Matthew: All Authority in Heaven and on Earth
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Part of the Preaching the Word series.
Douglas Sean O'Donnell
Douglas Sean O’Donnell (PhD, University of Aberdeen) is the senior vice president of Bible editorial at Crossway. Over the past twenty-five years he has helped train people around the world to read and teach the Bible clearly. He has pastored several churches, served as a professor, and authored or edited over twenty books, including commentaries, Bible studies, children’s books, and a children’s curriculum. He also wrote The Pastor’s Book with R. Kent Hughes and The Beauty and Power of Biblical Exposition with Leland Ryken.
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Matthew - Douglas Sean O'Donnell
A Word to Those Who Preach the Word
There are times when I am preaching that I have especially sensed the pleasure of God. I usually become aware of it through the unnatural silence. The ever-present coughing ceases, and the pews stop creaking, bringing an almost physical quiet to the sanctuary—through which my words sail like arrows. I experience a heightened eloquence, so that the cadence and volume of my voice intensify the truth I am preaching.
There is nothing quite like it—the Holy Spirit filling one’s sails, the sense of his pleasure, and the awareness that something is happening among one’s hearers. This experience is, of course, not unique, for thousands of preachers have similar experiences, even greater ones.
What has happened when this takes place? How do we account for this sense of his smile? The answer for me has come from the ancient rhetorical categories of logos, ethos, and pathos.
The first reason for his smile is the logos—in terms of preaching, God’s Word. This means that as we stand before God’s people to proclaim his Word, we have done our homework. We have exegeted the passage, mined the significance of its words in their context, and applied sound hermeneutical principles in interpreting the text so that we understand what its words meant to its hearers. And it means that we have labored long until we can express in a sentence what the theme of the text is—so that our outline springs from the text. Then our preparation will be such that as we preach, we will not be preaching our own thoughts about God’s Word, but God’s actual Word, his logos. This is fundamental to pleasing him in preaching.
The second element in knowing God’s smile in preaching is ethos—what you are as a person. There is a danger endemic to preaching, which is having your hands and heart cauterized by holy things. Phillips Brooks illustrated it by the analogy of a train conductor who comes to believe that he has been to the places he announces because of his long and loud heralding of them. And that is why Brooks insisted that preaching must be the bringing of truth through personality.
Though we can never perfectly embody the truth we preach, we must be subject to it, long for it, and make it as much a part of our ethos as possible. As the Puritan William Ames said, Next to the Scriptures, nothing makes a sermon more to pierce, than when it comes out of the inward affection of the heart without any affectation.
When a preacher’s ethos backs up his logos, there will be the pleasure of God.
Last, there is pathos—personal passion and conviction. David Hume, the Scottish philosopher and skeptic, was once challenged as he was seen going to hear George Whitefield preach: I thought you do not believe in the gospel.
Hume replied, I don’t, but he does.
Just so! When a preacher believes what he preaches, there will be passion. And this belief and requisite passion will know the smile of God.
The pleasure of God is a matter of logos (the Word), ethos (what you are), and pathos (your passion). As you preach the Word may you experience his smile—the Holy Spirit in your sails!
R. Kent Hughes
Preface
The unique feature of this commentary—as opposed to all others in the history of the church—is that I wrote it. I don’t mean that arrogantly or humorously, although I hope you thought the second and are still laughing. I mean it in this sense.
I like Bible commentaries, particularly ones on my favorite book of the Bible (both before and after I was commissioned to do this)—the Gospel of Matthew. Sitting beside me as I write, I have as many commentaries on this Gospel as I have had birthdays. Many of them I have read. Some of them I have used. One of them I enjoyed so much I wish I wrote it. But this commentary is not like them. It’s a pastor’s commentary for pastors, written by a tall pastor from a small church in a large Chicago suburb to other pastors—tall and short, large and small—in America and around the world. It is written to those who will use it as an aid to preach sermons that would make Matthew smile with approval.
And I do mean smile. Matthew didn’t write his Gospel so we’d merely write voluminous tomes that begin Recent studies on the nature of written documents . . .
or As in the commentary’s various analytical sections, here in the introduction I will first discuss problems of synchronic analysis before turning to those of diachronic analysis.
He wrote it, as the church has long and rightly assumed, as an evangelist. Irenaeus, Jerome, and those medieval monastic artists got it right: the Gospel of Matthew is the face of man.¹ This Gospel was written by a man for men about the Man. Matthew wants all people everywhere to bow down before that Man, the one to whom all authority in Heaven and on earth has been given. He wants Gentiles and Jews to submit to their King, trusting Jesus to be Savior from sins and Lord of life. He wants us to know Jesus, worship him, obey his teachings, and tell others to do the same.
Thus, my purpose is as close to Matthew’s as possible. Like the Gospel, this commentary was written to gospel.
² I’m appealing to real people (let the reader understand,
cf. 24:15) who need a real King. This is not to say I don’t deal with doctrines and difficulties in some depth. Nor is it to say I’m not concerned about getting it right. But it is to say, I am more concerned about practical theology than theoretical. To borrow from J. C. Ryle’s methodology, I have endeavored to dwell chiefly on the things needful to salvation.
³
I shall say lastly but least importantly, the language of this commentary is reflective of this evangelistic and pastoral purpose. You see, therefore, my brothers and sisters, I’ve occasionally used real phrases we use in everyday ecclesial talk—like my brothers and sisters
and you see
—to make you see what you’re supposed to see. At times I’ve also included look there
because I assume you have your Bible open, either as a pastor preparing a sermon or a layperson doing daily devotions. And I’ve even disregarded those old rules of grammar (based on proper Latin, not proper English) about not starting a sentence with a conjunction. I want the language of these now dead sermons to be as alive as Christ. I hope you find that to be the case. Enjoy!
I acknowledge my heartfelt gratitude to Kent Hughes for the privilege of contributing to the Preaching the Word series. Kent left a phone message five years ago asking me to contribute a volume and to think about what book of the Bible that might be. The Gospel of Matthew is what first came to mind. However, I was young and didn’t want be so presumptuous as to ask for that. So I called Kent back and left a message that I’d love to contribute and that I’d be happy to take whatever book he assigned. He called back and left another message—asking me to do Matthew!
I am indebted to the careful editing and proofreading of the Crossway staff. Thank you. I’d also like to thank Matt Newkirk, as well as Alexandra Bloom and Emily Gerdts for their various editorial tasks. Finally, I thank God for my family (Emily, Lily, Evelyn, Simeon, and Charlotte), and notably my oldest son—Sean Michael O’Donnell—to whom I dedicate this book. Sean, I am thankful to God for you more than you can know or imagine.
Douglas Sean O’Donnell
New Covenant Church, Naperville, Illinois
1
The Melodic Line of Matthew
An Introduction and Overview of the Gospel of Matthew
WHEN VAN HALEN’S album 1984 hit the record stores, many a young lad, myself included, signed up for piano lessons. This was because the great guitarist, Eddie Van Halen, learned to play piano and proceeded to compose the hit single of that album—one still played at many NBA tip-offs—Jump.
In six short lessons I learned how to master this melody, which in those days was enough to impress friends, woo girls, and justify the expense of ten-dollar lessons. My performance at the junior high talent show was enough to bestow upon me that prestigious adjective-noun combination—rock star. I entered the stage. The spotlight moved across my face and fingers. Cameras flashed. A sixth grade girl fainted. Wearing black dress pants, a white shirt, one glove, cool sunglasses, and (yes!) a skinny piano tie, I sat on my poorly padded bench and bum before my Korg 500 digital synthesizer and played perfectly the rudimentary bass line and monotonous melody of Van Halen’s masterpiece.
I’m not certain if such an introduction to a Gospel is sacrilegious or just silly. I intended neither. I actually intended to get your attention in order to make a basic point about music and to show how such a point can and does relate to our study of any piece of literature, notably Matthew’s Gospel. The point is this: just as every good song has a melodic line (a tune that brings unity to the whole by its recurrence)—think of the chorus of Jump
or Ode to Joy
of Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony, Fourth Movement—so too does every book of the Bible.
I’ll put it this way. The four Gospels—Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John—all sound the same. That is, they all have a similar bass line. It’s as simple as the two C notes I learned for that Van Halen song. They focus on the same person (Jesus), and they were written for the same primary purpose (conversion to Christ; see John 20:31). In all four we hear those same deep, steady notes of Jesus as the Son, Savior, and Christ. We behold him as a miracle-worker. We hear his teaching and his call to faith and repentance. We encounter his passion, death, and resurrection. In these ways, all four sound the same. They have the same bass line. Yet each Gospel has a distinct melody of its own. And just as we can recognize the melody of Ode to Joy
each time we hear the first four notes or Jump
when we hear the first four chords, so can we recognize Matthew’s melody if we hear the recurring themes.
In Beethoven’s Fourth Movement of the Ninth Symphony, the beginning and the end are important. Matthew’s Gospel is the same. We hear the melody most clearly at the top and tail. Look at the first words with which Matthew begins: The book of the genealogy of Jesus Christ, the son of David
(1:1). Notice the first two titles applied to Jesus. The first is Christ.
That is not a last name. That is a title. It means anointed one
or king.
This is a book about King Jesus. That point is reiterated with the next title, the son of David.
David was the great king of Israel, the one to whom a great promise was made. In 2 Samuel 7 we are told that through his offspring God would establish a forever kingdom. So with those first two titles you can hear the first note of the melodic line: Jesus, the King. Jesus is a sovereign who will be sovereign over an everlasting kingdom!
From that note of kingly authority Matthew subtly drops a half-step to the next note. He does this by moving from Jesus being the son of David
to also being the son of Abraham.
Who was Abraham and why does he matter? Abraham was the non-Israelite Father of Israel. That is the point Paul will make in Romans 4, that Abraham of Ur wasn’t a Hebrew
(Genesis 14:13) until he became one (you’ll have to think about that to get it). And why is he important? Abraham is important because he too received a great promise from God. In Genesis 12:1–3 God explained how through him and his offspring all nations
would be blessed (cf. 17:4; 18:18; 22:18).
So, the point of these two persons and promises is this: Jesus will be that Davidic King who will reign over that eternal kingdom that will be a blessing to all peoples of the earth.
Jesus is King. That’s the first note. Jesus is the King of Jews and Gentiles. That’s the second. The third is a necessary admonition: Therefore, this King Jesus is to be worshipped. Read 2:1–11. This is perhaps the best summary picture of Matthew’s Gospel. Here we find very non-Jewish people—wise men from the east
(2:1). What have they come to do? They have come to finish the melodic line. They have come to worship the newborn king—to give their allegiance to him.
That’s how this Gospel begins. That’s the top.
Next let’s turn to the tail. Like a fine symphony, Matthew’s melodic line resurfaces time and again through each chapter, oftentimes like a cello quietly playing in the background, until finally we come to the finale, where the whole orchestra, chorus, and even the audience stand up, play, and sing in one voice! This happens in the last three verses—the Great Commission. Listen for yourself. Listen for the culmination of all the subtle and strong sounds.
And Jesus came and said to them, All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you. And behold, I am with you always, to the end of the age.
(28:18–20)
Underline all the all phrases: all authority,
all nations,
observe all
(cf. always
in v. 20). Those are the same three notes found in 1:1—2:11 and found, as we will see throughout our study, everywhere in this Gospel. If it helps, you can think of it like this. Here’s my prosaic summary: Jesus has all authority so that all nations might obey all he has commanded, or more simply and poetically, like this:
I don’t like to say any one passage in the Bible is more important than another, for they are all divinely inspired, but I will say that if you understand the Great Commission in its context, you will very well understand the Gospel of Matthew.
This chapter will not be an exposition on the Great Commission per se. I will do that later in chapter 89. This is only a preparation for it. That is, at the start of our exploration of Matthew, I want to show you these three notes—this melodic line—so you might better hear them when we come to them.
All Authority
So listen to the first note of this Gospel—all authority. After his sacrificial death and glorious resurrection, Jesus says, All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me
(28:18).
That is not a statement you hear every day, is it? Yet, it is so familiar to us that we don’t recognize how bizarre it is. Think of the most famous and powerful man alive today. Let’s say, for the sake of argument, it’s Barack Obama (the President of the United States at the time of this writing). If he said what Jesus said, what would you say of him? If he called a press conference and said, I have all authority in Chicago,
what would you think of him? How about if he said, I have all authority in America
? What if he said, I have all authority over the world
? If he said any of those, you’d think he was (to borrow from C. S. Lewis) either a liar or a lunatic, or more precisely an unrealistic egoist or an overly ambitious idiot.
Nobody talks the way Jesus talked. Those today who have great authority, even if they overestimate their power and over-esteem themselves, do not talk like Jesus talked. They do not claim to be the king of Heaven and earth. They do not claim, as they sit on their glorious throne no less(!), that every person from every time and everywhere will one day come before them to be judged. They do not claim to have authority to forgive sins. They do not claim to be greater than the temple and the Torah or to be the fulfillment and embodiment of the Hebrew Scriptures. They do not claim that their rule will spread to every corner of the world. They do not claim to establish an unconquerable church and institute new sacraments that have themselves as the foundation and focus. They do not claim that all their commandments are to be obeyed.
Yet with that said, as striking as such statements are, the more striking fact about Jesus is not only that he made such claims, but that somehow such claims are believable. Jesus is believable! Right? You believe him. I believe him. Maybe we’re just extremely gullible. Maybe we were all just brainwashed as children. That might explain some of us, but it doesn’t explain all of us. It doesn’t explain how for so many centuries very sensible, non-superstitious people have taken Jesus at his word. There is something very believable about Jesus, about the testimony of him that a fisherman,¹ doctor, and tax collector put together.
And as I come to this tax collector’s testimony, I compare it to the preaching of Martyn Lloyd-Jones, which can be called logic on fire.
² Matthew has a certain logic about him. He gives us various reasonable proofs for Jesus’ crazy claims. But such proofs are not like a mathematical equation. Rather, they are like the burning bush that Moses encountered, a bush that burns but never burns out. You have to come close enough to feel its heat to know it’s true. Logic on fire!
Think of it like this. I won’t go too far from the burning bush analogy. I’ll just update and extend the metaphor. Think of Matthew’s case for Christ and his absolute authority like one of those metal fire pits. In the fire pit itself are these burning but not burning-out claims of Christ—I have authority over all things,
etc. Then there are those four sturdy, cast-iron legs that hold the pit up and in place. Each leg by itself would not necessarily hold up the claims, but together they make a pretty solid base.
Let’s briefly examine the legs that hold up his claims.
The first leg is fulfillment. Matthew will repeatedly use the word fulfilled
and phrases like This was to fulfill what was spoken by the prophet
to show that what was promised in the Old Testament is now being fulfilled in Jesus. He highlights general characteristics of what to expect in the Messiah as well as specific prophecies—e.g., Behold, the virgin shall conceive and bear a son
(1:23) or Behold, your king is coming to you, humble, and mounted on a donkey
(21:5). Near the beginning of the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus will say of himself, Do not think that I have come to abolish the Law or the Prophets; I have not come to abolish them but to fulfill them
(5:17). The idea is this: check what the Old Testament says. Check what Jesus does and says. Then you might very well say, By golly, the shoe fits!
The second leg is teaching. If you have one of those Bibles that has all the words of Jesus in red, in Matthew you will see a lot of red. But the point is not simply that Jesus taught a lot. It is that he taught with authority. That is what the crowds noticed. He taught them as one who had authority
(7:29). This will be the constant criticism of his critics, who will ask, By what authority
he does this or says that (cf. 21:23–27).
Jesus taught with authority, but an authority unlike any other. It’s nice to say, as so many today do, I like Jesus—the good moral teacher.
But that is to listen to only half the story. That is to read only half the red. Jesus once said, Heaven and earth will pass away, but my words will not pass away
(24:35). That is a remarkable statement. How can he say that and get away with it? I think he can do so because so far he has been right! It has been nearly 2,000 years since he first said those words, and we are still talking about them today. I am quoting from Jesus’ teachings to people who still read commentaries on Jesus’ teachings and who have, in fact, experienced the life-changing power of his words.
The third leg is character. A wise person can say some wise things, and some of those wise things can be remembered, even many years later. We still quote Socrates. But nobody worships Socrates. Why? Well, because he never claimed to be God, and because his character never had to fit his claims. As John Stott says, There is no dichotomy between [Jesus’] character and his claims.
³
I am a student of church history. And there is a certain sadness to such study, for whenever I study popular figures in Christian history, I am always left with a bittersweet taste. I admire them. But I also don’t aspire to be like them (at least not precisely). I recognize their flaws. However, I’ve been looking and listening to Jesus and reading about him for two decades now, and I haven’t yet found the flaw. Even what seems like a flaw—like his anger over the fruitless fig tree or his overturning the tables—when I understand what he was doing, all makes marvelous sense. I like Jesus more. I love Jesus more. I want to be like Jesus more. Jesus’ character is so compelling. It supports his claims. And it is his humility, ironically, that I and many other Christians have found to be Christ’s most compelling characteristic. John Stott puts it this way,
[Jesus’] claims for himself are very disturbing because they are so self-centered; yet in his behavior he was clothed with humility. His claims sound proud, but he was humble. I see this paradox at its sharpest when he was with his disciples in the upper room before he died. He said he was their Lord, their teacher and their judge, but he took a towel, got on his hands and knees, and washed their feet like a common slave. Is this not unique in the history of the world? There have been lots of arrogant people, but they have all behaved like it. There have also been humble people, but they have not made great claims for themselves. It is the combination of egocentricity and humility that is so startling—the egocentricity of his teaching and the humility of his behavior.⁴
The fourth leg is his miracles. By themselves, the miracles are not what is unique about him. But as the last and final leg, his miracles hold everything in place perfectly. The healing of the blind men, the lepers, the multiplication of the fishes and loaves, and the resurrection itself all point beyond themselves to Jesus’ identity. They point to his authority—his authority to forgive sins, his authority over disease, and his authority to conquer even death, of which there is nothing so powerful and prevalent in this world. If you can conquer death, you have a lot of power!
All authority is the first and key note in Matthew’s Gospel. Tragically it is the most disregarded thought in the world today. Non-Christians don’t mind if we sing to them of Jesus’ compassion or humility—just don’t sing of his exclusive authority. Do you hear how people talk today? They staunchly and arrogantly hold their doctrine—doctrines do not matter
—and with a tinge of moral superiority and intellectual enlightenment (as if able to look over all the cosmos and overlook all religions), they say to us dogmatically, All belief systems are morally equal and should thus coexist.
We are to coexist. Perhaps you have heard that spiritual slogan or seen it written across a bumper sticker. I actually saw it carved into a pumpkin sitting outside a church one Halloween. Do you know what I’m talking about? It is the word coexist
with each letter a symbol of one of seven world religions or philosophies. It’s a popular slogan because it’s a popular sentiment.
Now I assure you, I don’t have a problem with coexisting. I don’t have a problem with tolerance if tolerance means what it should mean. I will tolerate you; that is, I won’t persecute you for your beliefs. I will coexist with you. Christianity, Islam, and Judaism can and do coexist in most places. But I will not put my brain under a bushel basket. Since I am convicted by Matthew’s logic on fire that Jesus has all authority in Heaven and on earth I’m not going to say, Your god is as true or as real as my God.
Jesus either has all authority or he does not. And if he does not, then let’s move on. Let’s close up shop. Let’s stop calling ourselves Christians. But if he does have all authority, then we can certainly coexist with our fellow human beings who believe differently than we do, as long as we know that we won’t coexist forever, for as Jesus said in Matthew 25:31–34, 41 (quite strikingly and offensively):
When the Son of Man comes in his glory . . . then he will sit on his glorious throne. Before him will be gathered all the nations, and he will separate people one from another as a shepherd separates the sheep from the goats. . . . Then the king [King Jesus] will say to those on his right, Come, you who are blessed by my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world. . . .
Then he will say to those on his left, Depart from me, you cursed, into the eternal fire prepared for the devil and his angels.
All authority is the first note of Matthew’s melodic line.⁵ And I know, as you know, that note doesn’t resonate with our culture. Which either means the note is off or our ears are bad. Jesus will tell everyone who rejects his claim that it is the latter.
All Nations
Whatever we might think of the first note, thankfully the second note does appeal to our American ears. It is right, and it sounds right. That note is all nations. In the Great Commission, Jesus commissions his followers to take the gospel to the world, to every tribe and language and people and nation,
as the book of Revelation repeatedly describes (5:9; cf. 13:7; 14:6).
This might not sound like a radical concept because we know Christianity is the largest religion in the world and the fastest growing and that it has spread to nearly every nook and cranny of this terrestrial ball,
to borrow from that very applicable hymn, All Hail the Power of Jesus’ Name.
Yet I want you to know that this idea—to go and make disciples of all nations
not by the sword but by the Word—is a concept as revolutionary as Copernicus’s claim that the earth revolves around the sun.
Some people think Christianity is a Western religion, and thus assert that it is culturally rigid. That belief (to put it in a very sophisticated way) is the biggest bunch of bunk! Jesus said his kingdom would start as small as a mustard seed and grow slowly but surely into a big and beautiful tree, engrafting people from east and west, north and south, from Jerusalem, Samaria, and the ends of the earth (8:11; 13:31, 47; cf. Acts 1:8). Has he been right about that? Oh yes! As Tim Keller notes,
The pattern of Christian expansion differs from that of every other world religion. The center and majority of Islam’s population is still in the place of its origin—the Middle East. The original lands that have been the demographic centers of Hinduism, Buddhism, and Confucianism have remained so. By contrast, Christianity was first dominated by Jews and centered in Jerusalem. Later it was dominated by Hellenists and centered in the Mediterranean. Later the faith was received by the barbarians of Northern Europe and Christianity came to be dominated by western Europeans and then North Americans. Today most Christians in the world live in Africa, Latin America, and Asia. Christianity soon will be centered in the southern and eastern hemispheres.⁶
Let me ask you a trivia question: What country has or soon will have the most Christians? Missiologists estimate that China—a Communist, officially anti-Christian country—has the most Christians in the world. So, when you think of the future face of Christianity think not of an American girl but a Chinese boy.
Jesus is the King of the Jews. Matthew will make this point directly and indirectly. But he will also show us that this King of the Jews is also King of the Gentiles—He will proclaim justice to the Gentiles . . . and in his name the Gentiles will hope
(12:18, 21; cf. Romans 15:9–12).
Above the cross was written, sarcastically, This is Jesus, the King of the Jews
(27:37). It was written in Aramaic, Greek, and Latin—the languages of that world (see John 19:20). But today it reads, realistically, This is Jesus, the King of the Jews and the Gentiles.
And it is written in Aramaic, Greek, Latin, Mandarin, Hindi, Spanish, English, Arabic, Portuguese, Bengali, Russian, Japanese, German, and nearly every other language imaginable.
In the Synoptic Gospels, when Jesus dies, something significant and symbolic happens. The curtain of the temple is torn in two. This shows God’s power and his approval of the cross. But it also symbolizes that the wall of hostility between Jews and Gentiles has been forever torn down. Now whoever believes in Immanuel can have access to God. In Matthew’s Gospel, as the curtain is tearing, the ground at the foot of the cross is shaking, and the centurion upon that ground as well. Filled with fear and faith, this Gentile Roman soldier announces, Truly this was the Son of God!
(27:54).
John the Baptist said, God is able from these stones to raise up children for Abraham
(3:9). In Matthew’s Gospel that is exactly what we see—stones being turned into children of God—a Canaanite woman, a ceremonially unclean Jewish woman, lepers, tax collectors, and even two Roman soldiers.
If you love paradox and irony, you will love this Gospel, for the rulers of the earth—Herod and Pilate—will reject Jesus. The most devoutly religious—the scribes, the Pharisees, and temple authorities—will reject Jesus. But the rejects will not reject him. Those from the wrong race or class or sex find Jesus just alright. The kids picked last for the team are picked up by Jesus. Jesus loves the losers. And the losers love him.
In the first chapter of Romans, after Paul summarizes the gospel of God
in verses 1–5 as being good news about Jesus for the nations, he makes that memorable statement in 1:16, "For I am not ashamed of the gospel, for it is the power of God for salvation to everyone who believes, to the Jew first and also to the Greek [i.e., Gentile]." So yes, the gospel is exclusive—it is exclusively about Jesus and his kingdom. But it is also inclusive—it includes all who will believe.
My brothers and sisters, we must not be ashamed of this exclusive/inclusive gospel. The inclusivity of Christianity is today one of our greatest appeals. The social progressives didn’t get to this first. Jesus got to it. No, Jesus created it! That’s what so astonishing. It is not astonishing that Oprah or Desmond Tutu would say, We should embrace people of different ethnicities.
But for a Jewish man, twenty centuries ago, to say it and live it out in a culture where the opposite was absolutely normative . . . I can’t think of anything more astonishing. It had the earliest Jewish converts to Christianity scratching their heads. But we should not be scratching ours.
All Allegiance
All authority—that’s the first note; all nations, the second; now finally, all allegiance, the third.
As many have noticed, Matthew’s Gospel is a gospel of discipleship. It speaks of the call, cost, and content of discipleship. Time and time again Jesus will say, Follow me.
Each time an individual will be met with the same choice we have before us today: Jesus above money? Jesus above power? Jesus above reputation? Jesus above comfort? Jesus above tradition? Jesus above family? Jesus above life and breath? Those are the choices put before both great governors and lowly lepers. Jesus will say:
Whoever loves father or mother more than me is not worthy of me . . . whoever does not take his cross and follow me is not worthy of me. Whoever finds his life will lose it, and whoever loses his life for my sake will find it. (10:37–39)
Matthew’s Gospel has this beautiful balance between forgiveness, faith, and obedience. At the center of the Sermon on the Mount is the petition forgive us our debts
(6:12), and at the end of the Lord’s Supper is the pronouncement, This is my blood of the covenant, which is poured out for many for the forgiveness of sins
(26:28). And it is this blood that is poured out for the forgiveness of sins that flows into us through faith, giving our dry bones new flesh—new ears and eyes and hearts and hands, giving us all that we need for life and godliness.
Following Jesus means absolute allegiance—trust in him and obedience to him. In the Great Commission Jesus will put it this way: we are to observe all
that he has commanded
(28:20). Do I mean his teachings on sin and Scripture, idolatry and adultery, money and marriage, slander and suffering, anger and evangelism, purity and prayer, alms and anxiety, fasting and forgiveness, luxury and love? Yes! Everything he commanded.
Christianity is not a pick-n-save religion: you pick whatever teachings you like and you still get saved. Oh no! If that’s how you think, you have it all wrong. Just listen to Jesus if you won’t listen to me. He stated it straightforwardly: "Not everyone who says to me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ will enter the kingdom of heaven, but the one who does the will of my Father who is in heaven (7:21). To be a follower of Jesus is to be someone who does
the will of [his] Father in heaven" (cf. 12:50)—not perfectly as Jesus did, but consistently and repentantly. It’s a matter of allegiance: Jesus first, everyone and everything else second.
You see, all authority demands all allegiance from everybody . . . even me and even you.
Welcome to the Gospel of Matthew!
2
Perfect Aim
Matthew 1:1–17
RECENTLY I LISTENED to a fascinating talk by Marvin Rosenthal, a Jewish convert to Christianity. He shared how Matthew’s genealogy was one of the proofs that persuaded him that Jesus is the Messiah. To explain what he meant Rosenthal used a helpful analogy from his experience as a U.S. Marine many decades ago. At the rifle range, he and his fellow soldiers would practice their aim by shooting at a target from three distances—200, 300, and 500 yards. From that distance they couldn’t always tell by the naked eye if their bullets hit the target or not. So, in order to determine their accuracy, one of the soldiers would hide down in a nine-foot ravine behind the target until he heard ten shots. Then he would get up and check the sharpness of the shooter. He would add up the score and relay the results by slipping a colored disk onto the end of a pole and raising it up high. The color of the disk would communicate the shooter’s accuracy. If you missed the target completely, a big flag would be waved, a military way of saying, You ought to be embarrassed!
Yet, for each bull’s-eye a red disk would be secured to the pole and the pole would go up and down. So if you were six out of ten, the pole would go up and down six times. Now, if you hit the bull’s-eye ten times out of ten, that same pole and red disk would simply be spun around once. Rosenthal goes on to say that, especially for a Jewish audience (who understands the significance and the necessity of genealogical records), Matthew’s genealogy hits the bull’s-eye ten times out of ten.¹
As we explore this genealogy, I’m going to utilize Rosenthal’s analogy with some slight modifications. I want you to think of this text like a target set before us. Let’s make it three targets. And I want you to think of God, not with a rifle in his hand (I’ll tame the imagery just a bit, in fact, I’ll make it more Biblical) but as an archer with a bow and three arrows (e.g., Psalm 64:7). Now watch what he’ll do. With this genealogy he will take three shots at three targets, each time hitting them dead center. God can see that he has hit the bull’s-eyes, but he wants us to see it as well. He wants us, if you will, to insert the red disk, raise up the pole, and turn it once, showing we know and appreciate his perfect aim.
Right Line—Jesus Is from the Line of Abraham and David
We will call the first target "God hits the right line. (Let’s say this one is 200 yards away.) Jesus is from the right bloodline, as Matthew will say from the start. Jesus is
the son of David, the son of Abraham" (v. 1). Abraham and David are two key names in this genealogy. If you miss seeing them (at the top and tail, in v. 1 and v. 17, and also in v. 2 and v. 6), you miss everything.
Now, what’s so important about these two men? Two promises! God gave each a specific promise. In Genesis 12:1–3 God says to Abraham:
Go from your country and your kindred and your father’s house to the land that I will show you. And I will make of you a great nation, and I will bless you and make your name great, so that you will be a blessing. I will bless those who bless you, and him who dishonors you I will curse, and in you all the families of the earth shall be blessed.
Through Abraham and his offspring God will raise up a people (Israel) who will be a blessing to the entire world (the Gentiles). This is the beginning of the Abrahamic Covenant. Paul also called it, in a broad sense, the gospel
(Galatians 3:8). This gospel
is further specified by the Davidic Covenant, the promise made in 2 Samuel 7:12, 13 (cf. 1 Chronicles 17), where David is promised that one of his descendants would establish a forever kingdom:
When your days are fulfilled and you lie down with your fathers, I will raise up your offspring after you, who shall come from your body, and I will establish his kingdom. He shall build a house for my name, and I will establish the throne of his kingdom forever.
Throughout his Gospel, Matthew brings these promises together in the person of Christ, with what Jesus calls the gospel of the kingdom
(4:23; 9:35; 24:14—this phrase is only used in Matthew). However, this is not the point of the genealogy. Here, the Evangelist is simply showing how God hits the lineage target—i.e., how Jesus is a descendant of both Abraham and David. Jesus comes from the right line. As Craig Blomberg summarizes, he has the correct scriptural pedigree to be the Messiah.
² The Messiah must be a Jew (a son of Abraham, v. 2), but he also must be from the tribe of Judah (vv. 2, 3; cf. Genesis 49:8–10), and from one specific member of that tribe (David, v. 6). Jesus has all of this going for him.
But Jesus wasn’t the only person in world history to have such a lineage. All those listed in verses 6–16 shared his lineage, as well as others who were his contemporaries, like his four brothers (13:55) or the famous rabbi Hillel. So in some ways it’s like the time my mother did our family genealogy in which she traced the O’Donnells back to a line of Irish kings. I come from nobility, which is no surprise to me. But it was a surprise when I learned that all of Ireland was once run by various nobles, thus indicating that anyone with Irish ancestry was descended from some Irish king.
Well, you’ll be glad to know that Jewish genealogies aren’t the same as Irish ones. Only a select group of men in the history of the world came from Abraham and David. The select group, however, was larger than one man. Jesus wasn’t the only Jew who could claim lineage from this patriarch and that king. And that’s why two more targets are set in place.
Yet, before we move on to them, I want us here and now to stop and think about the obvious, which we so often fail to do. In Matthew 1:18–25, which we will look at in the next chapter, an angel appears to Joseph and tells him what is happening with Mary, his betrothed. He is told about this son who is to come, whom he is to name, Jesus,
which means Yahweh saves.
After he is told the details of the divine plan, we read in verses 22, 23:
All this took place to fulfill what the Lord had spoken by the prophet [Isaiah]: Behold, the virgin shall conceive and bear a son, and they shall call his name Immanuel
(which means, God with us).
Jesus is Immanuel. The man Jesus is God with us.
Now, while Immanuel
can refer merely to God’s presence through Jesus, as John Nolland argues,³ I believe an additional complementary truth can be embraced, which in no way diminishes Matthew’s emphasis. That truth is that the one who brings to humankind the divine presence (Jesus) is also fully divine. Matthew stresses equally that Jesus is the presence of God in the world (cf. 18:20; 28:20),⁴ while being the fleshly embodiment of the deity. Thus I say that what Paul said in Colossians 2:9 is a fitting summary of Matthew 1:23: For in him the whole fullness of deity dwells bodily.
That’s so easy to forget, isn’t it? I forgot the awesomeness of it until I opened Charles Spurgeon’s commentary on Matthew and saw how he pauses in his second paragraph on the genealogy. He ceases making observations and for a time simply engages in pure adoration. Marvelous condescension,
he writes, that [God] should be a man, and have a genealogy, even He who ‘was in the beginning with God,’ and ‘thought it not robbery to be equal to God’!
⁵ Marvelous condescension!
We think it is such a wonderful thing when a queen from another country comes to visit and offers her greetings and love. We think it is such a wonderful thing when a rich businessman volunteers for a night to help at a homeless shelter, providing food and comfort to the poor. We think it is such a wonderful thing when a professional athlete gives of her time to conduct a free clinic for inner-city kids. Such are wonderful things, all of which we recognize, appreciate, and applaud—the humility and condescension. But what marvelous, unfathomable humility and condescension it was when God became man. When you read 1:1, the book of the genealogy of Jesus Christ
alongside 1:23, and they shall call his name Immanuel,
it ought to be enough for us to stop and think, to pause and praise, and to join in the angelic chorus, singing,
Veiled in flesh, the Godhead see,
Hail th’ incarnate Deity!
Pleased as man with men to dwell,
Jesus our Emmanuel.
Hark! The herald angels sing,
Glory to the newborn King.
⁶
Right Time—Jesus Came at the Right Time
Jesus is from the right line. That’s important and necessary. Without it we stop the target practice. We look for a Messiah elsewhere.
In addition, Jesus was born at the right time. That’s the second target we’ll take a look at, and we’ll see that God’s arrow here likewise goes straight into the middle. Look at verse 17. Matthew wants to make sure we see this. So he ends the genealogy like this:
So all the generations from Abraham to David were fourteen generations, and from David to the deportation to Babylon fourteen generations, and from the deportation to Babylon to the Christ fourteen generations.
Matthew is saying that there are three key periods thus far in salvation history. Frederick Dale Bruner helpfully suggests that we think of the history here like the capital letter N. The first fourteen generations head upward from Abraham to David, the second fourteen downward from Solomon to the Babylonian exile, and then the final fourteen move upward again in hope and fulfillment from the exile to Christ.
⁷
Scholars disagree as to why Matthew structures the genealogy this way. Some say the number fourteen is a literary device called a gemetria. In Hebrew each letter has numerical value. Aleph, the first letter, is worth one; dalet, the fourth letter, is worth four; vav, the sixth letter, is worth six, etc. The word David
in Hebrew is comprised of three letters (dalet/vav/dalet—four/six/four) which equal fourteen. So perhaps Matthew is telling us prosaically as well as poetically, Jesus is the son of David
(underline David).
Others theorize that the three fourteens are just a structural way of aiding our weak memories.⁸ The argument is that Matthew limits all the names he could have had so we would remember the genealogy itself and the necessary and important names within it.
Beyond the numerical or mnemonic value, Matthew’s structure has theological value. He has intentionally selected names (real historical people who are really part of Joseph and Mary’s line) and arranged them to make the same theological point that Paul made in Galatians 4:4a: But when the fullness of time had come, God sent forth his Son
(cf. Hebrews 9:26). In other words, God has designed history around the birth of Jesus.
On paper we agree. Christmas is the center of history. But so often this head knowledge has yet to make it to our hearts. We might write BC (Before Christ
) or AD ("Anno Domini,
in the year of our Lord"), but we are often far removed theologically and emotionally from the importance of this reality.
Have you ever wondered why Jesus didn’t come to earth as a man in the modern age rather than in the first century? Why didn’t he come to earth during the era of television, video, and the Internet, when nearly all that he said and did could be precisely documented? Can’t you just picture CNN reporters and paparazzi camped a few feet away from Jesus and the Twelve for three years straight? Can’t you imagine a streaming video of his each and every movement? Can’t you imagine the ten o’clock news starting every night with something from the life of Christ—Today Jesus healed ten lepers. We interviewed nine of them. One refused an interview in order to return to Jesus for a word of thanks.
And can’t you imagine years from now, when some rebellious teen started to doubt the claims of Christ, how the teachers of the times would just pull out their computerized contraptions and say, Now, son, look here, it’s all on video.
And then this teacher would proceed to show the clip, the most famous one played on YouTube—Jesus’ resurrection. Everyone has seen it. The reporter is outside the tomb, giving a play-by-play of Jesus’ life, and while he’s saying something about Christ’s claim to rise again, lo and behold, the stone is rolled away. There it is on film! They take a close-up and out comes the Son of God, just as he said he would. Who wouldn’t believe?
Sometimes we wish God’s timing were different. And sometimes we wish God took out the faith
part of our faith. What I mean is, some of us think like Carl Sagan thought. Sagan, the brilliant scientist but foolish man, once said he’d believe there was a God if God had written the Ten Commandments on the moon. Well sure, everyone would believe if that were the case. But that would take the faith out of faith, which would as be as bad as taking the mystery out of romance, the curiosity out of the cat, or the oxygen out of the air.
When Scripture says that Jesus came at the fullness of time,
it means it. God designed history—with the rise of this empire and the fall of that one, with this person born here and that person born there, with this event happening now and that one then—to prepare us for Jesus and to give room for faith. God values us too much to treat us like robots, and I’ll add (and maybe I’m bold to do so) that only unimaginative atheists want the Ten Commandments painted on the moon or Jesus captured on videotape.
The Bible tells us that while God’s ways are hidden to some extent (e.g., Deuteronomy 29:29; cf. 2 Corinthians 4:3–6), nevertheless his invisible attributes, namely his eternal power and divine nature,
as Romans 1:20 puts it, are as obvious as the North Star on a clear night. When we die, we will find this reality to be as real as oxygen, which we cannot see or taste or touch, but we know it’s there, keeping us alive every second of the day.
God is real, and he is faithful, and we can see such attributes in creation and in Scripture. Yet God has not made himself so self-evident that no faith whatsoever is required. How boring that would be. How dull. How lifeless. How robotic. How so not like he who created this unbelievably complex, mysterious, beautiful universe. How so not like he who glories in bestowing the gift of faith to undeserving and rebellious sinners (see Matthew 16:17).
There is enough evidence for my children—whether it’s facial features, lanky limbs, or personality characteristics—to recognize me as their father. But if each one of them demanded a DNA test before they would acknowledge and appreciate me as such, then they would be very ungrateful and overly demanding children. God has given us creation—what Calvin called the theatre of his glory—and Scripture, what I’ll call the evidence of his faithfulness, and yet how many humans want a DNA test before they will call him, Abba, Father.
Thankless little brats, aren’t they?
Let’s not be thankless little brats. Let’s look at the arrow in the middle of this target. Let’s have faith, more than we had when we read the last page. Let’s recognize that Jesus came at the right time, which is one of the many marks that he’s the right one. He is the Messiah with whom we can trust our very lives.
Right Design—Jesus Came Even for Gentile Sinners
So here we are, sitting and waiting in the nine-foot ravine. We’ve come up once to see God hit that first target right in the middle—Jesus, the Son of David and Abraham. We are in awe of the incarnation. Then we’ve come up again to see God hit that second target dead-on—Jesus came at the right time (fourteen/fourteen/fourteen). Our faith in his faithfulness and in his sovereign rule of this world and its history is elevated. Finally we hear the third arrow strike. We jump up and see that, sure enough, God is three for three.
The first target is the right line, the second is the right time, and the third is (oh yes, I’ve made it rhyme with line and time) the right design. It is not simply that Jesus came as a Jew from a lineage of kings and at the perfect time in history, but it is also the design of it all—why he came and for whom he came. That’s what we’ll explore last but not least. In fact, this last point likely is the least least. This is the 500-yard shot that strikes with such accuracy and force that it goes through the bull’s-eye and out the back of the target! It’s the shot we are to see, stand up, and applaud!
So, what’s the design? It is a strange design, but it’s a Scriptural one.
Matthew’s genealogy is unparalleled. While it appeals to a Jewish audience because it is a genealogy, it has at least three peculiarities that would have offended a pharisaical Jew who, for example, valued racial, moral, and patriarchal purity.
The first peculiarity is that Matthew includes five women: Tamar (v. 3), Rahab (v. 5), Ruth (v. 5), the wife of Uriah, whom we know to be Bathsheba (v. 6), and Mary (v. 16), the mother of our Lord. This mention of women here is as strange as having Mary Magdalene and the other Mary
as the first two official eyewitnesses of the resurrection, which Matthew records in 28:1–10. This is peculiar because a woman’s testimony was not valid in a court of law, and a woman’s name in a Jewish genealogy was of little legal significance. (Note the word father,
repeated thirty-nine times!) This is why in other Biblical genealogies, such as the first nine chapters of 1 Chronicles, very few women are mentioned, and the ones who are named are likely added to show the purity of the line or enhance its dignity.
⁹ But here in Matthew, the great Hebrew matriarchs are missing.¹⁰ Where is Sarah, Rebekah, or Leah?
Matthew records five women in this genealogy. This is peculiar. But it’s a peculiarity with a purpose. It’s part of the plan. It’s in the divine design. With the coming of Jesus, women do not gain new status within God’s covenant people. However, they do take on key roles in the drama of Jesus’ life, death, and resurrection. Matthew sees fit to note this at the beginning and end of his Gospel.
Now, if it’s not bad enough that there are so many women in this genealogy, it is even worse (to continue my sarcasm) that four out of five are not even Jewish. Besides Mary, who was likely herself from the kingly line of David,¹¹ Jesus’ genealogy is full of a bunch of Gentile women! Tamar and Rahab were Canaanites (a race of people with which the Israelites were forbidden to intermarry). Ruth was a Moabite. The Moabites trace their lineage back to incestuous Lot. Remember the story of Genesis 19? It’s a true but terrible story. Moreover, we’re told in Deuteronomy 23:3–5 that the Moabites were excluded from Israel’s assembly because they refused to give them food and drink after they left Egypt. So, for Naomi’s son to marry Ruth in the first place would have been as scandalous as a Swedish-American in the 1920s marrying an African-American. You want to marry a Moabite?
We can almost hear Naomi cringe. Then we have Bathsheba. She was the wife of Uriah before she was the wife of David. Uriah, we are told in 2 Samuel 11:3, was a Hittite. He was a Gentile. While Bathsheba was likely an Israelite, as she was the daughter of Eliam, the son of Ahithophel the Gilonite (2 Samuel 11:3; 23:34),¹² through marriage she legally become a Hittite.
So am I saying that King David’s great-grandmother was a Moabite and his wife, the mother of great King Solomon, a Hittite of sorts? I’m afraid so. The bloodline is impure. It’s as bad as Prince Charles marrying that woman of non-royal stock. Ah, but again, it’s all part of the plan, a plan that Paul explains most plainly in Galatians 3:27–29: "For as many of you as were baptized into Christ have put on Christ. There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither slave nor free, there is no male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus. And if you are Christ’s, then you are Abraham’s offspring, heirs according to promise." Even Canaanites, as we shall see in 15:21–28, can come into the kingdom; even Gentile dogs can eat the crumbs that fall from the King’s table.
The first peculiarity of this genealogy is the mention of five women. The second is that at least three are Gentiles. The third is that most of them were involved in (how shall I put this?) irregular sexual liaisons. Tamar dressed as a prostitute in order to get her father-in-law, Judah, to give her lawful offspring. This plan worked, for that’s how Perez and Zerah (the twins mentioned in v. 3) came into this world. Forget the soap opera tomorrow morning or Desperate Housewives reruns. Just give good old Genesis 38 a read. That’s Tamar. Then we have Rahab, who didn’t disguise herself as a prostitute but actually was a prostitute in Jericho, that wicked town where the walls came tumbling down. She became—as the books of Joshua (2), Hebrews (11) and James (2) point out—a woman of faith. However, the scandal of her past is what it is. Finally, we have Bathsheba, who was certainly taken advantage of by King David. But she was, in my estimation, not perfectly innocent. She was after all taking an indiscreet bath out in the open, in the king’s view, and she didn’t say no to his advances when the Law said that a woman should in such a situation. Either way, even if she was only 2 percent to blame, she was involved in an adulterous affair, one that cost the life of her first husband and her first son and one that certainly marred her reputation.
Yet even the sexual irregularities of these women are part of the design. For they prepare us for the most irregular sexual or non-sexual encounter of all time. They prepare us for the virgin conception and birth.¹³ For those who doubt that God would work through an unmarried, teenage girl to bring about the Messiah, Matthew is saying, Well, take a look at Grandma Tamar and Bathsheba. Look at the line. Notice the design!
If David and Solomon could come from where they came from, then the King of kings could come, as Isaiah said he would, from a virgin, this pure girl of marred reputation named Mary.
Now as I said, that’s one of the things that Matthew is up to. The other is this: Jesus comes from the right stock, but it is bad stock. As one commentator says, there is no pattern of righteousness in the lineage of Jesus.
¹⁴ Jesus comes from a bunch of sinners. I don’t just mean Tamar and Rahab. Look at the list of wicked kings here—e.g., Rehoboam, Abijah, and Ahaz. Ahaz!
Moreover, look at the so-called righteous
men of old—like Abraham (who lied) or Judah (whose idea it was to sell his brother Joseph into slavery and who was, after his own admission, worse than Tamar) or David (with his adultery and murder, two permanent marks on his background check) or Solomon (with his polygamy and idolatry) or even good Hezekiah (with his pride in being good). And you thought your family tree is a mess. It’s as if Matthew puts a criminal lineup before us.
But why? What’s the moral of this method? Why inform us that Jesus did not belong to the nice clean world of middle-class respectability, but rather he ‘belonged to a family of murderers, cheats, cowards, adulterers and liars’
?¹⁵ The point is almost too obvious to belabor.
¹⁶ Matthew wants to show us what Paul will teach us in 1 Timothy 1:15: The saying is trustworthy and deserving of full acceptance, that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners.
Jesus came not for the righteous but the unrighteous (cf. 9:13), for sinners—like Matthew the tax collector and Rahab the prostitute. He came for sinners like you and