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What is the importance of obedience to "The Law"? Who are the "violent ones" mentioned in verse 12? Was Yeshua (Jesus) schizophrenic in His instructions?

Matthewโ€™s Gospel is a Jewish account containing a number of Jewish cultural expressions that were inherently understood by Jews in that era but can be confusing to gentiles in the modern Church that is so many centuries removed. Taught by Tom Bradford.

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THE BOOK OF MATTHEW

Lesson 40, Chapter 11 Continued

Perhaps one of the more important, yet difficult to capture, statements made by Christ is found in Matthew 11:11 – 15. Another comes at the end of the chapter that we'll get to later. We're going to get pretty detailed and nuanced today because the subject matter calls for it. I'm also going to make some frank comments on a few well entrenched and accepted Church doctrines that need to be tested against their claims. Let's begin by reading those 5 challenging verses.

RE-READ MATTHEW CHAPTER 11:11 – 15

Instantly our eyes and ears ought to be on alert with what Yeshua says in His characterization of John the Baptist that no human being ever born is greater than John. However… theย leastย in the Kingdom of Heaven will be greater than he is. We ended last week with our connection between this statement and the one Yeshua made during His Sermon on the Mount. I'll quote for you only a couple of verses to jog your memories.ย 

CJBย Matthew 5:18-19 18 Yes indeed! I tell you that until heaven and earth pass away, not so much as a yud or a stroke will pass from the Torah- not until everything that must happen has happened. 19 So whoever disobeys the least of these mitzvot and teaches others to do so will be calledย the least in the Kingdom of Heaven. But whoever obeys them and so teaches will be called great in the Kingdom of Heaven.ย 

Clearly Yeshua's use of the phrase "the least in the Kingdom of Heaven" means the same thing here in Matthew 11:11 as it did in Matthew 5:19 otherwise it can't be deciphered in either statement. Before we address that let's discuss for a moment why Yeshua says that among people who are born (which is all people), no one is greater than John. It is my opinion that while Jesus says this in a rather sweeping, all inclusive way meaning the entire human race, in fact this is intended within the context of what He said immediately prior to verse 11. It was that John is not only a prophet, he is more than a prophet. So we need to take this as meaning not only that there is no human being greater than John, but also there is no prophet greater than John.ย 

The Early Church Father Jerome says this in his Commentary on Matthew.ย 

John is greater than the other prophets for this reason: the other prophets predicted to John that someone was to come, but John pointed out with his finger that he had indeed come; saying, "Behold, the Lamb of God, who takes away the sins of the world". And he reached not only the rank of a prophet but even to that of Baptist, by baptizing his Lord.

I agree with Jerome. Not only is John a great prophet in his own right, but he carried with him the spirit of Elijah, considered to be the epitome…the chief… of Old Testament Prophets. Many of those Old Testament prophets spoke of a future time when a Deliverer would come for the sake of Israel, and also of another man that would announce the arrival of that Deliverer. The herald of the coming of the Messiah turned out to be John the Immerser (immerser is a much more apt title within the Jewish context than "Baptist"). So John's divine purpose was not as the prophesier of what was to come later, but rather he was to announce the present fulfillment of what those earlier prophets foresaw and foretold (just as an angel announced the birth of that same Messiah, as the Old Testament prophets foresaw and foretold). ย 

Even so, Christ says John is going to be considered less than the least in the Kingdom of Heaven. Does this statement baffle you? How can the unmatchable John the Baptist (at least according to Jesus), the honored messenger of Christ's arrival, at the same time be considered as less than theย leastย in the Kingdom over which Jesus shall rule forever? To unravel this mystery we have to go back to the instruction I gave you some weeks ago on Matthew chapter 5 verses 17 – 20. It is that Yeshua says that His followers, without exception, are to continue following the Law and the Prophets (which, as with Paul, is a term that points to the entire Hebrew Bible of that day…. what Christians call the Old Testament). Further, there is a consequence for Believers…. without exception…… who obey and teach the Law of Moses and the Prophets, versus those who don't. Those who do teach and obey will be awarded the status of greatest in the Kingdom of Heaven. Those who do NOT teach and obey will be given the status of the least. But what must be kept in mind is that whether one is the least or the greatest, all those who follow Christ will be members of the Kingdom of Heaven.ย 

Our earthly social or economic status or even our accomplishments….. accomplishments that may, ultimately, benefit the Kingdom of Heaven…. may have some bearing on our status in the Kingdom of Heaven. But clearly our acceptance, obedience to, and teaching of the Law of Moses and the Prophets during our lifetimes are the largest determining factors NOT on whether we are admitted as members of God's Kingdom, but rather what our societal status will be within God's Kingdom. Yet even knowing that it seems almost as though Yeshua has a bone to pick with John, and says that John is perhaps not going to be a member of God's Kingdom. At least it certainlyย seemsย to read that way.ย 

The Early Church Father Theodore of Mopsuestia had something important to say on this matter. What makes him an expert source is that not only in the late 300's A.D. did he say what I'm about to present to you, he sprang from the Antioch branch of early Christianity. That is, he received his religious training and ordination in the Church there in Antioch. Antioch was Paul's hub of operation 3 centuries earlier, and he established several believing congregations there. So a certain set of traditions and doctrines developed in Antioch that grew out of what Paul had taught them and naturally that influenced, if not represented, their core beliefs. Theodore records the following words of how John can be the greatest of men, but still be considered less than the least in the Kingdom of Heaven. These words are from a fragment of a small collection of works attributed to him:

If John is being judged against other people according to being born from a woman, he will be found to be the greatest of them all. He alone was filled with the Holy Spirit inside his mother's womb, so that he "leaped"; and his mother prophesied because she partook this as well. But if John is judged in relation to those who are to partake of the Spirit in the Kingdom of Heaven, Jesus says, he will be found to be the least. Thus Jesus says that John by no means partakes of such great grace as those who will be reborn into immortality after Jesus' resurrection from the dead and that John will experience physical death. At that time, however, the Spirit's abundance toward people will be so great that no one who has partaken of even the least part of it can afterward fall into death.ย 

In other words, Theodore says that when it comes to the deeds and accomplishments of humans…. even at the Lord's direction…. John is the greatest. But… those deeds have not in some way earned him a place of honor in God's Kingdom because that is not the standard. So after heaping praise on John, Yeshua uses John's greatness to contrast with the overwhelmingly superior greatness of the Kingdom of Heaven and its members. J.C. O'Neil says it best:ย "Jesus is not contrasting all begotten of women with John at their head, and some other group of men the least of which is greater than John; he is contrasting the present state of the greatest men with the future state of even the least in the Kingdom of Heaven".ย I would add that the future state of men that O'Neil speaks about takes a leap forward upon the resurrection of Yeshua, and then yet another leap at Pentecost upon the indwelling of the Holy Spirit within the small community of humanity that bows to Yeshua as their Savior, Lord, and King. So: Yeshua has not turned from praising John to criticizing him.ย 

It is interesting that although it only appears in some Bible versions, the word "amen" is what actually begins verse 11. The CJB (unfortunately) chooses not to use "amen" but changes it to "yes" and thus the verse itself loses much of its impact. Amen is a term of special reverence and soberness that more means "truly" than it does "yes", especially when it begins a thought. When "amen" begins a sentence in the Bible it is used in a similar way to the term "behold". That is, it is a prefix to a statement that tells us to pay special attention to what follows it, usually because a revelation is coming. And what is coming is that because John has fulfilled his role as special messenger of the entrance of the world into a new age…. the messianic age… when the Kingdom of Heaven has arrived into the world (albeit in its infant stage)…. then in a certain sense Johnย isย a person of the past. This is not to mean he is now irrelevant anymore than was Moses, Isaiah, Daniel, and so many others because their work was completed and it occurred in the past. Rather it is that each had his own irreplaceable mission and role in God's plan of Redemption History that brings us up to the time of John and Christ.ย 

But here is what separates the sheep from the goats (so to speak) among Jesus's followers today. If you get nothing else from today's lesson, please absorb this. While in a sense John is indeed a representative of the past, it mostly means being a representative of the time prior to the resurrection of Christ. A time when the initial purpose of Yeshua was to bring salvation to the world by means of Him atoning for our sins through the spilling of His innocent blood. What this doesย notย mean is that John belongs to the era of the Law and thus John and the Law are organically connected such that together they are both destined for the grave in order to be replaced by a new dynamic called grace. If that were the case then Yeshua's Sermon on the Mount was pointless; or worse, it was intentionally misleading. And especially misleading would have been Yeshua's proclamation in Matthew 5:17 – 20 that He did NOT arrive on this earth to abolish the Law and the Prophets, and in fact a Believer in Him will be measured in the Kingdom of Heaven (a kingdom that arrived with John) according to his or her personal devotion and obedience to the Law and teaching that truth to others.ย 

I'll put that same thought in the negative, now, to perhaps make the point easier to see. Those who claim that the Law is dead and in the grave (along with John) and so the Law has no role in the life of a Christian, have ignored and dishonored the direct and unmistakable teaching of Christ on this subject and instead have adopted a pleasing manmade Church doctrine to replace it. Further, while such a wrong belief and intentional lack of devotion to the Law of Moses may indeed not necessary result in that person's exclusion from God's Kingdom, it unequivocallyย doesย put them at the lowermost rung of the societal ladder of the Kingdom. These are not my words, but Yeshua's in Matthew 5. This matter that I have just set before you is second in its seriousness and eternal impact ONLY to the matter of accepting Yeshua as Savior in the first place. Now for a warning. I have said to all who have ever heard me that Christ is the only way to peace with God and life eternal; therefore you cannot stand before God and plead that no one ever told ย you. It is the same about our obligation to obey the Law of Moses. This means that on Judgment Day you no longer have an excuse to stand before God ย and say that you were intentionally disobedient to the Law because the Church misled you and so you didn't know. But you know now, and so you can change now.ย 

In verses 12 and 13 Yeshua is making at least a couple of different points. The first thing He is doing is emphasizing that John's and the Kingdom of Heaven's arrivals ran in parallel. Thus it is not at all difficult to determine when the Kingdom of Heaven began its reign on earth; it coincided precisely with the life and times of John the Baptist. So we can come pretty close to marking a date on the calendar. The second thing is that since John's and the Kingdom of Heaven's arrivals, so-called "violent ones" are trying to thwart its presence and purpose. The number of interpretations of what this means are so many that it is not possible to present them all. Some go so far as to say that the "violent ones" are a nickname for Jesus and His followers. Others say that this can only be talking about the Pharisees and the Sadducees. Still others believe that the "violent ones" represent a group of Jewish fanatics like the Zealots. I will tell you what I think, but I confess that I'm not wed to it. Yet considering both the local and the larger context, for me it best explains the intended meaning of the term.ย 

Whoever the "violent ones" are, they are in opposition to the Kingdom of Heaven and so they are trying to thwart it in its earliest stage. Therefore whoever or whatever this might be, its source is evil. Because the Kingdom of Heaven and John the Baptist were connected, appearing at the same moment in history, then it can be said that the Kingdom of Heaven has been attacked since John because it has existed since John. The Kingdom of Heaven can be defined as essentially the ideal of God's Kingdomย inย Heaven, but now also existing on earth….. hence the name the Kingdomย ofย Heaven. This spiritual Kingdom of God could not be touched by evil since prior to John it ONLY resided in Heaven and was carefully guarded by legions of angels. But now that a form of it has been birthed on earth, in its infancy it is being attacked by the forces of evil (to nip it in the bud, so to speak). This is in clear parallel to the Messiah being born. When Yeshua was the Word living in a purely spiritual form in a purely spiritual Heaven, He was safe and no evil could attack Him. But once He was born by means of a woman into the physical world on earth, the attack could begin because the earth is influenced under Satan's regime. Soon after His birth the wicked Herod tried to attack Yeshua and so Joseph and Miriam took the Christ child and rushed to Egypt. The immediate danger passed when Herod died; however the attacks on Yeshua went on to His death and of course it was these attacks of evil that directly led to His execution.ย 

I think we could justifiably say that it was the "violent ones" that pounced upon Yeshua starting at His birth, just as He could say that it was the violent ones that pounced upon the Kingdom of Heaven at its birth. So the "violent ones" is a somewhat expansive term. It seems to me that we needn't try to distinguish between the physical, fleshly violent ones (wicked humans) versus the spiritual violent ones (demons); they are essentially one in the same. And we also don't need to make the work of the violent ones based upon the time and the era that it happens. The Kingdom of Heaven was attacked immediately upon its arrival on earth in John's day, and it will continually be attacked by spiritual and physical violent ones until Yeshua returns in the future to subdue our planet, rid it of evil, and rule over it. Therefore the term "violent ones" means all physical people and all spiritual entities that are evil and those that participate in trying to thwart God's plans, which are wrapped up in the Kingdom of Heaven. The violent ones attack in all eras and all times since John the Baptist. The violent ones are trying, by force, to take the Kingdom away from God. I concede that it is possible that there is a different and better meaning of violent ones; but with the information we currently have I'm confident that this best captures it the way Yeshua intended it.ย 

Verse 13 follows up with Christ declaring something that is so very simple and plain in its words and meaning, yet the vast bulk of Christian leadership has never been able to accept it. Thus they claim that this verse is too complex to be taken at face value, so it can only mean something else. Plainly it has Jesus saying that the prophets (of old) and the Law of Moses prophesied until John (the CJB uses the term the Torah instead of The Law, which is close enough in meaning and is probably actually more accurate in the sense it was thought of by 1st century Jews). Before I tell you what it means….. and what it does not mean…. let's begin by setting the subject and the context. What's the context of this verse? The arrival of the Kingdom of Heaven. That is, Yeshua is saying that all the Prophets and the Torah prophesied about the coming of the Kingdom of Heaven on earth. So while the context is the Kingdom of Heaven, the subject is prophecy. Upon the arrival of John, all prophesying about the future coming of the Kingdom has come to a close. Why? Because the Kingdom has arrived and so those prophesies are now fulfilled. But since the Kingdom is invisible, somebody has to announce its presence or who would know? That person is John, says Christ.ย 

Unfortunately because Christianity has historically declared the Law of Moses to be an abolished dispensation of the past so that obedience to God in any tangible sense is also a thing of the past, and by contending that the divine rules and regulations given on Mt. Sinai are also but legalistic and inferior things of the past, therefore in the new messianic age we can just kind of be nice to one another and make it up as we go according to how we feel in our hearts. Therefore it is nearly universal claimed within Christianity that in verse 13 we have Yeshua stating that the era of the Law is gone and the era of grace has replaced it. Never mind that those words are simply not present. Disregard that if such a claim were true then we have a rather schizophrenic Yeshua saying (as plainly as it gets) in the Sermon on the Mount in Matthew 5 that He didย notย come to abolish the Law, then turning around a few weeks later and saying that He did. Nothing in this verse makes a claim that the Law is abolished. Rather Yeshua's claim involves…. what? Prophesy. Only prophesy. And it is that prophecies about the Kingdom of Heaven are found both in the Law (the Torah) and in the Prophets….. which is absolutely accurate and true. Then logically, since the thing that was prophesied for hundreds of years has come to fruition (The Kingdom of Heaven has arrived) then that's the end of any prophesying about it. When did that event occur? As Yeshua says; it happened upon the coming of John the Immerser as God's messenger. Case closed.ย 

Verse 14 throws out another challenging comment by Yeshua, which has resulted in several different interpretations. He says: "Indeed, if you are willing to accept it, he (John) is Elijah, whose coming was predicted". Please notice: as we have been dealing with for the past several minutes, prophecy and prophets continues to be the subject of Yeshua's statements. ย One of the most prevalent interpretations of this verse among Bible scholars is to not bother to interpret it at all, but rather to declare this verse as something Matthew made up out of his own mind and added in order to guide (or in some Bible scholars' view, to mislead) Christians into Matthew's way of thinking. Therefore, it is simpler to just skip it, in the same way we are to just skip over Matthew 5:17 – 20 as being words that are not credible. Why is this? I hope that you are all beginning to understand that, sadly, mainstream Christianity's clergy along with many theologians over the centuries have established certain doctrines to fit an agenda, and whatever is found in the Bible that doesn't validate that agenda is said to be either a mistake, or it is misunderstood and doesn't mean what it says. Why is this particular verse a problem for theologians? Because once again we have Yeshua referring to Old Testament prophets and prophecies, that are supposed to have become irrelevant once He and John appeared. In this case, that prophet is Malachi and what he has to say is too Jewish for a gentile Church.ย 

CJBย Malachi 3:22-24 22 "Remember the Torah of Moshe my servant, which I enjoined on him at Horev, laws and rulings for all Isra'el. 23ย Look, I will send to you Eliyahu the prophet before the coming of the great and terrible Day of ADONAI. 24 He will turn the hearts of the fathers to the children and the hearts of the children to their fathers; otherwise I will come and strike the land with complete destruction." [Look, I will send to you Eliyahu the prophet before the coming of the great and terrible Day of ADONAI.]ย 

The involvement of Elijah in the End of Days was an accepted matter in Christ's day and remains an important element of Jewish tradition and belief to this day. In a well written article by Jews for Jesus, the matter of Elijah is explained from the Jewish perspective.ย 

This is the 3rd "forerunner" prophecy. Isaiah 40:3 -4 spoke of a voice crying out to prepare the way of the Lord in the desert; Malachi 3:1 prophesied of a messenger preparing God's way and now in Malachi 3:22 -24 (in some Bibles it is Malachi 4:5 – 6) God sends the prophet Elijah before the "great and awesome Day of the Lord" comes. Elijah's mission is to bring about reconciliation as the passage indicates: โ€œBehold, I will send you Elijah the prophet before the great and awesome day of the Lord comes. And he will turn the hearts of fathers to their children and the hearts of children to their fathers, lest I come and strike the land with a decree of utter destruction.โ€ Based on this passage and also on the fact that Elijah did not die but was taken up to heaven directly, Jewish tradition spoke often of the future return of Elijah. As an example, in the Mishnah (Edduyotย 8:7), Elijah will come to settle all disputes and reconcile all discrepancies in the holy books. In that passage of the Mishnah, discussion ensues as to what Elijah will accomplish. At the end of the passage, โ€œThe Sages say, [Elijah will come]โ€ฆ to make peace in the world, as it is saidโ€ฆโ€ and then this is followed by quoting the Malachi passage. He is also involved with the resurrection of the dead in the Mishnah,ย Sotahย 9:15: โ€œThe resurrection of the dead shall come through Elijah of blessed memory.โ€ The resurrection was expected to happen at the end of history, so Elijah here is definitely associated with the end of time. And of course atย Passover an entire place setting is put out for Elijah as well as a special cup of wine, and the door is opened for him to enter. For the hope at Passover is that if Elijah comes, the Messiah himself cannot be far behind.

In the time of Jesus, messianic expectation was never far from the surface, and speculation was that both John the Baptist and Jesus were the reappearances of ancient biblical figures. For example, see this passage in Matthew:

So in this article from Jews for Jesus we see the important place Elijah continues to hold in the traditions of Judaism even from Yeshua's time. Christ assigns Elijah's mission (at least part of it) to John the Baptist. In Matthew's Gospel it is almost as though John the Immerser is Elijah's agent in the same way that Yeshua the Son, is God the Father's agent. We must not imagine that John is a reincarnation of Elijah or a change in form of Elijah to that of John. This possibility was actually a proposal of some of the Early Church Fathers, including most notably Tertullian. Matthew would never have accepted such a point of view.ย 

The most important take away from this statement for those Jews that were listening to Christ (and should be for us) is that the appearance of Elijah (and therefore John) signals the beginning of The End. So Yeshua is unequivocally validating the general belief of Jewish religious leadership and Jewish society that they were living in the Latter Days. What they could not have known is that there would beย twoย Latter Days, and in both of them the Messiah would appear as would Elijah. In this first of the two Latter Days, John represents the appearance of Elijah in the sense of him carrying the spirit of Elijah, and that means it in the sense of carrying out Elijah's prophesied mission. However as the Jews for Jesus article shows us, because Judaism doesn't allow for two Latter Days (only 1), then Elijah can only come once….. in whatever form he comes…. and for them this has not yet happened.ย 

As those of you who have studied my commentary on the Book of Revelation know, it is my conviction that one of the famous Two Witnesses that appear during the reign of the Anti-Christ will be Elijah in the flesh. Since all men are destined by God to die once, and Elijah did not die but ascended to Heaven alive, then he still has a destiny with death. Since John the Baptist carried the spirit of Elijah as Elijah's earthly agent (so to speak), then John's death was not representative of the death of Elijah any more than Christ's death on the cross was representative of the death of God The Father. But in Revelation chapter 11 when we read of the 2 Witnesses who mysteriously appear and display awesome powers, they both die. Since I believe one of them to be Elijah, then this death would fulfill his destiny of dying once.ย 

Let's read a little more of Matthew 11.

RE-READ MATTHEW 11:16 – 19

Yeshua asks a rhetorical question: "What can I compare this generation with?" He then immediately offers the comparison. This generation, He says, are like little children sitting in marketplaces and calling out to one another that they made happy music, but no one would dance to it. And they made sad music, but no one would cry. The first order of business is to discern just who Jesus is talking about. "This generation" doesn't mean "everyone" per se but it does seem to mean "all living Jews" that were contemporary with Christ. Probably the best way to understand it is as in the same sense God characterized the so-called Exodus generation; those who wandered in the Wilderness upon fleeing Egypt.ย 

CJBย Deuteronomy 1:35 35ย 'Not a single one of these people, this whole evil generation, will see the good land I swore to give to your ancestors…ย 

CJBย Deuteronomy 32:3-5 3 "For I will proclaim the name of ADONAI. Come, declare the greatness of our God! 4 The Rock! His work is perfect, for all his ways are just. A trustworthy God who does no wrong, he is righteous and straight. 5 "He is not corrupt; the defect is in his children, a crooked and perverted generation.ย 

So here the "generation" is a general term meaning the entire lot of people who left Egypt as a group as opposed to those who came before them and after them. The Exodus group consisted of a broad age range. This of course doesn't mean every last individual within the group shares this condition; ย rather it refers to an overall, or the most conspicuous, that best represents the condition of the people as a national community. In this case the condition is wickedness and perversion.

In context, this 1st century generation Jesus is talking about can be specifically identified as those who oppose John the Baptist and Christ. And those who oppose them (those of the children in the marketplaces illustration) insist that others join them and march to their tune, rather than joining John and Yeshua. The illustration is that if the children ("this generation") sing a happy tune, everyone is to dance to it or they are considered out of step. If these same children change-up and now decide to sing a sad tune, then everyone is to change direction along with them and dance to that tune or they are again considered out of step. It is terrifyingly easy to give you a modern day analogy of this. Are we… every last one of us…. not living in a generation that is behaving in such a way in the year 2020 that they were in Jesus's generation? We are among a generation that is uniquely characterized as insisting that everyone is to believe as their faction believes, and to act as they act, and to choose as they choose or you (an outsider) will be attacked with the intent of silencing you and if possible destroying you. It may be a violent physical attack upon your person or your family; or perhaps you'll have your car or business vandalized. Maybe you'll be denied any voice to express your viewpoint. Cities are taken over and normal commerce and living conditions are suspended by the most fanatical who demand that governments and the population at large support them…. or else face their wrath. In this age of the tsunami-like influence of social media, one must agree and conform with the social trends and mindsets that come and go in chaotic fashion or risk having your reputation destroyed, your life reduced to a shambles, and your peace taken from you. ย And to prove that this illustration of the generation of today is representative of the one that Jesus was criticizing, just listen to His next words.ย 

In verse 18 He says of John the Baptist that he came fasting (meaning it in the religious sense) and not drinking (meaning not drinking wine as a display of holiness like a Nazarite would), and so the politically correct of that generation who oppose him shout to one another that this can only indicate that John must be demon possessed (probably more meaning that he was crazy). But, when the Son of Man (Jesus) came eating (meaning not fasting) and drinking wine, then the same politically correct of that generation who opposed John said that Yeshua was a glutton and a drunkard for doing the opposite. Christ gave an illustration of how it doesn't matter what you do or what you say; if you represent the opposed, nothing you do or say will be judged as right or good. You will be criticized and slandered and have your character attacked and be marginalized if you refuse to join the crowd.ย 

Then this sort of straw-man attack Yeshua is offering turns to the company He keeps. Yeshua is said to associate with tax collectors (Jews who are intelligent, educated, and make a good living at their occupation, but are hated for it) and sinners (meaning Jews who are uneducated and poor, so they are considered incapable of correctly obeying the current slate of religious doctrines so they, too, are hated for it). Once again both ends of the spectrum of social company Jesus keeps are attacked: the educated and the ignorant. The well-to-do and the poor. ย He can do nothing right. So unless His social company falls in line with what is expected and accepted by the politically correct crowd, he is foolish and wrong and despised. Yeshua's response is: "Well, the proof of wisdom is in the actions it produces". That is, in speaking to this corrupt generation Christ says that you pat yourselves on back, telling one another how very wise and clever you are; but your actions betray your lack of wisdom. What actions? Although it is a general statement, no doubt the focus of it is the lack of reception of Elijah's agent, John the Baptist, and of God's agent, Yeshua of Nazareth.ย 

And what do we, the witnesses of the 21st century observe regarding the adherents to the faith of Jesus Christ? Believers in Him are more and more seen as foolish followers of ancient myth and primitive customs. We can do nothing right. We are characterized as ignorant and naive, holding back progressive society because society is moving forward and as a part of that forward motion (as a rule) it must necessarily include opposition to Jesus as Messiah or you may find yourself on the outside looking in. Should we be surprised by this unwelcome turn of events? Christ didn't seem to be. As Solomon once famously said:

CJBย Ecclesiastes 1:9 ย ย What has been is what will be, what has been done is what will be done, and there is nothing new under the sun.ย 

We continue in Matthew chapter 11 next week.

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    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 9, Chapter 4 As we work our way through the Gospel of Matthew and discover so many important details buried in the text, and also discover those present in Christian traditions and just as importantly in the ancient Jewish traditions, we are regularly going to…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 10, Chapter 4 Continued The Early Church Father Chrysostom said this about the temptations of Christ:ย "The devil begins with the temptation to indulge the belly. By this same means he cast out the first man, and by this means many are still cast down."ย  In…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 11, Chapters 4 and 5 Our previous lesson in Matthew chapter 4 left off at a time when Christ was gathering His first disciples. Teachers and Holy Men gathering disciples was nothing new; in fact John's Gospel says that Andrew was John the Baptist's disciple…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 12, Chapter 5 The Sermon on the Mount will be our topic for the next few weeks as it takes up Matthew chapters 5, 6, and 7. I think I can say without much objection that the Sermon on the Mount represents the most consequential…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 13, Chapter 5 Continued The richness and depth of instruction contained in the Sermon on the Mount is so breathtaking and yet foundational to the life of a Believer in the Father and in Messiah Yeshua, that after much time studying and researching it, I…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 14, Chapter 5 Continued 2 We have now completed studying 7 of the Beatitudes. It is usually said that there are 8 of them, but some Bible commentators say there are 9, and others say 10. My position is that the separating away of the…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 15, Chapter 5 Continued 3 I want to begin by acknowledging that we've spent the better part of 3 lessons covering only the first 16 verses of Matthew chapter 5; I know this is a very slow pace. I'm afraid that it is not likely…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 16, Chapter 5 Continued 4 Today we continue our careful and deliberate study in Matthew chapter 5, the Sermon on the Mount. Last week we spent our entire time together on the pivotal verses 17 – 20 because these form the basis and the backstop…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 17, Chapter 5 Continued 5 We've been in Matthew chapter 5 long enough that a reminder of the setting and background for the Sermon on the Mount is in order.ย  The setting is the Galilee. It is the serene rural agricultural and shepherding center of…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 18, Chapter 5 Conclusion Despite the happy fiction that in Yeshua's day the Jewish people practiced a religion that was rather pure and Torah driven, in reality what they practiced was a religion based mostly on Tradition. Naturally the Jews were not a monolithic culture;…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 19, Chapter 6 Our duty, and our hope, as followers of the Messiah Yeshua is to place our feet into His footprints. The Sermon on the Mount is showing us the way. Matthew recognizes how crucial Yeshua's speech is and so takes 3 full chapters…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 20, Chapter 6 Continued We'll continue in Matthew chapter 6 directing our focus upon the Lord's Prayer of verses 9 – 13. Leading up to this prayer example that Christ presented to those listening to His Sermon on the Mount, He gave His listeners a…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 21, Chapter 6 Continued 2 As we continue today in the Lord's Prayer, we'll begin at verse 13. Verses 11, 12, and 13 are sometimes called the "we petitions". This is because of the use of the plural "us" to begin each of these verses.…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 22, Chapter 6 Continued 3 We ended last week by discussing Matthew 6 verse 19. Beginning with this verse and on into the first part of chapter 7 Yeshua deals with an array of matters that in modern vocabulary we would probably label as "social…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 23, Chapter 7 We have now completed 2 of the 3 chapters that Matthew devoted to Yeshua's Sermon on the Mount. Every now and then it is probably profitable to remind you that Matthew did not write in chapters; ending one and beginning another. Rather…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 24, Chapter 7 Continued As we continue in Matthew chapter 7, we will review what we covered in the prior lesson. Let's begin by opening our Bibles and reading the opening verses.ย  RE-READ MATTHEW 7:1 – 6 Around a century ago, Thomas Walter Manson, a…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 25, Chapter 7 Continued 2 Matthew chapter 7 concludes the Sermon on the Mount that began in chapter 5. I'm hoping that by this point a better understanding is being gained about the context and intent of Yeshua's long speech; a context that has been…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 26, Chapter 7 Continued 3 In our previous lesson in Matthew chapter 7, Christ continues His Sermon on the Mount by making this unnerving statement in verses 22 and 23. CJBย Matthew 7:22-23 22 On that Day, many will say to me, 'Lord, Lord! Didn't we…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 27, Chapter 7 and 8 We'll conclude Yeshua's Sermon on the Mount today, which we have spent 17 lessons studying because of its incomparable value, and we'll also open the door into Matthew chapter 8. But first let's take a look back on the all-important…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 28, Chapter 8 Continued As we delve deeper and deeper into Matthew's Gospel, to this point we have found three elements to be always present and repetitive; therefore it is crucial for us to notice them and to understand that Matthew has constructed his Gospel…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 29, Chapter 8 Continued 2 We took another extensive detour last week in our continuing study of Matthew Chapter 8 to explore some of the Early Church Fathers in order to trace their viewpoint on the all-important matter of Believers in Christ having an obligation…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 30, Chapter 8 and 9 We are in the midst of several miracle stories of Jesus. The first involved cleansing a man who hadย Tzara'at. The second was healing a house slave of his infirmities (at the request of a Roman army officer), without Christ even…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 31, Chapter 9 We're going to spend a little more time today with the story that opens Matthew 9; that of the paralytic man who was brought to Christ so that he might be healed. Let's begin by re-reading verses 1 – 7. RE-READ MATTHEW…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 32, Chapter 9 Continued The subject that we'll focus on to begin today's lesson is a dispute between John the Baptist's disciples and Yeshua's disciples, ostensibly over the subject of fasting; this is what Matthew 9:14 – 17 revolves around. We'll go forward today in…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 33, Chapter 9 Continued 2 As we continue in Matthew chapter 9, we left off last time with verse 27 that says: CJB Matthew 9:27 27 As Yeshua went on from there, two blind men began following him, shouting, "Son of David! Take pity on…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 34, Chapter 9 and 10 We'll conclude Matthew chapter 9 today and get into Matthew chapter 10.ย  What we've been reading in chapter 9 has all been occurring on the shores of the Sea of Galilee; largely in Yeshua's new hometown of Capernaum, itself a…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 35, Chapter 10 Miracles are at the foundation of biblical faith. It begins with Creation itself as a miracle. After all, how does a Universe that never before existed have a definite beginning? Yet beyond simply declaring something a "miracle", we tend not to think…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 36, Chapter 10 Continued As we continue today in our study of Matthew chapter 10 there's a couple of important context items to keep in mind. First, Matthew lived and wrote well after the events he is speaking about. He was not the Matthew (also…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 37, Chapter 10 Continued 2 The topic of what Christ signified when He called Himself "the Son of Man" is how we ended our last lesson. In the Torah Class study of the Book of Daniel, lessons 20 and 21, I spent extensive time explaining…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 38, Chapter 10 and 11 Of the several passages in Matthew chapter 10 that we studied last week, verses 26 – 31 dealt with fear, death, and the problem of evil. In context it had primarily to do with what Yeshua's 12 Disciples might face…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 39, Chapter 11 From the panoramic view perhaps one of the main take-aways from all 4 Gospel accounts is that Yeshua was misunderstood by His own Jewish countrymen; and surprisingly by those one might think would have understood Him best. Since it is various individuals…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 40, Chapter 11 Continued Perhaps one of the more important, yet difficult to capture, statements made by Christ is found in Matthew 11:11 – 15. Another comes at the end of the chapter that we'll get to later. We're going to get pretty detailed and…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 41, Chapter 11 Continued 2 Before we continue in Matthew chapter 11, let's back-up a wee bit and reset the context. The first 19 verses of this chapter were about John the Baptist in relation to his connection with Christ. First, he was the foretold…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 42, Chapter 11 and 12 We wrapped up the prior lesson with a message of awareness to a sad but dangerous reality within Christianity in modern times, in which not only is it acceptable within the academic branch of the Church for agnostics or even…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 43, Chapter 12 We closed last week with discussing the establishment, purpose and ongoing relevance of the Sabbath. This stems from the opening verse of Matthew 12. CJBย Matthew 12:1 One Shabbat during that time, Yeshua was walking through some wheat fields. His talmidim were hungry,…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 44, Chapter 12 Continued While every chapter of the Book of Matthew is packed with important information for the Believer, chapter 12 is one of the meatiest of them all. This chapter also helps us to recognize something I highlight in the very first lesson…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 45, Chapter 12 Continued 2 Of the several things Matthew continues to underscore in his Gospel, here in chapter 12 we seen this growing contrast… an unfriendly polarization, if you would… between Christ and the leaders of the Synagogue. As we read let's always remember…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 46, Chapter 12 Continued 3 Last week in Matthew chapter 12 we left off with the thorny issue of what blasphemy of the Holy Spirit amounts to. And the reason that is important is because even Christ's death on the Cross can't atone for it.…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 47, Chapter 13 Matthew chapter 13 begins this way: CJBย Matthew 13:1 That same day, Yeshua went out of the house and sat down by the lake; 2 but such a large crowd gathered around him that he got into a boat and sat there while…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 48, Chapter 13 Continued We began last week's lesson with a somewhat long dissertation about the true nature of parables because in Matthew's Gospel, chapter 13 is where Christ's use of parables begins in earnest. I'll briefly review.ย  One of the most important elements of…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 49, Chapter 13 Continued 2 Do you want to understand what the Kingdom of Heaven is like? Assuming you are Believers in the God of Israel and His Son, Yeshua, then little is more important in our faith journey than to pursue this understanding. In…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 50, Chapter 13 Conclusion "Communion with God by means of prayer, through the removal of all intruding elements between man and his Maker, and through the implicit acceptance of God's unity, as well as an unconditional surrender of mind and heart to His holy will,…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 51, Chapter 14 The first dozen verses of Matthew chapter 14 bring us back to the subject of John the Immerser; more specifically it tells us of his death. That he was in prison was already established back in chapter 11. Now chapter 14 begins…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 52, Chapter 14 Continued Keep your Bibles open and handy as we're going to do much reading today.ย  The beginning of Matthew chapter 14 was covered in the previous lesson. It is the story of the execution of John the Baptist. The request for his…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 53, Chapter 15 Today we start Matthew chapter 15. The first 20 verses represent perhaps one of the most controversial segments of any Gospel account. There is a parallel account of this same incident in Mark 7. We'll look it at as well because it…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 54, Chapter 15 Continued We'll continue this week in Matthew 15, one of the more challenging (and therefore controversial) chapters in the New Testament. At the same it is one of the most inspirational, instructional, and therefore among the most important for Believers to get…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 55, Chapter 15 Conclusion Before we continue in Matthew 15 today there's a couple of housekeeping issues I would like to get out of the way because I am regularly asked about it and enjoy the opportunity to offer an explanation. The first is my…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 56, Chapter 16 Who is Yeshua?ย Whatย is Yeshua? This is a question that has yet to be fully answered to this point in Matthew, and even though most 21st century Christians think it is an answered and settled matter in The Church, it is far from…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 57, Chapter 16 Continued I began the previous lesson with the rhetorical questions: who is Yeshua? What is Yeshua? It is such a complex issue that as we go through this chapter I'll continue to weave-in some needed background about the historical Jesus so that…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 58, Chapter 16 Continued 2 We will continue to carefully work our way through Matthew in this chapter that is nearly a Gospel within a Gospel. Some of the more elite Bible scholars of the past make chapter 16 of Matthew among their most extensive…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 59, Chapter 16 and 17 Last week in our study of Matthew chapter 16 we ended with an important topic Yeshua raised beginning in verse 24, which is the high cost of being His disciple. Let's immediately go to our Bibles and read from verse…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 60, Chapter 17 We opened Matthew chapter 17 last week, which begins with one of the landmark occurrences within Yeshua's short ministry on earth: The Transfiguration. I promised that we'd try to untangle the meaning of it and we'll do that shortly. This is going…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 61, Chapter 17 Continued Last week we concluded our study of the opening portion of Matthew chapter 17 that focused on The Transfiguration. Truly this nearly unfathomable event of an epiphany of Moses, Elijah, and Jesus together is one of the most mysterious in the…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 62, Chapter 17 and 18 Last week we began to delve into the interesting story that ends Matthew chapter 17 about a certain tax collector coming to Capernaum where Yeshua was residing with Peter, and the tax collector asks the question " doesn't your Master…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 63, Chapter 18 We began chapter 18 last week and immediately the topic became humility. It is that humility is to be perhaps the chief virtue for anyone hoping to enter the Kingdom of Heaven. Verses 1 – 14 are essentially an examination of Godly…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 64, Chapter 18 Conclusion We began to study Matthew 18:15 – 20 last week and shortly we'll re-read that section. Before we do that we need to set the context. This is necessarily going to involve some amount of sermonizing to go along with the…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 65, Chapter 19 We begin chapter 19 of Matthew's Gospel today, and it begins with a bang. Immediately some dicey subjects arise; dicey for the 1st-century Jewish community and they remain problematic for God worshippers to this day. The subjects are divorce, monogamy, and celibacy.…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 66, Chapter 19 Continued Marriage, divorce, polygamy versus monogamy, and celibacy… these were all important issues in Yeshua's time, and remain so in the modern era. While polygamy in the Western developed world is found only in smallish and offbeat remnants of our societies and…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 67, Chapters 19 and 20 In Matthew chapter 19 we find the story of the rich man who asked Yeshua how he could obtain eternal life. We find this same story in Mark and Luke as well, with only minor differences. Let's re-read it. RE-READ…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 68, Chapter 20 We began Matthew 20 last week and dealt with the Parable of the Fair Farmer who paid the same amount of money to workers that had labored from dawn to dusk equally as workers that had worked perhaps no more than an…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 69, Chapter 21 The first 20 chapters of Matthew have set the stage for what we'll encounter beginning in chapter 21. Those chapters could almost be set apart and in summation titled "How We Got Here From There". ย Thus far we have learned much about…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 70, Chapter 21 Continued As we opened Matthew chapter 21 last week we read about what Christianity calls the Triumphal Entry. In this short but revealing action in Yeshua's life and mission, He enters Jerusalem riding upon a donkey, accompanied with the donkey's foal. This…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 71, Chapter 21 Continued 2 In Matthew chapter 21 Yeshua's journey to the cross is gaining speed as the proverbial snowball rolling down a steep hill. We find Him having now arrived at the place of His foretold and impending death: Jerusalem. In many ways…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 72, Chapter 22 Today we open Matthew chapter 22. It begins with quite a long Parable. Unlike some of the other metaphorical and symbolic illustrations that Jesus has been using to instruct and to reply, this is a true Parable in the Hebrew literary sense…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 73, Chapter 22 Continued Matthew chapter 22 records a series of hard-hitting verbal reprimands and instruction that Jesus had with some representatives of the Temple organization and others from the Synagogue organization. Generally speaking, these two organizations were populated and led by members of two…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 74, Chapter 22 Continued 2 When we follow Yeshua's career on earth and especially His Wisdom teachings, we find that just as in the manner our teachers taught us in elementary, High School and college, over time He built-up knowledge in His followers by starting…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 75, Chapter 23 In opening Matthew 23, if I were to give it a title, it would be "Exposing the Hypocrisy of the Leadership". It is an interesting reality that as a person gets older and knows that death is not far off, or at…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 76, Chapter 23 Continued Our study of Matthew 23 continues today, but bear with me before we re-open it's inspired pages. Early in the Book of Genesis we learned of a fundamental governing dynamic of God: He divides, elects, and separates. One of the most…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 77, Chapter 23 Continued 2 Because I had the great privilege of being raised in a Christian household from my earliest age, my family and I spent every Sunday in Church. Child Psychologists and most parents (especially moms) can verify that even when a child…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 78, Chapter 23 Conclusion As we inch closer and closer to Yeshua's death on the cross in Matthew's Gospel, there's so much context and background and many subjects that we encounter that are in need of explanation and fleshing out that at times we're going…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 79, Chapter 24 Before we dive into Matthew chapter 24, I think it is best to first offer you an exposition and summary of not only what we have learned thus far in Matthew about the crucial role that Jesus plays in Redemption History, but…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 80, Chapter 24 Continued Last week I installed a framework for us to try to better comprehend not only what we have learned thus far in the Gospels about Yeshua's role in Redemption History, but also about the several stages of it. And that beginning…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 81, Chapter 24 Continued 2 The Gospel of Matthew is a delight to teach because it offers such opportunities to provide application to our modern lives, as well as to prepare us for what lay ahead. Chapters 24 and 25 form what is nearly universally…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 82, Chapter 24 Continued 3 If the End Times matters to you; if where we likely stand in the timeline of Redemption History matters to you; then the study of Matthew chapter 24 and 25 are crucial to your understanding and I don't want to…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 83, Chapter 24 Continued 4 For the majority of New Testament commentators, the explanation of Matthew chapter 24 is among the most (if not the most) extensive required of all the Gospels combined. The main reason is because Yeshua speaks so considerably about the future…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 84, Chapter 24 Continued 5 Matthew 24:30 says:ย Then the sign of the Son of Man will appear in the sky, all the tribes of the Land will mourn, and they will see the Son of Man coming on the clouds of heaven with tremendous power…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 85, Chapter 24 and 25 Verse 42 of Matthew chapter 24 sums up perhaps Yeshuaโ€™s most indispensable teaching about the End Times: CJBย Matthew 24:42 So stay alert, because you don't know on what day your Lord will come.ย  Awareness, alertness, and preparedness form the recurring…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 86, Chapter 25 Continued In our previous lesson we ended with delving into the fascinating and illuminating Parable of the Talents. The most common method within Christianity (and often within Messianic Judaism) to study or preach this parable is by using allegories to separate out…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 87, Chapter 25 and 26 Last week the ending portion of our study was essentially a word picture of the final judgment that also goes by the name Judgment Day. This is one of those things that isnโ€™t particularly pleasant for a Pastor or Bible…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 88, Chapter 26 Last week we began what is popularly known as the Passion Narrative, which essentially dominates the remaining chapters of Matthewโ€™s Gospel. The circumstances of leading up to Christโ€™s execution, burial, resurrection, and the immediate aftermath represents probably the most focused upon portion…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 89, Chapter 26 Continued When we closed our study on Matthew chapter 26 last time, we had been looking at the rather strange act of the common Jewish woman in Bethany that had just poured a great deal of costly perfumed ointment on Christโ€™s head.…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 90, Chapter 26 Continued 2 We open today with what is known as the very intriguing Last Supper. Clearly from the way in which this event is covered in all the Gospel accounts, each writer sees it as dramatically meaningful for those who love and…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 91, Chapter 26 Continued 3 In our previous study of Matthew chapter 26 we took a careful look at a rather peculiar ceremony that took place at an unknown location within the city walls of Jerusalem, with Jesus and His 12 disciples in attendance. It…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 92, Chapter 26 Continued 4 When we left off last time in Matthew 26, Yeshua had just been identified by Judas and betrayed to the Temple authorities. It was nighttime, a short time after the Last Supper, and so it occurred within the first few…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 93, Chapter 27 Matthew chapter 26 concluded with a mixed group of Jewish religious leadership, representing both the Temple and the Synagogue authorities, gathering at night in an official capacity at the High Priest Caiaphasโ€™s home with one purpose in mind: to find false allegations…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 94, Chapter 27 Continued Verses 11 through 26 in Matthew chapter 27 have been perhaps the chief source for persistent anti-Semitism within our faith; and this has been so for as much as 1800 years. The question these verses have been alleged to deal with…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 95, Chapter 27 Continued 2 As we are nearing the end of our extensive study of Matthewโ€™s Gospel and all that has been revealed about Jesusโ€™s life and teachings along the way, we have arrived at the epic Redemption History milestone that had itโ€™s beginning…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 96, Chapter 28 END Today, we shall conclude what amounts to a 2-year study of the Gospel of Matthew. Although there are some additional facts and events surrounding Christโ€™s death, resurrection is far and away the central matter of chapter 28, as it ought to…