Home | Lessons | New Testament | Matthew | Lesson 89 Ch26
en Flag
Lesson 89 Ch26
Overview
Transcript
Slides

About this lesson

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.

Download Download Transcript

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. She probably didn’t quite know why she did it… other than she was overcome with some inner urge to do so… and Yeshua’s disciples were none too happy about it because they viewed it as a silly and extravagant waste of resources.

Bethany was a relatively small village that was an easy 2 mile walk from Jerusalem. During the festival periods like Passover, it became a sort of customary overflow area for Jewish pilgrims to find lodging as they arrived from all over the Roman Empire including North Africa and even parts of Europe, to obey the Torah commandment to come to the Temple for these God appointed times so that they could sacrifice and celebrate. On the surface, that is why Yeshua and His disciples were there; under the surface, it was to fulfill the Prophets that the Messiah would die an atoning death to save humanity from our just reward of eternal death.

So far in this chapter we have seen that within Jewish society there were two starkly different reactions to this Holy Man’s presence in Jerusalem. The first was the opposition that is represented by the High Priest and the Elders of the Synagogue, and the second was of welcome by many of the common Jews (although those residents of Jerusalem proper were a mixed bag of suspicion and adoration). As we begin to enter into the rather dark story of Yeshua’s march to the cross, as Matthew frames it, despite the divine act and nature of Jesus we must always keep in mind that He was also fully human. He lived a real life, suffered from thirst and hunger as we all do, had emotions that ranged from sad, to apprehension, to anger and frustration, all the way to wonder, awe, and joy. And very soon He was to suffer from terrible pain. First, however, Jesus would suffer betrayal.

It must also be kept in mind that Yeshua was not a victim of circumstances; in fact, it was He that was orchestrating the course of events. It was He who charted the exact path of His journey to the cross, using the wickedness of men as the vehicle to get there.  

Open you Bibles to Matthew chapter 26. Since we’ve already read this chapter all the way through, we’ll re-read in short segments in order to get our footing.

RE-READ MATTHEW CHAPTER 26:14 – 16

Judas the betrayer makes his appearance. The story of Judas has fascinated scholar, pastor and layman alike for centuries. Why he did such treachery to his Master that he knew so well is filled with mystery. Exactly how long after Yeshua being doused with perfumed ointment this plot Judas hatched takes place we don’t know; no doubt, however, it was no more than a few hours. Judas was one of the twelve disciples, which is what makes his act all the more perplexing and treacherous. Might he have been present in Bethany to witness the woman pour her expensive perfume over his Master’s head? Could it have been this act somehow was the catalyst that drove him to take such a despicable action against Yeshua? The way Matthew places these 2 events in such immediate proximity in his Gospel, it is my impression that this is exactly what we are meant to understand; the one was the cause for the other.

The Apostle John in his own Gospel account of Yeshua’s life reveals a little more about just who this man Judas was in John chapter 6 verse 71.

CJB John 6:71 (He was speaking of Y'hudah Ben-Shim'on, from K'riot; for this man- one of the Twelve!- was soon to betray him.)

This man’s full name was Judas son of Simon. Christianity more traditionally knows him as Judas Iscariot. The “Iscariot” part of his identification has always been somewhat of an enigma in trying to decipher just what it was designating. Some believe, as the CJB tenders, that it was the name of the town he was from. And indeed, there may have been a town in ancient Judah called Kerioth. On the other hand, the English term Kerioth is probably taken from the Hebrew qeriy’yot that simply means cities. So, I cannot buy in to the concept that Iscariot is a Greek/English term that is a but a town name that Judas hails from. More likely is that Iscariot is a translation of the Latin sicarius. Most of our modern English translations of the New Testament have come from the Latin, which is what the Greek New Testament manuscripts were first translated to. And even when they have not come as direct translations from the Latin versions, certain loan words are taken from it and they appear in our Bibles.

Sicarius means assassin. There was a known group among the radical Zealot sect of Jews (the group that advocated for violent rebellion against Rome), called the Sicarii. This group was what we might today call the “terrorists”. They were fanatics, with no act of violence or criminality beneath them in attempts to achieve their purpose. They were most feared not by the Roman occupiers of the Holy Land, but rather by the Holy Land Jews because the sicarii would assassinate Jews they thought might have collaborated with the Roman enemy, or those who refused to support them if asked. It is believed that the 1000 men, women, and children who fled to the desert fortress of Masada, and then committed mass suicide rather than be captured by the Roman foreign legion, were sicarii. This term being transliterated into Greek easily becomes Iscariot, and considering his radical actions it fits Judas to a tee.

So, was Judas a Zealot infiltrator that somehow burrowed his way into the inner group of Christ’s 12 disciples? Perhaps. Or, just as likely, he truly thought that Yeshua of Nazareth may have been the Messiah in the typical Jewish sense of it; a charismatic military commander in the mold of King David that would lead the Jews into an overthrow of Rome, a recapture of the Holy Land, and then he would sit on the throne as the first Jewish king of Judah to reign since Zedekiah, who ruled some 6 centuries earlier. However, Yeshua’s open prediction that within but a few hours He would die by crucifixion, and then His display of humility and allowing this woman to pour perfume on His head as symbol of His burial procedure, might have disillusioned Judas to the point of wanting Jesus done away with.  The way Christ could draw the multitudes to Himself, His triumphal entry into Jerusalem in the mode of a king, and His actions in the Temple grounds where He took on the cowardly and deceitful religious authorities had Judas believing that Yeshua was the one he and most of Judaism had yearned for, for so long. Yet, Christ’s most recent actions knocked Him off the pedestal Judas had built for Him. Now Judas determined that He had mistakenly joined with the wrong man. So, he waited for the right opportunity to approach the Jewish religious leadership to help them do what they so vigorously wanted to do: kill this threat to their lofty and lucrative positions.

It is regularly offered in Christian circles that Judas betrayed Jesus simply for money (although 30 pieces of silver wasn’t all that much money). Others comment that it was out of his Zealot idealism. Both the Gospels of Luke and John characterize it as Judas operating in co-operation with Satan. However, the Church sometimes takes this view too far by spiritualizing it to the point that Judas loses his human nature and nearly becomes the embodiment of Satan himself. The mention of the money cannot be dismissed; while the silver may not have been the entire motive, it clearly played a significant role in his decision. His greed for money reveals that despite Judas’s place among the 12, He was no longer a true follower of Yeshua.

Judas seeks out the chief priests and makes a bargain. This is NOT the High Priest Caiaphas that is being spoken about. Rather these are the most senior among the regular priests, because the term “chief priests” is presented in the plural; he made the dirty deal with a small group of them. Judas was paid, and then went off to plot how best to turn Yeshua over to them. I’ll insert here that if we pause to think about it, why did the chief priests need Judah at all to capture Jesus? They knew who Yeshua was and that He wasn’t a violent man. I suspect the issue was that they didn’t know WHERE He was, and because Jesus was a rather non-descript man in appearance, He wasn’t easily identifiable in a crowd. I’ll remind you yet again that this was Passover week, and so Jerusalem and its surrounding villages were overrun with crowds of Jews from everywhere. Yeshua was the classic needle in a haystack and who better to know His whereabouts and His identity than one of His most trusted disciples. After Matthew makes this insertion (probably for the sake of creating a kind of timeline), he moves on to what came next. Open your Bibles again to Matthew chapter 26.

RE-READ MATTHEW CHAPTER 26:17 – 30

This is what is popularly known as the Last Supper. I’ll frame this section by saying that the story begins in Bethany, moves to Jerusalem, and then once again moves to outside the city walls, across the Kidron Valley to the Mount of Olives. I’ll also mention that the term “Last Supper” doesn’t appear in the narrative; it is but a name that later Christianity gave to it. Exactly what this ceremony was, is actually controversial if not enigmatic. I’ll delve into this as we go.

So, this passage begins with words that seem rather straightforward:

CJB Matthew 26:17 On the first day for matzah, the talmidim came to Yeshua and asked, "Where do you want us to prepare your Seder?" 

Different Bible versions choose very slightly different words, but there is no disagreement in substance among them. This is speaking about the 1st day of the biblical Feast of Unleavened Bread (matzah), which according to the Torah is a 7-day feast. However, when we know the Torah, and we know Jewish Tradition of the 1st century, this statement in verse 17 actually presents all sorts of conundrums.

According to the Hebrew biblical calendar (something the entire Bible is based upon), the 1st day of the Feast of Matzah is Nisan 15. So, to read this passage literally, as it stands, means that the Feast of Passover, which occurs on Nisan 14, must have already ended. This, however, presents a major problem because it also speaks of preparing the Passover meal (the seder) several hours prior to eating it. The problem is that the preparation for the Passover meal doesn’t occur on the 1st day of Matzah, because the 1st day of Matzah is a special Sabbath day and no work can be done. This is why Passover day (the 14th) was given the traditional nickname of Preparation Day.

We’ve already discussed in earlier lessons that just as in the modern Western world we’ll speak about our various holidays using different terms… usually not terms that are technically precise… still everyone knows by context and custom what we’re talking about. I gave the example of the last half of December being called things like the holiday season, the Christmas Holidays, or just the Holidays, or speaking of Christmas as including not just Christmas Day but also Christmas Eve, and even extending something we call Christmas week to include New Year. None of this troubles or confuses us because we’re familiar with how all this terminology is meant. It worked like that for the feasts of Passover and Unleavened Bread in Yeshua’s era. Thus, there is no way that the scrupulously Torah observant Christ would have instructed His disciples to do the work of feast preparation on a Sabbath… something that is expressly forbidden in the Torah and is a grave sin. OK, so we must have some calendar issues at work here.

Let’s begin unpacking this puzzle by destroying a misconception among many Jews and most Christians who know little if anything about these biblical feasts.  It is regularly said that the Feast of Unleavened Bread is an 8-day event, and yet the Torah clearly says it is a 7-day event. Why this difference? It is because of what happens when we overlay a Hebrew calendar upon a Roman calendar. Because the Hebrew and Roman calendars each assume different starting and stopping points to define a day (a 24-hour period), and the names and lengths of Roman months differ from Hebrew months, then to say something like “the Feast of Unleavened Bread begins on the 15th of Nisan and ends on the 21st” gets confusing. When we overlay those 2 calendars, we see that in relation to a Roman calendar (our modern-day calendar) each Hebrew day stretches across portions of 2 Roman calendar days. So, it can appear on a modern Roman calendar that the Feast of Matzah lasts 8 days and not 7. Further the date of the Hebrew month (such as the 15th of Nisan) only rarely coincides with the same date (in our example, the 15th) within a Roman month.  Of course, this was not an issue biblically nor is it confused in the Bible because the Jews never entertained the use of the Roman calendar, and the Bible only uses the Hebrew calendar.

The underlying nature of the issue begins in that when taken together, the consecutive feasts of Passover and then Unleavened Bread last for a total of 8 days. Due to the logistics and many practicalities of later Hebrew society, the 2 feasts eventually became conjoined in Jewish eyes, even though technically everyone knew they were 2 separate feasts. The result was that it was common among Jews to call the entire 8-day feast period Passover or just as common to call the same period Unleavened Bread. That’s not too tough to grasp; unfortunately, it gets more complex. The reason for this added complexity is that Galileans seem to have created some of their own traditions for this holiday period that differed somewhat from how the Jews who lived in Judea celebrated it. Partly this was because the Jews of Judea all lived in close proximity to the city of Jerusalem, while all other Jews… including those of the Galilee… had to pack up and travel 2 or 3 days, even a week or more, to get to the Temple in Jerusalem. So, the realities of distance and travel time played a major role in how Jewish festival Traditions evolved.

After all, when the Torah Laws concerning the required observance of these feasts were first created and given to Moses, it was 1300 years earlier at the time that the Wilderness Tabernacle was the place of worship for the Israelites. They hadn’t completed their journey to the Promised Land, yet; let alone had they conquered it. During those 40 years in the wilderness, all Israelites lived encamped, tribe by tribe, in rings around the Tabernacle so no one had to make a journey to get to it. But a long time later, when Joshua captured Canaan, Israel was divided into 12 tribal regions, greatly spread out over the entire land; distance now became a barrier to overcome. Jerusalem was where the Temple would eventually be built, and thus nearly all Israelites had to leave their homes and make a substantial journey to get there to celebrate the feasts; except of course for those Israelites that lived in Judah, the tribal territory where Jerusalem was located.

After Rome conquered the Holy Land, and after Israelite tribalism and (along with it) tribal boundaries had long been extinguished, the Roman governing districts of Judea and Galilee were established in the former Holy Land (and a couple of others as well), and in time the Jewish residents of those districts became less than harmonious. Hatred of the residents of one district for another is probably too strong, but each went out of their way to establish their own customs and traditions that suited their circumstances. And, it seems, that nearly certainly this is what was at play when trying to unravel this strange event that we call The Last Supper. It is really with the growing influence of modern-day Jewish Believers and their academics that these matters that involve the 7 biblical feasts are being re-examined and in some cases it is leading to a few of the stories in the New Testament having to be redefined.

Here’s the deal: there is no way that the Last Supper was the biblical Passover seder (Passover meal) because Passover would have to have ended for it to occur and Jesus is known to have been crucified on Passover day. If He wasn’t crucified on Passover day, but rather during the next day, it would have been on the 1st day of Matzah, which is a Sabbath. This makes no sense because later we’ll read that there was a huge urgency to get His body down from the cross so as to get him interred BEFORE a Sabbath began. Dr. Baruch Korman and Rabbi Joseph Shulam are among those who have offered possible solutions to the problem, and despite some technical differences, they agree that while the Last Supper happened on Passover, it was in the first hours of Passover, which is at night time (somewhere in the 7 pm to 10 pm timeframe). Remember: a Hebrew day BEGINS at sunset. So, in the first hours of Passover, Nisan 14 (night time), there was a gathering of Yeshua with His 12 for some kind of a ceremonial meal. The following afternoon (which in the Hebrew calendar was still the same day), He would be killed. Whatever Last Supper was, clearly it was customary for Jesus and those who made up His 12 disciples to celebrate it. Also remember: Jesus and His 12 disciples were all Galileans and so had their own traditions apart from those typically celebrated in and around Jerusalem of Judea.

Rather than further try to characterize the meal that night, let’s move on to what happened during it. I want to begin by our reading Mark’s version. Turn your Bibles to Mark chapter 14.

READ MARK CHAPTER 14:12 – 26

Notice how Mark time-stamped the day of the Last Supper. He, like Matthew, says it was the 1st day of the Feast of Matzah. But then, unlike Matthew, he adds that it was the day when the lambs were slaughtered. From a technical standpoint, this doesn’t work. The lambs are not slaughtered on the 1st day of Unleavened Bread; they are slaughtered the day before that, on Passover day. This is why we mustn’t try to apply the technical Torah sense to these words, but rather to understand it from the casual conversational way of the era in which these festival holidays were spoken about. For the common Jewish person, Passover and Unleavened Bread had become synonyms, and so the 1st day of Unleavened Bread meant the 1st day of the 8-day feast period that conjoins 1 day of Passover with the 7 days of Unleavened Bread to form one big event. Let me also add that eating unleavened bread was NOT a biblical requirement for Passover day. Therefore, it would not have been a requirement for the Last Supper… even though by a created Galilean tradition they may have started eating only unleavened bread a couple of days earlier than was required by the Torah (but this is my speculation and there’s no real written evidence for it). This would not have been a sin; we could choose to eat only unleavened bread every day of the year, and this is perfectly in tune with Torah commandments.

Of a few differences between Mark’s and Matthew’s versions of the Last Supper, perhaps the one we need to notice most is that in Matthew in verse 28 it says that Jesus’s blood (as symbolized by the wine) is for the forgiveness of sins. Mark makes no mention of this. Matthew seems to have a better understanding of the atoning power of Christ’s sacrifice, and it is something he emphasizes and has built up to, in his Gospel. Beyond these differences is a point that I’ll make up front so that you can watch for it: the words chosen by Christ and the way things proceed during the Last Supper has a direct link to the words spoken by Moses at Mt. Sinai as he makes covenant with God. I bring this up because a few times during our extensive study of Matthew I’ve urged you not to miss this underlying characterization of Yeshua as the 2nd Redeemer… the 2nd Moses (which He surely is, only greater even than Moses).

The scene begins with the disciples asking Jesus where He wants them to prepare the seder. While we find those words in the CJB, in fact the question that is asked is where to prepare the Passover. So, the underlying CJB assumption is that this is referring to the Torah-commanded Passover meal, which I claim it is not. I will say this again, and probably again still later, because it can be so hard to wrap our minds around. Indeed, the Last Supper was a Passover meal but only in the sense that it occurred on Nisan 14th (Passover). However… this is not same as the biblical Passover meal as prescribed in the Torah… the one that Jews call the Passover seder… and I know this for 2 reasons: 1st, the Passover lambs had yet to be slaughtered (you can’t have a Passover seder without the Passover lamb), and 2nd, because the actual biblical Passover seder doesn’t occur on Passover despite its name; it happens in the first few hours of the next day (which begins just after dark), on the 1st day of the Feast of Unleavened Bread. This is exactly the way it happened in the exodus from Egypt. The Passover seder is indeed prepared on Passover, but it is not actually eaten until the sun sets and the day changes to Nisan 15th, the beginning of the Feast of Matzah.

Therefore, because Christ is talking to His fellow Galileans, and they are all thinking in terms of Galilean traditions, and because the conversation is merely using standard terms of the times, then Yeshua’s reference to the Passover merely means the meal that Galileans eat shortly after dark, the first couple of hours after the day turns to Nisan 14th, Passover. This is the Last Supper. One of the assumptions often made in sermons about this event is that we ought to notice that Jesus did not eat the Passover with His biological family; rather He chose to do this with His disciples. And that we are to understand from this that this is due to the replacement of His physical Jewish family with His new spiritual family. While this is an interesting thought… and one gentile Christians prefer to hear… we can outright dismiss it because even though it was biblical tradition to eat the Passover meal with family, I’ve already demonstrated that the Last Supper was not the Passover meal.

Yeshua instructs the disciples to go from Bethany, into the city of Jerusalem, and find a certain unnamed man, and tell him that the Rabbi says that His time is at hand (His time to be arrested and killed), and that they are going to celebrate Passover at his house. It can only be that this had to be something that was prearranged and whoever this man was, the disciples knew of him. Mark puts it a little differently saying:

CJB Mark 14:13-14 13 He sent two of his talmidim with these instructions: "Go into the city, and a man carrying a jar of water will meet you. Follow him; 14 and whichever house he enters, tell him that the Rabbi says, 'Where is the guest room for me, where I am to eat the Pesach meal with my talmidim?'

So; the disciples are to find this man carrying a jar of water who is waiting to meet them. The disciples are to follow this man to the house he has reserved for the purpose of this Last Supper meal. And, they are to say that their Rabbi (the better translation for us is Master) wants to know where the guest room for Him is, and also where is the room where they are to eat the Passover. That is, one place is for Jesus to sleep, the other is for Jesus to have this meal with His 12. What is happening here was common in Jerusalem during the busy feast days. The thousands of pilgrims needed places to stay, and so the local residents would open their homes and rent out rooms not so much as a money maker but as a righteous deed of hospitality. The place was known to be on the 2nd floor of a building; 2 and 3 story buildings being common in the densely populated Jerusalem.

I want to pause here to address the matter of the Upper Room that one can visit on tour today in Jerusalem. I can confidently say that this is not where the Last Supper took place. Located in the modern Greek section of Jerusalem on Mount Zion, the tourist is taken to is very large room (you can easily put 100 people in it) but it was actually built during the Crusader era. Sorry to pop any bubbles.

In any case the disciples left Bethany, went into the city, found the man and the room prepared for them as Yeshua said they would. There, the disciples made the meal preparations and when evening came (meaning the day changed), they ate while reclining (a usual Jewish custom for a festival meal). Essentially, the Last Supper became a farewell meal. I mentioned a few minutes ago about the relationship of the Last Supper to the Mt. Sinai covenant ceremony with Moses, so I’ll take a moment to read to you a short section from Exodus.

CJB Exodus 24:3-7 3 Moshe came and told the people everything ADONAI had said, including all the rulings. The people answered with one voice: "We will obey every word ADONAI has spoken." 4 Moshe wrote down all the words of ADONAI. He rose early in the morning, built an altar at the base of the mountain and set upright twelve large stones to represent the twelve tribes of Isra'el. 5 He sent the young men of the people of Isra'el to offer burnt offerings and sacrifice peace offerings of oxen to ADONAI. 6 Moshe took half of the blood and put it in basins; the other half of the blood he splashed against the altar. 7 Then he took the book of the covenant and read it aloud, so that the people could hear; and they responded, "Everything that ADONAI has spoken, we will do and obey."

There are a few more connections, but for the moment notice the number 12. At the Last Supper Yeshua involves 12 disciples; at the Mt. Sinai covenant ceremony the 12 tribes of Israel are represented by the 12 large stones set upright. We’ll soon get to the use of blood in the ceremony. I have no doubt that Yeshua choosing 12 men to be His disciples is meant to represent the 12 tribes of Israel, and we’re told in other places in the New Testament that these 12 will sit in judgment of the 12 tribes… a one-to-one relationship.

Next we read that during the eating of the meal Yeshua drops a bomb on the proceedings: one of those seated at the table will betray Him. No details of it, or when, are put forward. I think it is hard to overstate how agitated this would have made them all. They believe Him, even to the point that each seeks to be exonerated. The concern for them is less that Yeshua is going to be betrayed and suffer the consequences, than it is that one of them will do the deed. Since the beginning of the collecting of the 12, they have always been concerned about themselves; who will be greatest, who will gain the most. We can sort of stand back and shake our heads in disgust at them for thinking like that, but they were being no more or less than human. In some ways we are to be comforted in this knowledge that if those great men who were taught directly by the Messiah could battle over self versus service, then we shouldn’t beat ourselves up too badly when we inevitably do the same. This isn’t an excuse or are we to feel enabled to be self-oriented. Rather it is that while our goal as followers of Messiah is to be perfect in devotion to Yeshua and the Torah principles, yet the spirit is willing while the flesh is weak. It is a process that takes effort, and despite our best intentions we will fail at it from time to time. The 12 disciples are perhaps one of the best biblical examples of this kind of failure inherent to our fallen nature, but also a revelation of how all but one would soon right themselves and rise above those failures.

During the turmoil when each disciple nervously asked if the Lord was referring to them, He replied with the equally cryptic: "The one who dips his matzah in the dish with me is the one who will betray me.”

Although the CJB takes some unneeded liberties with this verse when it says “the one who dips his matzah…”, there is no reference to bread or to matzah in the passage. Rather it says “the one who dips his hand in the dish..” The matzah reference continues to incorrectly assume that this meal is the official biblical Passover seder. This comment from Yeshua no doubt didn’t at all soothe the disciples’ anxiety because there is no particular disciple that has put his hand into the bowl… all have. One by one they seem to question Yeshua if it is them. Clearly this is a matter of Yeshua knowing something that only a person with divine foreknowledge could, and that’s the context of what their questioning asks. That is, their question is more “will it be me” rather than “it is NOT me”.

Yeshua scares them all a bit further by again invoking His favorite title for Himself… the Son of Man… and says that “it is written” that He will be betrayed and die. “It is written” meant two different things to a Jew. One, it meant a written biblical prophecy. And two, it meant something like we would say today: “It is written in stone”. That is, it is predestined and cannot be changed. There is no specific Scripture that says such a thing, so the point is that neither the coming betrayal nor its consequences are a surprise. Evil can’t overtake Yeshua without Him knowing about it in advance, and by implication choosing to allow it to happen. This is a classic case of God using what is intended as evil, for good. Even though this is the case, says Christ, woe to the person who will betray the Son of Man. The consequences will be so severe for him that he will wish he hadn’t been born to suffer them. No doubt this expresses the eternal punishment that will result. Finally, Judas speaks up and feigning innocence asks if it could be him (what else could he do… wouldn’t it be terribly suspicious if he were the only one who didn’t inquire?). Yeshua nails him; He says “the words are yours”. This is a Jewish expression that in this case means you have just condemned yourself.  

Strangely enough, the topic just seems to get shelved for the time being with Yeshua identifying Judas in front of the other eleven. Just as strangely, in Mark’s Gospel it is left out that Yeshua exposed Judas as the betrayer. Either way, the reader already knows who it is. What comes next is what was eventually transformed into the Church sacrament of Communion. There’s much to discuss about it, but our time is over for today so we’ll pick-up with that next time.

This Series Includes

  • Video Lessons

    96 Video Lessons

  • Audio Lessons

    96 Audio Lessons

  • Devices

    Available on multiple devices

  • Full Free Access

    Full FREE access anytime

Latest lesson

Help Us Keep Our Teachings Free For All

Your support allows us to provide in-depth biblical teachings at no cost. Every donation helps us continue making these lessons accessible to everyone, everywhere.

Support Support Torah Class

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 1, Introduction The New Testament contains 4 gospel accounts of the life, purpose, and meaning of the most unique man in history: Yeshua of Nazareth, known better within the Western Christian Church as Jesus Christ. The creation and ordering of this New Testament addition to…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 2, Chapter 1 The worldview from which we are going to study the Gospel of Matthew is this: Matthew (whether that was the author's actual name or not) was a Jewish Believer. This is an essential starting point because for centuries the institutional Church has…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 3, Chapter 1 Continued In our previous lesson we studied at length the genealogy of Yeshua that opens Matthew's Gospel. We discovered that Matthew seems to have created a structure for his genealogy based on the numbers 3, 14, and 42. It is unknown by…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 4, Chapter 2 We concluded chapter 1 of Matthew's Gospel last time, and I remarked then that Matthew's goal was to begin his Gospel by explaining who Jesus is. According to Matthew He is the prophesied Messiah of Israel; the Son of David, Son of Abraham.…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 5, Chapter 2 Continued We spent the bulk of our previous time together on the birth story of Our Lord and Savior as we find it in the Book of Matthew; it is the only place in the New Testament that we'll hear about the…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 6, Chapters 2 and 3 As we drink in and deeply reflect on the beauty, salt, and light that the Book of Matthew provides us, let us also be reminded of something about the author himself. Our Jewish Matthew was not an eyewitness to anything…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 7, Chapter 3 Continued  If we were to do a deep comparison between the 4 Gospel accounts that open the New Testament, it would become evident that each Gospel writer approaches the matter of the advent, life, death, and resurrection of the Messiah with his…

    THE BOOK OF MATTHEW Lesson 8, Chapter 3 Continued 2 As we re-open Matthew chapter 3, we left off with verse 7, the mention of Sadducees and Pharisees coming to John ostensibly to be immersed by him, but in reality it was to investigate this strange man who seemed to…

    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: "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."  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.  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…