegation to Galilee in order to observe and interview Him and then report on His actions. It appears that the disciples were flattered to see members of the high-profile Pharisees coming all the way from Jerusalem to see their Master, for they expressed disappointment that Jesus was not more welcoming (Mat 15:12).

     The Jews in the time of Christ had many customs involving the washing of hands and plates before meals (Mark 7:2-4), but the Mosaic Law contained no such commandments. Sometime after the return from Babylon the Jewish elders had formulated these elaborate handwashing rituals, which may have been based upon the uncleanness laws found in Scriptures such as Lev 5:2-3; 11:30-35. The Pharisees however, claimed to possess the “oral law,” which was a supposed infallible interpretation of the written Law. This oral law had purportedly been passed down through the years by the prophets and elders. Centuries after Christ, this “oral law” was finally written down and called the Talmud.

     The Pharisees’ man-made laws were oppressive, unbending and sometimes arbitrary. Their lengthy sabbath rules, for instance, addressed even the most simple physical exercises. A cripple could not use his crutch on the sabbath, even to attend the synagogue. Throughout His life on earth, Jesus obeyed the Mosaic Law, but he did not always follow these doctrines of men. Evidently the Pharisee investigators had seen the disciples eating their meals without washing, or maybe one of them had picked and eaten some figs on the Sabbath. Whatever the case, it provided the Pharisees with a point of criticism, for they were desperate to discredit Jesus in the eyes of the people. They had tried earlier, when the disciples picked some heads of wheat on the Sabbath (Mat 12:1-2).

3 But he answered and said unto them, Why do ye also transgress the commandment of God by your tradition? For God commanded, saying, Honour thy father and mother: and, He that curseth father or mother, let him die the death. 5 But ye say, Whosoever shall say to his father or his mother, It is a gift, by whatsoever thou mightest be profited by me; 6 And honour not his father or his mother, he shall be free. Thus have ye made the commandment of God of none effect by your tradition.

     Here is revealed how the Pharisees would use their own tradition to literally overturn God’s law. Notice the parallel in their accusation and Jesus’ response: Why do you transgress the tradition of the elders?Why do you transgress the commandment of God by your tradition?  This was one of the worst sins of the Jews, to justify the disregarding of a Scriptural command by human interpretation of the Bible. Does that sound familiar in the realm of Christendom today? It happens in very liberal settings and in very conservative ones, that the true spirit and sound doctrines of the New Testament are overturned by man-made theologies and forms of worship. Let us take warning to hear and do all that the prophets and Apostles have spoken (Luke 24:25). Let the Scriptures speak for themselves and let us simply read and learn from them, listening always to the Spirit’s instruction (John 14:26). 

     The fifth commandment in the Decalogue is: Honour thy father and mother that thy days may be long upon the land which the Lord thy God giveth thee (Ex 20:12). Honoring parents includes providing for them in old age, but the Jews found a way to avoid that burden by giving their money instead into the sanctuary offering, which received far greater recognition in the eyes of their fellow-man (Mat 6:2). So when parents needed financial help, the Jews had designed a way to be free from honoring their parents (Mat 15:6) by saying, It is Corban (Mar 7:11). That is, “It has already been given to God.” Perhaps this was a fairly recent Pharisaical tradition by which the Jewish leaders could gain donations from their tight-fisted countrymen: “You give the money to us and we will absolve you from spending it on your parents. We’ll call it Corban.” Thus a man-made tradition was used to overturn a commandment of God.

     Good and right traditions will draw us to Christ, and not lead us away from Him.

7 Ye hypocrites, well did Esaias prophesy of you, saying, 8 This people draweth nigh unto me with their mouth, and honoureth me with their lips; but their heart is far from me. 9 But in vain they do worship me, teaching for doctrines the commandments of men.

     The quote is from Isaiah 29:13, which does not read exactly as our Masoretic-based Old Testament, but does match the Greek Septuagint. This condemnation was fully accurate, for most of the Jewish nation in the time of Christ were only pretending to worship God. Their hearts were far from Him. Certainly some were sincere, but sincerity is vain when it follows false beliefs. The Jews professed to honor God, but in truth were not. In fact, the whole worship system that God had instituted through Moses had been perverted by the Pharisees’ burdensome additions they called the oral law. Their washings, rituals and interpretations had become their religion – their idol – that had taken the place of true worship of their God.

     Churches today must take warning from the sad example of these Jews. Be sure to teach and do what God has said is important to Him – not what you think should be important to Him. Handle the Word of God with all reverence and care (2Cor 4:2; 2Tim 2:15, 3:16), for it tells us what He desires of them that would worship Him. Follow with all diligence His commandments and not a set of man-made rules that do not please Him (Col 2:22; Tit 1:14). Rules are good when they are firmly based in Bible principles and from the beginning of Christianity the early church applied the New Testament Scriptures to their life situations. We must do no less. For example, polygamy, suicide, abortion and pornography are not explicitly condemned by Christ and the Apostles, yet they are logical, necessary applications of the Scriptural doctrines concerning marriage, murder and uncleanness. The Pharisaical approach would find ways to justify those sins using the very Word of God. No surprise then that some churches are doing that very thing today.

     Teaching for doctrines the commandments of men. This reprimand cuts both ways. It condemns the liberals who, like the Sadducees, disregard the commandments of God by proposing lawyerly arguments. It also admonishes the hyper-conservatives who, like the Pharisees, make strict mint-and-cummin rules that mean little to nothing to God (Mat 23:23). Unfortunately, many fall into the ditch of lawlessness immediately after pulling themselves out of the ditch of legalism. Don’t lose sight of the big important picture: God is seeking a people for His name, a peculiar people that in righteousness are praising the One who has called them out of darkness (1Pet 2:9).

     What does God really want when we worship Him? Present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto God, which is your reasonable service (Rom 12:1). What does the Lord require? To do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God (Micah 6:8). What is that pure religion and undefiled? To visit the afflicted and to keep oneself unspotted from the world (James 1:27). A living sacrifice is that life which has laid Self on the altar, it is that life which has counted all but loss in order to gain Christ (Php 3:8). It is a life that is alive to walk humbly with God, but dead to following the desires of Self (Rom 6:11). Such worship ascends to throne of God a sweet-smelling savour (Eph 5:2). It is not the periodic gathering of the people for praise and sermons, but the continual living sacrifice of the individual soul! Cain and Abel offered up their sacrifices; one was accepted but the other was rejected because it was offered in sin (Gen 4:7).

10 And he called the multitude, and said unto them, Hear, and understand: 11 Not that which goeth into the mouth defileth a man; but that which cometh out of the mouth, this defileth a man.

     Later Jesus spoke to the multitude concerning the Pharisees’ charge that His disciples had defiled themselves by eating with unwashed hands. According to the Talmud, a ridiculous tradition warned that a certain evil spirit would sit upon and poison the food of any person who did not wash their hands before eating. Jesus however, shows that uncleanness is a spiritual matter of the heart. The disciples still did not understand, so Jesus explained further in Mat 15:17-20. To us His words are plain, but for those in the Jewish religion it was new and contrary to what they had been taught. Uncleanness in the Law was a condition contracted only by physical touch and remedied only by physical ceremonies.

12 Then came his disciples, and said unto him, Knowest thou that the Pharisees were offended, after they heard this saying?

     The Pharisees were offended. Imagine that. Did they really think the One who could control nature and heal the body with a spoken command should obey their mandates? What arrogance. Rather than acknowledge that He was right in revealing their inconsistency and hypocrisy, their proud and self-righteous hearts were offended. It is always the way of a deceived man to take offense at attempts to point out an inconsistency in his life. Even sincere men are often not able to acknowledge their error. Instead they find reasons to reject advice, often by finding fault with the bearer of it. Shortly we will see this in the case of the Pharisees with Jesus. Men are offended because of pride. It is virtually impossible for a truly humble person to take offense at personal criticisms.

     The Gospel of John relates more about Jesus offending the Pharisees with His teaching on this occasion (John 6:29-69). Indeed, His words were so new, shocking and controversial that many of His disciples went back and walked no more with Him (John 6:66). Yet, Jesus backed up this new doctrine by deeds of confirmation never so seen in Israel (Mat 9:33). He healed the sick, cast out demons, fed 5000 men using just one lunch, tamed nature’s storm by His word and walked on water. The same is true today! Jesus’ teaching is everywhere rejected by the majority of men. It is too hard for them, they cannot accept it.

     Then as today, some believed and followed Christ while others did not. The little dialogue between Jesus and His disciples at the end of this test helps to understand why that is so. “Will you, like the others, also leave Me?” Jesus asked. “Where would we go?” His disciples responded. “You are the only One with the words of eternal life” (Joh 6:66-69). Observe three points concerning this crucial accepting/rejecting of Christ. One, the disciples were wholly committed to the pursuit of eternal life. Two, they recognized by deductive reasoning that there is no rational alternative to attain that goal. And three, the evidences Christ offered were far more compelling than were His difficult, hard-to-understand tests of faith.

13 But he answered and said, Every plant, which my heavenly Father hath not planted, shall be rooted up. 14 Let them alone: they be blind leaders of the blind. And if the blind lead the blind, both shall fall into the ditch.

     Clearly this was leveled at the Pharisees. Their manmade religion was about to be rooted up and replaced by a heavenly religion instituted by God at the death of His own Son. The plant could symbolize a person, a sect or a particular doctrine (compare John 15:2). The Pharisees ceased as a sect after the dispersion of the Jews at the destruction of their temple.

     Let them alone, or, “have nothing to do with them.” Not that their errors should be allowed to continue uncondemned, but that the disciples should not heed the leaven of the Pharisees (Mat 16:6). These blind leaders are a sad illustration of many religious and political sects in history. People so easily follow a charismatic person without holding his life and doctrine to the gem of Truth. That is why the Bible is such an important possession for every Christian. By it, error and deception can be avoided.

15 Then answered Peter and said unto him, Declare unto us this parable. 16 And Jesus said, Are ye also yet without understanding? 17 Do not ye yet understand, that whatsoever entereth in at the mouth goeth into the belly, and is cast out into the draught? 18 But those things which proceed out of the mouth come forth from the heart; and they defile the man. 19 For out of the heart proceed evil thoughts, murders, adulteries, fornications, thefts, false witness, blasphemies: 20 These are the things which defile a man: but to eat with unwashen hands defileth not a man.

     The parable that Peter asked Jesus to explain was not the one concerning the blind leaders (Mat 15:13-14), but of the mouth defiling a man (Mat 15:10-11). See the parallel account in Mark 7:14-20. The disciples were true Jews, raised and taught all their lives in the religion of Judaism. The Law’s many defilements derived from physical acts and their prescribed cleansings were literal ceremonies. The idea that a man was not defiled by physically touching a dead body or by eating an unclean animal just didn’t fit in their minds, yet that is what Jesus was teaching.

     The gospel of Mark adds a concluding phrase to verse 17: purging all meats, which is better translated in other versions (see NASB for Mark 7:19). Jesus was changing the Law of Moses into a spiritual Law (see note on Mat 5:1). In that vein, it is consistent to find the next topic to be the account of the Canaanite woman who found grace with Christ (Mat 15:21-28).

     The heart is a euphemism for the will and intellect of a man. Evil actions are preceded by and proceed from a corrupted heart condition (Jer 17:9). A man’s good intentions are often judged to be good even if the action upon those intentions ends up being negative. Your friend may break a piece of equipment while trying to fix it for you. Are you going to judge him negatively when you know he was doing his best to help you? Similarly, a man’s evil intentions are judged to be evil even if the action he intends actually never happens. Sin begins in the heart, with the intellect and will choosing to commit evil. Sin is finished (reached the point of being sin) when the intent is acted upon (Jam 1:14-15). Jesus here teaches that if we guard our hearts against these things, we will not be defiled with sin. He wants His disciples (and us) to understand that observing outward rituals and rules cannot keep a man clean inwardly. We must keep the inside clean and then the outside will also be clean. Keep thy heart with all diligence, for out of it are the issues of life (Pro 4:3).

     The list of wicked acts is not comprehensive, as the parallel passage in Mark 7:21-23 shows. The evil thoughts cover a significant area: evil imaginations, erroneous debates and reasonings, immoral fantasies, invalid justifications of wicked actions, evil surmisings and judgments of others, etc.

21 Then Jesus went thence, and departed into the coasts of Tyre and Sidon.

     Tyre was a famous seaport in the very north of Palestine. While it was within the land promised to Israel, it was never fully subjugated by the Jews. The city was utterly destroyed by Nebuchadnezzar and Alexander the Great in fulfillment to Ezekiel’s prophecy (Eze 26-28), but was later rebuilt a short distance away. Tyre’s sinful lifestyle of worldly pleasures and idolatry was a great temptation to the OT Jews. By the time of Christ, the city was largely Gentile and not even considered a part of Israel.

     Many scholars doubt that Jesus travelled to Tyre (or Sidon, 20 miles farther north). But Mark gives the same history and even hints why Jesus went there (Mark 7:24). As we saw in Mat 14:23 and John 6:15, Jesus had to constantly avoid the people’s attempts to make Him their king. That was why He quietly went into seclusion for a time when He heard of John’s death, why He had sent the disciples and the 5000 away and now why He secretly left the land of Israel for a time. People (Jews?) had come from Tyre and Sidon to hear His sermons in Galilee (Luke 6:17), and that may have prompted His journey there. When the politically charged mob dispersed, Jesus would return to Judea. Meanwhile, this account shows that His fame had spread beyond the borders of Israel.

22 And, behold, a woman of Canaan came out of the same coasts, and cried unto him, saying, Have mercy on me, O Lord, thou Son of David; my daughter is grievously vexed with a devil. 23 But he answered her not a word. And his disciples came and besought him, saying, Send her away; for she crieth after us. 24 But he answered and said, I am not sent but unto the lost sheep of the house of Israel. 25 Then came she and worshipped him, saying, Lord, help me.

     Although a Canaanite, here was someone who did not hesitate to call Jesus by the Messianic title, Son of David. The Jewish expectation of a coming Prophet from the kinship of David was common knowledge. Although a Gentile, this woman was determined to obtain a blessing from Him. Perhaps she had friends who had attended His sermons in Galilee (Luke 6:17). This Canaanite woman is one in faith with those two famous Gentile women of old, Rahab and Ruth. These women were sure of what they believed and in spite of the daunting difficulties they persevered until God could not but reward them! This account is one of the greatest examples of faith, humility and fervency to be found in the Bible. The parallel account is in Mark 7:25-30.

     In spite of her pleas, Jesus ignored this woman! And it seems out of character of Him. Yet, the rest of the story convinces us that He did not ignore her because He had rejected her, but kept silence so that He could demonstrate her faith to His disciples. He knew how she would respond even before He spoke, and her faithful, powerful example now stands for all the world to see. It was like God testing Abraham (Gen 22:1) and Job (Job 23:10). How often has God similarly tested us, in order to demonstrate His grace and our faith? Does His silence always mean He is dissatisfied with us? This story gives strong indication that sometimes Christ’s silence is for His own inscrutable purposes, maybe to develop more fruit in our lives, maybe for reasons we will never know this side of heaven. God’s silence does not mean that we are outside His will. When He hung dying upon a tree, Jesus was never closer to being in God’s will and yet He experienced God’s silence.

     For this woman, to be ignored must have felt even worse than a negative answer. But she did not give up. She pleaded, she cried for mercy, disregarded the disciples’ harsh words and when at last He did speak to her (and that negatively), she took courage! She brushed aside His dismissive words and came near to bow down and worship Him, saying, Lord, help me. Surely Jesus could not deny her humble petition, could He? But He did. And how crushing His words then: It is not good to take bread from the children and give it to dogs. A weaker heart would have fainted, but she was not here on account of her standing and merits. She hoped only to obtain mercy. She was willing to be a dog in order to receive grace. Astonishing determination. As Jacob did when wrestling with the Angel, she would not let Him go except Thou bless me (Gen 32:26). Those who ask in the same spirit as this woman did will receive as this woman did.

     Jesus was not discriminating against Gentiles by refusing her, for earlier, at the first request of a Gentile centurion, He had agreed to go at once to heal an ailing servant (Mat 8:5-13). Instead, His actions teach important truths filled with meaning for us today. In many of Jesus’ miracles there are similar evidences that He used His omniscient power to reveal and teach deeper spiritual concepts.

    Jesus was sent to the house of Israel (Mat 10:6). The Messiah was promised through the prophets of Israel and salvation came through the Word as delivered to the Jews (John 4:22). In the time of Christ however, Judaism had taken pride in God’s favor. In the Jewish mind, there was a huge chasm between them and the Gentile “dogs.” The disciples’ hard-hearted response to this poor, needy woman agreed with that mentality:  “Send her away. She is not worthy of help.” They agreed with Christ’s cold silence to her plea.

26 But he answered and said, It is not meet to take the children’s bread, and to cast it to dogs. 27 And she said, Truth, Lord: yet the dogs eat of the crumbs which fall from their masters’ table. 28 Then Jesus answered and said unto her, O woman, great is thy faith: be it unto thee even as thou wilt. And her daughter was made whole from that very hour.

     The Lord answers her with discriminatory, debasing words, but perhaps there was a tone in His voice, or a kindness in His eyes that impelled her onward. Whatever the case, she would not be easily discouraged. “What you say is true, Lord. Will you then hear me being a dog? Even the dogs receive scraps of food from time to time.” This woman’s faith and perseverance are astonishing and inspiring. She admits that she is not worthy of His favor, that she is a vile sinner and she humbles herself to the very lowest point. It is then that she is exalted, rewarded and blessed. That lesson is worthwhile learning.

     The Canaanite woman did not ask on the basis of merit, but on the basis of mercy (Mat 15:22). She is acknowledging her unworthiness, begging for that to be disregarded so that she might receive anyway. Such is the attitude every soul must have in coming to Jesus for salvation. We ask for mercy, not justice or reward.

     The woman’s answer displays spiritual discernment beyond that of the scribes and Pharisees. She takes His parabolic answer that could have so discouraged her and finds a way to turn in into a matter of hope. Can we do the same with the promises of God in those times that discouragement and sadness are deepest? “All I ask for is a crumb.”

     Mark adds that when the woman returned to her house, she found the demon gone and her daughter lying upon a bed (Mark 7:30). Does anyone doubt that mother and daughter believed in this Messiah from that moment on?

29 And Jesus departed from thence, and came nigh unto the sea of Galilee; and went up into a mountain, and sat down there. 30 And great multitudes came unto him, having with them those that were lame, blind, dumb, maimed, and many others, and cast them down at Jesus’ feet; and he healed them: 31 Insomuch that the multitude wondered, when they saw the dumb to speak, the maimed to be whole, the lame to walk, and the blind to see: and they glorified the God of Israel.

     Although it is not possible to know for sure, Jesus was probably in Tyre and Sidon just a few weeks. Returning to Galilee, He ascended a mountainside and waited for the people to gather around Him again. This was one of His favorite venues (Mat 5:1; 14:23; 17:1; 28:16), away from the busy streets, away from distractions and rabble-rousers. Only the sufficiently motivated seekers would find Him and of course the sufficiently motivated critics and spies.

     The multitudes that soon surrounded Him came from Decapolis (Mark 7:31), a region near to the sea of Galilee. They brought their sick and invalid friends and loved ones, and Jesus healed them all: the lame, blind, dumb, maimed, and many others. The Greek word for maimed usually signifies “without a limb” (Mat 18:8). Jesus had calmed the raging sea with His word, had multiplied five loaves of bread to feed 5000 men, so for Him to replace a missing arm or leg was a simple act. Nevertheless, to see a man’s missing arm suddenly appear whole would have been a spectacular sight! The multitude glorified God when they saw the miracles of goodness Jesus performed (Mark 7:37). Mark elaborates one of the miracles that Jesus did at this time, the healing of a deaf and dumb man (Mark 7:32-35).

32 Then Jesus called his disciples unto him, and said, I have compassion on the multitude, because they continue with me now three days, and have nothing to eat: and I will not send them away fasting, lest they faint in the way. 33 And his disciples say unto him, Whence should we have so much bread in the wilderness, as to fill so great a multitude? 34 And Jesus saith unto them, How many loaves have ye? And they said, Seven, and a few little fishes. 35 And he commanded the multitude to sit down on the ground. 36 And he took the seven loaves and the fishes, and gave thanks, and brake them, and gave to his disciples, and the disciples to the multitude. 37 And they did all eat, and were filled: and they took up of the broken meat that was left seven baskets full. 38 And they that did eat were four thousand men, beside women and children.

     Matthew and Mark are the only Gospel historians to record this miracle (see Mark 8:1-9). Not many days prior, He had fed 5000 men in Galilee (Mat 14:15-21). If that account had not also been recorded in these same two Gospels, Bible critics would surely say that the Apostles got their details wrong. Many have tried to dismiss the Bible as a human work rather than a divinely inspired gift of God by stressing some supposed conflict or contradiction in the Gospel accounts. They find it convenient, (although illogical) to reckon the entire story wrong upon finding a discrepancy! One example is Jesus expulsing the moneychangers from the Temple, which John details at the beginning of His ministry (John 2:15) and the Synoptics at the very end (Mat 21:12). All signs point to those being separate events.

     While this miracle is very similar to the one in the previous chapter, the details are different. There, Jesus fed 5000 men with 5 loaves and 2 fishes, and 12 baskets of food were left over. Here, He feeds 4000 men with 7 loaves and a few fish, and 7 baskets of food were left over. In the earlier miracle we noted the symbolic meanings of numbers in the Scriptures (see note on Mat 14:19) and the same is true in the present account. The number 7 denotes completion or totality, usually involving God’s complete and perfect purpose. The number 4 is the number of the world, or God’s creation. The number 1000 is often used in figurative contexts to expand numerically the symbolism of the primary digit.

     The two miracles can be seen as complementary analogies of the gift of salvation that Christ has graciously made available to all men. In both miracles, Jesus felt compassion for the multitude who had come to hear Him (Mat 14:14; Mat 15:32) and He determined to provide them with food. The formula is the same in both instances, Jesus took the bread and blessed it, then gave it to His disciples to divide among the multitudes. The first miracle illustrates the elect of God receiving His grace and mercy, and the present one illustrates the abundance of grace and forgiveness being offered to all nations and kindreds of the world. Certainly this was not the Spirit’s sole purpose in relating these miracles, but the symbolic meanings of the numbers are widely acknowledged. See my brief glossary for symbolic words in the note on Rev 22:21.

     In feeding the 5000, five is the number of grace and the 5000 represent the number of those who have received Christ’s mercy and forgiveness to enter the Kingdom. They are saved by grace (five loaves) and have been chosen or ordained by God in the Second Covenant He has developed for Mankind (two fish), which is the symbolic meaning of the number two. This does not imply God’s election is arbitrary as the Calvinists teach, but that His benevolent, all-wise character means He will always choose righteously and fairly (ie. those who want to be saved and show it by their lives). The twelve baskets (kophinos) of leftover food, symbolize God’s elect, or those chosen because of their faithfulness to Him, for that is the meaning of the number twelve.

     In feeding the 4000, four is the number of the physical world and the 4000 would represent the vast population of the world to whom the Gospel is preached. Not Jews only, but every nation and kindred, and tongue, and people (Rev 14:6). The seven loaves represent the full and complete provision of God, the entire purpose of His will, in providing for the salvation of all mankind. Even after feeding the multitude, there were seven baskets (spuris) left over, which speaks again of grace in abundance and available to all. The power and resources that Christ gained by His redemptive death are not depleted by use! There remains overflowing and abundant salvation for every man, woman and child that has ever lived. Unfortunately, many will not appropriate that salvation and will reject the One who ordained and effected it. That failure is entirely due to the selfish will of each individual and not to any defect or insufficiency in the work and provision that the Messenger of the Covenant (Mal 3:1) has accomplished.

39 And he sent away the multitude, and took ship, and came into the coasts of Magdala.

     Again Jesus left the multitude and went by ship on the Sea of Galilee to another place, this time to the region of Magdala, although Mark calls it Dalmanutha (Mark 8:10).

commentary Matthew 14

1 At that time Herod the tetrarch heard of the fame of Jesus, 2 And said unto his servants, This is John the Baptist; he is risen from the dead; and therefore mighty works do shew forth themselves in him. 3 For Herod had laid hold on John, and bound him, and put him in prison for Herodias’ sake, his brother Philip’s wife. 4 For John said unto him, It is not lawful for thee to have her.

    Herod was suffering from a guilty conscience for having beheaded John the Baptist (Mark 6:16; Luke 9:7-9). So upon hearing of Jesus and His mighty deeds, Herod worried that Jesus was John back from the dead, coming to revenge his wrongful death. This in spite of the fact that John had worked no miracles in his lifetime. Herod’s fear of John was well-founded, for a more holy and just man has never lived (Mat 11:11). It is revealing that Herod would think it possible for John to rise from the dead, for he seems to have been a member of the Sadducees, who did not believe in life after death. The parallel passage is in Mark 6:14-29.

     Herod Antipas was ruler of Galilee and son of Herod the Great (Luke 3:1). While a professing Jew, Herod had blatantly broken the Mosaic Law (Lev 18:16) by marrying his brother’s wife Herodias. It was strictly forbidden by the Law for any man to marry a close relative and Herodias was a sister-in-law to Antipas. It was actually unlawful for either of the brothers to marry Herodias, for she was the daughter of Aristobulus, who like Herod Antipas and Herod Philip was a son of Herod the Great. Herodias was their niece. John the Baptist warned Herod that it was unlawful for him to have her as wife. He must divorce her. Herod knew that John was right, but he refused to heed his warning and had him imprisoned instead.

     In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus taught that a man should not divorce his wife, saving for the cause of fornication. The Greek word does not mean adultery (unfaithfulness in marriage), but refers to incestuous relationships (see note on Mat 5:32). Herod’s marriage to his sister-in-law fell squarely in this category and John the Baptist was right to require him to put away Herodias. Contrary to the opinions of some, this passage does not directly teach against the practice of divorce and remarriage because the Old Covenant allowed that. It does speak directly to the unlawfulness of incest, or marrying close relatives, and that accords with Jesus’ teaching.

     This account conspicuously teaches that an unlawful marriage is a continuing sin before God and that the unlawful partners must separate. Unfortunately, most Christian denominations teach otherwise. They judge that yes, second marriages are wrong, but that the sin is only a one-time act of remarrying. According to them, the subsequent married state is not sin. Many divorced and remarried people within the church justify themselves in this way. John however, believed that being married contrary to the law was a continuing sin. John’s message was repentance – separate yourself and stop sinning. For telling Herod what he must do, John lost his head. Sometimes we avoid pointing out sin because of what it will cost us!

5 And when he would have put him to death, he feared the multitude, because they counted him as a prophet. 6 But when Herod’s birthday was kept, the daughter of Herodias danced before them, and pleased Herod. 7 Whereupon he promised with an oath to give her whatsoever she would ask. 8 And she, being before instructed of her mother, said, Give me here John Baptist’s head in a charger. 9 And the king was sorry: nevertheless for the oath’s sake, and them which sat with him at meat, he commanded it to be given her. 10 And he sent, and beheaded John in the prison. 11 And his head was brought in a charger, and given to the damsel: and she brought it to her mother.

     While Herod Antipas was content to let John languish in prison, his new wife Herodias was not (Mark 6:19-20). She waited her time, determined to rid herself of this constant prick of guilt. Having her daughter dance sensually for Herod was apparently all part of Herodias’ plot to have the Baptist killed. Herod tried to postpone John’s death, but she found a way to deprive him of that option, “Give me here and now the head of John the Baptist on a platter.” At some other time Herod could have agreed to John’s death but then delayed it indefinitely. But demanded in front of all his guests, Herod could not deny her request and still look kingly. He gave the wicked order.

     John’s head was brought to the murderers on a platter. What a vicious, bloodthirsty mother! No trace of the attractive feminine traits of sympathy, kindness and love. Guilt should stimulate one to repentance and righteousness, but sometimes it leads to angry attempts to remove the object causing the guilt. The reason many atheists are not content to let Christians live the Bible way is because the Gospel life is a constant reminder of their guilt. There is no other reason they should antagonize a people of peace and goodwill! Nothing in history has been so benevolent and blessed to a nation as the true Kingdom of God, yet atheists are sadistically antagonistic to her. They cannot stand her truth and righteousness because it is a constant reminder of their guilt before God.

12 And his disciples came, and took up the body, and buried it, and went and told Jesus. 13 When Jesus heard of it, he departed thence by ship into a desert place apart: and when the people had heard thereof, they followed him on foot out of the cities. 14 And Jesus went forth, and saw a great multitude, and was moved with compassion toward them, and he healed their sick.

     Did Jesus leave to escape Herod’s hand? Earlier when the Jews were plotting to kill Him, Jesus had also left quietly (Mat 12:14-15). Some of the mob were intent upon making Him their king (John 6:15) in the place of Herod, who had surely stirred their anger against Rome even more by killing the people’s prophet, John the Baptist (Luke 3:19-20). Herod even ventured that Jesus was John risen from the dead.

     See Mark’s account for added details about Jesus going into a private place with His disciples (Mark 6:30-33). The twelve had recently returned from their mission and Jesus wanted some time alone with them. This event apparently took place on the shores of Galilee near the town of Bethsaida (John 6:1; Luke 9:10). Jesus travelled in a boat, but near enough to land that the people could follow Him on foot. The boat passed by seashore villages and the crowd of followers continued to expand with people curious to see and hear Jesus again. By the time Jesus had landed on the shore, the multitude had grown to 5000 men plus women and children.

15 And when it was evening, his disciples came to him, saying, This is a desert place, and the time is now past; send the multitude away, that they may go into the villages, and buy themselves victuals. 16 But Jesus said unto them, They need not depart; give ye them to eat. 17 And they say unto him, We have here but five loaves, and two fishes. 18 He said, Bring them hither to me. 19 And he commanded the multitude to sit down on the grass, and took the five loaves, and the two fishes, and looking up to heaven, he blessed, and brake, and gave the loaves to his disciples, and the disciples to the multitude. 20 And they did all eat, and were filled: and they took up of the fragments that remained twelve baskets full. 21 And they that had eaten were about five thousand men, beside women and children.

     When the disciples saw that the sun had begun to decline, they advised Jesus to send the multitude away to look for food in the surrounding villages. Jesus however, saw the people as sheep without a shepherd (Mat 9:36) and He looked upon them with compassion. Their spiritual leaders had led them so poorly; now they were wandering about without direction or understanding. Mark says that He taught them many things that day (Mark 6:34), though none of the Gospels give record of what He said. Looking upon that great expectant multitude, Jesus told His disciples, They need not depart; give YE them to eat.

     The miracle of feeding the 5000 is found in all four Gospels. The parallel passages are in Luke 9:10-17, Mark 6:30-44 and John 6:5-14. Two of the Gospels (Matthew and Mark) record a separate miracle at which 4000 men were fed (Mark 8:1-9). By this we convinced that variances in the Gospel accounts are sometimes based in different events being related – the anointing of Jesus’ feet, for example. Skeptics have doubted this particular miracle more harshly than most other miracles that Jesus performed. And no wonder, for there is no possibility of sleight of hand tricks in it. To take five loaves of bread and multiply them unto feeding 5000 people requires “ex nihilo” creation. Only the Creator could work such a miracle.

     One person, at least, had thought to bring along a lunch: a lad who had five barley loaves and two small fishes (John 6:8-9). These weren’t loaves of bread such as we might have today, but were probably thin, cracker-style bread. Imagine the story this young boy told his friends for years to come! Jesus took his lunch that day and multiplied it into 5000 lunches. Maybe there were others in the multitude with a little food too, but here was one who was willing to share. The story of the boy David volunteering to fight Goliath comes to mind.

     The numbers in this account might teach us by their symbolic meanings elsewhere in the Word of God. Five is the number of God’s grace, two is the number of God’s choice and twelve is the number of God’s elect. God’s grace extended to those who He has chosen and who have accepted Him are transformed miraculously into the elect saints of God. In the next chapter, Jesus feeds four thousand men. See note on Mat 15:36 for a comparison of the symbolism in the two accounts.

     Perhaps there is symbolism also in the way Jesus takes the bread, blesses it and gives to His disciples who then distribute to the multitude. How shall they hear without a preacher? (Rom 10:13-15). The bread of life is available to all. More is left over than what was there at the beginning.

22 And straightway Jesus constrained his disciples to get into a ship, and to go before him unto the other side, while he sent the multitudes away. 23 And when he had sent the multitudes away, he went up into a mountain apart to pray: and when the evening was come, he was there alone.

     We can only speculate why Jesus created this “alone” time for Himself, but it does speak to the importance of personal prayer and worship for all persons, maybe even more so for those in leadership positions. Notice that Jesus made sure His flock was cared for and that His workers were instructed for their task, and then He went up into a mountain apart to pray. It is a lesson for every pastor, minister and gospel worker that prayer and communion with God cannot be neglected.

     Jesus may have constrained His disciples to leave without Him in order to disrupt the plans of the people to take Him by force and make him a king (John 6:15). Even the disciples were expecting Jesus to rise to the political throne of Israel and break the yoke of Herod, who had just killed their prophet. But this was not in line with God’s mission for the Messiah, so Jesus avoided their plans by dividing them and then slipping away.

24 But the ship was now in the midst of the sea, tossed with waves: for the wind was contrary. 25 And in the fourth watch of the night Jesus went unto them, walking on the sea. 26 And when the disciples saw him walking on the sea, they were troubled, saying, It is a spirit; and they cried out for fear. 27 But straightway Jesus spake unto them, saying, Be of good cheer; it is I; be not afraid. 28 And Peter answered him and said, Lord, if it be thou, bid me come unto thee on the water. 29 And he said, Come. And when Peter was come down out of the ship, he walked on the water, to go to Jesus. 30 But when he saw the wind boisterous, he was afraid; and beginning to sink, he cried, saying, Lord, save me. 31 And immediately Jesus stretched forth his hand, and caught him, and said unto him, O thou of little faith, wherefore didst thou doubt? 32 And when they were come into the ship, the wind ceased. 33 Then they that were in the ship came and worshipped him, saying, Of a truth thou art the Son of God.

     The parallel accounts are in Mark 6:47-51 and John 6:17-21. They are very similar except that Matthew alone describes Peter walking upon the water. The disciples had started out across the Sea of Galilee at dusk, toiling at the oars for most of the night before Jesus overtook them. The Romans divided the night into four watches:  the first watch was 6-9PM, the second was 9-12AM, the third was 12-3AM, and the fourth was 3-6AM. The Jews, on the other hand, seem to have divided the night into three watches of four hours each (Judges 7:19; 1Sam 11:11). It was early in the morning when Jesus came walking on the water and the disciple had been rowing a long time against a stiff wind.

     When they saw a figure on the water, the disciples thought it was a ghost. It seems that throughout history, men have thought that the spirits of the dead reappear in this world from time to time. Jesus did not identify Himself by name, but expected His disciples to recognize Him by voice (compare Acts 12:13-14). The disciples’ amazement quickly turned into a teaching lesson when Peter asked Jesus to help him walk on water too.

     How often is our own experience like Peter’s! We step forward with a little faith, but when difficulties arise and dangers threaten, then we become afraid. Lord, save me! we cry. Faith is so important for God to work in our lives and this example helps to define Biblical faith: Peter heard, believed, accepted and obeyed, but he failed to trust. Some theologians define faith as nothing more than believing, but that is far too simplistic for the Biblical examples in Heb 11, for instance. The opposite of faith is also multi-faceted: Ignorance/disinterest, Unbelief/doubting, Rejection/rebellion, Disobedience/pride and Fear/discouragement. “Unfaith” was the sin of the children of Israel in the desert (Heb 3:12). They heard God, but rejected, disobeyed and mistrusted Him (Mat 13:58). An important part of Biblical faith is trust (Pro 3:5) and that was Peter’s error upon seeing the storm. He heard, believed and obeyed, but he failed to trust and persevere in faith. He became fearful and began to doubt. Then God’s power on his behalf began to disappear.

     We wonder what to make of Peter’s question:  Lord, if it be thou… Did he doubt it was Christ? No, but perhaps his words reveal just a little insecurity, a faint doubt, “If it is You, and You are willing and able…” We as Christians tend to do the same:  “If it is Your will, then open the door.” When the door does open, we respond with an act of faith, perhaps with a little of Peter’s timidity too. We leave the safety of the boat and began to walk on the water! But then, feeling alone and threatened, we become distracted by the wind, the waves and the furious sea. Fears set in, worries about the future; we begin to waver – and suddenly we feel ourselves beginning to sink.

     Life’s problems will always deepen when we get distracted from the battle and focus on ourselves! Our feelings, our concerns, our worries, our doubts. These distractions just grow worse as we stop looking outward and upward. Remember that Christ is our Rock of refuge and He has invited us to cast our cares upon Him (1Pet 5:7).

     Little faith. The Greek gives the idea of a short-term faith that soon dies out. As long as we keep our eyes on Jesus we will not be distracted by fears and doubts! The actual idea of walking on water first occurred to Peter, it wasn’t a command of Christ. That detail is often true in the Christian experience. We have an idea, a daring plan to do something for the Kingdom. So we petition God and we see the signs that He is saying, “Yes, go do it.” Remember the example of Peter and do not retreat under fears and strifes! A good work begun for the Kingdom of Heaven is sure to attract the attention of that Wicked, who will do all in his power to discourage and trouble the once enthusiastic intentions of good men and women.

     The five aspects of faith must be present in the individual or else he does not possess a saving faith. Faith is the criteria by which God has chosen to redeem mankind (Eph 2:8), and it grows by stages (Rom 1:17; 2Pet 1:5) to maturity and completion (James 2:22; Eph 4:13; 1Thes 3:10). In its simplest definition, Faith is an active, unshakeable conviction to live by the Truth. The


  • Greek variations of of pistis – faith:
    • apistia, n: faithlessness, disobedience
    • apisteo, v: unbelieving, disobey
    • apistos, adj: disbelieving, untrustworthy, heathen
    • pistis, n: trust, be persuaded
    • pisteuo, v: to trust, be convinced
    • pistikos, adj: trustworthy, authentic
    • pistos, adj: trustworthy, trusting
    • pistoo, v: to assure

34 And when they were gone over, they came into the land of Gennesaret. 35 And when the men of that place had knowledge of him, they sent out into all that country round about, and brought unto him all that were diseased; 36 And besought him that they might only touch the hem of his garment: and as many as touched were made perfectly whole.

     John says the disciples headed for Capernaum (John 6:17), while Mark says it was Bethsaida (Mark 6:45) in the land of Gennesaret (Mark 6:53). Bethsaida and Capernaum were just a few miles apart. Luke says the miracle of feeding the 5000 was near to Bethsaida (Luke 9:10). The miracles of chapter 9 had taken place in this region and Jesus was very well-received by the people there. The overflowing power of Christ is demonstrated by the sick being healed only by touching His clothes.

commentary Matthew 13

1 The same day went Jesus out of the house, and sat by the sea side. 2 And great multitudes were gathered together unto him, so that he went into a ship, and sat; and the whole multitude stood on the shore.

     This was the Sea of Galilee, a freshwater sea that many of the Apostles knew well due to their occupations as fishermen. Capernaum, Jesus’ adopted hometown and the setting for this story, was built upon the northern shore. True to his custom, Matthew dedicates a sizable section to describe a new topic. In this case, he introduces the reader to the parables of Jesus. Besides relating seven consecutive parables accompanied by several interpretations, Matthew goes on to explain why Jesus spoke so often in parables and shows that this style of teaching was predicted by the prophets. 

     In order to be better heard, Jesus sat in a boat just off the shore and spoke to the multitude on land (see Luke 5:1; Mark 4:1).

3 And he spake many things unto them in parables, saying, Behold, a sower went forth to sow; 4 And when he sowed, some seeds fell by the way side, and the fowls came and devoured them up: 5 Some fell upon stony places, where they had not much earth: and forthwith they sprung up, because they had no deepness of earth: 6 And when the sun was up, they were scorched; and because they had no root, they withered away. 7 And some fell among thorns; and the thorns sprung up, and choked them: 8 But other fell into good ground, and brought forth fruit, some an hundredfold, some sixtyfold, some thirtyfold. 9 Who hath ears to hear, let him hear.

     This is the first official parable recorded in the NT, although certain of His teachings in the Sermon on the Mount could be considered parables too (the beam and mote for example). A parable is a short story based on a simple human experience that teaches a deeper spiritual truth which might be difficult to describe in concrete terms. When interpreted, parables make a strong message and are more readily remembered than direct language. Nobody spoke in parables and figurative language more than Jesus did. And no wonder, for He had many deeply spiritual things to teach us, things that the human mind simply cannot understand without assistance. Jesus used parables, metaphors and similes to teach spiritual truths in a powerful and impressionable way that is not easily forgotten. Parables may be obscure to some listeners (Mat 13:13), but they are the best literary devices available to explain the mysteries of universe (Mat 13:34-35).

     The parable of the sower is found in each of the Synoptic Gospels in nearly identical form (Mark 4:1-20; Luke 8:4-15). It is the simple picture of a man walking through his pasture sowing seeds which spout up into plants. The multitude heard only the bare story, but later on Jesus interpreted it for His disciples (see Mat 13:18-23). The seven parables in this chapter can be sub-grouped into four and three. This is a common feature in figurative language of the Scriptures containing the number seven. Each of the parables describe an aspect or principle of the Kingdom of heaven.

10 And the disciples came, and said unto him, Why speakest thou unto them in parables? 11 He answered and said unto them, Because it is given unto you to know the mysteries of the kingdom of heaven, but to them it is not given. 12 For whosoever hath, to him shall be given, and he shall have more abundance: but whosoever hath not, from him shall be taken away even that he hath. 13 Therefore speak I to them in parables: because they seeing see not; and hearing they hear not, neither do they understand.

     By speaking in parables, Jesus made it more difficult for His enemies to accuse Him of blasphemy, yet the true seeker would be able to understand. The scoffers, the selfish, the wicked and lazy however, were unable to see the spiritual message. This was Jesus’ standard practice throughout His ministry. He did not give the Gospel to those who were antagonistic to the Truth and He spoke in veiled language to the skeptical. In general, the Jews were completely closed to truth and the Gospel message, so “even that which they had was taken away” (Mat 13:12).

     The disciples were given to know the mysteries of the Kingdom because they had the qualities that Jesus required. And so He gave them even more knowledge and truth. The Jews were not granted to understand the Kingdom because they had not those qualities. And so He took away even what they did have. Generally speaking, the truths that Christ taught, or mysteries of the Kingdom, were not accepted by the intellectual person, the man in authority, or the rich man. Instead they were revealed to simple folk who were willing to listen and wanted to learn (see note on Mat 11:25). Jesus did not speak in parables simply to hide the truth, but to make the truth discernable only to those who are truly seeking it (see note on John 9:39). It is an approach that impels Man to a crossroads:  believe Christ and seek His truth, or reject Christ and ignore what He has said. It requires force of will, which is what He said in Mat 11:12.

14 And in them is fulfilled the prophecy of Esaias, which saith, By hearing ye shall hear, and shall not understand; and seeing ye shall see, and shall not perceive: 15 For this people’s heart is waxed gross, and their ears are dull of hearing, and their eyes they have closed; lest at any time they should see with their eyes, and hear with their ears, and should understand with their heart, and should be converted, and I should heal them. 16 But blessed are your eyes, for they see: and your ears, for they hear.

     The quote is from Isaiah 6:9-10, which Jesus explains and applies to His listeners. Many had closed their ears and eyes to the truth – they didn’t want to be converted. This we saw in previous chapters, where Jesus criticized the Pharisees for their rejection of His teaching and miracles. He even said that if His mighty works had been done in wicked Sodom, Tyre or Sidon, they would have repented long ago in sackcloth and ashes (Mat 11:21). This verse goes hand in glove with the parable of the Sower. The blessed eyes and ears are given to understand the mysteries of the Kingdom because they have prepared the soil of their hearts to receive the truth; the closed eyes and dull ears are not given to understand because they have not prepared the soil of their hearts.

     Hardened hearts are man’s responsibility, but yes, God leads Man to places and circumstances which require decisions to be made. Man’s unhealthy choices eventually create this dire condition of not wanting to hear, not wanting to believe, not wanting to be healed. While the Scriptures teach that God hardens some hearts and softens others, we know that He is entirely fair, righteous and just in all His ways. He does not send men to Hell, they choose Hell. The actions of God may be likened to the sun, whose heat will soften butter and melt ice, but will harden clay. The soil conditions of each man’s heart is in his own power, and the fires of events and circumstances that God brings into our lives will cause one heart to harden and another to soften.

     The parables goaded the sincere follower to seek Him more, to be more instructed in the ways of God and Christ’s Kingdom (Mat 13:52). On the other hand, they were a great excuse for the skeptics and scoffers to reject His teaching! They accomplished Jesus’ purpose well, for those who wanted to understand the mysteries of the Kingdom could, yet the “gross hearts” continued filthy still (Rev 22:11). It is as lesson for us today. May we be seekers and lovers of truth, else we also will be deceived by the arts of the Beast and False Prophet.

     While Jesus’ condemnation of the Pharisees was very true, it grieved Him to see the hardness of their hearts (Mark 3:5). They saw the withered hand miraculously restored, but refused to accept Him. Instead, they immediately conspired with the Herodians to kill Him! They seeing see not; and hearing hear not, neither do they understand. Clement of Alexandria comments: “Not as if the Lord caused the ignorance: for it were impious to think so. But He prophetically exposed this ignorance that existed in them, and intimated that they would not understand the things spoken.” Matthew quotes from the Septuagint version of the OT, which is why it does not read exactly the same in the English Bible.

     Jesus here quotes a prophecy of Esaias, the first occurrence of that word in the NT. Like the parables, Bible prophecies are often found in deeply veiled, figurative language. The reasons are similar: to hide the truth from the undeserving. God chose to interact with mankind by using faith as the means whereby Man might encounter Him. Therefore did He create Man with the ability to choose and chart his own course. Could not then God’s will and purpose be thwarted if mankind united to make sure His prophecies do not come to pass? Not if they are hidden in language such that only those who have chosen to follow Him in faith might understand! God is all-powerful and fully able to step into His creation and change the events of nature and world history, yet His plan of salvation by faith requires that He not exercise that power in overt and obvious ways. That which is seen and recognized by all men cannot be of faith. Calvinists might try to argue that this means God is not able to do any and all things, and they are right! God is not able to lie, sin or deceive. There is no reason that He cannot limit His powers if He so chooses to act within the parameters of salvation by faith. The Scriptures bear out that fact.

17 For verily I say unto you, That many prophets and righteous men have desired to see those things which ye see, and have not seen them; and to hear those things which ye hear, and have not heard them.

     The prophets and righteous men of old had earnestly sought to understand the prophecies the Spirit had impressed upon them, but were made to understand that it was not for their time (1Pet 1:10-12). No wonder Jesus said the simple, uneducated disciples were blessed, for it was given that their eyes and ears should see and hear the good news that the prophets enquired and searched diligently to understand. Daniel in particular sought to comprehend the meaning of his last visions, but could not because they were sealed unto the end (Dan 12:9). Surely David and Isaiah also wished they could understand what the Spirit was intending as they were moved to write His words (2Pet 1:21).

     And we too are truly blessed, even beyond the disciples, for we have the entire Word of God in our hands. With it we may understand all the mysteries of the Kingdom! Perhaps not in full, for there are things concerning the future that is not given for us to know, yet we are deeply blessed by having God’s Word in our hands. These Holy Scriptures are able to make us wise unto salvation (2Tim 3:15).

18 Hear ye therefore the parable of the sower. 19 When any one heareth the word of the kingdom, and understandeth it not, then cometh the wicked one, and catcheth away that which was sown in his heart. This is he which received seed by the way side. 20 But he that received the seed into stony places, the same is he that heareth the word, and anon with joy receiveth it; 21 Yet hath he not root in himself, but dureth for a while: for when tribulation or persecution ariseth because of the word, by and by he is offended. 22 He also that received seed among the thorns is he that heareth the word; and the care of this world, and the deceitfulness of riches, choke the word, and he becometh unfruitful. 23 But he that received seed into the good ground is he that heareth the word, and understandeth it; which also beareth fruit, and bringeth forth, some an hundredfold, some sixty, some thirty.

     In this parable Jesus speaks of Himself as the Sower and the seed is the Word of God (Luke 8:11). As the Sower scatters abroad the precious Seed, it falls upon different types of soil, which represent the hearts and minds of Mankind. This parable illustrates the interaction of the Word of life with a person’s mind and will, and it does not seem a coincidence that it immediately follows the Pharisees’ rejection of Christ. Four groups of people are represented, but just one group is saved by Faith in the eternal Word which is Christ. Faith is hearing, believing, accepting, doing and persevering in the Truth (see Mat 14:31). The four groups parallel the Four Gospels and the four corners of the world, the seed is sown in all places. But, there are just two ways: the narrow way leading to life and the broad way leading to destruction (Mat 7:13-14). Here are the four groups:

  1. The way side. This group are those who receive the Word into hard, unplowed ground where the seed lies exposed to the birds of the air. In figurative contexts, birds are often associated with evil spirits (Rev 18:2). These are people who have been convicted by the Truth and are weighing the cost. King Agrippa is an example (Act 26:27-29). Many more have similar unplowed hearts. While they have heard the message, they haven’t made a commitment to Christ. More work is needed to prepare their hearts! The seed of the Word lies on hard ground, but given some time and a little water it may sprout and grow, for the soil underneath is fine for growing things. Meanwhile however, the seed lies exposed to a wide range of dangers that make it almost certain to never sprout at all. A traveler may step on it, a bird may eat it at any time, intense heat or frost is liable to kill it, etc. So too the Word that falls on a hardened heart will likely die. “Wise” friends will persuade with fine arguments, carnal desires will exert their pressures. Hard soil just doesn’t grow crops. It must be broken up, plowed and tilled so that it can receive the Seed (Hos 10:12).
  2. Stony places. The second group has heard the Word and are immediately attracted to its promises of eternal life, joy in the Spirit and fellowship of believers. They accept it joyfully, but without considering the cost of discipleship. Thinking the Christian life is easy and natural, they are unprepared when the way becomes difficult with trouble and persecution. Without firm root within themselves, they cannot withstand in the evil day (Eph 6:13). They soon give up and return to their old way of life. The members of this group begin as true Christians – they have tasted of the Word of life, have received it and have begun to do it – but failing to persevere, they are offended by some trouble or persecution and do not win the heavenly crown. The word offended in this context is noteworthy (its also in the same parable in Mark 4:17). A person may become offended by so many things, events within the church and persecutions from without. People may be offended by Jesus’ teaching (Mat 11:6), by His requirements and laws (John 6:61), by other Christians (Mat 24:10; 1Cor 8:13), by their own temptations (Mat 5:29-30) and by difficult trials that God allows in their lives. Many Christians fall from grace because they cannot overcome the hurtfulness of an offense against them. Notes: 1) many times the “offense” was unintentional or even a misunderstanding. 2) a truly humble person cannot be offended! Think long about that. 3) to be offended is to think too much of oneself; it is pride! Amazingly, many Christians think they have the right to feel offended. Never does the Bible teach such a thing. Offenses will come, and woe to him who commits the offense, but to take offense is not allowed. To forgive is the correct action.
  3. Among the thorns. The third group is the deceived group. They profess to be Christians, but do not realize that they are no longer approved by God. Materialism, worldly lusts and selfish living have choked out the Word sown in their lives. They have become unfruitful and lost in many foolish pursuits. The Scriptures are filled with warnings that Christians must take much care to not fall into this sad condition. Only a God-sent, painful experience can jar people in this group into seeing their blind and naked condition (Rev 3:17).
  4. Good ground. The last group are true Christians. They have received the Word into their hearts and have acted upon it. They evidence their standing by bringing forth fruit according to the measure of grace that God has given unto each one (Eph 4:7). As true servants in Christ’s kingdom, they use and invest their talents for its increase and goodwill. Finally, they trust in God and persevere through stormy, tempestuous seas. They will not be swayed from their commitment, even when they do not understand their trials nor feel that God is near. Though He slay me, they say, yet will I trust in Him (Job 13:15).

     Except for the heathen who have never heard the Gospel, each person falls into one of these categories. Those within the churches today are perhaps most susceptible to the third group, for the deceptions of the Beast and False Prophet are fearfully cunning and strong. Slowly, they begin to care more about the things of this world than the things of God. Demas is an example of such an one (compare Phm 1:24; 2Tim 4:10). As foolish as it sounds, many, many people believe the Gospel is true, but do not truly act upon that belief. Few will find the reward they really believe exists because they lack the will and the desire necessary to receive it. The parable of the sower is one tool the Christian can use to stir up the minds of the weak-hearted and feeble (Heb 12:12).

24 Another parable put he forth unto them, saying, The kingdom of heaven is likened unto a man which sowed good seed in his field: 25 But while men slept, his enemy came and sowed tares among the wheat, and went his way. 26 But when the blade was sprung up, and brought forth fruit, then appeared the tares also. 27 So the servants of the householder came and said unto him, Sir, didst not thou sow good seed in thy field? from whence then hath it tares? 28 He said unto them, An enemy hath done this. The servants said unto him, Wilt thou then that we go and gather them up? 29 But he said, Nay; lest while ye gather up the tares, ye root up also the wheat with them. 30 Let both grow together until the harvest: and in the time of harvest I will say to the reapers, Gather ye together first the tares, and bind them in bundles to burn them: but gather the wheat into my barn.

     This second parable also uses the imagery of sowing seeds, but illustrates a different truth concerning the Kingdom of Heaven. The explanation of the parable, which is found only in Matthew’s Gospel, is given in Mat 13:36-43. See our notes there.

31 Another parable put he forth unto them, saying, The kingdom of heaven is like to a grain of mustard seed, which a man took, and sowed in his field: 32 Which indeed is the least of all seeds: but when it is grown, it is the greatest among herbs, and becometh a tree, so that the birds of the air come and lodge in the branches thereof.

     The third parable of the chapter predicts the phenomenal growth of the Kingdom of Christ. It is found in each of the Synoptic Gospels (see Mark 4:31-32; Luke 13:18-21). The Kingdom began about 2000 years ago in Palestine, when a seed of grain fell into the ground and died (John 12:24). From that seed, a mighty tree took root and grew into the greatest, most powerful force the world has ever known. Nothing has influenced mankind more than Jesus Christ and His call to follow Him.

     God had foretold the tremendous rise of Christianity in prophecies of Old Testament prophets, who wrote in general terms of the Jewish nation (Is 2:1-4; Mic 4:1-4; Dan 2:44-45), for Israel is the mother of Christianity (Rev 12:1-6). Even powerful nations have been greatly affected by the might of the Kingdom of heaven. And conversely, its might has attracted much antagonism. The end-time era will see a terrible hostility of the world’s nations and religions against all things righteous and just, which will much turmoil, conflict and deception in the true churches of the Kingdom.

33 Another parable spake he unto them; The kingdom of heaven is like unto leaven, which a woman took, and hid in three measures of meal, till the whole was leavened.

     Many commentators equate the meaning of this parable with the previous one which illustrated the expansion of the Kingdom into all the world (Luke 13:21). Leaven however, is a symbol of sin in all parts of the Bible (Ex 12:8; Luke 12:1; 1Cor 5:6-7). It is my belief that this parable doesn’t repeat the former, but rather complements it by predicting the spread of sin and apostasy among the churches of Christianity. And given its position in the progression of parables in this chapter, this idea has much to favor it. The Sower going forth to sow, the wheat and tares growing together unto the judgment, and the mustard seed becoming a huge tree accurately describe the history of the Christian Church. An important detail is lacking which the parable of the leaven will supply, which is the eventual spread of apostasy and sin in the Kingdom (2Thes 2:3; Mark 8:38). Deception and apostasy are among the most frequent topics of the New Testament. We read warning after warning of false prophets and wolves among the sheep, and the end-time era will be characterized by unprecedented levels of apostasy (2Tim 3).

     A quote from Robertson will serve to illustrate the differences of interpretation on this parable: “Curiously enough some people deny that Jesus here likens the expanding power of the Kingdom of heaven to leaven, because, they say, leaven is the symbol of corruption. But the language of Jesus is not to be explained away by such exegetical jugglery. The devil is called like a lion by Peter and Jesus in Revelation is called the Lion of the Tribe of Judah.”

     I answer that “exegetical jugglery” is to assign an incongruous meaning to a symbolic term. Leaven is everywhere a symbol of sin. We cannot “understand the language of Jesus” if we don’t follow His definitions. After all, He is the Author of the Bible. The proper exegetical hermeneutic is to allow the Scriptures to provide the interpretation, and the overwhelming (indeed, universal) support of Bible is that leaven is a symbol of sin, wickedness and improper doctrine (Mat 16:6). Robertson’s example of Jesus and Satan both being likened to a lion illustrates his miserable understanding of symbolic language in the Bible. The lion does not represent both Christ and Satan, but rather an aspect of character that each happens to have. In the Scriptures, a lion is everywhere a symbol of power and strength (2Sam 23:20; Pro 19:12; 28:1; 1Chr 12:8). Christ and Satan are likened to lions on account of this shared characteristic, yet one describes an evil character and the other a good character. Likewise, Jesus is called the Lamb of God, but Satan’s henchman is also said to resemble a lamb (Rev 13:11). With only a few exceptions, deity is never directly symbolized in the Bible; instead, a particular feature of deity is the object represented.

     Leaven works quickly, quietly and sight unseen as it spreads throughout a loaf of bread. This is much more descriptive of the surreptitious work of the Devil than of the work of the conquering Church of Christ! Understanding leaven to be a type of sin and corruption fits the details and context of this parable and also matches the symbolic meaning of leaven in the Scriptures (1Cor 5:6). Many of the parables describe the Kingdom as mixed with with impurities (the Tares, the Net, Ten Virgins, the Sheep and Goats, etc). The Church, on the other hand, is presented as the pure, spotless, redeemed, unblemished Bride of the Lamb.

     Three measures of meal. Those who interpret this parable to be illustrating the spread of Christianity have no good explanation for this detail, but we who understand it to be illustrating the sinister spread of wickedness see the three measures as representing the three dispensations, each of which are destined to end because of the overspreading of iniquity. Additionally, a woman is a common symbol for the Church and in this case would answer to the wicked woman of Rev 17 who represents the harlot-church of the end-time.

34 All these things spake Jesus unto the multitude in parables; and without a parable spake he not unto them: 35 That it might be fulfilled which was spoken by the prophet, saying, I will open my mouth in parables; I will utter things which have been kept secret from the foundation of the world.

     Returning to the theme of Mat 13:11-17, Matthew explains further why Jesus spoke in parables. If even earthly things be difficult to understand, how much more difficult to understand heavenly things (John 3:12). And many of the parables teach of heavenly things, things that the human mind can hardly grasp because they are beyond our realm. The teacher must describe them in human language by using analogies and comparisons rather than literal observations.

     Things kept secret from the foundation of the world. From before the beginning, the plan of God included the death of His Son (Rev 13:8). He knew that Mankind would sin and corrupt their way upon the earth, yet He created the Universe and Man to live in it. Why? This and many other truths and events were kept hidden from the prophets of old (Mat 13:17), and even now some parts are but dimly understood. The apostle Paul alludes to these mysteries on several occasions (Col 1:26; 1Cor 2:7; Rom 16:25).

     The New Testament is the revelation of God’s plan and purpose for mankind. It is a book that explains secrets! Soothsayers all through history (like Joseph Smith) have claimed to have received a further, more detailed revelation. This too was predicted and careful warnings were given that the people of God be on constant alert so that they are not deceived (Mat 24:5, 11, 24). Truth is found by logic and revelation, with revelation being the ultimate, absolute truth. Truth discovered by man’s logic and wisdom may be flawed, but revealed truth is infallible because it originates in God (1Cor 1:25; 3:19).

36 Then Jesus sent the multitude away, and went into the house: and his disciples came unto him, saying, Declare unto us the parable of the tares of the field. 37 He answered and said unto them, He that soweth the good seed is the Son of man; 38 The field is the world; the good seed are the children of the kingdom; but the tares are the children of the wicked one; 39 The enemy that sowed them is the devil; the harvest is the end of the world; and the reapers are the angels. 40 As therefore the tares are gathered and burned in the fire; so shall it be in the end of this world.

     The first parable of this chapter (the Sower) described four ways Mankind responds after hearing the Gospel message. This second parable (the wheat and tares) continued the story by describing the good seed growing and reaching the time of harvest. It also predicted that there will be false brethren in the Kingdom of heaven that appear to be Christians but are finally revealed to be imposters. Tares sprang up early among the churches of the Kingdom. Just fifty years after Jesus’ death, five of the seven churches of Revelation were in imminent danger of being disowned by Christ.

     Why does Christ’s kingdom have imposters and wicked men within it? Is the Gospel of the Kingdom flawed? This parable answers those questions. Jesus sowed only good seed at the beginning, but the Devil, ever attempting to corrupt God’s creation, comes against the churches of Christ with all fury of wickedness. It is impossible for men to judge who is truly a member of Christ’s kingdom, for they cannot see the heart as God can. But the day will come when all will be revealed. Then the imposters will be exposed and judged for their iniquities.

     The tares (or “darnel” according to scholars) are plants that look like wheat and even produce grain that resembles the wheat grain. Early on, tares are virtually indistinguishable from real wheat plants, but as they mature the difference becomes obvious, for the grain of the tares is black and unfit to eat. Wherefore by their fruits ye shall know them (Mat 7:20), Jesus said in speaking of false prophets. The wheat and tares growing together is a picture of the Kingdom in its earth-bound form (the field is the world, Mat 13:38). There are many who profess the name of Christ and sit on church pews on Sundays, but not all are good-fruited Christians! Outwardly, they look like wheat perhaps, but at the end their fruit will be exposed for all to see (Mat 7:22-23). Since the true marks of ciitzenship can only be seen within human hearts (Luke 17:21), the good and the bad may not be readily noticed by others. The parable of the Wheat and Tares illustrates the two perspectives of the churches of Christ: man sees the visible, professing Church, but God looks on the heart and knows each name that is truly His (Rev 3:4). 

     This parable does not imply that churches should consciously allow the good and bad among their members, but that many times the bad walks among them in disguise. The time will come when the bad will be revealed and exposed. Some men’s sins are open beforehand, while others conceal their wickedness until the judgment (1Tim 5:24). The church can only judge that which it knows to be contrary to sound doctrine (1Cor 5). Several expressions in this parable stand out:

  • The good seed is sowed by the Son of man. It grows up into a plant which yields good fruit in abundance.
  • The Enemy, the Devil sows the bad seed. The Greek word is diabolos, which is also used in reference to the human character trait of slander, lying and backbiting (1Tim 3:11, 2Tim 3:3; Tit 2:3). Those are favorite ways in which the Devil sows tares.
  • While men slept. Isn’t that so aptly descriptive of why and when wickedness is sown in the church? Good men were not awake to the danger.
  • The harvest and the reapers. At the end of the world, the Son of man will send forth His angels and they shall separate the good from the bad.
  • The furnace of fire, and the Kingdom of the Father. These are the two future states which each soul of man will experience for eternity.
  • He who hath ears to hear, let him hear. Let him take heed and let him prepare his heart so that the planted seed will grow and bear fruit (Mat 13:23).

41 The Son of man shall send forth his angels, and they shall gather out of his kingdom all things that offend, and them which do iniquity;

     Jesus’ explanation of this parable is extremely clear, yet various eschatologies have re-shaped it drastically to fit their ideas. Preterists, in particular, have proposed an illogical and erroneous interpretation of this parable as support for their radical idea that the Second Coming of Christ has already taken place back at the destruction of Jerusalem in AD 70. They say that when Jesus said, the end of the world (v39), He meant the end of the Jewish age, which would mean that the Son of man’s coming in verse 41 refers to the destruction of Jerusalem in AD 70. This interpretation is obviously forced upon the passage and its fallacy is readily apparent. Did the mighty Kingdom which the Son came to preach actually end in AD 70? Moreover, the Preterist idea here directly contradicts their own theory, as we shall see.

     Preterists attempt to support their specious interpretation by narrowly defining the meaning of the Greek word aion (translated “world” in the KJV and “age” in the NIV). They argue that if Jesus was truly referring to the end of the world, He would have used kosmos. A brief word study however, will show that the two Greek words are often used interchangeably. In 1Cor 1:20 for instance, both words appear in identical meanings. In fact, the close interplay between aion and kosmos can be seen in this very parable. The field is the kosmos, Jesus declares, and the harvest is the end of the aion (Mat 13:38-39). Here the two meanings must be essentially the same. You can’t put one in the Jewish age and the other in a different age. True, aion does carry the sense of time and kosmos does not, so perhaps the kosmos describes more the physical, tangible world, while aion implies a time or age of the world, but the two must refer to the same era. In our language, “the end of the world” means both “the end of time” and “the end of the universe,” so it doesn’t matter which word Jesus used. The most damaging proof against the Preterist view is that Jesus uses this identical Greek expression later:  Lo, I am with you alway, even unto the end of the world (aion). If this phrase means the end of the Jewish age as Preterists insist, then Jesus promised to be with His people only until AD 70.

     Determining the meaning of aion is not necessary to fixing the time of the harvest! The context and content are eminently able to do that for us. Jesus gave this parable to describe His Kingdom (not the Jewish one). He explains the gathering of the good wheat at the end of His Kingdom (not the Jewish one). It is so clear. But for those with ulterior motives, finding the truth is secondary to advancing a particular doctrine. For these, no proof or argument is sufficient to change their beliefs. To illustrate that further, I offer the following evidence. Preterists say the harvest in v39 refers to the end of the Jewish age. They also say that Christ’s Kingdom did not begin until after the destruction of Jerusalem in AD 70, which is required to reconcile the numerous Scriptures describing the end of the world. Yet the Parable of the Tares wrecks that scheme completely, for it describes the end of the age as occurring within Christ’s Kingdom. Actually, Christ’s Kingdom truly began immediately after His death and resurrection, when He ascended into heaven and took His seat upon His heavenly throne (1Cor 15:24), for His Kingdom is not based on earth but in heaven. The message of Jesus and His disciples was that the Kingdom of heaven is at hand (Mat 10:7).

     The Preterist idea that the end of the world refers to the end of the Jewish age contradicts Jesus, for His parable explains the Kingdom of Heaven (Mat 13:24), which is a common euphemism for the New Covenant, not the Jewish Covenant. At the end of the world, the wicked are cast into a furnace of fire and the righteous shall shine in the Kingdom of their Father. This is restated a few verses later in the Parable of the Net (Mat 13:47-50), where again the end of the world takes place during the time of the Kingdom of Heaven, not the time of the Jewish kingdom (Mat 21:43). The transformation of Christ’s kingdom into the Father’s kingdom can also be seen in other passages (1Cor 15:24; Rev 11:15). These verses cannot fit the Preterist view that Christ’s Kingdom began in AD 70, for Jesus is clearly describing the passing of His earth-bound kingdom at the end of the world to the heavenly Father’s eternal kingdom (Mat 26:29). The idea that the end of the world refers to the Jewish age cannot remotely be reconciled with an honest reading of the Scriptures. The house of Preterism must fall to the ground.

42 And shall cast them into a furnace of fire: there shall be wailing and gnashing of teeth. 43 Then shall the righteous shine forth as the sun in the kingdom of their Father. Who hath ears to hear, let him hear.

     The last two verses of Jesus’ interpretation of the Parable of the Tares are focused on the two final states of Eternity. The furnace of fire is a reference to eternal hell (Mark 9:43-44; Rev 19:20; 20:10), and the Kingdom of their Father is a reference to heaven. Jesus talked more about the horrors of hell than the rest of the NT writers put together. Today however, hell is a topic that few preachers dare to speak about. People are offended by it. Christians shouldn’t scare people into heaven, they say. Nonsense. Fear of punishment is the natural instinct parents use to teach their children. Moral government is based on it. From the beginning, hell was intended as a deterrent to committing wickedness and crimes against God. If it is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of an angry God (Heb 10:31), then by all means let us speak of hell in the most fearful way possible so that some may escape (Luke 21:36; Rom 2:3; Heb 12:25). If the Master described in graphic detail the horrors of hell, then His servants should not be ashamed to do so.

     The Kingdom of the Father is a reference to the future, eternal state of glory with Christ in the heavens (Mat 25:34; 26:29). The Kingdom of Christ and the Kingdom of God are more general terms that encompass both the earth-bound Kingdom and the future one (Dan 7:14). The apostle Paul alludes to the passing of the Kingdom of Christ to the Kingdom of the Father at the end of the Age in 1Cor 15:24. The righteous shining as the sun forever expresses the glory of Eternity with Christ (see Dan 12:3).

44 Again, the kingdom of heaven is like unto treasure hid in a field; the which when a man hath found, he hideth, and for joy thereof goeth and selleth all that he hath, and buyeth that field.

     This parable illustrates the worth of becoming a citizen in the Kingdom and the cost that you are required to pay in order to enter therein. Salvation is free in that it is open to all and attainable by every person. Nobody is excluded because of personal insufficiency. But salvation is also expensive in that it will cost a person everything he owns. It is an all or nothing proposition. You can’t invest a little in the Kingdom to “play it safe” and invest also in the pleasure of this world. Jesus wants all of our hearts and lives, not a portion of it. The Apostle Paul’s testimony goes well with these verses (Php 3:7-8). Many less well-known men have followed in his steps.

     The Gospel is a treasure, yet many in America cast it away, and others in foreign countries do not even know it exists. Let us send forth laborers into the harvest so that others too may own it and be blessed by it. Some commentators propose that the treasure hid in the field is a reference to the Holy Scriptures. I see it representing the whole mystery of man’s salvation (Eph 6:19; Col 1:26), which certainly includes the Word of Truth, but also includes Christ, in whom are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge (Col 2:3).

45 Again, the kingdom of heaven is like unto a merchant man, seeking goodly pearls: 46 Who, when he had found one pearl of great price, went and sold all that he had, and bought it.

     In this parable, the seeker becomes the primary object of the illustration. The merchant man goes out on a mission to acquire a string of the best pearls money can buy. During his quest, he suddenly finds a single pearl that dazzles him far more than all the rest he has seen. It is beautiful, rare and extremely valuable. It so captures his attention that he is determined to own that pearl for himself, even though he realizes that the price of this one pearl will cost every penny he owns. But the pearl is worth it, the merchant man must have it, and so he sells every possession he has to buy that pearl so that he can call it his.

     Most would call this man a fool. Sell everything to own a single pearl? Give up your house, your car, your life, and follow Christ? The world might call such a person insane, but the spiritually astute will call him “wise.”

47 Again, the kingdom of heaven is like unto a net, that was cast into the sea, and gathered of every kind: 48 Which, when it was full, they drew to shore, and sat down, and gathered the good into vessels, but cast the bad away. 49 So shall it be at the end of the world: the angels shall come forth, and sever the wicked from among the just, 50 And shall cast them into the furnace of fire: there shall be wailing and gnashing of teeth.

     The parable of the Net is found only in Matthew’s gospel and seems to complement the parable of the Tares. The sea is the world and the net is the Gospel. The good and bad fish are the souls drawn into the Kingdom during the Age of Grace, and the separation is the judgment at the end of the world. The parable of the wheat and tares illustrated that there are pretenders and hypocrites in the Kingdom whose wickedness is not immediately evident, but the good and bad fish in the Net seems to illustrate the evidently wicked which profess the name of Christ. The Roman Catholic inquisition with its torture and killing is an historical example, while blatant sins like adultery and homosexuality are contemporary problems in the nominal churches of Christ.

     This parable illustrates that the visible Kingdom is not entirely pure and holy, but that God knows the truly good and will separate and purge His Kingdom of anything and everyone that is offensive at the end of the Age. As David said, sometimes it seems that the evil prosper, but their day of reckoning is coming, and they will be certainly and eternally cast into the furnace of fire. Christ and His angels will come in flaming fire to sever the wicked from among the just, and then He will be admired by all who believe (2Thes 1:7-10). The Greek word sever is the same word translated separate and divideth in Mat 25:32.

51 Jesus saith unto them, Have ye understood all these things? They say unto him, Yea, Lord. 52 Then said he unto them, Therefore every scribe which is instructed unto the kingdom of heaven is like unto a man that is an householder, which bringeth forth out of his treasure things new and old.

     After giving seven parables in succession, Jesus explains to His disciples how to use them. The able scribe, or Kingdom ambassador, must first understand the meanings and truths of these parables. Then he will employ them in teaching others the mysteries of the Kingdom. The Scriptures are an amazing, precious, wonderful treasure, filled with things new and old. The Old Testament is a history of God’s interaction with Mankind containing many examples and lessons that are useful today (1Cor 10:11), and the New communicates God’s will and purposes in creating a people for His name (Acts 15:14). The parables of Christ are powerful tools to help sincere truthseekers to find the Light. See my note for 1Peter 1:12.

53 And it came to pass, that when Jesus had finished these parables, he departed thence. 54 And when he was come into his own country, he taught them in their synagogue, insomuch that they were astonished, and said, Whence hath this man this wisdom, and these mighty works? 55 Is not this the carpenter’s son? is not his mother called Mary? and his brethren, James, and Joses, and Simon, and Judas? 56 And his sisters, are they not all with us? Whence then hath this man all these things? 57 And they were offended in him. But Jesus said unto them, A prophet is not without honour, save in his own country, and in his own house.

     The town of Nazareth in the region of Galilee was Jesus’ own country, but with the beginning of His ministry came a transition of residence to the homes of His disciples in Capernaum. This move seems to have been occasioned by His hometown people rejecting Him. Read Luke 4:16-31, which describes His countrymen trying to stone Him. The Nazarenes must have been exceedingly dense people to not accept Jesus as the Messiah of God, for they readily recognized that Jesus had wisdom and power far exceeding anything He could have learned in their village. They had seen Him grow up and knew His father, mother, brothers and sisters. Whence then hath this man all these things?  Somehow, they failed to connect His supernatural power and divine wisdom with God. They were offended in Him. Evidently they expected the Messiah to ascend to the Israelite throne from some highly influential family, while Jesus’ family was simple, poor and common. Jesus had not even a place where to lay His head (Mat 8:20). Could this really be the Messiah? Even today, many are offended in Him for some reason or another.

     Some have tried to connect the names of Jesus’ brothers with certain names in the lists of the Apostles. Others are sure that they were not true brothers, but cousins and relatives. Given the general antagonism of His family (Mark 3:31-35), that does not seem likely (see JFB).

58 And he did not many mighty works there because of their unbelief.

     Jesus did not work many mighty miracles in His hometown because the people there categorically rejected Him. They knew Him personally and in spite of His miracles, they could not believe that He was the Messiah. He marvelled because of their unbelief (Mark 6:4-6). This happened in Gadara too, where the people begged Him to leave their coast. In Galilee, crowds came to hear Him, but in Nazareth they avoided Him. His only opportunity to speak was in the synagogue, where He was scandalized by doubters. Jesus did not impose Himself upon them, and even today He is looking for sincere, humble seekers of the truth.

     Some say that Jesus could not do miracles in Nazareth because the sick lacked sufficient faith that He could heal them. Yet on many occasions Jesus healed peremptorily, and in the case of the paralytic He healed on account of the faith of the sick man’s friends (Mark 2:5). Peter healed the blind man who was only asking for a few coins. Works of divine power are not contingent upon a man’s faith, although God may choose to act when special faith is displayed. The Nazarenes did not.

commentary Matthew 12

1 At that time Jesus went on the sabbath day through the corn; and his disciples were an hungred, and began to pluck the ears of corn, and to eat. 2 But when the Pharisees saw it, they said unto him, Behold, thy disciples do that which is not lawful to do upon the sabbath day.

     This chapter relates several criticisms the Jews threw at Christ concerning His new Kingdom. The first criticism involved the law of the Sabbath. Luke specifies that this was the second sabbath after the first (Luke 6:1), which many think is a reference to the week of the Passover. The first day of the feast of Unleavened Bread (sometimes called the Passover) was fixed to be the 15th Nisan and that day was to be a holy Sabbath day regardless of whether it fell upon a Saturday or not. The second sabbath after the first would be the normal sabbath which followed that first sabbath of 15 Nisan. In the year that Jesus died, the normal sabbath fell exactly upon 15th Nisan. The coincidence of the two sabbaths upon the same day made it a high day. (John 19:31). The second sabbath after the first was important in the Judaic religion because it was fixed the beginning of the mandated countdown of seven sabbaths unto the feast of Pentecost.

     Though the KJV says corn, it was probably barley. The Greek word means simply “grain.” The disciples were hungry because they were poor and this Sabbath day found them eating raw grain from a field as they walked to synagogue perhaps. The Pharisees charged that the disciples had broken the Sabbath by “harvesting grain” on that day.

3 But he said unto them, Have ye not read what David did, when he was an hungred, and they that were with him; 4 How he entered into the house of God, and did eat the shewbread, which was not lawful for him to eat, neither for them which were with him, but only for the priests?

     David was held by the Jews in highest esteem, so Jesus’ argument could not be easily dismissed. The shewbread was a sacred bread made once a week which was placed in the Temple. The Law specified that only the priests were permitted to eat it. In a time of great need however, David asked the priest to give him this bread, probably on the sabbath day (1Sam 21:1-7), for the Law commanded that the old bread in the holy place be replaced with fresh bread each sabbath (Ex 24:5-9). The priest would have given David the one-week old shewbread he had just removed from the Holy Place.

     Now, if David was held innocent although having eaten holy shewbread on the sabbath day, how can the disciples possibly be held guilty for eating kernels of grain on the sabbath?

5 Or have ye not read in the law, how that on the sabbath days the priests in the temple profane the sabbath, and are blameless? 6 But I say unto you, That in this place is one greater than the temple.

     The duties of the priests required them to work on the sabbath – killing and butchering lambs, kindling fires, offering sacrifices, etc. In a sense, there was no Sabbath for the Temple priests, for they did not follow that law. This fact shows that the Temple and its work were more important than the law of the Sabbath. Yet, something greater than the Temple itself was then present in Israel – the very Lord of the Temple. Was it not appropriate then, that His “priests” attend Him on the Sabbath?

     By proclaiming Himself to be greater than the Temple, in effect Jesus was saying that He was God, for the Temple was the dwelling place of God. See a similar declaration later in this chapter (Mat 12:41-42). This was the basis for the the unbelieving Pharisees to hold counsel against Him, how they might kill Him (v14).

7 But if ye had known what this meaneth, I will have mercy, and not sacrifice, ye would not have condemned the guiltless.

     Jesus had given the Pharisees some homework to do in Mat 9:13, when He told them to learn what their prophet Hosea meant when he wrote those words some 500 years earlier (see Hos 6:6). The Old Covenant had many ceremonial laws, but God’s real interest was man’s heart. The prophet Micah understood this clearly when he contrasted mercy (the law of love) with sacrifice: Wherewith shall I come before the LORD, and bow myself before the high God? shall I come before Him with burnt offerings, with calves of a year old? Will the LORD be pleased with thousands of rams, or with ten thousands of rivers of oil? shall I give my firstborn for my transgression, the fruit of my body for the sin of my soul? He hath shewed thee, O man, what is good; and what doth the LORD require of thee, but to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God? (Mic 6:6-8).

     The Pharisees had not learned mercy and integrity from Hosea and Micah. They were thoroughly guilty of rigidly enforcing sacrifice, ritual and burdensome rules while neglecting the greater works of justice, mercy and humbly worshipping God. The OT sacrifices and rituals were meant to stimulate these greater spiritual fruits, but they had become the end rather than the means. May we learn a lesson from their sad behavior.

     Ye would not have condemned the guiltless. The Pharisees, in accordance with their legalistic judgment, condemned the disciples for breaking the Law of the Sabbath, but according to Christ they had not broken that Law.

8 For the Son of man is Lord even of the sabbath day.

     If the Father has delivered all things to the Son (Mat 11:27), then the Son has the authority to set the rules of the Law. A greater than the temple and a greater than the Sabbath was present, indeed the very One who had designed them both. The fourth commandment of the decalogue is to remember the Sabbath (seventh) day to keep it holy (Ex 20:8). The Ten Commandments are fundamentals of God’s unchanging moral law, which is repeated in the New Testament. Under the New Covenant, the Lord’s Day (Rev 1:10), is the seventh day we reserve to worship the God of heaven and His Son, Jesus Christ.

     Actually, Jesus was not challenging the law of the Sabbath, but the Jews’ relatively new interpretation of that law. The Pharisees had added an immense burden of exceedingly strict regulations to this commandment. They had formulated a long, detailed list of what could and could not be done on the Sabbath. Jesus was not impressed with these additions to the Law. While Jesus and His disciples kept the Law of the Pharisees (Mat 23:1-4), on several occasions He exposed their poor and arbitrary applications that often went counter to other laws of the Old Testament. In the Pharisees’ judgment, to pick grain and eat it as one walked along was violating the Sabbath. The disciples were plainly doing servile work (Lev 23:7)! Jesus however, says they were guiltless in this matter (v7). The Law said you could pluck the ears with thine hand while passing through a field (Deut 23:25), but according to the Pharisaical interpretation that could not be done on a Sabbath.

     It is a lesson for churches today that to ignore or misunderstanding the spirit and intent of a divine commandment is an error with consequences. The Pharisees held so rigidly to their form of the sabbath law that they missed its blessing entirely. It grew into a giant burden that killed the spiritual meaning for which it had been created.

Alexander Bruce writes: “This difference between Christ’s mode of regarding the Sabbath and the pharisaic involves of necessity a corresponding difference in the spirit and the details of its observance. Take Christ’s view, and your principle becomes: That is the best way of observing the Sabbath which is most conducive to man’s physical and spiritual well-being-in other words, which is best for his body and for his soul; and in the light of this principle, you will keep the holy day in a spirit of intelligent joy and thankfulness to God the Creator for His gracious consideration towards His creatures. Take the pharisaic view, and your principle of observance becomes: He best keeps the Sabbath who goes greatest lengths in mere abstinence from any thing that can be construed into labor, irrespective of the effect of this abstinence either on his own well-being or on that of others. In short, we land in the silly, senseless minuteness of a rabbinical legislation, which sees in such an act as that of the disciples plucking and rubbing the ears of corn, or that of the healed man who carried his bed home on his shoulders, or that of one who should walk a greater distance than two thousand cubits, or three-fourths of a mile, on a Sabbath, a heinous offence against the fourth commandment and its Author.”  (The Training of the Twelve)

The following article is complementary to the topic.

Sunday or Saturday Worship?

And let us consider one another to provoke unto love and to good works: not forsaking the assembling of ourselves together, as the manner of some is; but exhorting one another: and so much the more, as ye see the day approaching (Heb 10:24-25).

Christians need the encouragement and exhortation of other Christians. Surely that was a primary reason that God instituted the local church body as the basis of Christian brotherly love and worship. And according to this verse, end-time church fellowship is particularly essential to motivate one another, to hear sound exhortation and to warn against the deceptions of heresy, apostasy, apathy and following the wisdom of man. Unfortunately, some Christians disregard the Apostle’s charge, perhaps thinking the local body is unimportant, or maybe to avoid the accompanying responsibilities and duties that dedicated membership requires. The Scriptural rule is quite clear – the meetings of the faithful are not optional.

The general practice has long been that churches formally meet on Sunday, but in the twentieth century increasing numbers of Christians began reject that tradition in favor of meeting on Saturday. This paper endeavors to summarize the arguments of both groups and will propose a Scriptural solution. I do not attempt to “convert” sabbath-worshippers, but intend to establish the good reasons for worshipping on Sunday.

One of the most important commandments in Judaism was to remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy (Ex 20:8). In giving the Law to Moses, God further explained that the seventh day is the sabbath of the LORD thy God: in it thou shalt not do any work (Ex 20:10). This rule was enforced by strict penalty of death (Ex 35:2). The Hebrew noun shabbath, which means “a rest,” first appears in Exodus 16:23, and its verb form, shabath, first appears in Gen 2:2. Besides being a name for the seventh day of the week, shabbath was also used to refer to special holy days and particular years in the Law (Lev 23:32; 25:4). The Jews named the days of the week according to number: first day, second day, third day, etc, but the seventh day had an additional name: shabbath. Other than the Sabbath, only the sixth day of the week was privileged with a name, it being called, “the preparation” since certain work needed to be done on that day in preparation for the Sabbath (John 19:31).

The present practice of using names for the days of the week is not that ancient, having originated around 100 A.D. in the Greco-Roman culture. They named the days after the seven visible luminaries in the night sky (Sun, Moon, Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn). These names were apparently not yet in common use when the New Testament Scriptures were written, but they do appear in second century church writings. Saturday corresponds to the seventh day of the Jewish week, and Sunday is the first day of the week.

From the time they left Egypt until Christ’s resurrection, true Israelites kept every seventh day as a holy rest day in obedience to the Old Covenant. It was not an easy transition. At first, some went out to gather food on the Sabbath in spite of God’s command (Ex 16:27), and one man was put to death for gathering sticks on the Sabbath (Lev 15:33). In the time of Christ though, the Sabbath laws were widely known and strictly kept by every believing Jew and proselyte.   

How and when did the churches of Christ begin to meet on the first day of the week instead of the seventh day? Those who argue for Sabbath-keeping argue that, in a major compromise with pagan Sun-worshippers, the Roman Catholic Church unilaterally changed the day of worship to Sunday, the first day of the week. Many say this change is the fulfillment of the mark of the beast prophesied in Revelation 13 and that those who worship on Sunday are worshipping the Beast! According to Sabbath-keepers, it is a grave sin against God to not keep Saturday holy unto the Lord.

While it may be true that the Catholic Church officially recognized Sunday as the universal day of worship, it is not true that they changed the worship day from Saturday to Sunday. From the very beginning, even before Jesus’ ascension, the Apostles and disciples met for worship and Communion on Sunday. They never wavered in that custom.

Somewhat surprisingly however, the New Testament Scriptures do not specifically command the churches of God to meet upon Sunday, or Saturday, or any other day of the week. Nevertheless, every time a day of the week is mentioned in connection to the assembling of the church, it is always Sunday, the first day of the week. The Apostles would often attend the Jewish synagogues for the sake of evangelism, but the weekly Communion took place on Sunday.

The simple reason the people of God now meet to worship Him on the Lord’s Day instead of Moses’ Sabbath is potently compelling – it is that greatest event in the history of the world, the resurrection of the Son of God. For Jesus rose from the dead very early in the morning the first day of the week (Mark 16:2; Luke 24:1; Mat 28:1; John 20:1). And from the very beginning, His disciples commemorated that momentous event by gathering together on Sunday for the Communion ceremony. The very first Sunday meeting was the evening of Lord’s resurrection, when He appeared to them all except for Thomas (John 20:19). The following Sunday, the Apostles were again gathered together. This time Thomas was also present when Jesus appeared to them a second time (John 20:26).

The third appearance of Christ to the Apostles almost certainly took place the following Sunday at the conclusion of a famous fishing trip, although the Scriptures do not actually state the day. After Thomas’ encounter, the Apostles obeyed Christ’s order to travel to Galilee, a few days journey away. There they waited awhile until Peter’s restless declaration:  I go a fishing! There would not seem to be time for the Apostles to go fishing before that week’s Sabbath, so the timing is perfect for a Saturday night fishing trip that ended early Sunday morning when Jesus appeared for the third time after that He was risen from the dead (John 21:14).

At that meeting Jesus presided over the first post-resurrection Communion service on record. Only the book of John describes that beautiful scene of a brotherhood in fellowship. Jesus is waiting on the shore with bread and fish cooking over a bed of coals and He invites His disciples to Come and dine. The details paint a storybook-like setting: a freshly-grilled breakfast served early in the calm of morning on the shores of Lake Galilee with the sun’s first rays lightening the waters. Brothers and loved ones are there to share it and Jesus Himself is serving the bread and fish, presumably in much the same manner that He had broken the bread at the Last Supper two weeks prior. What a wonderful meeting!

Whether this reunion took place on Sunday or not, from here on the Scriptures show the churches meeting on the first day of the week. There is not even one passage hinting that they met together on Saturday and that is true even into the earliest writings of the primitive church. 

The next important event in the Scriptural record was the formal coming of the Holy Spirit, which took place at Pentecost seven weeks after Jesus’ resurrection. The Mosaic Law of Pentecost was written by God so that its dual ceremonies always fell upon a Sunday (Lev 23:15). Again we find the disciples gathered with one accord in one place (Acts 2:1), even though there was no reason to meet that particular Sunday (the Pentecost rituals were priest-only affairs). Nevertheless, the disciples had already established the custom of meeting on Sunday, so on the morning of Pentecost they were congregated to commemorate Jesus’ resurrection upon that day and at that very time of day (Acts 2:15). The Pentecost ritual is just one of many strong indications that the New Covenant would feature a change in the manner and day of worship.

The fledgling Church was, however, made up entirely of Jews who had no idea of beginning a new religion. The Apostles and disciples continued to observe the Jewish customs, keep the Sabbath and attend the festivals. This only began to change after God revealed to Peter His great plan to extend mercy to the Gentiles (Acts 10:28). The Apostles, Paul in particular, would use the Jewish Sabbath as an opportunity to preach (Acts 16:13; 17:2; 18:4), but the Christian meeting was held on Sunday….upon the first day of the week, when the disciples came together to break bread (Acts 20:7; 1Cor 16:2). Again, the ceremony of Communion, the Lord’s supper, was a central reason for this weekly church meeting (1Cor 11:17-34).

The earliest church writers, without exception, describe the normal meeting of the churches upon the first day of the week:

  • “But every Lord’s day, do ye gather yourselves together, and break bread…” (Didache, ca 80 AD).
  • “…[Jewish Christians] who were brought up in the ancient order of things have come to the possession of a new hope, no longer observing the Sabbath, but living in the observance of the Lord’s Day, on which also our life has sprung up again by Him and by His death ” (Ignatius, ca 100 AD).
  • “Wherefore, also, we keep the eighth day with joyfulness, the day also on which Jesus rose again from the dead” (Epistle of Barnabas, ca 100 AD).
  • “And on the day called Sunday, all who live in cities or in the country gather together to one place, and the memoirs of the apostles or the writings of the prophets are read…Sunday is the day on which we all hold our common assembly…” (Justin Martyr, ca 130 A.D, First Apology, ch67). “For we too would observe the fleshly circumcision, and the Sabbaths, and in short all the feasts, if we did not know for what reason they were enjoined you” (Dialogue with Trypho the Jew, ch18).
  • “We devote Sunday to rejoicing, from a far different reason than Sun-worship” (Tertullian, ca 200 AD).

These are powerful, early evidences that the churches of Christ were accustomed to meeting on Sunday. Proponents for Saturday worship are forced to either impugn these testimonies and/or somehow make the Lord’s day to be a reference to Saturday. Yet in his writing, Ignatius separated the Sabbath from the Lord’s Day, which he names as the day that Jesus rose from the dead. Additionally, John was in the spirit on the Lord’s day when the Lord met him once again and communicated the Apocalypse (Rev 1:10). By the time the Revelation was written (ca 96 A.D.), the first day of the week had probably already come to be called the Lord’s day, in recognition of His resurrection. This doesn’t mean that the Apostles or early church did not recognize the Sabbath at all, but that the Christian meeting was held on Sunday. 

Unfortunately, many who advocate Sabbath-keeping are really not interested in honestly seeking the truth – they just want to “prove” their belief. This has given rise to a lot of misinformation due to highly biased manipulation of the texts and specious interpretations thereof, for the Sabbathites only recourse is to enter into complex arguments explaining why the writings do not really mean what they plainly say, and why certain words do not actually mean what they appear to mean! Unhappily, their best argument is to undermine and cast doubt upon the authenticity of the ancient texts. We live in a day where sensational age-old “truths” are supposedly being newly discovered, but at the expense of much distortion, spin and new interpretation of very clear texts. I am truly amazed at the lengths that many will go to overturn the plain and simple reading of the Scriptures themselves, the saddest example of that being the complete nullification of Col 2:16 by grammatical tricks and nuances.

While on this topic, let us recognize that we use the early church writings to understand what the early churches believed and practiced, not to establish doctrines of the Bible. The Scriptures alone are authoritative for doctrine and instruction in righteousness (2Tim 3:16). Much of the squabbling about what the early church believed or didn’t believe is a distraction from the real issue at hand and those who initiate it are content with that diversion. Do not be detoured from the real search to determine what the New Testament teaches concerning the keeping of the Sabbath. We will find that it is not silent on that topic.

The real posture of Sabbath-keepers is to elevate the Old Testament commandments above the New Testament. Likely they would protest against that assessment, but I stand firm in it. Genesis 2:3 is their foremost proof-text: And God blessed the seventh day, and sanctified it because that in it He had rested from all His work which God created and made. They argue that this early truth is universally in effect and forever fixed. Since this command of God even predates the Law, it MUST rule for all time, they say. Why then do they not follow the law of circumcision? It too was given long before the Law as an everlasting covenant (see Paul’s argument in Rom 4). We will return to examine Genesis 2:3 later, but recognize here that this argument is the old bait-and-switch tactic. By quoting the Old Testament they make us appear to be arguing against the Scripture, yet we too believe that Genesis 2:3 is good, true and right, along with the fourth commandment of Exodus 20:8-11. Yet even the Ten Commandments, which constitute the foundational unchanging moral law of God for mankind, are not rigidly static laws. A key feature of Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount was the expansion and refitting of those Ten Commandments for appropriate usage in the New Covenant. So we believe the fourth commandment continues in force along with the other nine, but will show conclusively that all ten have been re-applied conducive to the purposes of the New Covenant. The Old Covenant is just that – old (Heb 8:13).

Today we obey the Ten Commandments as they are explained by Jesus in the New Testament. Under the Old Covenant, Thou shalt not kill, did not have the same meaning as it does under the New. Thou shalt not commit adultery is newly defined to include lust and immoral thoughts. Thou shalt not bear false witness now extends to every idle word that man shall speak. When the Old Covenant said, Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vain, it meant that oaths given in God’s name were to be strictly performed and kept, but in the New Covenant it means to refrain from all oaths. Under the New Covenant, bowing down to a graven image is not just literal idolatry, but extends to the worship of material possessions:  he that layeth up treasure for himself, and is not rich toward God. Each of the Ten Commandments have been newly expanded and redefined in the spirit and intent of the New Covenant. For the priesthood being changed, there is made of necessity a change also of the Law (Heb 7:12).

All of the Ten Commandments are addressed in the Gospels and most are recited virtually verbatim. The fourth commandment however, is a special case. It is not really repeated in the New Testament and is notably absent from Jesus’ answer to the young Jew who asked Him which commandments he should keep in order to inherit eternal life: Thou shalt do no murder, Thou shalt not commit adultery, Thou shalt not steal, Thou shalt not bear false witness, Honour thy father and thy mother: and, Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself (Mat 19:18-19). One would expect Jesus to have included, Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy, if it is so essential and important to God as the sabbath-keepers claim.

Due to the absence of a direct injunction, some say the fourth commandment has been completely discarded in the New Testament. I was once of that opinion. The general rule followed by most Anabaptist groups is that we do not follow Old Testament rules and laws unless they are repeated in the New, and we will search in vain therein for any clear declaration of the fourth commandment. Some passages even speak against keeping the Sabbath (Col 2:16, for example).

Several facts have caused me to reconsider. First, while Jesus may not have distinctly repeated the commandment, neither did He pronounce its end, even when presented with several golden opportunities (see Luke 6, for example). Instead, as with the other commandments, He gave it additional meaning. Second, the general rule of periodically setting aside one day to honor the God of all grace is a reasonable service of the redeemed. It would seem highly inappropriate to entirely annul that form. Third, the Scriptures do enjoin formal meetings of the church body and it is only natural that these are undertaken upon a set day of the week. In sum, we believe that the body of New Testament Scripture indicates that the spirit of the fourth commandment continues, but that the letter of it has ended (2Cor 3:6). 

It is commonly thought that one reason God instituted the New Covenant is because the Old Law was too difficult for Man to keep. That is false. The truth is that no law is so high and lofty, so stringent and strict, so exceedingly difficult to keep, as the one Jesus laid out in the Gospels! It is altogether the highest code of conduct and worship ever proposed to mankind and it can only have originated in the mind of God (see Mat 5:20; Rom 8:4). The Law of Christ speaks first to the heart of man, who then must act in the world according to those precepts. This basic and foremost premise applies to all of the Ten Commandments. Unfortunately, some well-meaning churches fail to appreciate this truth and attempt to promote spirituality by legislation.       

So we do not have to reject either Genesis 2:3 or Exodus 20:8 in order to follow the Apostles’ example of meeting on Sunday. That, however, has apparently escaped the notice of many who claim to be following the commandment of remembering the Sabbath day to keep it holy and yet inconsistently do not obey the rules as they are set forth in the Scriptures! Instead, they have made a Sabbath law all of their own. They typically refrain from remunerated work beginning very strictly on the evening of each Friday in accordance to the Jewish Law’s reckoning of days, but then they ignore the rest of that Law and prepare food, kindle fires and do all manner of personal work and recreation on that day. Consistency dictates that one either follow the Sabbath as detailed in the Old Covenant, or eschew it entirely in favor of the New Covenant precept. 

Moreover, many Sabbath-keepers that argue the meanings of words in the texts of the Scripture and early church writings have overlooked the fact that beyond changing the day, the Apostles and early church also stopped keeping any day holy as defined by Judaism. In other words, they didn’t just change the day from Saturday to Sunday but go on following the same sabbath law. For one example, see Tertullian’s, Of the Observance of the Sabbath. 

As already mentioned, Saturday-worship proponents argue that the Sabbath commandment was in force before it was commanded in the Mosaic law. Citing Genesis 2:3, they teach that from Adam unto Moses the faithful patriarchs kept the seventh day holy to the Lord. There is no affirmative indication of that statement anywhere in the Scriptures, but even conceding the point our position is unaffected: the Old Testament commandments were refitted by Jesus Christ to correspond with a New Covenant that God has made with His people. The laws of the Old have been fulfilled and completed in Christ, who did not destroy the Law, but inaugurated a new one to take its place (Mat 5:17). It is a better Covenant that builds upon the Old, but with new and better promises (Heb 8:6).

Sabbath-keepers propose that the first rule God made after creating the Universe was to require Man to keep the Sabbath day holy. It would seem the fourth commandment is the most important of all laws! It is far more likely that Genesis 2:2-3 is God’s communication to Moses some 2,000 years later so that he might give better foundation to the sabbath law that He instituted at the time of the Jewish exodus. In fact, God Himself said the Sabbath was given to the Jews after their bondage:  I caused them to go forth out of the land of Egypt, and…I gave them my sabbaths, to be a sign between me and them, that they might know that I am the LORD that sanctify them (Eze 20:10-12). This should put an end to all arguments that keeping Saturday holy is a universal, timeless law of God. 

Nevertheless, let’s suppose Genesis 2:2 actually is intended for us today. How are we to keep it holy? There’s nothing in it about worship, about not working, or about what time of day it began and ended. The bare fact is that the Old Testament shows God establishing a pattern in Genesis that was incorporated into the Jewish Covenant many years later. However, I am inclined to agree that God’s blessing continues upon every seventh day, although I am more influenced by its inclusion in the Ten Commandments than by its appearance in the Creation Account. Nevertheless, it is logical that it be reapplied in the New Covenant along with the other nine. 

Exactly how has the fourth commandment been affected in the revamping of the Covenants? First, in keeping with the core difference between the two Covenants, the spiritual aspects of keeping the day holy is emphasized over the bodily, physical aspects. Under the Old Covenant, keeping the Sabbath holy and observing the rite of circumcision were the most important mandates of the Law. They were identity markers, or constant reminders to the Israelite nation of God’s covenant with them. And they were formulated using very strict applications to the physical world. Under the New Covenant, setting aside one day of the week to publicly honor God may serve a similar purpose, but the final result is to worship Him in spirit and truth (John 4:24); it is time set apart for sacred communion between God and the human soul (Rev 1:10).   

The Fourth Commandment reads as follows: Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy. Six days shalt thou labour, and do all thy work: But the seventh day is the sabbath of the LORD thy God: in it thou shalt not do any work, thou, nor thy son, nor thy daughter, thy manservant, nor thy maidservant, nor thy cattle, nor thy stranger that is within thy gates (Ex 20:8-10). The Law defined “work” to include all physical exercise (Ex 16:29), even to preparing food (Ex 16:23) and making a fire (Ex 35:3). Jesus however, did not follow the sabbath Law – at least in the way the Pharisees interpreted it. Neither did He reaffirm it verbally. On several occasions the Jewish leaders confronted Christ for not keeping the Sabbath according to the Law. The Son of Man is Lord even of the sabbath, He responded (Mat 12:8). It is lawful on the sabbath days to do good (Luke 6:9). The sabbath was made for man, and not man for the sabbath (Mark 2:27). These are the principles that teach the new meaning of the Sabbath and they come straight from the lips of our Leader Himself. 

While Jesus did not challenge the validity of the sabbath law, it is clear that He did change the spirit of the law such that it conflicted with Jewish practice. Yet in saying, The Son of Man is Lord even of the Sabbath, He proclaimed that He had the right to redefine it! Jesus taught that in the New Covenant, the Sabbath would be for the benefit of man. It would become the best time for the spiritual man to work in doing good. Jesus made clay on the sabbath to anoint a blind man’s eyes (John 9); He told the cripple to carry his bed on the sabbath (John 5); His disciples picked corn on the sabbath (Mat 12:1-2); He healed a withered hand in the synagogue on the sabbath (Mat 12). And the coup-de-grace took place on a certain sabbath when, under the disapproving eyes of the Jews, He said, I must work the works of Him that sent Me, and then He healed a man blind from his birth (John 9). Indeed, the many clashes between Jesus and the Jews over the Sabbath day makes it seem like Jesus purposely picked that day to work miracles. Certainly He was teaching us something.

According to Jesus, the new spirit of the command to keep the seventh day holy is not to burden man with cumbersome duties, but to benefit him and others in body and soul. In the New Covenant, one day set aside to rest from the labors of life is a privilege and a blessing! And yet, keeping the day holy is a voluntary act, a personal expression of our commitment and love for Christ. Under the Old Covenant, the law of the tithe required giving a portion of one’s belongings to God, while the law of the Sabbath required giving a portion of one’s time to God. Both are not repeated as commandments under the New Covenant because the rule has become stricter! Now we give all our possessions to God and all of our time. Justin Martyr, who we quoted earlier, reasoned similarly to the Jews of his day: “The new law requires you to keep perpetual sabbath, and you, because you are idle for one day, suppose you are pious, not discerning why this has been commanded you” (Dialogue with Trypho, ch12).

Perhaps you are thinking, “Ok, maybe Jesus did change the spirit of the sabbath law, but He didn’t change the day from Saturday to Sunday.” Well, maybe not in so many words, but in practical example He did much to effect that change. For some reason, He chose to work on the Sabbath, to rise from the dead on the day following the Sabbath, and to appear again and again to His disciples on Sunday.

The epistles of the Apostles are even more emphatic in exalting the Lord’s Day over the Sabbath. Hebrews 4 explains that the Old Testament Sabbath rest pre-figures the New Testament believer’s continual spiritual rest in Christ: We which have believed do enter into rest (Heb 4:3). However, a future, eternal sabbath rest awaits in the heavens: There remaineth therefore a rest to the people of God (Heb 4:9). Those who wish to keep the Sabbath rest on earth do not recognize that they are in effect living in the past, for the core difference between the two covenants is dramatically illustrated by the fourth commandment. The Old Covenant was ordained in such fashion that a man “worked” to gain a promised future rest, but the Christian begins his week by resting in what Christ has worked for him. The Old Covenant proved that man cannot gain salvation by his own works (Rom 8:3). In the New Covenant, we work because of our salvation (Eph 2:10). 

In keeping with these grand differences, it is only appropriate that a new seventh day be observed and it is natural that it be the Lord’s Day, Sunday, the day that our Savior rose from the dead. How natural that we begin the week by resting in His work of love and worshipping Him for that unspeakable grace! Then we use the other six days to labor in His vineyard. In the New Covenant, we might paraphrase Genesis 2:3 as follows: “God blessed the eighth day and sanctified it, because that on it He had raised Jesus Christ from the dead.” Notice that by saying this we do not change the fundamental pattern of Genesis 2:2, that every seventh day is a day of rest, sanctified and holy for the Lord. How blessed it is!

The Law had many Sabbaths. Besides the seventh-day Sabbath, there were feast-day Sabbaths, seventh year Sabbaths and fiftieth year Sabbaths (Lev 25:4-12). All of these were a shadow of things to come. They have been fulfilled in Christ and have not been reaffirmed as mandates under the New Covenant. That does not mean the fourth commandment has been abolished, but that its earlier purpose has been fulfilled. As with all the Ten Commandments, it has been refitted for good purposes in the New.

  • Ye observe days, and months, and times, and years. I am afraid of you, lest I have bestowed upon you labour in vain (Gal 4:10-11).
  • Let no man therefore judge you in meat, or in drink, or in respect of an holyday, or of the new moon, or of the sabbath days: which are a shadow of things to come; but the body is of Christ (Col 2:16-17).
  • One man esteemeth one day above another: another esteemeth every day alike. Let every man be fully persuaded in his own mind. He that regardeth the day, regardeth it unto the Lord; and he that regardeth not the day, to the Lord he doth not regard it (Rom 14:5-6).

These verses are emphatically against Sabbath-keeping, at least in the form and practice of Judaism. Only by sleight of grammar and mind can they be taken any other way (2Pet 3:16). However, while the Old Testament rules concerning the Sabbath are no longer in effect, I cannot think that there is no purpose for the fourth commandment under the New Covenant. The preceding warnings must be taken alongside the warning not to forsake the assembly of the church (Heb 10:25).

The Ten Commandments are underpinned by two greater, immutable Laws: Thou shalt love the Lord thy God, and, Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself (Mat 23:37-40). The first four of the Ten Commandments pertain to the former and the last six pertain to the latter. In the Old Covenant, those two laws were primarily concentrated upon physical actions but in the New Covenant, they are first aimed at the spiritual heart of man, who then puts them into physical action.

Strict enforcement of form and practice tends to obscure the spirit of any rite or ordinance, a fact which explains the sharp change from very detailed Old Covenant rites to unregulated New Covenant ordinances. Baptism and Communion are hallowed ordinances in Christianity, but the Bible leaves their exact pattern of observance astonishingly undefined. Very sadly, many churches ignore this striking fact and have forced these ordinances into molds that may not be varied on pain of dis-fellowship and charges of heresy. Such strict and literal requirements do nothing for the Church of Christ and heavily detract from the deeper spiritual purpose of these beautiful types. This is acutely true for sabbath-keeping. Forcing all to worship on Saturday and further defining it in stringent detail misses, to great detriment, the spirit of the commandment.

This was the chief error of Jewish legalism and Jesus severely reprimanded them for it (see Mat 23). Legalism ignores the context, or accompanying situation, and demands unbending obedience to the rule even when it conflicts in principle with another rule. Liberty recognizes and submits to the rule of law, but remembers that context and situation also matter and that other rules may be at play. The legalism of the Pharisees found a way to negate the command to honor one’s parents by invoking the command to tithe (Mark 7:10-13). Jesus’ example in keeping the law of the Sabbath is according to the law of liberty and not legalism. Obviously, there are many New Testament laws that circumstances can neither affect nor qualify. It’s much like the laws of mathematics, in which 4+4=8 without fail, but 2x+3y=12 has an infinite number of combinations for x and y that will yield the same answer of twelve.  

Given that the fourth commandment is not declared to be a Law in the same fashion as 4+4=8, I believe that God expects us to wisely decide how to keep holy the Lord’s seventh day – note by a set of unchanging rules that define what is sinful and what isn’t, but by guidelines which are not over-ruled by other rules and circumstances. Deciding to avoid traveling on Sunday is not legalistic, but dictating that it is unlawful to ever travel on Sunday may be entering too far along the path of the Pharisees. Deciding to avoid buying things on Sunday is not legalistic, but making it to be a sin requiring church confession no matter the circumstances seems equally unwise. This view may not find popular agreement in some Anabaptist communities, but I believe it does follow Jesus’ own example in dealing with the Jews on their Sabbath.

I am not arguing for libertarianism, relativism, or the unimportance of church guidelines. The rule of law is based firmly on Scriptural authority. And let us remember that the only Judge who counts is weighing not just the outward actions, but our very thoughts and motives. If there is any idea of using this liberty as an opportunity for the flesh, think again! The point I am attempting to make is that in the course of our lives we will be presented with many diverse situations and opportunities. Let us follow the wise, good example of Christ and not the dead legalism of the Pharisees.

Why then did the Apostle warn to let no man judge us concerning the keeping of the Sabbath? (Col 2:16). If this paper has been successful, the answer is not that difficult: the old manner of remembering the Sabbath day has been updated to fit New Covenant precepts. There is no purpose to following old laws and rituals that have been fulfilled in Christ and His Kingdom. The epistle to the Galatians warns that to keep the OT law is to deny Christ (Gal 5:2).

And yet, the Apostle recognizes that, One man esteemeth one day above another: another esteemeth every day alike. Let every man be fully persuaded in his own mind. (Rom 14:5). The context of that passage involves sincere Jews who had converted to Christianity but were still keeping various Jewish traditions, such as not eating certain meats and keeping the Sabbath as prescribed by the Law. It warns against judging our brother’s conscience, and asks that the believing Jews and Gentiles accept each other in the Lord. For whatsoever is not of faith is sin (Rom 14:23).

This is the New Testament solution to those who worship the Lord. Let us not judge those whose consciences lead them to keep the Sabbath on Saturday (Rom 14:5). And we urge them in turn to not judge us in meats, drink, holy days, or Sabbaths (Col 2:16-17). The Apostle concludes his exhortation, Let us therefore follow after the things which make for peace, and things wherewith one may edify another (Rom 14:19). That seems a fitting conclusion to this examination.

Questions for thought:

  • If Sabbath-keeping is for the Christian, why is it not commanded in the New Testament?
  • Why did the early church meet on the first day of the week?
  • Is it sensible to return to Old Covenant rules that are not repeated in the New Testament?
  • Does Sabbath-keeping bring more glory to Christ, or less?
  • Why did Christ schedule His appearances with the Apostles for Sundays?
  • Why did the Apostles warn against keeping the Jewish Sabbath?
  • What is my motive for choosing to worship on Saturday or Sunday?

 The Ten Commandments in the book of Matthew:

  1. Thou shalt not have any other gods before Me ……………………(Mat 4:10; 6:24)
  2. Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vain…….(Mat 5:33)
  3. Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image………………..(Mat 19:21)
  4. Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy ………………………….(Mat 12:1-12)
  5. Honor thy father and mother ……………………………………………….(Mat 15:4)
  6. Thou shalt not kill …………………………………………………………………(Mat 5:21)
  7. Thou shalt not commit adultery …………………………………………..(Mat 5:27)
  8. Thou shalt not steal………………………………………………………………(Mat 19:18)
  9. Thou shalt not bear false witness …………………………………………(Mat 5:33)
  10. Thou shalt not covet …………………………………………………………….(Mat 23:11-12; Luke 12:15)

9 And when he was departed thence, he went into their synagogue: 10 And, behold, there was a man which had his hand withered. And they asked him, saying, Is it lawful to heal on the sabbath days? that they might accuse him. 11 And he said unto them, What man shall there be among you, that shall have one sheep, and if it fall into a pit on the sabbath day, will he not lay hold on it, and lift it out? 12 How much then is a man better than a sheep? Wherefore it is lawful to do well on the sabbath days. 13 Then saith he to the man, Stretch forth thine hand. And he stretched it forth; and it was restored whole, like as the other.

     This account is a further example of the Pharisees’ extreme legalism, for it shows just how little they sought for the real spirit of the Law of God. How could healing a withered hand on the sabbath possibly be construed as servile work? Just speaking the word violated their sabbath-laws! Yet unwittingly, they testify to the skeptic even today that Jesus’ miracles were truly great works of healing and not just empty words and sleight of hand.

     This occasion is one of the few times the Gospels note Jesus’ emotions. Being grieved at the hardness of their hearts, Jesus looked about Him with anger (Mark 3:5). It did not bother the Pharisees that a suffering man must continue in that condition so that their man-made rules concerning the sabbath would not be broken. It did bother Jesus. See the parallel passages in Mark 3:1-6 and Luke 6:6-11.

14 Then the Pharisees went out, and held a council against him, how they might destroy him.

     The Jews had so hardened their hearts to the truth that they were filled with madness, and went out plotting how they might destroy Him (Luke 6:11; John 5:18). Their hardened hearts were entirely unmoved by this beautiful miracle of healing a poor, lame person! They provide a perfect example of Jesus’ words, that false prophets are discovered by examining their fruit (Mat 7:16). A true prophet does not do bad things, but a false prophet does – maybe not always and on every occasion, but often enough to betray himself to the wise follower of Christ. The contrast between Jesus and the Jewish leaders as true and false prophets is notably evident in this account.

     When men continue to resist the truth, a point is reached where even hearing it will fill them with madness and they will do all in their power to destroy it. Witness the present attacks of the intellectual and societal world against Christianity. These self-appointed shamans of society and philosophy are filled with madness against Christ and Christianity. They will not be content until they have purged America of any mention of God. They hold council against Him, conniving new ways to destroy His laws and His Word of Truth.

15 But when Jesus knew it, he withdrew himself from thence: and great multitudes followed him, and he healed them all; 16 And charged them that they should not make him known: 17 That it might be fulfilled which was spoken by Esaias the prophet, saying,

     Here again Jesus asked the healed not to testify that He was the Messiah (see note on Mat 8:4). The Jews were plotting to kill Him and the multitudes were trying to make Him their king, but Jesus was dedicated to performing the strange work (Is 28:21) for which He had been sent. And that required walking a careful path. The parallel passage in Mark 3:7-12 adds some interesting details.

     Matthew further notes that this attitude of Jesus fulfilled the Messianic prophecy of Is 42:1-4. Jesus did not argue with the Jews about their erroneous ideas of the sabbath law, but left quietly. He did not seek the praise and recognition of the masses, nor did He call them to revolt in the streets. Instead, He withdrew Himself from thence. It was not yet His hour (John 8:20).

18 Behold my servant, whom I have chosen; my beloved, in whom my soul is well pleased: I will put my spirit upon him, and he shall shew judgment to the Gentiles.

     In this prophecy, God is speaking to the world in general. “Behold, take note of the Servant that I have chosen to proclaim My truth to the nations.” Although the Son of God, He took upon Him the form of a servant (Php 2:7) to do the will of the Father (John 5:30). The Greek words for “servant” in these two passages are different. In Matthew the word is pais, which also means a young boy (see Luke 2:43), while Paul’s word is doulos, a bond-servant. God calls Jesus, My Beloved.

     Isaiah describes God with a spirit and soul, and His Servant is a man with the Spirit of God in Him who would shew judgment to the Gentiles (Is 42:1). Though the Jews did not understand it yet, this is a clear prophecy that the Messiah’s laws and precepts would be proclaimed in Israel and beyond, in every nation under heaven. Isaiah concludes, He shall not fail nor be discouraged till He have set judgment in the earth, and the isles shall wait for His law (Is 42:4). The mission of the Messiah was not complete until Peter, as Christ’s chosen instrument, opened the door of salvation to all people.

19 He shall not strive, nor cry; neither shall any man hear his voice in the streets.

     Jesus did not come as a fiery leader of the people. He was not actively in the streets, gathering followers with provocative speeches of rebellion and violence. True, His miracles and teaching always drew huge crowds of admirers, but every time He would quietly remove Himself and travel on to a new place. That is exactly the picture of this prophecy, but the Jews and even the disciples, simply did not understand. They had been taught to believe that their Messiah would be a powerful political leader (like David) who would return Israel to her former glory days as chief among the nations.

     Isaiah however, often described a humble and gentle Servant (Is 53:7), a Man with no pretensions to leadership nor aspirations for fame and power. And Jesus Himself expressed the same: I am meek and lowly in heart (Mat 11:29). These characteristics caused great confusion, even among His sincere and God-fearing followers, as they tried to mold Jesus the Nazarene into the Messiah they had developed in their minds. No less than John the Baptist even expressed doubts as to whether He was the Messiah (Mat 11:2-3).

20 A bruised reed shall he not break, and smoking flax shall he not quench, till he send forth judgment unto victory.

     As if to dispel any doubts concerning the prophecy of the Messiah proclaiming judgment to the Gentiles, the Scriptures give a further testimony of His overwhelming kindness, mercy and gentleness. He is a King, but meek (Mat 21:5) and moved with compassion (Mat 14:14). He is peaceable and filled with love and understanding. He will not crush even the lowest ember of faith, nor will He answer with violence the vitriolic attacks of His enemies.

     A bruised reed, perhaps meaning a tender young plant, signifies a life that could be easily crushed. Smoking flax, perhaps the wick of an oil-lamp, signifies the same – a low, flickering flame that is in imminent danger of being snuffed out by the slightest breeze. These poetic figures are applied to the human soul and spirit so delicately contained in the innermost parts of a human being. Isaiah 35:1-10 describes the joy of those who recognize and accept Jesus as the Messiah. Come unto Me…and ye shall find rest unto your souls.

     Judgment unto victory. The culmination of Jesus’ earthly ministry was the destruction of him that had the power of death (Heb 2:14). This great victory over Satan came by way of judging the prince of this world and casting him from his place of power (John 12:31; 16:11). A few verses later, Jesus will speak allegorically of that event (v29).

21 And in his name shall the Gentiles trust.

     It wasn’t until after His death that was this prophecy realized. The extension of salvation to the Gentiles was the greatest event of the Gospel (not counting Jesus’ death and resurrection), yet it was actually enacted and nourished by His disciples several years after His death. It is one of the greater works that Jesus prophesied His followers would perform after He returned to His heavenly Father (John 14:12). Today, throughout all nations of the world there are followers of Christ, men and women who trust in the name of Jesus for salvation. What began as a Jewish religion, has grown into a great mountain of Gentile believers that has filled the whole earth (Dan 2:35). Jews by birth are astonishingly critical of this peerless religion, even though it was begun by their own greatest prophet and is contained prophetically and typologically in all of their own sacred Scriptures! The times of the Gentiles (Luke 21:24) will continue until the Second Coming of Christ at the end of the world.

22 Then was brought unto him one possessed with a devil, blind, and dumb: and he healed him, insomuch that the blind and dumb both spake and saw. 23 And all the people were amazed, and said, Is not this the son of David?

     This man was possessed of a demon which made him blind and unable to talk, but when Jesus cast out the demon the man was able to see and speak (see Luke 11:14). The miracle amazed the multitude, who looked to their recently arrived leaders from Jerusalem (Mark 3:22) and asked, Is not this the son of David? The envious and self-righteous Pharisees however, answered in unthinkable blasphemy: “This fellow casts out demons by the power of Satan.” Or as Mark’s gospel, “He hath Beelzebub – He is demon-possessed – He hath an unclean spirit ” (Mark 3:22; 3:30).

     In this case, the man’s physical sickness was attributed to the work of demons. See note on Mat 8:28 for thoughts on demon-possession. Perhaps there is a typological lesson in this miracle which is coupled to Isaiah’s prophecy of the Gentiles trusting also in the name of the Messiah. For long centuries the Gentile world was blind, dumb and possessed by devils, but the Gospel of Christ came and so miraculously healed them that all the people were amazed. The Jews however, deny Jesus Christ as their Messiah even down to the present day.

24 But when the Pharisees heard it, they said, This fellow doth not cast out devils, but by Beelzebub the prince of the devils.

     The parallel passages are found in Mark 3:22-30 and Luke 11:15-20. The unbelieving Pharisees were in an impossible situation. They must either accept Jesus’ wonderful power and acknowledge Him as the Messiah, or find some excuse for rejecting Him. Yet, that an amazing miracle had just taken place they could not deny, for they had just witnessed a work of power beyond the abilities of any man. But to accept this man as their Messiah they could never do, for they were children of Satan (John 8:44). So they took the low option and attributed His powers to the Beelzebub, or Satan. It is a ridiculous charge and Jesus goes on to demolish their argument. Beelzebub is simply another name for Satan and is transliterated from the Hebrew language (Mat 10:25; Mark 3:22).

25 And Jesus knew their thoughts, and said unto them, Every kingdom divided against itself is brought to desolation; and every city or house divided against itself shall not stand: 26 And if Satan cast out Satan, he is divided against himself; how shall then his kingdom stand? 27 And if I by Beelzebub cast out devils, by whom do your children cast them out? therefore they shall be your judges. 28 But if I cast out devils by the Spirit of God, then the kingdom of God is come unto you.

     Any Kingdom must be united in goal and action. If the works of Christ overthrow the kingdom of Satan, it is certain that He is not of that kingdom! Even this clear fact did not change the Pharisees’ opinion of Him, for they had already determined to reject and disbelieve the works of Jesus Christ, no matter how powerful, good and holy they might be.

     By whom do your children cast them out? After showing the absurdity of Satan casting out Satan, Jesus goes on to utterly destroy the Jews’ argument, for they too professed to be able to cast out demons: He points out, “If by casting out demons one is a Satan-follower, then you must be satanists too!” The reasoning is inescapable. How foolish to think that Satan would give a man special power to be used against him.

     The plain and obvious could not be ignored. Jesus’ words were powerful and theirs were feeble grasping after the wind. They cannot deny that He did indeed cast out the demons, so they say that His power comes from evil rather than good. Read what happened to some vagabond Jews who thought to cast out demons without having the Spirit of God in Acts 19:13-16. After Jesus proved the logic of the Pharisees to be in error, He firmly planted the conclusion that must follow: that the Kingdom of God has come unto you. They ignored Him.

29 Or else how can one enter into a strong man’s house, and spoil his goods, except he first bind the strong man? and then he will spoil his house.

     After exposing the fallacy of the Pharisees’ charge that He was on Satan’s side, Jesus explains the real way Satan is defeated. His words are prophetic, albeit hidden in a simple parable until the day that it could be known. Satan is the strong man and Christ is the One who will bind him, enter his house and spoil his goods. This of course, happened with the death and resurrection of the Son of God. Only a greater power can defeat the strong man, that is what Jesus is telling the Pharisees. Satan is the prince and power of the air (Eph 2:2) and goes about as a roaring lion (1Pet 5:8); he is the anointed cherub created in the holy mountain of God (Eze 28:14). There is only one power stronger than he and that is the very God who has cast him out of heaven with a spectacular victory over sin and death (Rev 12:7-9). The Synoptics give this account similarly, using only slightly different language (Mark 3:27; Luke 11:21-22).

     The tremendous spiritual victory that Christ achieved over Satan when He overcame death and rose victorious from the grave is the greatest, most important event in the salvation of Mankind. For a time, Satan rejoiced when he saw the Son of God crucified and dying upon a tree; he was certain that he had finally won (1Cor 2:8). O how death was swallowed up in victory! For God delivered His own soul from the grave and then Jesus spoiled Satan’s house. He descended into the lower parts of the earth and wrested from Satan’s power in Hades every righteous soul, carrying them away to Paradise to be forever with Him (Eph 4:8-10). This great war took place in the spiritual world and in it Satan was defeated and his power on earth and in heaven was greatly restricted (Heb 2:14).

     Irenaeus wrote: “For as in the beginning he [Satan] enticed man to transgress his Maker’s law, and thereby got him into his power; yet his power consists in transgression and apostasy, and with these he bound man; so again, on the other hand, it was necessary that through man himself he should, when conquered, be bound with the same chains with which he had bound man, in order that man, being set free, might return to his Lord, leaving to him (Satan) those bonds by which he himself had been fettered, that is, sin. For when Satan is bound, man is set free; since “none can enter a strong man’s house and spoil his goods, unless he first bind the strong man himself.”….the Word bound him securely as a fugitive from Himself, and made spoil of his goods,— namely, those men whom he held in bondage, and whom he unjustly used for his own purposes. And justly indeed is he led captive, who had led men unjustly into bondage; while man, who had been led captive in times past, was rescued from the grasp of his possessor, according to the tender mercy of God the Father, who had compassion on His own handiwork, and gave to it salvation, restoring it by means of the Word—that is, by Christ” (Against Heresies, Bk5 Ch21).

30 He that is not with me is against me; and he that gathereth not with me scattereth abroad.

     There are only two roads and they lead to vastly different destinations. This statement of Christ contradicts the philosophers and religious leaders of our day, who try to say that there are many roads leading to the heavenly destination. A person is either on God’s side, or he is working to advance the devil’s agenda. Many, like the Pharisees, think they are on God’s side when in fact they are working against Him. The imagery of this verse is of a sower going out to sow the seed (Mat 13:18). Some Christians however, are sowing discord instead (Pro 6:19), scattering the seed abroad instead of in the hearts of men.

     We hold in our hands every Sunday the safeguard against error. Cling to the Bible though all else be taken, follow its teachings and live by faith in its promises. That is how we know and keep to the road that leads unto life. Be not deceived, the devil knows the power of Scripture. Therefore he continues to do everything to deny it, to change it, to undermine it and to diminish it. Many strong men have been cast down by his terrible devices to make the Bible to be less than what it is, the very words of God communicating His will for mankind. Satan ever attempts to sow doubt in the Holy Scriptures. He wants us to believe the intellectual critics, that a scribal error or doubtful quotation means the Book cannot have been authored by a perfect God. They might be the work of genius, but they are not God’s words, they say. Like the Pharisees, they dismiss the powerful proofs and tremendous inspirations unto goodness and mercy by manufacturing reasons it is “false.” How sad that many, like the ordinary Jews of old, believe these men simply because they are smart, learned and of high repute.

31 Wherefore I say unto you, All manner of sin and blasphemy shall be forgiven unto men: but the blasphemy against the Holy Ghost shall not be forgiven unto men. 32 And whosoever speaketh a word against the Son of man, it shall be forgiven him: but whosoever speaketh against the Holy Ghost, it shall not be forgiven him, neither in this world, neither in the world to come.

     The unpardonable sin this has been called, the sin every Christian fears most. But exactly what is it? And does a person know when he has committed it? The rest of Scripture is silent on this topic, except for two possible references: 1John 5:16 speaks of the man who has committed a sin unto death, and for that the brethren should not intercede in prayer. And Heb 6:4-6 describes the condition of a man who has so fallen away from the faith that repentance is impossible.

     Jesus’ words here were prompted by the slanderous statements of the scribes and Pharisees: “He has an unclean spirit and casts out demons by the power of Satan” (Mark 3:22, 30). They were rejecting the only way to forgiveness, for it is the Holy Spirit who calls, convicts and convinces men of sin (John 16:8). To reject the voice of conviction results in an eternal sin which can never be forgiven. By rejecting the evidences of God and ascribing His power to the Devil, the Pharisees were speaking against that Spirit of God by whom Jesus cast out devils (v28). This sin, then as now, is a rational and knowledgeable decision to reject the Spirit of Truth and calling it wicked and false.

     Who should be concerned about this sin today? If it be true that the Pharisees were guilty of this sin, and that does appear to be the case, then here we have an example. The Pharisees had so long rejected the Spirit that their hearts and actions were utterly apostate and closed to Him (see note on Mark 3:5). Nothing would change their minds. No miracle was great enough nor evidence sufficient; no, not even if one were to rise from the dead (Luke 16:31). As the ultimate proof that they were complete reprobates, they went out and plotted the murder of an innocent Man even though they knew Him to be virtuous, sinless and possessing the powers of God. So it is today, the one who rejects the Spirit of God will be evidenced by wickedness, hypocrisy and above all, an implacable and unjustifiable enmity against the Kingdom of Christ (Heb 6:7-8).

     Does the unpardonable sin fall upon a single event of rejection, or upon an accrued record of rejection? It does not seem to be in the character of God to decree that a single rejection will separate one eternally from Him. If so, surely all of us would be guilty of this sin, for blaspheming the Holy Spirit is essentially rejecting His voice. God alone determines when that rejection is terminal. Like the Pharisees, a person can think himself to be Godly and yet be guilty of the unpardonable sin. Also like the Pharisees, such persons are opposed to the work of the Kingdom of Christ and their decisions and actions will show that. The next verses describe those people. Paul exhorted the Ephesian Christians to grieve not the Holy Spirit of God (Eph 4:30), which indicates that there is a rejection or ignoring of the Spirit that is forgivable.

     A repentant person that sorrows for his sins has not committed the unpardonable sin. If the Spirit is still calling and a man is still responding, hope of eternal life exists. God forgives seventy times seven. It is when a man does not respond to the Spirit that there remaineth no more sacrifice for sins, but a certain fearful looking for of judgment and fiery indignation (Heb 10:26-27). Christians rightly fear the unpardonable sin. We must always and immediately heed the voice of the Spirit, never once rejecting His convicting voice, lest like the Pharisees we end up passing that invisible line of no return known only to God.

     Note that all manner of sin and blasphemy shall be forgiven except blasphemy against the Spirit. Even blasphemy against the Son is forgivable. Is the Spirit more holy or more divine than the Son or the Father? No, for the Father, Son and Spirit are one. But the work of the Spirit is to call men to the Son, and if we reject or disregard that call there remains no more offering for sin. Thus, the unpardonable sin is quenching the Spirit until He no longer speaks and repentance is impossible. Paul calls these “reprobate” (Rom 1:21-32), for they are past conviction. If now and then they do feel a twinge of guilt, it is quickly forgotten. Hebrews 6 also describes the condition of one who has committed the unpardonable sin, and there it is said that he is “putting Christ to an open shame.” By living in an apostate, unrepentant condition he is rejecting the sacrifice of Christ and agreeing with the Jews that He deserved to die. On the other hand, if a person feels guilt, desires repentance and prays sincerely to Christ for deliverance, he cannot have committed the unpardonable sin. The writer of Heb 6:4-6 almost certainly was thinking of Jesus’ words in Mat 12:31-32, for he follows up with a similar analogy describing the condition of those who have indeed committed this sin (compare Heb 6:7-8 with Mat 12:33).

     Again, all manner of sin is forgivable and Christ is in the business of forgiving sins. Yet the warning remains. Do not abuse this grace! The Spirit will not always strive with man. Continuing in unrepentant sin is rebellion against God and is quenching the Spirit’s voice. At some point, the Spirit will leave and will no longer convict and call him to the cross of Christ. Later in this chapter we read of such a person (Mat 12:43-45).

33 Either make the tree good, and his fruit good; or else make the tree corrupt, and his fruit corrupt: for the tree is known by his fruit.

     The lives of those who have committed the sin of blasphemy against the Holy Ghost are evidenced by corruption and wickedness. By the context, it is clear that the Pharisees are the primary characters being described. Rejecting the call of the Spirit leads to increasing wickedness and corruption. These men will fall deeper and deeper into sin, rebellion and perversion. A similar analogy is found in Mat 7:17-18.

34 O generation of vipers, how can ye, being evil, speak good things? for out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh. 35 A good man out of the good treasure of the heart bringeth forth good things: and an evil man out of the evil treasure bringeth forth evil things.

     The Pharisees had just made the most irrational, blasphemous charge imaginable: ascribing the works of the Spirit to the power of Satan. Such slanderous words expose the extremity of their wickedness. They had become a veritable generation of vipers.

     A good man will speak good and righteous things because his heart is good. An evil man will speak evil things because his heart is evil. Take note Christian! Injurious, slanderous speech by church members reveal the inner condition of their hearts. The kind man, out of the good treasures of his heart, will speak healing and kindness (Mat 15:17-19; Luke 6:43-45). The word treasure in this principle of truth implies a life of being good. The good man brings out of his store-house good things because he put them there during his life of being good (Mat 6:19-21). It is likewise with the evil person, who responds with evil because of a life-time accustomed to being evil.

36 But I say unto you, That every idle word that men shall speak, they shall give account thereof in the day of judgment. 37 For by thy words thou shalt be justified, and by thy words thou shalt be condemned.

     The Greek word here translated idle means lazy, vain, without use, empty (1Tim 5:13; Tit 1:12; Mat 20:6). Being found in the context of the good man bringing forth good things out of a heart that has been righteously conditioned by a lifetime of being good, the contrast forms an extremely strong warning. Each person will be called to give account before God of every lazy, vain and empty word that he has spoken! The man who cannot bridle his tongue from speaking evil is deceived (James 1:26). The good man will not talk evil, nor talk empty and worthless words. He will not speak carelessly, nor say things that are not firmly based in fact. This truth is a sobering and important one to take to heart and do, for many Christians do not live this way. From gossip to slander, from white lies to bald untruths, from flattery to deceiving, from self-defense to self-promotions, what our tongues say reflect what is in our hearts.

     On that final and great day of Judgment, when all the world will be called to give account of themselves before the omnipotent, omniscient Judge, the history of the speeches and words we said in Life will be used as evidence for or against God’s decision to gift us salvation. That does not mean our actions will not be used as criteria, for that would contradict verses like 2Cor 5:10, which declare that our deeds will be judged. Rather, it strongly implies that our words and actions rise and fall together. A good man will produce good fruit, both in word and deed; an evil man will produce corrupt fruit, both in word and deed.

38 Then certain of the scribes and of the Pharisees answered, saying, Master, we would see a sign from thee. 39 But he answered and said unto them, An evil and adulterous generation seeketh after a sign; and there shall no sign be given to it, but the sign of the prophet Jonas:

     The Jews won’t believe without a miraculous sign, and the Gentiles are only convinced by reason (1Cor 1:22). Yet Jesus had given them countless signs! He had healed the blind, the paralyzed, the demon-possessed, the lame, and had even raised the dead to life. If they would not believe those signs, neither would they believe a sign from heaven (Mat 16:1), whatever that might be. By asking Him for another sign, they were tempting Him (Mark 8:11). See our notes on tempting God in Mat 4:7, and more on signs in John 6:30.

     While Jesus refused to give a sign to these reprobate Pharisees, He did give a sign for true seekers throughout the world and history. However, He hid it from the scoffers and insincere by answering with a prophetic riddle, a sign which would only be understood after His death and resurrection. It speaks powerfully today, because the fact of Jesus’ death and resurrection is central to the Christian hope. We believe that our mortal bodies will be quickened together with Christ because Jesus proved that is possible by His own resurrection. The Jewish majority did not accept this sign even after it was so gloriously fulfilled a year or so later.

     The Jews were an evil and adulterous generation that had left the true covenant of God and made their own religion. Throughout the Gospels, Jesus strongly condemned their traditions and actions. See note on Mat 24:34.

40 For as Jonas was three days and three nights in the whale’s belly; so shall the Son of man be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth.

     Many have struggled to reconcile the time period of this prophecy with the Gospel accounts from which we deduce the time that Jesus lay in the grave. The historical record is that Jesus was buried at dusk on Friday evening and rose at first light on Sunday morning. Yet this indicates that Jesus was dead for three days and two nights (counting each partial day as one day). Concerned by this discrepancy, some have proposed that Jesus was not crucified on Friday, but on Thursday. But that would mean Jesus was dead for four days and three nights. Finding this proposal little better, some adjust the argument to propose that Jesus died on Thursday and resurrected during Saturday night, thus making His period of death three days and three nights. Still others argue for a literal 72 hour period of three days and nights, and so require that Jesus died on Wednesday afternoon and rose again on Saturday afternoon. The official Jewish day ended at sundown, but in this case the text counts days and nights. 

     None of the above options fit the record of the Gospels better than the traditional view that Jesus died on Friday and rose again on Sunday. In my opinion they are much harder to defend, for the traditional belief has the additional benefit of having the full support of the early Church writers. However, the whole issue is easily resolved by removing an unnecessary assumption that many impose upon this passage, which is that the prophecy describes the time that Jesus was physically dead. And yet, the real beginning of Jesus’ hour of suffering began the night before His death (see my note Mat 26:36). That terrible night in Gethsemane, when Jesus was delivered into cruel hands and tried before the Sanhedrin, was His greatest temptation and sorrow, as He wrestled with what He knew was God’s will. It marked the beginning of His greatest work, as well as the beginning of that time in which He was delivered up to evil, earthly hands (Mat 20:19; Mark 9:31; Luke 24:7). Three days and three nights later, early on Sunday morning, Jesus rose from the grave. An interesting detail of this approach is that very nearly 40 hours, the symbolic number of testing, elapsed between Jesus’ death and His resurrection.

     Note that Jesus did not say He would be dead for three days and three nights, but that He would be in the heart of the earth for three days and three nights. Some require a narrow and strictly physical meaning of that enigmatic phrase; namely, either that it denotes 1) the time interval between His death and resurrection, or 2) the time that His body was in the grave. I add a third option: it signifies the time that He was delivered unto the control of the earthly realm as opposed to the heavenly one (John 3:31), thereby correlating to the Messianic prophecy of Ps 2:2. The Greek word translated earth (ge) literally means the land or ground, but is used figuratively in both testaments to describe the worldly people of the earth (Is 34:1; Jer 22:29; Col 3:2; Rev 6:8; 16:2), and that accurately matches the Biblical record that Jesus yielded Himself up unto wicked men for three days and three nights. Throughout His ministry, Jesus manifested His God-powers infallibly and invincibly, but in one moment that changed. That night in Gethsemane He laid aside His authority and yielded Himself to “the hour of the power of darkness” (Luke 22:53). The darkness endured until His equally sudden resurrection. This spiritual definition of the heart of the earth is consistent with other passages which depict Satan as the prince of this world (John 12:31; 14:30) and the god of this world (2Cor 4:4), and it provides appropriate context to verses like Gal 1:4, which describe the triumph of Christ over this present evil world. Other references include 1Cor 15:47, 2:6; Mat 24:35; Eph 6:12. This interpretation best fits the Gospel and historical records, and measures exactly three days and three nights.

     Jesus compared His coming trial with Jonah’s experience, who although as good as dead, did not actually die. In the spiritual sense, Jesus’ soul did not die either. Another point of comparison, which might be the principle reason that Jesus chose this analogy, is that Jonah was delivered from the belly of hell (Jonah 2:2), the pit of Sheol. And that curious phrase, the heart of the earth, finds its counterpart in Jonah: the earth with her bars was about me for ever (Jonah 2:6). One of the great works of Christ after His death was to descend into Hades and deliver those souls Satan had held captive since that first death (Abel) unto the last one under the Old Covenant (Zacharias, see note Mat 23:35). At that moment, every soul that Christ chose to redeem ascended with Him up on high (Eph 4:8-9). It is doubtful that time even exists in the spirit world, so to require Christ to be in Hades for 3 days and nights is a stretch. In likewise detail, Jonah had no way of counting days in the utter darkness of the whale’s belly.      

     A further problem with the secondary opinion that Jesus died on Thursday and rose again Saturday night is that the Scriptures say on multiple occasions that He rose the third day, and a Saturday night resurrection greatly complicates their proposal. Also, if the body of Lazarus had begun to stink after four days in the tomb, it is extremely unlikely that the women would go to Jesus’ tomb to anoint His body four days later. If it were only three days, actually only about 36 hours, their plans to visit the tomb on the morning He rose from the dead make sense. The Gospels convincingly describe Jesus’ resurrection at first light on Sunday, at the same hour that the priest in the temple was observing the offering of Firstfruits, which is a prophetic symbol designed into the Old Testament rituals by God to typify His resurrection.

     In conclusion, the Friday crucifixion/Sunday resurrection has vigorous Scriptural support on many points, the lone exception being this single phrase. A simple and logical resolution exists! Don’t be tempted to re-write the rest of the Gospel to justify inferring from this passage something it does not intend to say. Jesus entered the heart of the earth at that moment when, in the black of night, He crossed the Kidron River (a type of filth and sin), and in some unfathomable way began to bear the sins of the world (see my note John 18:1).

41 The men of Nineveh shall rise in judgment with this generation, and shall condemn it: because they repented at the preaching of Jonas; and, behold, a greater than Jonas is here. 42 The queen of the south shall rise up in the judgment with this generation, and shall condemn it: for she came from the uttermost parts of the earth to hear the wisdom of Solomon; and, behold, a greater than Solomon is here.

     The greater than Solomon is Jesus Christ! He speaks today as clearly as He did then, through the Scriptures, the Spirit and the Sciences. He spoke to this generation, which refers either to the Jews living at the time Jesus spoke, or to the historical Jewish race (Mat 11:16). Both applications are adequately supported by history. Jonah simply preached to the wicked, non-Jewish Ninevites and they repented in sackcloth and ashes. The works and doctrine of Christ exceeded by far the testimony of Jonah the prophet, yet Jesus was rejected and called a satanist.

     At the resurrection and final judgment of the world, even the ancient Gentile people groups will rise in judgment with this generation and condemn it. The sins of the Jews are worse than the sins of Nineveh and Sheba because the Jews had been entrusted with the very oracles of God. They had been instructed in the way of the Lord for centuries. He had sent them prophets and signs, worked miracles on their behalf, fought their battles and given them blessing upon blessing. Yet they rejected those Godly prophets and stoned them. And then, when the Wisdom of the Ages appeared, their own long-prophesied Messiah, they ridiculed and killed Him.

     This lesson applies to churches of today as well, for to whom much is given, much will be required (Luke 12:48). At the end, let not the same be found true for Gentile Christianity as has been true for Jewish Christianity for millennia.

43 When the unclean spirit is gone out of a man, he walketh through dry places, seeking rest, and findeth none. 44 Then he saith, I will return into my house from whence I came out; and when he is come, he findeth it empty, swept, and garnished. 45 Then goeth he, and taketh with himself seven other spirits more wicked than himself, and they enter in and dwell there: and the last state of that man is worse than the first. Even so shall it be also unto this wicked generation.

     Given the context, this analogy incriminates the nation of Israel, whose last state is predicted to be worse than the first. And certainly that has been true of that adulterous generation down through the centuries of time. Presently, Jews are much more likely to be atheists than Gentiles and it is rare indeed to find a Jew that believes in Christ. Perhaps that will change; 2Cor 3:16 might contain the barest hint that Jews may turn to Christ before the end of time. Then again, that verse is probably speaking of individual Jews accepting Jesus Christ. Regardless, the analogy of this passage describes the apostate condition of this wicked generation, the Jews (v45). Whether this took place at the end of the Jewish religion or is to be fulfilled at the end of the world is another question (Mat 12:45).

     Empty, swept, and garnished – meaning nicely cleaned and decorated. The word is used in reference to the Pharisees in Mat 23:27-28. The Kingdom was taken from Israel and given to a nation bearing better fruit (Mat 21:43). Then the empty house became filled with evil spirits of every description.

     By this analogy it seems clear that demons can enter humans. When an unclean spirit leaves a person, it will try to find another place of habitation. And if it cannot find one it will return to the previous man and seek entrance. If he finds the place empty and suitable, he will dwell there again, taking with him as many other evil spirits that wish to live with him. A key warning in these verses is to not allow our souls to be empty and receptive to spirits. If it is filled with the Holy Spirit, demons cannot enter. See 2Pet 2:20 and Mat 27:25.

46 While he yet talked to the people, behold, his mother and his brethren stood without, desiring to speak with him. 47 Then one said unto him, Behold, thy mother and thy brethren stand without, desiring to speak with thee. 48 But he answered and said unto him that told him, Who is my mother? and who are my brethren? 49 And he stretched forth his hand toward his disciples, and said, Behold my mother and my brethren! 50 For whosoever shall do the will of my Father which is in heaven, the same is my brother, and sister, and mother.

     The parallel passage in Mark 3:31-35 explains that His kinsmen were trying to speak with Him for selfish motives. They thought He was mad, beside himself, and they wanted to lay hold on Him and carry Him away (Mark 3:21; John 10:20). Apparently they were concerned that He would disgrace the family name and bring ruin to their house, however humble and meager it might have been.

     Brethren (adelphos) is a common expression for near kinsmen in the NT, so these were probably not brothers only, but uncles, cousins and siblings. While Jesus’ actions may seem to disrespect His kinsfolk, remember that they had not come to listen to His message. They stood without, waiting to ask Him to leave His work and submit unto their better plans for Him. Jesus was merely following His own teaching that the one who is not willing to forsake home and parents is not worthy of Christ (Luke 14:26). Jesus was always considerate of His mother, asking the Apostle John to care for her when He was dying on the cross (John 19:25-27), but here she earned His rebuke by her lack of faith and misguided attempts at counsel.

     Jesus used this opportunity to teach a spiritual truth. The family of Christ is not of blood, but of spiritual affinity; of love, faith and hope. Those that do the will of My Father are closest to the heart of Christ. They are His brethren, His family, His friends (John 15:4). Note also the omission of father from His rhetorical questions (Mat 23:9). Christ’s only father is God! He had no earthly father.

commentary Matthew 11

1 And it came to pass, when Jesus had made an end of commanding his twelve disciples, he departed thence to teach and to preach in their cities. 2 Now when John had heard in the prison the works of Christ, he sent two of his disciples, 3 And said unto him, Art thou he that should come, or do we look for another? 4 Jesus answered and said unto them, Go and shew John again those things which ye do hear and see: 5 The blind receive their sight, and the lame walk, the lepers are cleansed, and the deaf hear, the dead are raised up, and the poor have the gospel preached to them. 6 And blessed is he, whosoever shall not be offended in me.

     John had been cast into prison because for speaking out against king Herod’s marriage to his sister-in-law (and niece), which was contrary to the Law (Mat 4:12; 14:3-4). The Scriptures do not spell out the Baptist’s motive for sending his disciples to ask Jesus if He was the Messiah, but it is safe to infer that John was getting discouraged there in his prison cell. He had been witness to the Spirit descending like a dove upon Jesus and testified to that He was the Messiah (Mat 3:13-17; John 1:19-36), but now, feeling alone, forgotten and useless, he sought reassurance.

     All Jewry, including the disciples, had a greatly mistaken view of Messiah’s life and mission (see note Mat 12:19). They expected Jesus to raise up a Jewish militia and shake off the bonds of Rome. Then He would set up the earthly kingdom of David and fight for the nation of Israel. Did John have similar hopes? Perhaps he thought Jesus would come and deliver him. However, after sitting in jail for long months and seeing that Jesus was doing none of these things, John was discouraged and tired of waiting. And so He sent for further confirmation. Perhaps there is even a subtle hint, “Here I am in languishing in prison. If you’re the Messiah, what are you going to do about it?”

     Jesus did not answer John with any new proofs of Messiahship. He only says, Go shew John again those things which ye do hear and see (Mat 11:4). Those that are wavering in faith and hoping for new proof of God should learn from this a lesson. Instead of saying, “Yes, I’m the one,” Jesus reminded John of those miracles which only God has the power to work. Anybody can SAY he is the Messiah, but only Jesus could demonstrate it.

     The prophets of old had named the very miracles in Jesus’ list as works of the Messiah (see Is 35:5; Isa 61:1). And John, of priestly heritage and highly learned in the Law, would have been familiar with those passages. It has been noted that of all the miracles listed, none is so marvelous as the last one: the poor have the Gospel preached to them. Healings are thoroughly convincing, yes, but that the Almighty God would care for the poor and downtrodden is an incredible proof of His character. He IS a kind and compassionate God, a God of love, mercy and goodness.   

     Even great men can become discouraged and disheartened. The forerunner John the Baptist and the afterrunner Paul the Apostle both were imprisoned for the last years of their lives (see note Mat 3:4). They were sidelined from preaching the message that they loved, their very life’s work derailed and in doubt. Both were seemingly marginalized by their own disciples. Paul’s last epistle reveals his own end-of-life discouragements (2Tim 1:15; 4:10; 4:16-17). I can imagine John sitting day after day, alone in his cell; it seems so sad! But then it strikes me – these were real men, men of faith, men of God! Could it be otherwise for them? Which of the prophets were not persecuted? (Acts 7:52). All of the Apostles save John the Beloved were eventually taken and killed by wicked hands. Truly these were men of whom the world was not worthy (Heb 11:38).

     The Jewish nation in general was offended at Christ, another detail foretold by the prophets (Is 8:14-15). They were offended at His lineage and His Nazarene roots, and they were offended at His teaching and His manner of life. Jesus was not the Messiah that they expected and wanted! At His crucifixion, even His own disciples were offended (Mat 26:31). John was offended because Jesus was not helping him get out of that stale prison. And today, many continue to be offended at Christ and the Gospel (1Cor 1:23).

  • The careless Christian is easily offended by myriad tricks and deceptions of the Devil.
  • The self-centered Christian is offended when God asks him to do something he doesn’t want to do.
  • The weak Christian is offended when God doesn’t deliver him from temptations.
  • The lazy Christian is offended when God does not make his life easier.
  • The world in general is offended because of the Message itself.
  • Atheists are offended because God cannot be seen with the eyes. Richard Dawkins was asked what he would say to God if he woke up dead and discovered that God was real after all. He said, “I would ask why He had taken such great pains to hide Himself.”

7 And as they departed, Jesus began to say unto the multitudes concerning John, What went ye out into the wilderness to see? A reed shaken with the wind? 8 But what went ye out for to see? A man clothed in soft raiment? behold, they that wear soft clothing are in kings’ houses. 9 But what went ye out for to see? A prophet? yea, I say unto you, and more than a prophet. 10 For this is he, of whom it is written, Behold, I send my messenger before thy face, which shall prepare thy way before thee.

     John the Baptist was a prophet and priest. He could also be called the Kingdom’s first fire-and-brimstone evangelist. Unabashedly and uncompromisingly given to seeking God and truth, no greater prophet has ever walked this earth than John the Baptist. He was more than a prophet, he was the prophesied messenger sent by God to make ready the way for the Messiah.

     Here Jesus quotes Malachi 3:1, Behold, I will send My messenger, and he shall prepare the way before Me: and the Lord, whom ye seek, shall suddenly come to His temple, even the Messenger of the covenant, whom ye delight in: behold, He shall come, saith the Lord of hosts. This is an amazing prophecy in which the Messiah and the Lord of hosts seem to be the same person. John is the messenger who came to prepare the way and Christ is the Messenger of the covenant who appeared suddenly upon Jewish scene and just as suddenly departed to take His throne in the heavenly Temple (Heb 8:1-2).

     The last two chapters of the Old Testament contain some of the clearest prophecies of the Messiah to be found in the Scriptures. Pre-millennialists however, deny that they apply to Christ’s first coming and insist upon a fulfillment after the Church has been raptured from the earth in a supposed Millennial Age. For this interpretation, they must divorce mid-sentence the prophet’s message in Mal 3:1. The first half, they say, is a reference to John the Baptist, but the second half concerns a future re-appearing of Christ at a supposed rebuilt temple at Jerusalem. The same dissection is performed on Mal 4:1. However, there is not one New Testament prophetic hint that the temple at Jerusalem will be rebuilt, although one would suppose it to be commonly found therein. Instead, they cite Old Testament prophecies, yet completely ignore that all of those prophecies, every last one, was written before the Jews returned from Babylon and did actually rebuild the temple at Jerusalem. To prove that statement, we offer as Exhibit A their key prophetic text, Dan 9:24-27.

11 Verily I say unto you, Among them that are born of women there hath not risen a greater than John the Baptist: notwithstanding he that is least in the kingdom of heaven is greater than he.

     Can there be a higher compliment? A major component of John’s “greatness” was the depth of his commitment to seek God and fully follow His Word. The degree to which he disciplined himself and refused to be even slightly turned to the right or to the left is very impressive. John was well-born in Jewish society, of priestly lineage, with a bright and lucrative future in Judaism if he so desired. He laid those benefits aside so that he might better prosecute his special calling to prepare the way of the Lord. See our notes on Matthew 3.

     Yet, the least in the Kingdom of heaven is greater than he. What does this mean? I think Jesus was showing just how blessed it is to be part of the New Covenant, something which John the Baptist was not privileged to experience. Although filled with the Holy Spirit from birth (Luke 1:15), John lived and died during the Old Covenant age, before the sacrifice for sin was made (Rom 3:19-25). He was the last of the Prophets and its greatest according to Jesus, yet he would not live to know the events and details of Kingdom of heaven. He knew nothing of Christ’s death for the sins of the world, of His resurrection, of His ascension into heaven and of salvation through faith in His name. Those transcendental things, however, are known and preached by the least evangelist in the kingdom of heaven. Although he was neither, Samuel has been called the last judge and the first king of Israel; John was the last prophet and the first evangelist in Israel.

12 And from the days of John the Baptist until now the kingdom of heaven suffereth violence, and the violent take it by force. 13 For all the prophets and the law prophesied until John.

     The parallel passage reads, Every man presseth into it (Luke 16:16). The same Greek word (biazo) that is translated violent in Matthew is translated presseth in Luke. It takes force of will to enter the Kingdom. Weaklings and fearful ones will not attain its blessings. Only those who strive diligently to enter (Luke 13:24), who are willing to wrestle all night (Gen 32:24-28), who are unmoved by afflictions (1Thes 3:3), who ignore the opprobrium and shame (Heb 12:2), and who buffet their bodies into subjection (1Cor 9:27), will be able to enter in. We must through much tribulation enter the Kingdom of God (Act 14:22). It’s not a birthright condition, like the Jewish covenant was, but a real and desperate struggle to enter, overcome and win the prize (Rev 3:21; Php 3:14). The violent take it by force…every man presses into it. The Gospel road is not for wimps and weaklings, it is an intense, life-long conflict. Those who will live godly in Christ Jesus SHALL suffer persecution (2Tim 3:12). The Devil and his demons will attack, the world will tempt, the fight will be most severe and only the strong will overcome. The violent take it by force. This verse does not square with the Calvinist notion that the will of man does not enter into salvation, which they have manufactured by mis-representing Romans 9:16.

     Perhaps there is an allusion to Daniel’s prophecy that the saints of the most High shall take the Kingdom and possess the Kingdom forever, even forever and ever (Dan 7:18). The Kingdom of Christ is non-militant, but that does not at all mean it is passive. No, it goes out conquering and to conquer (Rev 6:2). It overcomes evil by doing good to others, it preaches the saving Gospel and so wrests from Satan’s power the souls of men, it is actively advancing in all the world (Mat 28:19).

     From the days of John the Baptist until now. Luke marks the same moment in his record, The law and prophets were until John: since that time the Kingdom of God is preached (Luke 16:16). Jesus’ ministry lasted 3-1/2 years, during which time the Jews constantly tried to kill Him (Luke 4:28-30; 13:31; John 5:18; 7:1).

14 And if ye will receive it, this is Elias, which was for to come. 15 He that hath ears to hear, let him hear.

     The prophet Malachi had prophesied: Behold, I will send you Elijah the prophet before the coming of the great and dreadful day of the Lord (Mal 4:5). Accordingly, the Jewish doctors of the Law taught that Elijah himself would descend from heaven in a whirlwind just before the Messiah appeared. Jesus however, affirmed that John the Baptist was the Elijah of Malachi’s prophecy, not reincarnated, but come in the spirit and power of Elias, just as the Lord had told his father Zacharias (Luke 1:17). See notes on Mat 17:10, John 1:21.

     As were the Pharisees of Jesus’ day, Pre-millennialists are obsessed with the idea that Elijah will return before the end of the world. They support this belief by linking one of the two witnesses in Rev 11 to the prophesy of Malachi 4:5. That interpretive system falls hard when compared to Jesus’ plain words here, that John the Baptist was Elijah, which was for to come. Let the Pre-millenialist note Jesus own words: Elias is come already…and they have done unto him whatsoever they listed (Mat 17:12).

16 But whereunto shall I liken this generation? It is like unto children sitting in the markets, and calling unto their fellows, 17 And saying, We have piped unto you, and ye have not danced; we have mourned unto you, and ye have not lamented. 18 For John came neither eating nor drinking, and they say, He hath a devil. 19 The Son of man came eating and drinking, and they say, Behold a man gluttonous, and a winebibber, a friend of publicans and sinners. But wisdom is justified of her children.

     This generation refers to the Jews in general (see that usage of the word in Mat 12:41, 24:34). Most did not accept the Messiah and His Gospel of the Kingdom. Some did and were saved; but most, especially the leaders and elite of the nation, violently rejected Christ and His spiritual kingdom (Luke 7:29-30). The picture of dancing and mourning describes the two-fold manner in which God testified to that generation. The messenger John the Baptist had come preaching repentance, austere living and strict adherence to the Law – and they beheaded him. Then the Messenger of the Covenant, Jesus the Messiah, came preaching mercy and love – and they crucified Him.

     The wicked and selfish will find a reason to reject Truth no matter how it is presented. It is a rule that applies today. Some reject Christ because they do not believe the Bible is the Word of God. Some do not believe Christ is the son of God. Some find certain of his teachings too onerous, etc. So it was with the Jewish rulers. They found fault with the company He kept. They were outraged at His “blasphemous” doctrine. They criticized His actions against their interpretations of the Law (see v6).

     Wisdom is justified of her children. True wisdom will be proven to be authentic by time and her wise actions; counterfeit wisdom will be proven to be false by the same method.

20 Then began he to upbraid the cities wherein most of his mighty works were done, because they repented not: 21 Woe unto thee, Chorazin! woe unto thee, Bethsaida! for if the mighty works, which were done in you, had been done in Tyre and Sidon, they would have repented long ago in sackcloth and ashes. 22 But I say unto you, It shall be more tolerable for Tyre and Sidon at the day of judgment, than for you. 23 And thou, Capernaum, which art exalted unto heaven, shalt be brought down to hell: for if the mighty works, which have been done in thee, had been done in Sodom, it would have remained until this day. 24 But I say unto you, That it shall be more tolerable for the land of Sodom in the day of judgment, than for thee.

     Tyre, Sidon and Sodom were wicked Gentile cities of the Old Testament whose sins God could no longer tolerate. Jesus came preaching the wisdom and knowledge of God with many convincing signs and proofs of His origin, but many people did not believe upon Him. Those who have received gifts of spiritual knowledge will be held responsible to rightly respond to that gift on the day of Judgment. The children of Israel in the time of Christ failed that test. They did not keep the oracles God had entrusted to them, and made their own rules and interpretations that mocked His plan.

     Isaiah 10:12-16 is a passage which undergirds Christ’s words, and they help to better understand Him in Luke 8:10; Mark 4:12; Mat 13:13, where one might erroneously infer that Jesus made sure that the Jews would not believe on Him. Those who possess the Gospel will be given more, but those who reject it will find that even the little they have will be taken away (Mat 13:12; Luke 19:26).

25 At that time Jesus answered and said, I thank thee, O Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because thou hast hid these things from the wise and prudent, and hast revealed them unto babes. 26 Even so, Father: for so it seemed good in thy sight.

     This truth is even more relevant today, for the societies of the world have elevated “knowledge and wisdom” to a maximum position. The intellectual community has placed complete confidence in human rationale based on science and knowledge. And yet the highest, ultimate truths of the Universe are hidden to them. Not many wise men after the flesh accept the Gospel (1Cor 1:26). Why? Because they cannot comprehend it and according to their own rationale, that means they cannot accept it. Of course, they are inconsistent even in that posture, for they use electricity and light without understanding how they work and they believe evolution is the cause of life without proof. They ask, “How can a good God permit evil in the world?” And then reject Him because they cannot fit the answer to their worldview. Who can comprehend God? It is impossible (Is 55:8-9). The materialistic minded man however, must understand, or he will reject. They have much too lofty confidence in Man’s faculties and capacities. The glory of Man is but a vapor of smoke and a fleeting flower of the field (James 4:14).

     Few of the worldly wise and prudent will believe the Gospel. It is a stumblingblock to their way of thinking. In Jesus’ day, the Jewish leaders thought themselves the very Wisdom of the ancients (compare Luke 10:21-24) and they were offended at Christ. That is not surprising. The very prophets had foretold the Messiah’s rejection by the wise of the world (Is 29:14; Jer 8:9). Because of their hardened hearts, the Gospel became more and more hidden to them (Mat 13:12-14; Luke 8:10; Act 28:25-28). The Psalmist wrote, Out of the mouth of babes and sucklings thou hast ordained strength (Ps 8:2). These will hear, speak and receive the Truth, while the wise and prudent of this world will stumble and fall (1Cor 1:18-28).

27 All things are delivered unto me of my Father: and no man knoweth the Son, but the Father; neither knoweth any man the Father, save the Son, and he to whomsoever the Son will reveal him.

     No man comes to know God except by God. The natural man cannot understand spiritual things, but he that is spiritual understands both (1Cor 2:14-15). God the Son, the eternal Word, became flesh in order to declare God the Father (John 1:18; 3:35; 6:46; 10:15). Irenaeus wrote: “For the Son, being present with His own handiwork from the beginning, reveals the Father to all; to whom He wills, and when He wills, and as the Father wills. Wherefore, then, in all things, and through all things, there is one God, the Father, and one Word, and one Son, and one Spirit, and one salvation to all who believe in Him” (Against Heresies, Bk 4, Ch6).

     Only the Father knows the Son, and only the Son knows the Father. A clearer picture of the Son’s deity can hardly be conceived, but add the previous affirmation that the Father has given the Son all things, and we cannot doubt that the Scriptures teach the divinity of Christ. Those who deny that truth, deny these Scriptures. The verse closes with an equally important truth:  the Son reveals the Father to whomsoever He chooses. Note the difference between knowing the Father by revelation and knowing the Father on account of direct provenance.

28 Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. 29 Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me; for I am meek and lowly in heart: and ye shall find rest unto your souls. 30 For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.

    This comforting promise has encouraged the souls of millions of Christians down through the centuries of time. Come unto Me (see also Is 55:1-3; Rev 22:17). No matter the burden you are carrying, take it to the One who knows all and has experienced it Himself. He is willing and waiting to empathize with every pain and sorrow (Heb 4:15) and He is able to lighten your load. The repose that Christ offers is not the absence of duty and work, but rest for your souls (Jer 6:16; Is 14:3). It is that inner peace which passeth all understanding (see note on Mat 10:34).

     A yoke implies burden and labor, but we have a choice of yokes. To bear the yoke of self, sin and Satan is to experience the heavy, awful load of guilt and the sad consequences of wickedness in life and death. Accepting the yoke of Christ is total freedom from those weights! Remember though, that Christ also has a yoke for you to carry. And while the first yoke looks plush, shiny and fun; the second has the look of a rough, wooden cross (Mat 10:38; 16:24). Their appearances are deceiving! For to take the first yoke will lead to destruction, misery and eternal death, but that old wooden cross leads to LIFE ETERNAL. Would you be yoked to Satan (2Cor 6:14), that cruel and hateful master? Infinitely more blessed it is to be yoked with Christ, who has promised to walk alongside the whole way (Mat 28:20; Heb 13:5).

     I can picture Jesus speaking to the attentive crowd when a pair of oxen pulling a heavy load begins to pass down the street. Come unto Me, He says, Take My yoke upon you…for My yoke is easy, and My burden is light. While there are yokes to bear and works to do in the Kingdom of Christ, His commands are never grievous or too difficult (1John 5:3). Jesus denounced the Pharisees for loading the people’s yoke with unnecessary burdens (Mat 23:4) even beyond the many rules, rituals and ceremonies of the Law (Act 15:10). Yes, there are temporary burdens of self-denial, ridicule and suffering (2Cor 4:17), but the overcomers will be granted the privilege to sit with Him on His heavenly throne for all eternity.

     Ye shall find rest unto your souls! Those who refuse the yoke of Christ must bear their heavily laden carts forever, even into Hell itself. How beautiful the picture of Jesus calling to travel-worn pilgrims to come unto Him, where they will find unimaginable blessings forevermore. He assures these tired ones that He is not a difficult King, but a gentle One, kind and compassionate, merciful and easy to talk to. Even the most timid person will quickly discover that is true (Mat 12:20). The yoke of Christ is much lighter than the yoke of sin.

     Learn of Me. Jesus had time for children, ate with sinners, spoke with harlots, and healed even the ungrateful. The way of Jesus may be difficult, but truly His yoke is easy and light. Moreover, the soul-rest He offers is heaven itself. The promises of Christ in the New Covenant are not simple revisions to the Law, they are the sure mercies that David wrote about in the Psalms – abounding spiritual realities that make the soul rejoice and sing even in times of sorrow.

commentary Matthew 10

1 And when he had called unto him his twelve disciples, he gave them power against unclean spirits, to cast them out, and to heal all manner of sickness and all manner of disease.

     Jesus chose twelve men from among His disciples who were to be His special witnesses, whom also He named apostles (Luke 6:12-13; Mark 3:13-14). At least half of them had been disciples of John the Baptist. The number twelve is closely associated with God’s choice, the elect of God chosen because of their faithfulness. The new Jerusalem of Rev 21:1-27, which is the heavenly home of the saints of God, is described in four dimensions of twelve thousand built over foundations of twelve precious stones, having twelve gates with twelve angels; within are the twelve tribes with the twelve Apostles, fed by the tree of life which bears twelve fruits. See also Rev 7, where the elect of God are represented by twelve times twelve thousand (Rev 14:1). The selection of twelve Apostles parallels the twelve patriarchal tribes of the Old Covenant (Mat 19:28; Luke 22:28-30), which added together forms the 24 elders of Rev 4 representing the redeemed of both covenants in glory.

     The apostles of the Lord (2Pet 3:2) are uniquely foundational to Christ’s Kingdom. There are twelve Apostles and no more. Some Christian groups today have created the office of “apostle” in their church government. That is arrogance to the extreme. The twelve Apostles were unique men ordained for a special time in world history. They were endowed with spiritual gifts and duties never before or since bestowed upon man (Heb 2:3-4). When has a man’s shadow healed the sick? (Acts 5:15). Who else has known the heart of a liar so certainly as to pronounce his death? (Acts 5:9). The Apostles were also entrusted with recording God’s Word in the Holy Scriptures. The foolishness of some churches in ordaining contemporary men to be “Apostles” is profound. Let us respect those names as did Christ in His Revelation, where the twelve Apostles of the Lamb form the very foundation of the City (Rev 21:14).

     The Twelve were sent out through the tribes of Israel with incredible power to cast out demons and to heal any kind of sickness and disease, but their real purpose was to spread a message: The Kingdom of Heaven is at hand (v7). It seems that Jesus was preparing them for that time when He would be no longer with them in person.

     Although Christ ordained just twelve Apostles, and that number remained even after Judas Iscariot’s ignominious death, there were actually thirteen Apostles. Paul, the Apostle born out of season (1Cor 15:8-9), came late to that office and yet outdid the rest, including Peter. This fact has an interesting parallel to the OT patriarchs, for although there were just twelve tribes of Israel, in reality they numbered thirteen because Joseph’s two sons, Ephraim and Mannaseh, were each given an inheritance in the land. Sometimes called “half-tribes,” they nonetheless received their own distinct land areas in Canaan. However, since Levi did not receive a land inheritance, there were only twelve tribal regions in Israel.

2 Now the names of the twelve apostles are these; The first, Simon, who is called Peter, and Andrew his brother; James the son of Zebedee, and John his brother; 3 Philip, and Bartholomew; Thomas, and Matthew the publican; James the son of Alphaeus, and Lebbaeus, whose surname was Thaddaeus; 4 Simon the Canaanite, and Judas Iscariot, who also betrayed him.

     Three more lists of the 12 Apostles are found in the Scriptures (Mark 3:16-19; Luke 6:14-16; Act 1:13) and in each list the names are grouped the same. Two sets of brothers, Peter and Andrew, James and John, are always in the first group, with Peter at the head of the list in every case. This group figures highest in the events and writing of the New Testament. Peter is the first on account of prominence:  he was the one chosen by God to open the door of salvation to the Gentiles and so begin to build His church (Mat 16:18). James was probably the first Apostle to be martyred (Act 12:2), but certainly not the last. All but John died cruel, untimely deaths at the hands of wicked men.

     The names of the next group are Philip, Bartholomew, Matthew and Thomas. Their order varies only slightly in the lists. Bartholomew is either Nathanael’s surname or simply another name for Nathanael – not an uncommon feature in those days, for Thomas was also called Didymus (John 20:24), Matthew was called Levi (Luke 5:27), and Peter was called Simon and Cephas. We know for certain that Bartholomew is Nathanael by reading his call to discipleship and also his close connection with Philip (John 1:45-50). It is only in John’s Gospel (John 21:2) that he is called Nathanael, which is the Greek form of the Hebrew name Nathaneel, which means “gift of God.” In the Synoptics and Acts he is called Bartholomew, an Aramaic name.

     In the last group of Apostles were James the son of Alphaeus, Simon the Zealot, Judas, and Judas Iscariot. This James is called of Alphaeus to distinguish him from James Boanerges of the first group (Mark 3:17). Also called James the Less (Mark 15:40), he was Jesus’ cousin, for Mary and James’ mother (also named Mary) were sisters (John 19:25; Mark 15:40). Some think that Alphaeus and Cleophas are the same name in different languages. James the Less became Bishop of the church in Jerusalem and is also called “the Lord’s brother” (Gal 1:19), though by that term we should understand “relative,” for he was actually a cousin. Simon is called the Canaanite or Zealotes, probably to distinguish him from Simon Peter. The Zealots were a Jewish sect that tried by force to overthrow Roman rule in Palestine. Judas Thaddaeus was most probably the writer of the book of Jude, beyond that not much else is spoken of him in the NT. The other lists call him Jude, the brother of James, but it should read, Jude, the son of James. The KJV translators chose brother in order to make it correspond to Jude 1:1. The addition is neither implied nor intended in the Greek, and consistency demands that it should read Jude, the son of James.

     The first six Apostles were probably all disciples of John the Baptist (John 1:35-51), but the last six are not as well-known except for Matthew, whose calling as a publican, or tax-collector, was astonishing, much like calling a harlot (see note on Mat 9:9). It is possible that Matthew and James the Less were brothers, for the name of their father was Alphaeus (compare Mark 2:14; Acts 1:13; John 19:25). That would make three sets of brothers in the Twelve. Some think that Judas (not Iscariot), Simon the Caananite, and James the Less were all half-brothers of Christ (Mat 13:55). The Scriptures are not clear on that.

5 These twelve Jesus sent forth, and commanded them, saying, Go not into the way of the Gentiles, and into any city of the Samaritans enter ye not:

     The commissioning of the Twelve Apostles to proclaim the coming Kingdom throughout the cities of Israel was a training session for their great evangelistic work which began immediately after Jesus’ ascension into heaven. According to Luke, there were two separate commissions, the first involving only the 12 Apostles (Luke 9:1-6) and the second involving a larger group of seventy disciples (Luke 10:1-20). The two missionary works appear to have occurred in rapid succession. While the Synoptics agree concerning Jesus’ instructions to the Twelve (compare Mat 10:5-15; Mark 6:7-13; Luke 9:1-6), Matthew enlarges the theme into a long prophetic passage that effectively commissions every future member of the Kingdom of heaven to preach the Gospel of Christ (Mat 10:16-42). Some scholars think this latter section was spoken by Christ to His Apostles at an occasion nearer to His departure and that it is added here because it topically relates to the subject matter. Matthew’s gospel tends to group related material rather than keep a strict chronology. Thus, Mary’s anointing of Jesus is given with Judas’ betrayal (Mt 26:1-16), the Sermon on the Mount capsulizes the teaching of Christ throughout His ministry, the fig tree’s cursing and withering are given together (Mat 21:18-22), and the ten miracles of chapters 8-9 represent a cross-section of His many signs.   

     Initially the Gospel was preached exclusively to the Jews. The Samaritans were half-Jews living in the land of Israel and whose capitol was Samaria. They probably originated at the time Judah was taken into captivity in Babylon (2Kings 17:24-28). They learned to worship the God of Israel and acknowledged the law of Moses, but later they devolved into a separate religion with their own temple on Mt Gerizim and false forms of worship (see notes on John 4). When the Jews returned from Babylon, the Samaritans tried to overthrow the work of rebuilding Jerusalem. From that time onward there was great animosity between the two peoples. Jesus categorized them with the Gentiles. Although Jesus targeted the Jewish people, both Gentiles and Samaritan had opportunity to hear Him and witness miracles among their own race.

6 But go rather to the lost sheep of the house of Israel.

     The imagery is drawn from the prophets, who often pictured Israel as sheep and their leaders as shepherds. Isaiah wrote: All we like sheep have gone astray (Is 53:6), and Ezekiel prophesied that Messiah would seek that which was lost, and bring again that which was driven away (Eze 34:16) And that corresponds with Jesus’ thoughts in Mat 9:36. Speaking prophetically of the Gentiles He said: And other sheep I have which are not of this fold (John 10:16). Later, Jesus repeats this phrase to the Canaanite woman (Mat 15:24).

     Jesus was born a Jew, lived according to the Jewish law and preached to the Jews. He came as a minister of the circumcision to bring into effect the promises made unto the fathers (Rom 15:8). Jesus and the Apostles first went to the lost sheep of the house of Israel because the oracles of God were given to the Jews and they were to receive the promises. And yet, even before it began, the Kingdom was designed and prophesied to include all nations and tribes. The Jewish leaders’ rejection of Christ was the catalyst for the extension of grace to the Gentiles. The apostle Paul writes to his fellow-Jews: It was necessary that the word of God should first have been spoken to you: but seeing ye put it from you, and judge yourselves unworthy of everlasting life, lo, we turn to the Gentiles (Act 13:46).

7 And as ye go, preach, saying, The kingdom of heaven is at hand. 8 Heal the sick, cleanse the lepers, raise the dead, cast out devils: freely ye have received, freely give.

     The first 15 verses of this chapter describe the evangelistic missions of Jesus’ disciples, but as the chapter progresses it becomes clear that in the latter half Jesus is speaking more of later missionary efforts that His future Church would undertake. In the book of Acts the warning of Mat 10:17-18 came true, as did His prophecy in Mat 10:34-37 of the great suffering the Jewish Christians would endure at the hands of their own kinfolk. At this time however, His words probably mystified the disciples: being hated of all men for My name’s sake (v22) did not sound very Messianic!

    The Twelve were sent out to preach repentance and the coming of the Kingdom of Heaven (Mark 6:12). John the Baptist and Jesus had proclaimed the same message (Mat 3:2; Mat 4:17). The Kingdom of Heaven is Jesus’ title for the New Covenant which He would inaugurate with His blood and which He contrasts to the Old Covenant. See my note for Mat 3:2.

     As proof of authenticity, these disciples were given special power to heal the sick, raise the dead and cast out devils. Given that the phrase, raise the dead, does not appear in many important manuscripts, and also that none of the other Gospels include it (Mark 6:7-13; Luke 9:1-6), many scholars do not think it was part of the original text. And it is true that there is no record of the Apostles raising the dead until after Jesus’ resurrection.

9 Provide neither gold, nor silver, nor brass in your purses, 10 Nor scrip for your journey, neither two coats, neither shoes, nor yet staves: for the workman is worthy of his meat.

     The Apostles were sent out two by two (Mark 6:7), empty-handed and money-less, and dressed in only the most basic of clothing. They were expected to trust God to provide for their daily needs. This was the common way that God’s prophets of old had lived, as also John the Baptist (Mat 3:4). The reason Jesus gives is: the workman is worthy of his meat, meaning that by laboring in Christ’s Kingdom the Apostles should receive their food and clothing from others in the Kingdom. While it is doubtful that this instruction is intended for all future evangelistic trips, the principle remains valid and Paul references it in 1Cor 9:14.

     Nevertheless, the Apostle to the Gentiles did not exercise that right as he labored to establish the first churches in the Kingdom. It was an unmistakable mark of his sincerity and commitment to God. So while the Scriptures do allow those who labor devotedly in the Church to earn their living from those they serve, Paul’s reason for refraining is certainly worth considering (2Thes 3:8). A paid minister may find it hard to speak against those who pay his salary and a missionary’s flock may find it hard to respect someone who does not work for his own food, clothing and shelter. Wise judgment is required for these decisions.

     Money can be used to benefit missionary efforts, yet it is not essential. And that appears to be the intent of Jesus’ words here: “Don’t worry about your physical needs, for God will provide for your necessities as you travel.” Many present-day evangelists and pastors in America could surely better judge these things! Their excesses and opulent living leave an ugly mark on the name of Christ. With their huge mansions, rich lifestyles and personal belongings, they act like celebrity stars rather than ministers of the Word. Recently I read in the news of a televangelist that is asking his viewers for $50,000,000 so that he can buy a new jet. Surely there are better Kingdom uses for that money.

     While the parallel passages in Luke 9:3 and Mark 6:8 agree in general, some critics see a contradiction in Mark saying the disciples were permitted a staff and sandals while Luke says shoes were not allowed (Luke 10:4). The contradiction is superficial. The passages intend to show that the evangelists went out with the bare minimum of provisions. Just one coat, for instance, and no travel-bag (KJV – scrip). It is doubtful that Jesus meant they should never use a walking stick nor refrain from using foot protection, but that they shouldn’t take changes of shoes and sandals. In those days, there were several kinds of staves, such as for self-defense and to carry possessions. Perhaps the slight differences can be attributed to Matthew grouping the two commissions (the Twelve and the Seventy) into one, while Luke separates them (Luke 9:3; Luke 10:4) and Mark does not mention the seventy.

11 And into whatsoever city or town ye shall enter, enquire who in it is worthy; and there abide till ye go thence. 12 And when ye come into an house, salute it. 13 And if the house be worthy, let your peace come upon it: but if it be not worthy, let your peace return to you. 14 And whosoever shall not receive you, nor hear your words, when ye depart out of that house or city, shake off the dust of your feet. 15 Verily I say unto you, It shall be more tolerable for the land of Sodom and Gomorrha in the day of judgment, than for that city.

     While Jesus was famous for associating with publicans and sinners, He instructed the Apostles to stay in households of good repute during their missionary journeys. Nor should they move from house to house during their time in that city. Apparently He gave this counsel to limit their exposure to dangers in the form of slander and temptation. A bishop must have a good report of them which are without; lest he fall into reproach and the snare of the devil (1Tim 3:7).

     To salute a house is to pronounce a blessing upon it; say, Peace be to this house (Luke 10:5). The salutation would be addressed to the members of the household and probably included a physical touch such as a hug, kiss or handshake. There are modes of greeting in every culture. Usually a salutation between friends will be different from a meeting of strangers. The Greek word is also used in the context of a farewell (Act 20:1; Act 21:6) and in the passages of the holy kiss (1Cor 16:20, 1Thes 5:26). The apostle Paul begins most of his epistles with a salutation of peace.

     If the household happened to be undeserving, the salutation would turn to you again (Luke 10:6). This apparently refers to greeting a stranger, for to bless the household of a known rebel or heretic is to participate in his wickedness (2John 1:10-11; 1Cor 5:11). And if a house or city rejected the Gospel, Jesus gold the missionaries to perform a little ceremony as they leave that place: Shake off the dust under your feet for a testimony against them (Mark 6:11; Luke 9:5). This solemn warning would alert the people that their rejection would incur the wrath of God. Maybe some would be provoked to repentance. The hard truth is better than ignorance. It is better to warn the ungodly and endure his scorn than to ignore their foul deeds and endure God’s scorn.

     Paul and Barnabas enacted this ritual when they were forced out of Antioch in Pisidia by the slanderous actions of the Jews, who stirred up the people against them (Acts 13:45-51). The people of Sodom did not have the Gospel of peace and grace preached unto them! Their sins, however so great, do not result in the same level of accountable judgment (see Luke 12:47-48).

16 Behold, I send you forth as sheep in the midst of wolves: be ye therefore wise as serpents, and harmless as doves.

     The rest of this chapter speaks prophetically of the missionary efforts that the churches of Christ would undertake during the Age of the Gospel. Jesus warns that we must face many dangers, trials, struggles and disappointments, but that God will always be with us (Heb 13:5). This section is prefaced by the striking picture of sheep walking through a forest populated with wolves. It is a most sobering caution, for sheep have no natural defense. Their only protection is stay close to the Shepherd, listening to His voice and obeying His commands. The true saints of Christ go out unarmed into a world filled with violent, greedy, conniving, jealous and ungodly men! So beware, carefully conduct yourself in the wisdom that is from above (James 3:17), innocently living without thought of retaliation and violence. The figurative language parallel of Rev 8:1-13 similarly paints “The churches of Christ in the world.” And it is true of the experience of pilgrim churches during in history.

     In this life, the Christian experience is not all blessing and goodness. There will be trials, deceptions, contentions, temptations, arguments, violence, confrontations and even death along the way. But take courage, Christ has told us beforehand and He has trodden that road already. Be wise as serpents yet harmless as doves. The following verses teach some principles of conduct in carrying the Gospel into this fallen world. Men will betray, persecute and slander the servants of God. So be ever alert to the Serpent and his people, be aware of their devises and deceits. Remember that many times the Devil is able to use other Christians to do his evil work, many times without them even knowing it (2Cor 2:10-11; Php 1:15-16). Follow the example of Jesus, who knew when it was time to withdraw from confrontation and when it was time to press it further (see Mat 12:14-15).

     This passage has much to do with the topic of Non-Resistant Love. The Christian is called to return evil with good, instead of resisting it with human force (Rom 12:21; Mat 5:38-39). How should I respond to a bad person trying to harm my family? Act in wisdom and with the power of God, not resorting to violence and harm (Php 2:15). Above all, rely on the Shepherd. He cares and is watching to help those who are doing His will. The imagery of wisdom and a serpent reminds us of the serpent in the Garden, who was cunningly shrewd and wise in the ways of the world. I would have you wise unto that which is good, and simple concerning evil (Rom 16:19).

17 But beware of men: for they will deliver you up to the councils, and they will scourge you in their synagogues; 18 And ye shall be brought before governors and kings for my sake, for a testimony against them and the Gentiles. 19 But when they deliver you up, take no thought how or what ye shall speak: for it shall be given you in that same hour what ye shall speak. 20 For it is not ye that speak, but the Spirit of your Father which speaketh in you.

     In his Gospel, John says that Jesus foretold these difficulties so that His followers would not become discouraged (John 16:2-4). Emboldened by Jesus’ words, Peter wrote that we should not think it strange when we are faced with fiery trials (1Pet 4:12-14). Behold, I have told you before (Mat 24:25).

     They will scourge you in their synagogues. At the beginning of the Age of Grace, the Jews were the worst adversaries that the missionaries faced. They also were cunning and astute in coercing the Romans to do their bidding (i.e. Acts 13:50). This devious trait remains among them down to this very day. Paul alone was scourged 5 times by the Jews (2Cor 11:24). In a later chapter, Jesus gives a similar prophecy that predicts the rejection and maltreatment many Christians will experience (Mat 23:34). The hands of the religious world are often the most cruelly turned against the true saints of the Kingdom.

     The Apostles gave testimony of the Gospel before great and small, Jew and Gentile. Their words ring with truth and conviction through the halls of time, for they took to heart the Master’s words: It is not ye that speak but the Spirit of your Father which speaketh in you. They did not agonize about their upcoming examinations, but relied on the Spirit to give the wisest words to answer their accusers (Mark 13:11). Take no thought how or what ye shall speak does not mean we shouldn’t prepare to give an answer to every man that asketh you (1Pet 3:15), but that we should speak in the power of the Spirit and not in man’s wisdom (1Cor 2:4). For the uneducated twelve Apostles, this promise surely served as a great encouragement. 

     Interestingly, Luke puts these verses in his version of the Olivet discourse (Luke 21:12-15). His words there are abundantly assuring to all Christians, whether novices or aged in faith: Settle it therefore in your hearts, not to meditate before what ye shall answer: for I will give you a mouth and wisdom, which all your adversaries shall not be able to gainsay nor resist. Peter’s answer before the Sanhedrin is an appropriate example (see Acts 5:29).

21 And the brother shall deliver up the brother to death, and the father the child: and the children shall rise up against their parents, and cause them to be put to death. 22 And ye shall be hated of all men for my name’s sake: but he that endureth to the end shall be saved.

     Through the centuries of time, it has often been that to choose Christ is to choose ridicule, persecution and death, even from the closest of relatives. Islamic and Hindu cultures are especially cruel to Christian converts and family members are still routinely killed for professing Christ. Yet, many have chosen to be hated of all men for the name of Christ and of them the son of Man will not be ashamed (Mark 8:38; Luke 9:26). He will confess to know them before the angels of God in glory (Luke 12:8).

     He that endureth to the end shall be saved. The encouragement is directed to these persecuted and downtrodden – persevere, determine to press on, do not despair! Weeping will endure during this earth’s night, but joy cometh in the morning (Ps 30:5). The road will be difficult and dangerous, but never lose sight of that eternal crown! I am convinced that this picture is just as true in churches of Christ that are not persecuted physically, but spiritually. The Devil has developed an astonishing array of temptations and deceits to persecute Christians in lands of religious freedoms. Indeed, he has caused more souls to lose heart in those settings than in works of torture and death.

23 But when they persecute you in this city, flee ye into another: for verily I say unto you, Ye shall not have gone over the cities of Israel, till the Son of man be come.

     To flee persecution is not a sign of weakness, although sometimes it may be better to stay. Richard Wurmbrand, a pastor in communist Romania in the 1960’s, knew that his preaching was making his country’s atheist leaders angry and that his life was in danger. One night, as he and his wife were discussing whether they should flee, a communist policeman troubled in spirit came to his house for help. Wurmbrand led that man to the Lord that night and it settled their question. They would stay. Sometime later though, Wurmbrand was arrested and imprisoned. For 14 long years he was tortured terribly by the communists, but during that time he led many of his fellow-prisoners to Christ. His wife continued their ministry until she too was jailed. Eventually communism in Romania fell and the two were released. What a story.    

     Till the Son of man be come. This apparently refers to the initial coming of Christ’s Kingdom on earth in the hearts and souls of men. That near event was the purpose for which the disciples were being sent out (v7). A few chapters later Jesus says: Verily I say unto you, There be some standing here, which shall not taste of death, till they see the Son of man coming in his kingdom (Mat 16:28). See similar in Luke 9:26-27. Christ came into His Kingdom at the beginning of the Gospel Age, when with power (Mark 9:1) He ascended into heaven unto the Throne of God (Heb 12:2) and invested His disciples with the Holy Spirit (Acts 1:8). The coming Kingdom was the repeated message of His ministry, so it is natural to take His “coming” in that sense in the present context (John 14:18).

     Preterists attempt to apply this verse to the destruction of Jerusalem, which took place about 40 years after this date. Their heretical idea is that Jesus returned to the earth in A.D. 70, so there is no future coming of Christ. Nor do they believe the world will ever come to an end. These beliefs contradict many plain passages that describe Christ’s Second Coming. Their main argument is that the Bible phrase, the end of the world, is a reference to the destruction of Jerusalem rather than the end of the world.    

     The contextual timeframe of this verse is a very strong point against the Preterist interpretation, for the destruction of Jerusalem is too distant an event to fit with Jesus’ words that His disciples would not finish going through the cities of Israel before His Kingdom began. Surely 40 years after Christ is much too long for the evangelism of Judea. For by that time Christianity had spread far beyond the coasts of Israel and reached throughout the vast Roman world!

     On the other hand, it is compelling and fitting that Jesus speak of the beginning of His kingdom at this juncture of His ministry. Jesus and John the Baptist had been preaching that this Kingdom was at hand (Mat 3:2; Mat 4:17) and now He sends out His disciples with the same message (Mat 10:7). He demonstrated the urgency of their message by saying that they would not finish visiting the cities of Israel before His Kingdom would come in power upon the earth. This interpretation is corroborated by Christ’s coming to His heavenly temple in the next chapter (see note on Mat 11:10).

     Preterists also like to point out that Christians were not persecuted until after Pentecost, but that fact we acknowledge and find in consonance with our comments above. Dioko means to pursue, to persecute, to press after, to follow. The same word is used to describe the Jews “persecuting” Jesus years before His death (John 5:16). Thus, read in context and using the parallel passages as interpretive guides, Jesus sends out His disciples to preach the Kingdom of heaven (Mat 10:7) throughout the cities of Israel only. They are instructed to not stay in any recalcitrant city, but to get out quickly and go to the next (Mat 10:14). They would not finish going through the towns of Israel before the Son of man be come into His Kingdom (Mark 9:1), which event refers to that official inauguration of its King rising from the dead and ascending to the heavenly Throne.

24 The disciple is not above his master, nor the servant above his lord. 25 It is enough for the disciple that he be as his master, and the servant as his lord. If they have called the master of the house Beelzebub, how much more shall they call them of his household?

     The disciple should expect to be treated in the same manner that his Master is treated. Jesus was rejected by the world, ridiculed and despised by the religious elite, and finally tried, tortured and killed by the Roman government. If they dared to call the Master of the house a “son of Satan,” they will call the servants of the house by even worse titles. Jesus did not take the easy road to Calvary. The mistreatments and cruelties He experienced give courage to His followers when they face the same troubles (see note on John 13:16). God could have ordained an easier, less-painful plan to redeem Man, but the path He chose demonstrates His love and His determined will for His servants.

     The reason the World mistreats the disciple of Christ is because his righteous message and life is a torment to the World (Rev 11:10). Because ye are not of the world…therefore the world hateth you (John 15:19). This hatred often comes harshest from the World’s religious quarter. The Jews, the Catholics, the Muslims, the Protestants – the true, pilgrim churches of Christ have always been hated and scourged in their synagogues down through the centuries.

     Beelzebub was a Pharisaical name for Satan. It seems to have its origin in the fly-god, an idol of Ekron (2Kings 1:2).

26 Fear them not therefore: for there is nothing covered, that shall not be revealed; and hid, that shall not be known. 27 What I tell you in darkness, that speak ye in light: and what ye hear in the ear, that preach ye upon the housetops.

     While ridicule and torments are sure to accompany the faithful missionary followers of Christ, they should never let these satanic tactics intimidate their message! Fear them not…preach ye upon the housetops. The Apostle describes his experience in evangelizing Macedonia: we were troubled on every side, without were fightings, within were fears (2Cor 7:5). And at times the situation is reversed: “fighting within, fears without.” Regardless of the difficulties, the truth must be preached! Fear them not therefore.

     In Luke’s account, the exposure of secret things relates to the hypocrisy of the Pharisees (Luke 12:1-3). Sooner or later, sin will become known to all. Better if it is sooner, when it can still be forgiven, than later at the Judgment Day (1Tim 5:24; Mat 22:12; Rev 20:11-15).

28 And fear not them which kill the body, but are not able to kill the soul: but rather fear him which is able to destroy both soul and body in hell.

     Here is another unsettling portent of the great persecution which the churches of the Kingdom have endured without pause since the crucifixion of Christ. All of us must pass through this world’s valley of tribulation – some will give up their bodies to the physical flames of torture while others will fight the life-long war against the ruler of darkness and his awful fiery darts aimed at your very soul (Eph 6:16). Wicked men can torture and kill the body, but no man is able to destroy both soul and body in hell. God alone possesses the authority to decide who will be assigned the second death, that forever-burning lake of fire where all those who have rejected salvation must endure endless torment (Rev 21:8).

     While God is to be soberly feared as the only Judge and authority over death and hell, I believe that here Jesus is warning us to fear Satan with all his terrible and cunning tactics to corrupt Man’s soul and thus seal his endless fate in hell. In that sense the Devil has the power of death (see Heb 2:14), for everyone who yields to his wicked ways will surely die (Rom 6:23). The counsel is this:  obey the commandments of God and fear Him even unto death, for he that gives up Christ in order to save his physical life will end up losing out on eternal life (Mat 16:25). See also Luke 12:4-5.

29 Are not two sparrows sold for a farthing? and one of them shall not fall on the ground without your Father. 30 But the very hairs of your head are all numbered. 31 Fear ye not therefore, ye are of more value than many sparrows.

     If it seems that God is uncaring, or not listening, or far away, these verses are for you. When one of His followers is cruelly tortured and killed, we wonder why God did not act. Whatever may be the reason, be assured it is not because God does not care! If He knows when a simple sparrow dies, He certainly knows when one of His children are suffering. When His own Son hung dying on a tree, cruelly tortured and mistreated, where was God? Was He far away, uncaring and unconcerned? A thousand times no! Surely He was never closer to His Son than at that time, yet even Jesus felt alone and forgotten: My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken Me? (Mat 27:46). God is never closer to those He loves than when they are in their most difficult hours, whether experiencing persecution and death, or struggling with Satan’s great trials and temptations. Take courage, afflicted soul, you are of more value to God than many sparrows. Cast your cares upon Him; He careth for you (1Pet 5:7).

     The promise of these verses is not that God will deliver the suffering Christian from every trial and torment, but rather that He is deeply affected by their suffering. The purposes of God in creating the world and Mankind are not fully revealed to us, but clearly part of that plan involves the free exercise of man’s will, and that must inevitably include wickedness and suffering.

32 Whosoever therefore shall confess me before men, him will I confess also before my Father which is in heaven. 33 But whosoever shall deny me before men, him will I also deny before my Father which is in heaven.

     This warning is given several times in the Scriptures. See Mark 8:38; Luke 12:8; Rev 3:5. While it is a comfort to the faithful ones who have suffered and endured for Christ, it is a warning to the cowardly and fearful (Rev 21:8) to return to Him. Peter denied that he knew Jesus, but repented and was forgiven. The word confess (KJV) means to acknowledge or affirm. See Mat 7:23; Rom 10:9; Heb 11:13; 1John 4:2.

Many would never deny Jesus in word, but by their decisions and actions they are denying Him. They do not keep His commandments, they do not walk even as He walked (1John 2:6). Those faithful ones who do honor Christ in all things in this life have this enormous blessing awaiting them at the last day: Jesus will confess to know them before the Judge. “I know this one, he kept My words and lived according to My will. Well done, thou good and faithful servant. Well done! Come on in! Enter into joy forevermore!”

34 Think not that I am come to send peace on earth: I came not to send peace, but a sword. 35 For I am come to set a man at variance against his father, and the daughter against her mother, and the daughter in law against her mother in law. 36 And a man’s foes shall be they of his own household.

     How sadly true this has been during the whole Gospel Age! Often a decision to follow Christ means permanent separation from one’s family. If a Muslim young person converts to Christianity, his family is required to kill him. A Jew that believes on Christ will never be accepted among his own people, and even the non-religious will excoriate and ridicule a son or daughter who becomes a “Jesus freak.”

     In the Scriptures, the sword is used to signify violence, suffering and war (Rev 6:4,8). In this context it is a striking symbol, for the enemies who wield it are one’s own loved ones. It has been said that the harshest cuts are those inflicted by a friend, something Jesus would know from experience (Ps 41:9; Mat 26:48-50). Perhaps in recognition of that fact, Jesus reassured His disciples that any man who has left house or brethren for the sake of the Gospel will receive one hundred fold reward in the world to come (Mark 10:29-30; Luke 18:29-30).

    I came not to send peace, but a sword. Didn’t Jesus come to bring peace and goodwill to men? (Luke 2:14). Yes, but His peace is not like that of this world (John 14:27). The peace that Christ gives is not physical rest from conflict and tension, but the peace of God, which passeth all understanding (Php 4:7). It is a peace of soul contentment and inner assurance. Earthly troubles and trials of faith cannot take away the peace that Jesus gives (John 16:33). True, inner peace is a state of being, or condition of the person. Yes, it may affect the emotions, but its true foundation is that deeper, solidly based faith in the promises of Christ. See note on John 14:27.

     Orthodox Protestant commentators find the interpretation of this passage difficult (see Clarke) because they are in the camp of the one wielding the sword instead of the camp experiencing persecution and variance. The JFB commentary even throws the blame on the persecuted ones, saying that they have “a fanatical thirst for martyrdom” (see his note on v16). Unbelievable.

37 He that loveth father or mother more than me is not worthy of me: and he that loveth son or daughter more than me is not worthy of me.

     This verse encourages the wavering heart to count the cost and then press on with Christ. The words are even stronger in Luke’s account (Luke 14:26). How much will it really cost you to become a Christian? It will cost you everything! For he that has chosen Christ has veritably suffered the loss of all things (Php 3:8). Many think to live with one foot in the World and the other in the Kingdom, but Christ demands absolute allegiance. 

38 And he that taketh not his cross, and followeth after me, is not worthy of me.

     It is a simple statement, but with far-reaching and all-inclusive effects in the life of every true Christian. God gives every person a cross to carry as he walks this earth following Christ. Each cross is unique, with different trials, weaknesses, temptations and callings. If you do not have a cross, you are not a disciple of Christ, for whosoever doth not bear his cross, and come after Me, cannot be My disciple (Luke 14:27). Remember this in your spiritual journey: Jesus calls you to carry a cross, not a suitcase of belongings! However, be comforted in the fact that He does not ask of you something that He has not already experienced. Let us gladly join our crosses with His and follow Him outside the gate, bearing its reproaches, temptations and sufferings (Heb 13:12-13). Charles Cowman wrote that Jesus sacrificed six things: personal comforts, social enjoyments, human relationships, worldly ambitions, earthly riches and physical life. Let the disciple remember that he is not above his master (v24). This topic of the Christian’s cross is found often in the Gospels (Mat 16:24; Mark 8:34; Luke 9:23).

     Lukewarm Christianity (Rev 3:16) attempts to serve Christ without a cross, but it cannot be done. Beware, Jesus said, when all men shall speak well of you (Luke 6:26), for that is not the normal Christian experience. Endure hardship as a good soldier of Christ (2Tim 2:3), be conscious of personal weaknesses, weights and sins (Heb 12:1). A literal cross is rough, heavy, cumbersome and uncomfortable to bear! At the finish line though, the faithful and patient one “will exchange that cross for a starry crown and reign forever with Christ.”

     In verse 34, the topic of peace has two very different aspects, one is inward and spiritual, but the other is outward and physical. The same is true of the Christian’s cross. In this world, the life of a Christian will be one of trouble, suffering and shame; but at the same time the burden of the inner soul is made easy and light (Mat 11:30). The one who truly experiences this inner peace and happiness will find that rough old cross to be not so heavy after all. In fact, it can be a literal joy (James 1:2-4). On the other hand, the one who does not appreciate the great things of Christ, will find that cross to be unbearably burdensome and shameful. He will find a way to make it lighter, but at terrible eternal cost!

39 He that findeth his life shall lose it: and he that loseth his life for my sake shall find it.

     In the Greek of the New Testament, the words life and soul derive from the same word, psuche. This passage (as well as others) uses psuche in an immortal dimension, but on other occasions it is used in reference to physical life. Like psuche, the word pnuema can refer to physical breath or to the spirit and immortal soul, while zoe is a more general term for life, including plant and animal life. These three Greek words correspond to the Hebrew words nephesh, ruwach and chay.

     Jesus will repeat this warning as a critical assessment of the Pharisees in Mat 16:25-26 (see also Mark 8:35; Luke 17:33). Live always mindful of the precious, everlasting value of your soul, for your decisions and actions will determine its eternal state. The first part of this duplet intones the impossibility of a man to actually save his own soul: whosoever tries to save it by his own will and strength shall end up losing it, for his sins immediately disqualify him. However, the second part of the duplet promises a way that a man can save his soul: by losing his life and pledging allegiance to Christ alone. John says, he that hateth his life shall keep it unto life eternal (John 12:25). Not that literal, physical death is required to be saved, but that the death of Self must be a reality in life. Whosoever would be saved must live for Christ first and always, regardless of the consequences to his own will, wishes and well-being. These verses emphatically show that the Christian must choose to live in total self-denial. See notes on Mat 16:24-26.

40 He that receiveth you receiveth me, and he that receiveth me receiveth him that sent me. 41 He that receiveth a prophet in the name of a prophet shall receive a prophet’s reward; and he that receiveth a righteous man in the name of a righteous man shall receive a righteous man’s reward. 42 And whosoever shall give to drink unto one of these little ones a cup of cold water only in the name of a disciple, verily I say unto you, he shall in no wise lose his reward.

     The principle that Jesus here teaches is that if we assist a prophet or righteous man in his work, be it even so small as giving him a cup of cold water, we will earn a heavenly reward. The reverse is also true – those who take pleasure in the wickedness of evil-doers will share in their punishments (Rom 1:32; 1Tim 5:22; 1John 1:10; Rev 18:4).

     These little ones. Apparently speaking of any disciple of Christ, including children and those new in the faith. See also Mat 11:11; Mat 18:6; Mark 9:41.

commentary Matthew 9

1 And he entered into a ship, and passed over, and came into his own city.

     The events of this chapter are so stirring and spectacular it seems incredible that His fame was not impossibly powerful in Israel. But the fact that He did not work (as yet) these miracles in Jerusalem contributed to lower His profile. Much of His ministry was to the poor and out-of-the-way folk in the northern countryside. Apparently Jesus did this purposely (see Mat 8:4, 9:30). This dual chapter of miracles (ch8-9) will showcase Jesus’ power in a variety of ways and areas, and they conclusively demonstrate His heavenly authority and power, such that after the tenth miracle the people marvelled, saying, It was never so seen in Israel (Mat 9:31). The first miracle of this chapter is an important one, for it shows Jesus with the power to forgive sins.

  1. Jesus touches the leper and heals him (Mat 8:2-4).
  2. He heals the centurion’s servant on his deathbed (Mat 8:5-13).
  3. He heals Peter’s mother-in-law of a severe fever (Mat 8:14-15).
  4. He stills the winds and waves with His word (Mat 8:23-27).
  5. He casts out a legion of demons from two men (Mat 8:28-34).
  6. He forgives the paralytic man’s sins and heals him (Mat 9:2-7).
  7. He heals the unclean woman from an issue of blood (Mat 9:20-22).
  8. He raised the ruler’s daughter from the dead (Mat 9:23-25).
  9. He opens the eyes of two blind men (Mat 9:27-30).
  10. He casts a demon out of a man who could not speak and heals him (Mat 9:32-33).

2 And, behold, they brought to him a man sick of the palsy, lying on a bed: and Jesus seeing their faith said unto the sick of the palsy; Son, be of good cheer; thy sins be forgiven thee. 3 And, behold, certain of the scribes said within themselves, This man blasphemeth. 4 And Jesus knowing their thoughts said, Wherefore think ye evil in your hearts? 5 For whether is easier, to say, Thy sins be forgiven thee; or to say, Arise, and walk? 6 But that ye may know that the Son of man hath power on earth to forgive sins, (then saith he to the sick of the palsy,) Arise, take up thy bed, and go unto thine house. 7 And he arose, and departed to his house. 8 But when the multitudes saw it, they marvelled, and glorified God, which had given such power unto men.

     Jesus had already performed amazing miracles that could not be explained outside of the power of God. Nevertheless, many continued in their skepticism, especially the Pharisees and doctors of the Law, who are noted to have witnessed this healing (Luke 5:17). Here, Jesus gave the theologians an undeniable proof of His deity. Instead of healing this man’s paralyzed body, He pronounced the man forgiven of his sins. And then, to prove that He really had authority to forgive, Jesus said the word and the man was healed!

     The stubborn and critical-minded scribes knew that only God can forgive sins (Mark 2:7), but amazingly they were still not willing to believe that He was the Son of God. Even the more open-minded multitudes seem to have missed the connection, for instead of recognizing Him as the Son of God, they marvelled and glorified God which had given such power unto men. Perhaps their unbelief is not so surprising, for various churches today also refuse to believe that Jesus is divine. Unfortunately, they find themselves standing with these unbelieving crowds. Some are analytic-minded theologians like the scribes, others are easily-swayed observers like the crowds of witnesses.  

     So-called “faith-healers” try to hinge all acts of healing on the amount of faith the sick person has, but in this case Jesus was more impressed with the faith of those that brought the invalid: Jesus, seeing their faith… The parallel accounts in Mark 2:1-12 and Luke 5:17-26 explain that the four helpers had found the path to Jesus completely blocked by people, but undeterred they carried the paralyzed man, bed and all, up onto the roof and removed the tiling to lower the man down directly in front of Christ. For this action, and not simply the act of believing, Jesus recognized their faith. It was a faith that worked to attain the blessing.       To the scribes and Pharisees, this amazing act of healing did nothing to change their hardened hearts. Instead, it sent them into even wilder thoughts of judgment. He is blaspheming! Three striking miracles: healing the body of a paralyzed man, healing the soul of a sinner and revealing the inner thoughts of the scribes. Yet in their blind jealousy the Jewish leaders dismissed these acts that God only can perform and even attributed them to Satan (Mat 9:34).

9 And as Jesus passed forth from thence, he saw a man, named Matthew, sitting at the receipt of custom: and he saith unto him, Follow me. And he arose, and followed him.

     Contrast Matthew’s response to the disciple of the previous chapter, who asked permission to bury his father first (Mat 8:21). Matthew was a hated tax-collector, a Jew who worked for the Romans in the city of Capernaum. As a rule, tax-collectors cheated the people and kept much of the tax money for themselves. They were part of that group commonly called the publicans and sinners (see next verses). Jesus however, saw something good in Matthew and asked him to become His disciple. To follow Jesus was a not a simple decision – the pay was zero and the danger was high. Yet Matthew was willing. He left all, rose up, and followed Him (Luke 5:28). So there are a few rich young rulers who do heed Christ’s commandments. Matthew changed his life completely and followed Jesus until his death.

     In the parallel passages, Matthew is called, a publican named Levi (Luke 5:27) and, Levi the son of Alphaeus (Mark 2:14), but in the lists of the disciples his name is Matthew (Mat 10:3; Mark 3:18; Luke 6:15). Both Matthew and James the Less were sons of Alphaeus, but it is not known if they were brothers, or if their fathers shared the same name (see note John 19:25). 

     The first six Apostles had been disciples of John the Baptist: Peter, James, John, Andrew, Philip and Nathanael knew each other well and were introduced to Jesus by John the Baptist (John 1:35-51). These six were sincere, righteous, radical, God-seekers. But with Matthew, the mold was broken, for he was a “person of the world.” Living in Capernaum, Jesus’ adopted hometown, he could not have been ignorant of Jesus’ fame in working miracles and righteous teaching. To hear Jesus call his own name, he, a known publican and sinner, must have been overwhelming (Rom 5:8) and Matthew did not disappoint Christ’s calling. Luke describes Matthew making a great feast at his house, inviting other publicans and sinners along with Jesus (Luke 5:27-32); the righteous scribes and Pharisees were not impressed.

     Matthew’s example is a strong encouragement for those who later in life wake up to find themselves deep in sin and far from God. Jesus is still ready to receive, still calling, “Follow Me.” It is never too late to repent, turn from a wicked lifestyle and follow the Master. It will not be easy, but the angels in heaven rejoice when such an one overcomes sin, self and the world to rise victorious in life by death with Christ. As someone once said, “The Christian life is hard work with low pay up front, but the retirement benefits are out of this world.”

10 And it came to pass, as Jesus sat at meat in the house, behold, many publicans and sinners came and sat down with him and his disciples. 11 And when the Pharisees saw it, they said unto his disciples, Why eateth your Master with publicans and sinners? 12 But when Jesus heard that, he said unto them, They that be whole need not a physician, but they that are sick.

     From the parallel passage, it is clear that this was Matthew’s own house (Luke 5:29). In writing his Gospel however, Matthew refuses to make that known, nor to draw any attention to himself. In the next chapter’s listing of the Twelve Apostles he is, Matthew the publican. There was no worse title or profession among the Jews than that of publican. Matthew however, was clearly a humble man, a man aware of his need for God and grateful for Christ’s mercy and grace in saving him.

     It is indeed wonderful for the vilest sinner to realize that Jesus loves and associates Himself with such as these. He is able to save to the uttermost every sinner that will but call upon Him in true faith and repentance. What a different Gospel it would be if Jesus had only associated Himself with persons of morally good character.

     Contrast Jesus’ actions with the thoughts of these Pharisees, who looked with distaste about them at these sinners with whom they, true keepers of the Law, were forced to share a place and meal. Yet Jesus came to save such as these. The self-righteous Pharisees did not want to see mercy and salvation extended to others. They were ones chosen to receive mercy. Even church men fall into this false thinking. Going about with over-much regard of their own righteousness, they are unwilling to help a lowly life-long sinner find salvation. They do not want to associate with a publican and so defile their own name and piety. Spiritual pride is a dangerous, self-righteous attitude that comes in various degrees and forms. It blinds the mind and damages reason, and the result is grave errors on a wide scale.

     Not the healthy, but the sick are in need of the physician’s care. Unfortunately, the self-justifying Pharisees (Luke 16:15) did not know they were sick ones! Like the self-absorbed Laodiceans of Rev 3:15-18, they could not see that they were wretched, and miserable, and poor, and blind and naked. And because they believed themselves healthy when actually they were blind, their sin remained (see John 9:41). This condition is rampant in churches today. So many think themselves the just ones, while condemning others for acting like sinners! Their faculties of judgment are turned upside down (Is 5:20). In present-day cases like this, where accusations are fierce and every act is criticized and doubted, a good rule to follow for those who are outside the situation is to judge first the attitudes of the parties and not get caught up into judging and second-guessing their “facts and actions.” Jesus said we would know false prophets by their fruits (Mat 7:20). Anybody can commit a wrong, but the good man is humble, open to correction, repentant. The proud and self-seeking man is antagonistic, vindictive and unwilling to accept criticism.

13 But go ye and learn what that meaneth, I will have mercy, and not sacrifice: for I am not come to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance.

     This quote comes from Hosea 6:6, where mercy refers to kind acts and goodwill toward one’s fellowman, which is the Second Commandment of the Law (Mat 22:39). The scribes and Pharisees kept the sacrifices and rituals of the Law and omitted doing good to others (Mat 23:23). Although they were the religious elite and thought they possessed full understanding of the Old Testament, Jesus tells them, “Go learn what God meant when He desired mercy and not sacrifice.” In Micah 6:1-8, God restates the same wish for His people. Apparently the Pharisees never did learn what that Scripture meant, for later Jesus brought the same Old Testament verse to their attention again (Mat 12:7).

     It seems to have escaped the Pharisees’ attention that here Jesus groups them with the publicans and sinners around Him! They were the sick ones, the unrighteous; and He had come to call such sinners to repentance. Most of the Pharisees however, were too proud and self-seeking to believe in Christ and for that reason the publicans and harlots went into the Kingdom before them (Mat 21:31-32). They were in desperate need of forgiveness and mercy, but did not know even know it. Jesus the Messiah had come for their spiritual healing, but they were refusing it (Dan 9:24; Mic 7:19).

14 Then came to him the disciples of John, saying, Why do we and the Pharisees fast oft, but thy disciples fast not? 15 And Jesus said unto them, Can the children of the bridechamber mourn, as long as the bridegroom is with them? but the days will come, when the bridegroom shall be taken from them, and then shall they fast.

     Earlier Jesus had criticized the Pharisees’ way of fasting as self-righteous and proud (see note Mat 6:16). While Jesus did not command His disciples to fast, He did fast during His ministry. And after His death the Apostles and the churches of Christ fasted often (Acts 13:2; 14:23; 2Cor 11:27). Here Jesus recognizes this unique time in the history of the world. The new Gospel Age was beginning and the Son of God had come to teach, demonstrate and establish it. Why fast and petition God when He was walking and talking in the flesh among them?

     A wedding is a time for rejoicing and singing, not mourning and fasting. In this analogy Jesus is the Bridegroom and His disciples are the children of the bridechamber. These days were happy for them, troubles and necessities did not even come to mind. But after the wedding celebration, they must be parted from the Bridegroom. Then there would days of deep tumults, dangers, trials and even death. While the disciple surely caught the general meaning of Jesus’ answer, they could not fully understand it until after His ascension. Nevertheless, in that era there was much comfort in remembering His words.

     The disciples of John the Baptist, who was probably still alive in prison, were the ones who asked Jesus this question. Maybe there was a subtle accusation behind their inquiry, “Why is our good teacher sitting in prison while You are eating and drinking as if nothing is wrong?” Jesus did not address that question here, but later He speaks of John the Baptist in some of the most glowing words of commendation to be found in the Scriptures (Mat 11:7-14). Yes, He understood that John was in prison for the sake of the Gospel, but isn’t that the fullest proof that John was a true prophet? (Mat 5:10-12).

16 No man putteth a piece of new cloth unto an old garment, for that which is put in to fill it up taketh from the garment, and the rent is made worse. 17 Neither do men put new wine into old bottles: else the bottles break, and the wine runneth out, and the bottles perish: but they put new wine into new bottles, and both are preserved.

     The next two parables (the patched cloth and the new wine) illustrate the coming change in the Kingdom: the Bridegroom would be taken away and the disciples would begin to fast and pray. The bottles were leather bags. New wine would expand the old leather bottles until they burst, so new wine required new bottles. Jesus did not come to patch up the old covenant, but to initiate an entirely new and better one. The new is so much better than the old that both covenant and people (wine and wineskins) are re-defined and ratified by Christ. The two should not, cannot be mixed, a task that the apostle Paul dedicated much of his life to effecting. Luke’s Gospel takes the imagery further, saying that most people like old wine better (Luke 5:39), meaning that the Jews (including the disciples) did not want to change. But eventually the new wine would become old, and the old would vanish away (Heb 9). Compare with Isaiah 65:8.

18 While he spake these things unto them, behold, there came a certain ruler, and worshipped him, saying, My daughter is even now dead: but come and lay thy hand upon her, and she shall live. 19 And Jesus arose, and followed him, and so did his disciples.

     Matthew gives a shortened account of these two miracles and begins with Jarius, a ruler in the Jewish synagogue (Mark 5:22), informing Jesus that his daughter had just died. The parallel accounts (Mark 5:22-43; Luke 8:42-56) begin while the girl is still alive, although at the point of death. Then, while Jesus was walking to her house, new word came that she had died. Jesus however, continued on to her house. Understanding those details help to see how these two miracles of healing are intertwined.

     It appears that this Jewish leader waited until the last minute before soliciting Jesus’ help. Perhaps he feared his fellow Jewish leaders, perhaps he too was a doubter. Whatever the case, at the last moment and in utter desperation, Jarius stooped to petition this Man of whom it was reported could heal at the spoken word.

20 And, behold, a woman, which was diseased with an issue of blood twelve years, came behind him, and touched the hem of his garment: 21 For she said within herself, If I may but touch his garment, I shall be whole. 22 But Jesus turned him about, and when he saw her, he said, Daughter, be of good comfort; thy faith hath made thee whole. And the woman was made whole from that hour.

     This woman had good reason to be quiet in the crowd! Such a blood disease made her perpetually unclean by Jewish law and prohibited her from all temple worship and probably even from being in public. What’s more, Jesus would have become unclean if He had healed her by touching. And so the woman did not ask for His help, but worked her way into position where she would be able to touch His garment. Maybe she thought that by touching only His clothes and not His body she would not make Him unclean.

     The parallel accounts describe the woman’s fear of revealing herself when Jesus remarked that virtue had went out Him and asked who had touched Him (Mark 5:30-34; Luke 8:45-48). Mark says that the woman had spent all her money trying to be cured of this disease and that she had suffered many things of many physicians (Mark 5:26). See Clarke’s note on that passage for a shocking citation of a Jewish doctor’s remedy for this condition.

     Thy faith hath made thee whole. Jesus would often accompany His healings with similar words. The statement draws attention to the important contrast between the Old Covenant’s works-based salvation and the New Covenant’s faith-based salvation. Jesus did not ask how good she had been or how well she had kept the Law before allowing her to be healed. Neither was she required to do something first to prove her faith, as in Naaman’s case. We do see however, belief in action (Faith) that resulted in her healing. She believed that Jesus was able to heal and she acted upon that belief by finding Him in the crowd and touching His garment.

     We commonly hear that the reason healings do not occur more frequently today is because people do not have enough faith. Jesus never once indicated that the measure of one’s faith determined whether He would heal or not. He never once withheld healing because someone “did not have enough faith.” Instead, faith is an either/or condition. They either had faith, or they did not. Thus, Jesus  avoided areas (like His family town) that did not believe on Him (Mat 13:58). That is another either/or faith situation.

     Yes, faith is a necessary requisite for healing; no, it does not determine whether healing will take place. Jesus’ power and will effected the healing. The error of “faith healing” should be evident upon studying the way healing occurred in the NT. Jesus said that it only takes faith in the amount of a grain of mustard seed to move a mountain (Mat 17:20), yet who has seen one literal mountain moved at the command of a man? That’s because it is not faith alone which brings the answer to our prayers! Petitioning God rightly requires asking unselfishly, in His will and for the benefit of His Kingdom.

23 And when Jesus came into the ruler’s house, and saw the minstrels and the people making a noise, 24 He said unto them, Give place: for the maid is not dead, but sleepeth. And they laughed him to scorn. 25 But when the people were put forth, he went in, and took her by the hand, and the maid arose. 26 And the fame hereof went abroad into all that land.

     Why would Jesus say the maid was not dead, but only sleeping? He made a similar statement concerning Lazarus (John 11:11-14). The attitude of the people changed from scorn to astonishment when the maid came forth walking and very much alive. To raise a person to life is a stunning miracle of power, but this straight-forward account makes it to be a simple act for Jesus Christ.

27 And when Jesus departed thence, two blind men followed him, crying, and saying, Thou Son of David, have mercy on us. 28 And when he was come into the house, the blind men came to him: and Jesus saith unto them, Believe ye that I am able to do this? They said unto him, Yea, Lord. 29 Then touched he their eyes, saying, According to your faith be it unto you.

     This particular miracle is unique to the book of Matthew, though later healings of the blind occur in all the Gospels. See for examples Mat 20:30-34; Mark 10:46-52; Luke 18:38-43. By calling Him the Son of David, the blind men were confessing that He was the Messiah (John 7:42). It seems that they followed Jesus for some distance (until He was come into the house), making the scene a walking proclamation that Jesus was the promised Messiah. As Jews, these blind men were acquainted with the OT, so maybe they were thinking of verses like Is 35:5 while they called upon Jesus for healing. Certainly these miraculous acts of healing fulfilled prophesies of Messiah.

     Notice that Jesus did not immediately heal the blind men. They continued to ask, continued to beg to be healed. Was Jesus testing their faith and persistence? Waiting to see if they would give up and walk away discouraged? Oh the reward that was theirs because of their perseverance! A lesson surely for Christians today.

30 And their eyes were opened; and Jesus straitly charged them, saying, See that no man know it. 31 But they, when they were departed, spread abroad his fame in all that country.

     Again Jesus gave command to remain quiet about the miracle He had performed (Mat 8:4). Why? I will give my idea in the next paragraph. First though, it is interesting that the disciples never asked Him what He meant, nor did any of the Gospel writers venture to explain why He would silence the testimony of others concerning Him. Mark does note that on account of His fame as a healer He could no more openly enter into the city (Mark 1:45), but we are still left to wonder: didn’t Jesus come for the express purpose of demonstrating to the world that He was the Messiah? Why then would He suppress the spread of these unbelievable miracles? And if He was a charlatan as the skeptic thinks, why would He try to lower His reputation as a miracle-healer? Indeed, for the scoffing intellectual, this little fact adds much weight to this truth:  Jesus is the Son of God as recorded by the Gospels.

     Nevertheless, Jesus must have had a reason for often warning people not to spread the news of their healing. I believe it was to prevent the people from forcibly making Him to be their Messianic king and leader. Their faulty idea of the Messiah had been developed and promulgated by the doctors of the Old Law, who taught that He would lead them politically and militarily back into world prominence like David of old. He would put all enemies to flight, subjugate the Assyrians, Egyptians, even the Romans, and the banner of Israel would wave at the head of all nations. This Messianic belief was so firmly held that even the Apostles could not imagine anything different. If Jesus said something that did not match with “their Messiah,” they either reprimanded Him or just refused to understand (Mat 16:21-22; Luke 9:43-45; Luke 18:31-34; John 12:16).

     Even at the moment of His ascension the Apostles had not yet fully learned the mission and kingdom of Jesus the Messiah. There they asked Him, Lord, wilt thou at this time restore again the kingdom to Israel? (Act 1:6). They would need several more years to understand all that He had come to do – die for the sins of the world and save the Gentiles with the Jews. Finally those OT prophesies came to life! Of course, Jesus knew all this from the beginning of His ministry, so instead of directly teaching them that their concept of the Messiah was completely wrong, He used it to His advantage and made sure that they could not implement it. This is plainly seen on the occasion that He quietly left the multitude because He perceived that they were about to make Him their king by force (John 6:15). All of this was outside God’s plan.

     So by warning the blind men not to spread abroad the account of their healing, Jesus was avoiding the development of their false idea of the Messiah, for they were loudly proclaiming Him to be that very One (Mat 9:27). This is further seen in Mat 16:20, where Jesus forbade even His own disciples to spread the news that He was the Messiah. And according to Mat 12:15-21, this was prophesied to be an attribute of the Messiah – that He would not strive and cry in the streets, inciting the people and proclaiming that He was their savior; instead, He would be meek and gentle, not breaking even a bruised reed but sending forth judgment.

32 As they went out, behold, they brought to him a dumb man possessed with a devil. 33 And when the devil was cast out, the dumb spake: and the multitudes marvelled, saying, It was never so seen in Israel.

     The Greek word for devil is daimonion which should be translated “demon.” Compare with Satan being called the Devil in Mat 4:1, where the Greek word is diablos. The KJV consistently fails to make the distinction between the two Greek words, translating both as “devil.” It appears that the demon was preventing the man from speaking, for when the demon was driven out the mute man was able to speak. See the parallel account in Luke 11:14-16.

     The Jewish nation has a long and storied history which includes quite a few miracles of healing and supernatural acts of deliverance. But what Jesus did was never so seen in Israel, for none of her famous leaders and prophets had done what Jesus was doing. See Is 35:5.

34 But the Pharisees said, He casteth out devils through the prince of the devils.

     What jealousy and hardness of heart! These words of the Pharisees cannot be softened or put in a less wicked light. Rather than accept and confess that God was acting among them, they slandered Him in the most blatant, blasphemous way possible – saying that His power came from Satan. Jesus will refute their charge later in Mat 12:24-32.

35 And Jesus went about all the cities and villages, teaching in their synagogues, and preaching the gospel of the kingdom, and healing every sickness and every disease among the people. 36 But when he saw the multitudes, he was moved with compassion on them, because they fainted, and were scattered abroad, as sheep having no shepherd. 37 Then saith he unto his disciples, The harvest truly is plenteous, but the labourers are few; 38 Pray ye therefore the Lord of the harvest, that he will send forth labourers into his harvest.

     Jesus, the evangelist. These verses have moved the hearts of many missionaries, pressing them ever deeper into foreign lands and strange cultures. The labourers are few.  The fields are already white unto harvest (John 4:35). Who will go for us?  God in heaven is asking! Oh for more willing hearts like Isaiah, who responded, Here am I, send me (Is 6:8). Drawing on this picture, a songwriter describes the Father’s thoughts:

      My house is full, but My field is empty,
      Who will go and work for Me today?
      It seems My children all want to stay around My table,
      But no-one wants to work in My field.

     The imagery of God’s people as sheep and their leaders as shepherds is a common one in Old Testament literature and several passages are direct prophecies of this period of history (Jer 23:1-6; Eze 34:1-31). See also John 10:1-18. Jesus was moved with compassion because the multitudes were fainting, scattered and leader-less. It is primarily a description of their spiritual condition. The scribes and Pharisees were supposed to be the religious leaders in Israel, but they were ravening hypocrites (Luke 11:39) who oppressed the flock instead of encouraging it. The multitudes were spiritually scattered, forced to seek for themselves what food might be found. The words of Jesus brought hope and comfort to their souls!    

     Verse 35 virtually repeats Mat 4:23. For 3-1/2 years Jesus travelled about the cities and villages of Israel, preaching and teaching the Gospel of the Kingdom. In the next chapter, He sends the disciples out to do the same.