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Lesson 56 Ch16
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Matthew’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 56, Chapter 16

Who is Yeshua? What 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 it. Matthew chapter 16 adds a new wrinkle into who and what Jesus is. Up to now He has said and demonstrated that He is a number of things. We'll go fairly deep into this topic during our study of this chapter mainly because this is the time to do it. The first thing that must be noticed is that Christ has been presented by the Gospel writer Matthew as a complexity of attributes and roles and He cannot be defined by a simplistic faith doctrine. The second thing to notice is that to this point Yeshua is, to the Jews He has encountered in so many different settings, primarily a Tzadik; a Jewish Holy Man…even though they had some suspicions that He was some other things, too. A Tzadik is a remarkable Jew who comes along only rarely that has the divinely-given ability to do miracle healings. It seems that Jesus was not the only Jewish miracle healer that had come along by His day, and after His time there would be others. 

Let's begin our study by reading all of Matthew chapter 16. 

READ MATTHEW CHAPTER 16 all

To better understand the scene that unfolds to open this chapter, we have to go back to the ending of chapter 15. There it reads:

CJB Matthew 15:37-39 37 Everyone ate his fill, and they took seven large baskets full of the leftover pieces. 38 Those eating numbered four thousand men, plus women and children. 39 After sending the crowd away, he got in the boat and went off to the region of Magadan. 

So after the miraculous feeding of the 4,000, and then sending the crowds away, Yeshua got into a boat and went to a place called Magadan (there is no settled conclusion about where exactly that is, except that it is on the western shore of the Sea of Galilee). Now, still in Magadan, Yeshua is approached by some Pharisees and Sadducees that have come to ask Him (demand is more like it) to show them a sign from heaven as some kind of unspecified validation not so much of who He is, but rather from what source does He get His power. Since the accusation has been made to Him before that His abilities came from Satan, I imagine they wanted Him to somehow prove to their liking that these powers came from above… from God… if He could. As with only the opening verse of this chapter, there is so much to unpack throughout it that we're going to spend a lot of time with it because it is here that we see an important milestone occur in Christ's earthly ministry. And, because this incident of yet another confrontation with the Jewish religious leaders is also recorded in the Book of Mark, we're going to take a couple of minutes to read it because it rounds out the information we have about it. 

READ MARK CHAPTER 8:11 – 22

Notice that Mark says some Pharisees came to Yeshua but makes no mention of Sadducees. It is hard to know why except perhaps Mark didn't think it that important to mention them. Remembering that Mark's intended audience were gentile Romans while Matthew's were Jews, the lack of mention of the Sadducees by Mark might have to do with his gentile readership not really understanding or needing to know the Jewish cultural nuances between Pharisees and Sadducees; nuances that every Jew would readily pick up on and understand the significance of this piece of information. Jews knew that the Pharisees were the faction who dominated the synagogue system leadership while the Sadducees were the faction that dominated the Temple system leadership. That is, while both of these are essentially political/social factions and are not the name of some kind of religious or political office or position, nonetheless each faction represented the dominant one within their particular sphere of influence; the Pharisees were the favored leadership of the synagogue while the Sadducees were the party favored by the chief priests and the High Priest. So an ominous corner has been turned. Up to this point Yeshua has been targeted as a threat only to the synagogue leadership (as we know from His several testy encounters with them); however that sense of threat has now crossed over to include the Temple authorities and priesthood. In other words, starting now the entire Jewish religious leadership complex was gunning for Him. 

What we see is that the Jewish religious leadership of both the systems were all too aware of Yeshua's accomplishments and claims but even more how much the people flocked to Him. These 2 factions that were essentially rivals had little love for one another but here they are banding together to try to blunt the trajectory of this rising star of the common people (the enemy of my enemy is my friend). We learned in Matthew chapter 5 of the tremendous crowd Jesus drew at His Sermon on the Mount. Then in chapter 14 we read of Him drawing about 10,000 people (people He not only miraculously healed but also miraculously fed), and in chapter 15 He drew yet another crowd of about 8,000 for whom He did the same. No one could establish that immense of a following in the Holy Land and it go unnoticed by a perpetually suspicious religious or political leadership because it was occurring outside their oversight and their structure, and therefore outside their control. Jesus was not accepted by the Pharisees or Sadducees as a fellow servant of God and minister to the people, but rather as an unwelcome competitor… a pest… that they were afraid would upset the apple cart and ruin especially the Sadducees' cozy relationship with their Roman occupiers. 

I think it is hard for a Bible student that is paying attention as he or she reads through Matthew to understand how after the barrel-full of miracles and exorcisms Christ had done that these men could then demand yet another one. The reality is that such a request for a sign is absurd on its face and merely exposes these leaders as the false prophets, blind guides, and wolves in sheep's clothing that Jesus had openly declared them on numerous occasions. There was nothing Yeshua could ever do to convince them of His divine position and authority because they had hardened hearts. They were here to protect their turf and nothing else. 

As for the miraculous sign in heaven that they wanted; this is speaking about a sign in the sky above the firmament of the ground, and it's not about the spiritual Heaven where God lives (and in the ancient belief of that day, God's Heaven sat above the sky). So, exactly what kind of a sign in the sky might they have been seeking? Making the sun stand still? The moon to come out during the day? It's not stated and no doubt it doesn't matter because their request for a sign was sarcastic and not literal and was only meant to try to cast Yeshua as a fraud in order to discourage His many followers and would-be followers. 

Yeshua refuses their request and in reply speaks a proverb of sorts that most people even in the modern West know. To paraphrase: red sky in the morning, sailor take warning; red sky at night, sailor's delight. That is, the red sky is a sign in heaven (the heaven where the birds fly and the clouds float) that the typical Jew (and gentile for that matter) would understand its significance. Just like today, weather mattered for people and they paid attention to signs that would tell them what to expect. In the red sky proverb the people of course understood that the time of day that the red sky occurred was decisive because the same sign at one time of the day was a good omen, but at another time it was a bad omen. So says Christ, these religious leaders seem to know how to look up into the sky and see these signs that tells them about the weather, and yet they can't read the even more important and obvious signs about the era of redemption history they are in and thus the accompanying events. The implication is heavy that Yeshua is one of those signs…the chief sign… of the times. 

There is a principle that simply oozes out of what we are reading, and yet it is one that can be easily overlooked. It is that despite the well-worn expression to the contrary, seeing is NOT necessarily believing. It wasn't only the religious leaders but also the thousands of common Jews that had personally seen Yeshua's incomparable acts of compassion and miracles, and heard His many sermons so full of wisdom and truth, yet that still didn't bring them to a belief that extended beyond His mysterious ability to heal. Yeshua proved (even though it frustrated Him deeply) that doing miracle healings for unbelievers is not what brings them to faith, and this reality is no different in the 21st century. Or as W.D. Davies puts it: "whereas miracles do not create faith, faith does in fact work miracles". 

In verse 4, giving as the reason for His refusal to produce a sign in the sky (something He was clearly capable of doing), Jesus says it is because these religious leaders are representative of those being in league with Satan; adulterous means to be unfaithful to the God whom they purport to be in union with and serve. Marriage terms like adultery are used because human marriage is the illustration that is regularly applied in the Bible to explain the kind of relationship we are to have with God. Marriage unions consist either of faithful partners or unfaithful (adulterous) ones. Yeshua's claim against these religious leaders is deeply offensive to them and quite embarrassing to have happened in front of an audience of onlookers. Both Matthew and Mark report that Yeshua abruptly ended the confrontation and left the leaders standing there as He got into a boat and went back to an undisclosed location on the east side of the Lake. I have little doubt it was to escape being arrested. 

The scene now changes to the boat as it is crossing over the Sea of Galilee. Jesus and His disciples are apparently some distance from the shore when one of them notices that they had forgotten to bring food… bread… with them. Bread…lechem in Hebrew… was a term that doubled as one time meaning actual dough that rose and was baked, but another time as simply meaning food in general. Bread was the staple food of the times, especially for the common folk. It was not only part of every meal, it was the primary food eaten… often with nothing to supplement it. So the disciples were likely a little upset when they discover they've somehow left their bread behind. Yeshua uses the mistake as an opportunity to teach.

Mark disagrees with Matthew on one small point; Matthew says they had no bread while Mark says there was one loaf between them all (hardly enough to go around). Yeshua uses the important ingredient of leaven in bread-making to illustrate a point. In verse 6 He says that the disciples need to be very careful and to guard themselves against the leaven of the Pharisees and Sadducees. Leaven is often used biblically as a metaphor for sin. And yet, it was at times (like here) also used as a metaphor for teaching. Very likely what we have here is a word play. In Aramaic the word for leaven is hamira and the word for teaching is amira. Hebrew and Aramaic are cousin languages, and it was common that both languages were spoken by Holy Land Jews in Yeshua's day. We know for sure because of His final utterance on the cross that Yeshua could speak Aramaic. So leaven was known to be used as a term describing teaching that was neither positive nor negative. It was the context of a conversation that determined in what light to take the meaning. Here because Yeshua says to beware, clearly He means the term leaven as a negative. So the idea is that while the instruction of the Pharisees and Sadducees may not always be wrong, all too often it is. This wrong instruction can be a corrupting influence that clouds or even replaces God's truth and leads people astray. We've already seen Christ excoriate the Pharisees for just this reason. 

In the previous chapter of Matthew we read of Yeshua saying this:

CJB Matthew 15:4-6 For God said, 'Honor your father and mother,' and 'Anyone who curses his father or mother must be put to death.' 5 But you say, 'If anyone says to his father or mother, "I have promised to give to God what I might have used to help you," 6 then he is rid of his duty to honor his father or mother.' Thus by your tradition you make null and void the word of God! 

So what Yeshua is saying to His disciples and against the Pharisees has now been extended to actions and edicts set down by the chief priests and the High Priest; those who control the Temple and belong to the Sadducee party. While the leaven metaphor is not a Parable in which only 1 single moral point is being made, at the same time we should resist the urge to find a flurry of allegorical uses of the term leaven in this verse that can send us away from the simple message Christ was establishing. And that message is this: it is the human tendency to automatically place our trust in our religious leaders, but we should always do that with a strong sense of caution. Their instruction to us could very well be in error and have a hidden agenda behind it. It's all too easy to assume that these leaders are especially holy; and that what they do and what they say must be biblical in its source and proper before God, because they are the experts, the religious office holders, and the role models. While Yeshua is of course referring directly to those particular Pharisees and Sadducees that put their manmade doctrines above God's Word, it equally applies to all Judeo-Christian religious leaders in every era, whatever their title might be or office they hold.  

It really is only in recent times that the layperson within Judaism or Christianity has the means to fact-check what our religious leaders are telling us. Bible ownership, even after the invention of the printing press, was still something that only the more well-to-do could afford. Later as the costs went down a Bible was still so expensive that it was considered a prized family possession that was usually handed down as an inheritance to the next generation. Today Bibles are exceptionally cheap, available in scores of languages and translations, and given away by the hundreds of thousands to people who don't even have a few dollars to buy one. So the 21st century Believer has the means at our fingertips to see if what is being taught to us agrees with the Bible. Therefore we are without excuse when we allow our Rabbis and Pastors to get away with, at times, taking great liberties with God's Word and teaching manmade doctrines as though it was holy truth. We don't necessarily have to confront them about it; but we can apply a filter to our eyes and ears about what they say.

What is truly remarkable is the resources we now have available online. I have no doubt that this is a fulfillment… or at least part of the fulfillment… of the strange prophecy from Daniel chapter 12:

CJB Daniel 12:4 4 "But you, Dani'el, keep these words secret, and seal up the book until the time of the end. Many will rush here and there as knowledge increases." 

"As knowledge increases". Little more than 25 years ago the knowledge and materials that were the sole province of Theological schools were locked up and available only for those few worthy students that attended and handed out within whatever doctrinal framework that school adhered to. The average synagogue or church member had little to no access. But because of the Internet, these libraries and their scholarly content have become opened to the public, and far more in depth Bible teaching has become available to the average God worshiper, for little cost. On the other hand we must understood that in Christ's era personal access by the common man even to the tiniest portion of Holy Scripture was not possible. Scripture scrolls were few, and they were held mostly by the wealthy and the religious authorities. The elite among the Jews (like Paul) did have an opportunity to go to one of the great religious academies of the day, if they had the funds and the influence to gain a seat in one of them. Yeshua knew that indeed those Jews who came to hear Him teach were helpless sheep before the ravenous wolves of the religious leadership that had their own personal interests in mind, and not the welfare of God's people. 

And yet there is another item in the background of Yeshua's warning to His disciples to watch out and guard themselves against the teachings (the leaven) of the Jewish religious leadership. As we have seen, Christ's disciples still held the Jewish religious leadership in high regard, respected them as pious men, and believed what they taught. In their minds Yeshua's teachings were a kind of supplement, but not a challenge to the accepted leadership and customs. So far they didn't seem to grasp that much of what Jesus taught conflicted with the Tradition-based teachings that were typical of the synagogue. It's not unlike warning your child for the hundredth time not to cross the street before looking both ways for traffic. Crossing a street is not a bad or wrong thing. But the hope is that someday that child will subordinate his or her instincts to just dart into the road assuming all is well, and instead approach it with the due caution you have been telling them to do. 

Verse 7 reveals that the disciples thought that when Jesus spoke about the hametz, the leaven, that He meant it literally because the disciples' focus was that they had forgotten to bring bread to eat. Their focus and mindset was still earthbound while Yeshua's teaching was Heavenly and spiritual-based. So once again Yeshua accuses them all, as a group, of having little trust. Not NO trust, but small trust. Hidden just under the surface is an important principle that is among the most difficult to communicate and to internalize. It is that trust in Christ is what opens our minds so that we can learn and act upon what it is that He, and all of God's Word, is telling us. Without that firm trust (not just in anything…not faith for the sake of faith… but trust in Him) we will find ourselves exactly as these disciples are. They have been sitting at the feet of Jesus, receiving personalized instruction, for several months and yet their trust in Him is still so small that they can't discern the more profound things He has been trying to teach them. So the inalterable principle is this: the more we trust in Yeshua, the more we'll understand His words. The less we trust in Yeshua, the less we'll understand His words. In some ways the disciples still place Yeshua lower in the religious pecking order of the Jewish faith than the synagogue and Temple leadership. 

Verses 9 and 10 that begin "Don't you understand, yet?" expresses an obvious level of frustration within Jesus towards the seeming inability of His disciples to comprehend the meaning of all that has been happening. He blames this inability on their lack of trust, and then goes on to remind them of the miraculous feeding of the 5,000 and later the 4,000 for which they were present and were the ones who distributed the multiplied food, with the idea that such a thing should have been instructive to them… but it wasn't. The word usually translated into English as "remember" is not meant to be some passive intellectual activity of merely recalling the specifics of an event. Rather… because Matthew was a Jew and wrote his Gospel in Hebrew… no doubt the Hebrew word he was thinking of and used was zakarZakar means to remember in the sense of paying heed to something; taking further action, or giving something more and deeper thought because of what is called to mind. 

Yeshua goes on in verse 11 to say (and I paraphrase) "how in the world can you think I was talking about leaven that is used to make bread?" Rather Christ's disciples are to guard themselves against the hametz, the leaven (the corrupted teaching) of the Pharisees and Sadducees. We're not told the response of the disciples but in a few verses we find at least one disciple that had a true spiritual breakthrough. It is rather mysterious that in Mark's account in chapter 8, verse 15 says that the disciples are to guard themselves against the leaven of the Pharisees and of Herod. What has Herod got to do with it? I have heard a few different explanations for this but none of them bear up to scrutiny. For one thing, which Herod is Mark talking about? Herod the Great or his son Herod Antipas? And why would any Jew ever look to either of them for spiritual food? Perhaps the closest to an explanation that might work is if this was referring to Herod the Great because the Priesthood (represented by the Sadducees)…. especially the High Priest… had been in Herod's pocket (although by Christ's adult life Herod was dead). But other than that, one has to wonder if the addition of "Herod" to this verse wasn't actually Mark's but rather can be attributed to a later copyist error (and I think this is what happened).

This episode in Magadan by the Sea of Galilee ends with Matthew telling us that Yeshua next appeared with His disciples in Caesarea Philippi also known as Banias home to the worship of the god Pan. This is a fascinating site in Israel that most times I take a tour group to Israel we try to stop here to take in its beauty, its history, and to have a Bible lesson. It is located on the southern slope of Mount Hermon in the north of Israel, and it is one of the sources of water for the Jordan River. It is here that Christ's mission and the question of who and what Yeshua is turns a corner. It is here that Yeshua makes the leap in His identity from Tzadik to Mashiach; from Jewish Holy Man to Israel's Messiah.  

In verse 13 Jesus asks His disciples: "Who are people saying the Son of Man is?" Pandora's Box has just been opened and a question has been asked that despite what the average Believer might think, has not been fully settled even to this day. Matthew's Gospel has the disciples saying that some people say He is John the Baptist, others that He is Elijah, and still others that He is the Prophet Jeremiah or another of the revered prophets of old. This ought to be sufficient evidence to prove that Jesus has, to this point, not made a firm mention of who He is such that people could quote Him or have some kind of definitive description of Him. I spoke to you in an earlier lesson about how Herod Antipas was concerned that Jesus might be a resurrected John the Baptist, and that this idea came to him not from his own mind but from others around him. Such superstitions had much popularity among the Jewish people in those days. Yeshua as a reappearance of Elijah had some merit in that Elijah went to Heaven having never died and He was prophesied to return at the End of Days (something which many Jews believed they were currently living out). And then finally there was the thought that Christ could be a reappearance of the Prophet Jeremiah. Biblically speaking no such thing was contemplated for Israel's prophets however it was the subject of folklore and Jewish tradition that some of Israel's ancient prophets would reappear in the Latter Days. The thing is that the people were guessing about Jesus because they were uncertain just how to label Him. Interestingly the one thought of the people that never seemed to enter their minds as a possibility was that Yeshua could be the Messiah. Why might that be? This leads to a subject all its own: in the minds of 1st century Jews what was a Messiah thought to be and what would He do? This is important because it goes a long way to explain the challenge Yeshua had in explaining His true and fullest identity over and against the expectations about a Messiah that had been taught to the people by the synagogue leadership. 

Yeshua's person and purpose were misunderstood by the very people He came to save. As one example of this we read in the Book of John:

CJB John 6:14-15 14 When the people saw the miracle he had performed, they said, "This has to be 'the prophet' who is supposed to come into the world." 15 Yeshua knew that they were on the point of coming and seizing him, in order to make him king; so he went back to the hills again. This time he went by himself. 

This probably represents the most widely taught and accepted mindset and firm belief among the Jews of what the hope-for Messiah was to be. He would come not as a religious leader but rather as a political figure. The Romans seemed to be quite aware of this belief among the Jews that their Messiah was going to be a king. They took this as a threat and it took it quite seriously. The Messiah would be the first Jewish king Israel had had in hundreds of years. And of course this belief came from a firm biblical foundation. 

CJB 2 Sam. 7:4-16 4 But that same night the word of ADONAI came to Natan: 5 "Go and tell my servant David that this is what ADONAI says: 'You are going to build me a house to live in? 6 Since the day I brought the people of Isra'el out of Egypt until today, I never lived in a house; rather, I traveled in a tent and a tabernacle. 7 Everywhere I traveled with all the people of Isra'el, did I ever speak a word to any of the tribes of Isra'el, whom I ordered to shepherd my people Isra'el, asking, "Why haven't you built me a cedar-wood house?"' 8 "Therefore say this to my servant David that this is what ADONAI-Tzva'ot says: 'I took you from the sheep-yards, from following the sheep, to make you chief over my people, over Isra'el. 9 I have been with you wherever you went; I have destroyed all your enemies ahead of you; and I am making your reputation great, like the reputations of the greatest people on earth. 10 I will assign a place to my people Isra'el; I will plant them there, so that they can live in their own place without being disturbed any more. The wicked will no longer oppress them, as they did at the beginning, 11 and as they did from the time I ordered judges to be over my people Isra'el; instead, I will give you rest from all your enemies. "'Moreover, ADONAI tells you that ADONAI will make you a house. 12 When your days come to an end and you sleep with your ancestors, I will establish one of your descendants to succeed you, one of your own flesh and blood; and I will set up his rulership. 13 He will build a house for my name, and I will establish his royal throne forever. 14 I will be a father for him, and he will be a son for me. If he does something wrong, I will punish him with a rod and blows, just as everyone gets punished; 15 nevertheless, my grace will not leave him, as I took it away from Sha'ul, whom I removed from before you. 16 Thus your house and your kingdom will be made secure forever before you; your throne will be set up forever.' 

The reality is that Jesus would be executed by the Romans primarily because He was mistakenly seen as a political revolutionary that challenged Roman rule. When we read of the sign tacked onto the cross, above Yeshua's head, it said "King of the Jews". This was intended to publicly mock Him but certainly not in the spiritual or religious sense. Rather it was a demonstration by Pilate to the Jewish people with the message that they should abandon any hope that a Jewish Messiah could ever come along, lead a successful rebellion against Rome, and install himself as king. Nonetheless, the expectation of the Jewish people was that the Messiah would be a warrior leader and a king like David and successfully vanquish their Roman occupiers. 

Of course as we have been reading, Yeshua wanted no part of being a political figure. He had no intention of trying to break the cruel yoke of Rome off the necks of His fellow countrymen. Despite the broad expectation among the Jewish public that their Messiah would be a political deliverer, there wasn't anything near to what we might call a unanimity of thought among the Jewish religious authorities or people regarding the attributes and works of the expected anointed-one.  

It does us well to recall that mashiach means anointed-one and not Savior or Deliverer. It is a rather broad term that, as used in the Bible, was applied to every one of Israel's kings. That is, from a purely grammatical and biblical standpoint every Israelite king was a Messiah… an anointed-one (not metaphorically or allegorically, but actually). The title of mashiach meant to communicate 2 things: 1) That this person was spiritually anointed by God as His divine choice to lead His people, and 2) the king was literally ceremonially anointed by having olive oil poured over his head in an inauguration usually officiated by the High Priest. So the most predominant view of Jesus by the Jewish people, as we find it in the New Testament, was in a nationalistic tone and not in a religious one. If Jesus was the Messiah of Israel, it would be as a typical sitting king over a newly re-established independent nation of Israel. The religious component was secondary to the political component. And the religious component existed primarily because there were prophecies that this new king Messiah would arise and rule, and because secular life and religious life were not separated or compartmentalized like they are today.

I dare to say that my reading of the Gospels decisively shows that the messianic expectations of the Jewish people in that era are nothing like the gentile Christian view. And perhaps that is because the Gospel accounts are based almost entirely on the recorded history and life of Christ prior to His death and resurrection. His death, burial, resurrection and ascension are told only in the final 1 1/2 of the 28 chapters of Matthew. In 1 1/2 of the 16 chapters of Mark. And in less than 2 of the 24 chapters of Luke. Thus the Christian views of who the historical Yeshua was and how to understand what His words and actions meant, are based almost entirely on what happened after His death. By no means am I suggesting this is wrong. Rather I'm suggesting that when Christianity reads back into the bulk of the Gospel accounts the things that happened before Yeshua's execution… interpretations and doctrines that are formed based only in the last few paragraphs of each Gospel book… this is how "The Church" can misunderstand so much of what happened in the many acts of Jesus and what it meant to the minds of the Jewish people of His era. The Jews had been conditioned through centuries of teaching and Traditions to understand the expected Jewish Messiah in certain ways; Yeshua didn't fit that mold because the mold makers were wrong. 

One other backdrop matter also tends to escape Christian view… especially the modern Christian view. It is that within the Jewish culture the expectation of the arrival of a Messiah coincided with the End Times and the Apocalypse. This expectation was not lost on Yeshua nor did He ever deny it. He saw His own advent as a Latter Days event, and all the Apostles who followed Him (including Paul) were certain they were living in the Latter Days not only because of the things Yeshua said, but because the culturally accepted notions of the Jews had it woven in to their thinking. 

Jesus, therefore, was not some odd figure who operated outside the cultural norms and lifestyle of typical Jewish society. He would not have stood out in a Jewish crowd from His appearance; rather He would have blended because He was, indeed, one of them. So it is with this conceptualization of Jesus in the minds of the Jews among whom He spoke and lived and performed miracles that we need to understand all that comes next in Christ's life as presented in the Gospels.  

We'll continue next week in Matthew chapter 16.

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    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.  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.  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. CJB 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 had 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.  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. CJB 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: CJB 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.  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.  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? What 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".  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: 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 Yeshua’s most indispensable teaching about the End Times: CJB Matthew 24:42 So stay alert, because you don't know on what day your Lord will come.  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 isn’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 Matthew’s Gospel. The circumstances of leading up to Christ’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 Christ’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 Caiaphas’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 Matthew’s Gospel and all that has been revealed about Jesus’s life and teachings along the way, we have arrived at the epic Redemption History milestone that had it’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 Christ’s death, resurrection is far and away the central matter of chapter 28, as it ought to…