Subtitles section Play video
-
The Gospel according to Matthew. In the first video we saw how Matthew introduced
-
Jesus as the Messiah from the line of David, and as a new authoritative teacher
-
like Moses, and also as Emmanuel which in Hebrew means "God with us." After Jesus
-
announced and taught about the arrival of God's kingdom and after he brought the
-
kingdom into day-to-day life among the people of Israel, we saw that Jesus was
-
accepted by many but rejected by others, especially Israel's religious leaders,
-
the Pharisees. And so the big question is, "How is this conflict between Jesus and
-
Israel's leaders going to play itself out?" The next large section, chapters 14
-
through 20, explore all the different expectations people have about the
-
Messiah. Jesus keeps healing sick people and twice he even miraculously provides
-
food for these huge crowds in the desert, one made up of Jewish people and the
-
other is a non-jewish crowd. And this sign is very similar to what Moses did
-
for Israel in the wilderness. And so are these people are excited about Jesus,
-
they think he's the great prophet and the Messiah, but not the religious leaders.
-
Their view of the Messiah is built on passages like Psalm 2 or Daniel chapter 2,
-
about a victorious Messiah who is going to deliver Israel and defeat the pagan
-
oppressors. And from their point of view, Jesus is a false teacher. He's making
-
blasphemous claims about himself and so there are stories here about them
-
increasing their opposition, hatching a plan to kill him. And so in response,
-
Jesus, he withdraws. And he begins teaching his closest disciples what it means for
-
him to be Israel's Messiah because it is not what anybody expects. So Jesus asked
-
his disciples-- chapter 16-- he says, "Who do you all say that I am?" And Peter comes up
-
with the right answer, it seems. He says, "You are the Messiah, the Son of the living God."
-
But then it becomes clear that Peter's thinking about a king who's going to
-
reign victoriously through military power. And Jesus challenges Peter, saying that
-
"Yes, I am going to become king, but through a different way." And so Jesus
-
starts to teach on themes from the prophet Isaiah who said that the
-
Messianic King would suffer and die for the sins of his own people. And so Jesus,
-
he was positioning himself as a Messianic king who reigns by becoming a
-
servant and who would lay down his life for Israel and the nations. Peter and
-
the disciples, they mostly just don't get it. And so Jesus enters into the fourth
-
block of teaching followed by a series of teachings after that. And these are
-
all about the upside down nature of Jesus' Messianic Kingdom--which turns
-
upside down all of our value systems. So in the community of the servant king you
-
gain honor by serving others and instead of getting revenge, you forgive and do
-
good to your enemies. And in Jesus' kingdom you gain true wealth by giving
-
your wealth away to the poor. To follow the servant Messiah, you must become a
-
servant yourself. In the next section we watched the two kingdoms clash--Jesus'
-
kingdom and that of Israel's leader. Jesus comes to Jerusalem for Passover
-
riding in on a donkey and the crowds are hailing him as the Messiah. Jesus
-
immediately marches into the courtyard of the temple and he creates this huge
-
disruption that brings the daily sacrifices to a halt. His actions speak
-
louder than words here. As Israel's King, Jesus was asserting his royal authority
-
over the temple, the place where God and Israel met together. And in Jesus' view, the
-
temple was compromised by the hypocrisy of Israel's leaders and so here he's
-
challenging their authority and naturally they're deeply offended. And so
-
they try to trap Jesus and shame him in public debate and they fail. So they end
-
up just determining to have him killed. In response, Jesus delivers his final
-
block of teaching. He first offers this passionate critique of the Pharisees
-
and their hypocrisy. And then he weeps over Jerusalem and its rejection of God
-
and His Kingdom. Then Jesus withdraws with the disciples and he starts telling
-
them what's going to happen. He's going to be executed by these leaders, but in
-
doing so they're going to create their own demise because instead of accepting
-
Jesus' way of the Peaceful Kingdom they're going to take the road of revolt
-
against
-
Rome and so Jerusalem and its temple are going to be destroyed. But Jesus says
-
that is not the end of the story.
-
He's going to be vindicated after his death by his resurrection and one day
-
he'll return and set up his kingdom over all nations. And so in the meanwhile, the
-
disciples need to stay alert and stay committed to just announcing Jesus and
-
His Kingdom and spreading the good news. And so with all of that ringing in the
-
disciples ears, the story comes to its climax. That night Jesus takes the
-
disciples aside and he celebrates the Passover meal with them.
-
Passover retells the story of Israel's rescue from slavery through the death of
-
the Passover lamb. And then Jesus takes the bread and the wine from this meal as
-
new symbols showing that his coming death would be a sacrifice that would
-
redeem his people from slavery to sin and evil. After the meal, Jesus is arrested,
-
he's put on trial before the Sanhedrin, the Council of Jewish leaders. And they
-
reject his claim to be the Messiah. They charge him with blasphemy against
-
God. Then Jesus is brought before the Roman governor, Pilate, and he thinks
-
Jesus is innocent, but he gives in to the pressure from the Jewish leaders and he
-
sentences Jesus to death by crucifixion. So Jesus is led away by Roman soldiers and
-
then crucified. Now you'll notice right here in this section that, just like
-
Matthew did in the opening chapters, he increases the number of references to
-
the Old Testament. He's trying to show that Jesus' death was not a tragedy or
-
failure. Rather, it was the surprising fulfillment of all of the old, prophetic
-
promises. Jesus came as the Servant Messiah spoken of by Isaiah. He was
-
rejected by his own people but instead of judging them, he is judged on their
-
behalf,
-
bearing the consequences of their sin. So the crucifixion scene, it comes to a
-
close, and Jesus' body is placed in a tomb. But the book ends with a surprising
-
twist--the last chapter. The disciples, they discover on Sunday morning that
-
Jesus' tomb is empty. And then all of a sudden people start seeing Jesus alive
-
from the dead. And the book concludes
-
with the risen Jesus giving a final teaching called the Great Commission.
-
Jesus says that he is now the true king of the world and so he sends his
-
disciples out to all nations with the good news that Jesus is Lord and that
-
anyone can join his kingdom by being baptized and by following his teachings.
-
And echoing all the way back to his name, Emmanuel, God with us, from chapter one,
-
Jesus' last words in the book to his disciples are "I will be with you." It's a
-
promise of Jesus' presence until the day he finally returns. And that's the Gospel
-
according to Matthew.