Straight to the Heart of Matthew: 60 bite-sized insights
By Phil Moore
4.5/5
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About this ebook
Jesus of Nazareth sparked a massive revolution. A lot of people miss that fact. They are so used to the long-haired, blue-eyed, white-robed storybook Jesus that they imagine he was about as tame and domesticated as many of his churches today. But he wasn't. Jesus was a radical, dangerous revolutionary who made big waves and powerful enemies. He was not killed for preaching pithy parables, but because he claimed to be King.
God inspired the Bible for a reason. He wants you to read it and let it change your life. If you are willing to take this challenge seriously, then you will love Phil Moore's devotional commentaries.
Their bite-sized chapters are punchy and relevant, yet crammed with fascinating scholarship too. Welcome to a new way of reading the Bible with fresh eyes. Welcome to the Straight to the Heart series.
Phil Moore
Phil Moore leads a thriving multivenue church in London, UK. He also serves as a translocal Bible Teacher within the Newfrontiers family of churches. After graduating from Cambridge University in History in 1995, Phil spent time on the mission field and then time in the business world. After four years of working twice through the Bible in the original languages, he has now delivered an accessible series of devotional commentaries that convey timeless truths in a fresh and contemporary manner. More details at www.philmoorebooks.com
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Straight to the Heart of Matthew - Phil Moore
In taking us straight to the heart of the text, Phil Moore has served us magnificently. We so need to get into the Scriptures and let the Scriptures get into us. The fact that Phil writes so relevantly and with such submission to Biblical revelation means that we are genuinely helped to be shaped by the Bible’s teaching.
– Terry Virgo
Phil makes the deep truths of Scripture alive and accessible. If you want to grow in your understanding of each book of the Bible, then buy these books and let them change your life!
– PJ Smyth – GodFirst Church, Johannesburg, South Africa
Most commentaries are dull. These are alive. Most commentaries are for scholars. These are for you!
– Canon Michael Green
These notes are amazingly good. Lots of content and depth of research, yet packed in a Big Breakfast that leaves the reader well fed and full. Bible notes often say too little, yet larger commentaries can be dull - missing the wood for the trees. Phil’s insights are striking, original, and fresh, going straight to the heart of the text and the reader! Substantial yet succinct, they bristle with amazing insights and life applications, compelling us to read more. Bible reading will become enriched and informed with such a scintillating guide. Teachers and preachers will find nuggets of pure gold here!
– Greg Haslam – Westminster Chapel, London, UK
The Bible is living and dangerous. The ones who teach it best are those who bear that in mind – and let the author do the talking. Phil has written these studies with a sharp mind and a combination of creative application and reverence.
– Joel Virgo – Leader of Newday Youth Festival
Phil Moore’s new commentaries are outstanding: biblical and passionate, clear and well-illustrated, simple and profound. God’s Word comes to life as you read them, and the wonder of God shines through every page.
– Andrew Wilson – Author of Incomparable and GodStories
Want to understand the Bible better? Don’t have the time or energy to read complicated commentaries? The book you have in your hand could be the answer. Allow Phil Moore to explain and then apply God’s message to your life. Think of this book as the Bible’s message distilled for everyone.
– Adrian Warnock – Christian blogger
Phil Moore presents Scripture in a dynamic, accessible and relevant way. The bite-size chunks – set in context and grounded in contemporary life – really make the make the Word become flesh and dwell among us.
– Dr David Landrum – The Bible Society
Through a relevant, very readable, up to date storying approach, Phil Moore sets the big picture, relates God’s Word to today and gives us fresh insights to increase our vision, deepen our worship, know our identity and fire our imagination. Highly recommended!
– Geoff Knott – former CEO of Wycliffe Bible Translators UK
What an exciting project Phil has embarked upon! These accessible and insightful books will ignite the hearts of believers, inspire the minds of preachers and help shape a new generation of men and women who are seeking to learn from God’s Word.
– David Stroud – Newfrontiers and ChristChurch London
For more information about the Straight to the Heart series, please go to www.philmoorebooks.com.
Copyright © 2010 by Phil Moore.
The right of Phil Moore to be identified as author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
First published in the UK in 2010 by Monarch Books
(a publishing imprint of Lion Hudson plc)
Wilkinson House, Jordan Hill Road, Oxford OX2 8DR, England
Tel: +44 (0)1865 302750 Fax: +44 (0)1865 302757
Email: [email protected]
www.lionhudson.com
First electronic edition 2011.
ISBN 978 1 85424 988 3 (print)
ISBN 978 0 85721 143 9 (epub)
ISBN 978 0 85721 142 2 (Kindle)
ISBN 978 0 85721 144 6 (PDF)
Distributed by:
UK: Marston Book Services, PO Box 269, Abingdon, Oxon, OX14 4YN
USA: Kregel Publications, PO Box 2607, Grand Rapids, Michigan 49501
Unless otherwise stated, Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New International Version, copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984 by the International Bible Society. Used by permission of Zondervan and Hodder & Stoughton Limited. All rights reserved. The NIV
and New International Version
trademarks are registered in the United States Patent and Trademark Office by International Bible Society. Use of either trademark requires the permission of International Bible Society. UK trademark number 1448790.
British Library Cataloguing Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
Cover image: Corbis.
This book is for my children –
Isaac, Noah, and Esther.
My greatest prayer for your young lives
is that, just like Matthew, you may know
and love Jesus more and more.
CONTENTS
Cover
Praise
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
About the Straight to the Heart Series
Introduction: The Revolution Has Begun
PROLOGUE: THE COMING OF THE KINGDOM
One of Us (1:1–17)
Holy Joe (1:18–25)
Unreasonable Response (2:1–23)
Israel’s Messiah (2:15)
Unconditional Surrender (3:1–12)
Three-Dimensional Jesus (3:11–12)
Unhurried Faith (3:13–17)
Predictable Foe (4:1–11)
Follow Me (4:17–25)
ACT ONE: KINGDOM LIFESTYLE
Kingdom Character (5:1–16)
Kingdom Obedience (5:17–48)
Kingdom Intimacy (6:1–18)
Kingdom Priorities (6:19–34)
Kingdom Vigilance (7:1–5)
Kingdom Decision (7:13–27)
Slumdog Millionaires (8:1 – 9:38)
Deliverance from Rome (8:5–13)
Authority (8:16–17)
Son of Man (9:1–8)
Friend of Sinners (9:10–13)
Faith (9:18–31)
ACT TWO: KINGDOM MISSION
Little Christs (10:1–42)
Gehenna (10:28)
Tyre, Sidon and Sodom (11:20–24)
My Yoke is Easy (11:25–30)
Sabbath (12:1–14)
The Sign of Jonah (12:38–42)
ACT THREE: KINGDOM MESSAGE
Kingdom Secrets (13:1–52)
Why Does God Allow Suffering? (13:24–30, 36–43)
Mincemeat (14:13–36)
The God Who Offends (15:1–20)
When God Is Silent (15:21–28)
Yeast (16:1–20)
The Master-Questioner (16:13–16)
Jesus is Not a Carpenter (16:13 – 17:13)
Why Doesn’t God Heal? (17:14–21)
ACT FOUR: KINGDOM COMMUNITY
Warning-Beacons (18:1–35)
Kingdom Forgiveness (18:21–35)
Back to the Beginning (19:1–12)
Possible with God (19:13–30)
Ambition (20:20–28)
Ransom (20:28)
The King Enters the Capital (21:1–17)
Blessing and Cursing (21:18–22)
Israel’s Ultimatum (21:23 – 22:46)
The Greatest Commandment (22:34–40)
ACT FIVE: KINGDOM JUDGMENT
Hypocrisy (23:1–39)
The King Comes Twice (24:1–51)
Parables of Judgment (25:1–46)
Worship Leader (26:1–16)
Bread and Wine (26:17–30)
The Only Way (26:36–54)
The Revolution on Trial (26:57–68; 27:11–31)
Remorse and Repentance (26:69 – 27:10)
Perspective (27:46)
The Curtain (27:51)
EPILOGUE: THE PROCLAMATION OF THE KINGDOM
Alive (28:1–15)
The Great Commission (28:16–20)
Conclusion: The Revolution Has Begun
About the Straight to the Heart Series
On his eightieth birthday, Sir Winston Churchill dismissed the compliment that he was the lion
who had defeated Nazi Germany in World War Two. He told the Houses of Parliament that It was a nation and race dwelling all around the globe that had the lion’s heart. I had the luck to be called upon to give the roar.
I hope that God speaks to you very powerfully through the roar
of the books in the Straight to the Heart series. I hope they help you to understand the books of the Bible and the message that the Holy Spirit inspired their authors to write. I hope that they help you to hear God’s voice challenging you, and that they provide you with a springboard for further journeys into each book of Scripture for yourself.
But when you hear my roar
, I want you to know that it comes from the heart of a much bigger lion
than me. I have been shaped by a whole host of great Christian thinkers and preachers from around the world, and I want to give due credit to at least some of them here:
Terry Virgo, David Stroud, John Hosier, Adrian Holloway, Greg Haslam, Lex Loizides, and all those who lead the Newfrontiers family of churches; friends and encouragers, such as Stef Liston, Joel Virgo, Stuart Gibbs, Scott Taylor, Nick Sharp, Nick Derbridge, Phil Whittall, and Kevin and Sarah Aires; Tony Collins, Jenny Ward and Simon Cox at Monarch books; Malcolm Kayes and all the elders of The Coign Church, Woking; my fellow elders and church members here at Queens Road Church, Wimbledon; my great friend Andrew Wilson – without your friendship, encouragement and example, this series would never have happened.
I would like to thank my parents, my brother Jonathan, and my in-laws, Clive and Sue Jackson. Dad – your example birthed in my heart the passion that brought this series into being. I didn’t listen to all you said when I was a child, but I couldn’t ignore the way you got up at five o’clock every morning to pray, read the Bible and worship, because of your radical love for God and for his Word. I’d like to thank my children – Isaac, Noah, and Esther – for keeping me sane when publishing deadlines were looming. But most of all, I’m grateful to my incredible wife, Ruth – my friend, encourager, corrector, and helper.
You all have the lion’s heart, and you have all developed the lion’s heart in me. I count it an enormous privilege to be the one who was chosen to sound the lion’s roar.
So welcome to the Straight to the Heart series. My prayer is that you will let this roar grip your own heart too – for the glory of the great Lion of the Tribe of Judah, the Lord Jesus Christ!
Introduction: The Revolution Has Begun
Above his head they placed the written charge against him: This is Jesus, the King of the Jews.
(Matthew 27:37)
Jesus of Nazareth sparked a massive revolution. A lot of people miss that fact. They are so used to the long-haired, blue-eyed, white-robed storybook Jesus that they imagine he was about as tame and domesticated as many of his churches today. But he wasn’t. Jesus was a radical, dangerous revolutionary who made big waves and powerful enemies. He was not killed for preaching pithy parables, but because he claimed to be King.
Jesus chose an incendiary word to announce his Revolution. The word kingdom has lost its edge in our world of democratic republics and constitutional monarchies, but in the first-century Roman Empire it was explosive. That was a world where kings could execute their enemies without a trial and slaughter hundreds of babies on a whim.¹ It was a world where kings brooked no rival and where sedition was quickly silenced. It was a world where few messages were more dangerous than the claim that the kingdom of heaven is near
.² If Jesus was King, it meant that Caesar was not. This was inflammatory talk of the highest order.
After three years, Jesus was arrested and put on trial for his life. He stood before the Jewish Sanhedrin, before Herod and before Governor Pilate, who was the Roman emperor’s man in Palestine. He was accused of treason because he claimed to be King, and his enemies insisted that anyone who claims to be a king opposes Caesar
.³ He was tortured and crucified under the charge that he was the King of the Jews
,⁴ and when he died his tomb was guarded by a group of Roman soldiers. Scoreline: the Roman emperor one, Jesus of Nazareth nil. The King of the Jews was dead and the Revolution was over.
Well, not exactly. In fact, not at all. Three days later the corpse disappeared and rumours began to spread that he had been raised back to life. What was more, his followers began to preach that his death had not only failed to prevent the revolution, it had somehow always been part of the plan through which he would bring it to pass. Within a generation, the Jewish state was dead but their King had spread his rule across the Roman Empire. Within three centuries, even the Roman emperor himself worshipped at Jesus’ feet and proclaimed him King of kings. Now, 2,000 years later, he is still by far the most loved, most worshipped, most followed and most obeyed person in the world. Google his name and you will find 170 million websites to visit. Type his name into Amazon.com and you can choose from 405,000 books about him. Search in any Western town or village and you will find a church that bears his name. The end of the Revolution? No, just the beginning.
Matthew was one of Jesus’ original twelve followers. He had once been an eager employee of the Roman Empire, but when he heard Jesus’ message about the Kingdom of God he quickly deserted Emperor Tiberius to follow King Jesus.⁵ Matthew invested his life in Jesus’ Revolution, and he wants us to do the same. That is why he wrote his gospel.
Matthew wrote the fullest and most systematic account of the life, death and resurrection of Jesus. He groups his material by theme rather than by strict chronology, because he wants us to respond to five central acts in the drama of King Jesus. He uses the Greek word basileia, or kingdom, fifty-six times in his twenty-eight chapters, stressing the revolutionary call of Jesus the King and of his Kingdom. He divides each of his five acts into Jesus’ words and Jesus’ deeds, so that we will not mistake Jesus for a mere lecturer in religious philosophy, but grasp that he is the-King-on-a-Mission and that he wants to enlist us as his willing followers. Matthew’s structure is:
Chapters 1–4
Prologue: The Coming of the Kingdom
Chapters 5–9
Act One: Kingdom Lifestyle (words in chapters 5–7, deeds in chapters 8–9)
Chapters 10–12
Act Two: Kingdom Mission (words in chapter 10, deeds in chapters 11–12)
Chapters 13–17
Act Three: Kingdom Message (words in chapter 13, deeds in chapters 14–17)
Chapters 18–22
Act Four: Kingdom Community (words in chapter 18, deeds in chapters 19–22)
Chapters 23–27
Act Five: Kingdom Judgment (words in chapters 23–25, deeds in chapters 26–27)
Chapter 28
Epilogue: The Proclamation of the Kingdom
Matthew’s gospel is a revolutionary pamphlet, which shook the ancient world and still shakes the world today. A few years ago, I took a sleeper train across western China as part of a backpacking holiday and fell into conversation with an old man and his son, who spoke good English. When I felt the time was right, I reached into my bag and offered them a Chinese Bible, which I had smuggled into the country. The old man caught sight of it and held it in his hands like a prized jewel. Where did you get this book?
he demanded, before telling me his story. His father had been an itinerant evangelist during the great upheavals of the 1960s. One day, the communists had discovered that he was preaching the Gospel. They confiscated his Bibles, took him to a prison camp, and ordered him to recant his faith. The old man – still a bewildered young boy when the soldiers came – told me that he had never seen his father again. He and his mother had been blacklisted by the local party officials, and he had grown up in gruelling poverty because his father proclaimed that Jesus was King and therefore Mao Zedong wasn’t. I shall never forget the look on that old Chinese man’s face as he was reunited with a Bible after forty years apart. His face reminds me that Jesus of Nazareth is a dangerous revolutionary who demands that we give up our whole lives to follow him, and no one else.
I have written this book to take you on a tour of Matthew’s gospel and to bring you face to face with Jesus as Matthew knew him. It doesn’t aim to cover every verse, but I pray that its sixty short chapters will draw you deeper into God’s Kingdom and the radical message of King Jesus.
Get ready for an adventure with Jesus Christ. The Revolution has begun.
Prologue:
The Coming of the Kingdom
One of Us (1:1–17)
A record of the genealogy of Jesus Christ the son of David, the son of Abraham.
(Matthew 1:1)
Celebrities on the TV series Who Do You Think You Are? receive expert help in tracing their family tree.¹ A wide range of people have appeared on the show, but they all have one thing in common: they all want to learn that their ancestors were good, worthy and noble. Jeremy Clarkson’s face lights up when he discovers that his ancestor was the inventor of the Kilner jar. Jerry Springer says a silent prayer as he visits the place where his Jewish grandmother was gassed by the Nazis. Patsy Kensit weeps when she discovers that her granddad was a criminal who barely knew her father. People trace their family tree because they hope to find great ancestors and a fine lineage.
Matthew starts his gospel with Jesus’ family tree, and it’s not pretty. More than that, Matthew seems to go out of his way to demonstrate that it’s not pretty. He is descended from Judah and his daughter-in-law Tamar, who dressed up as a prostitute to trick her backslidden father-in-law into having sex with her.² He is the descendant of Rahab, the prostitute of Jericho, who was saved when her city was destroyed because she hid two spies on the roof of her brothel and lied to protect their lives.³ He is descended from Ruth, the widowed migrant-worker from the Gentile nation of Moab, whose people were so corrupt that they were excluded from the presence of God.⁴ He is the descendant of Bathsheba, the mother of Solomon, who committed adultery with David and became his queen even while her murdered husband’s grave was still fresh. Matthew emphasizes this sin by referring to her as Uriah’s wife
,⁵ and then adds to his list Rehoboam, Jehoram, Ahaz and Manasseh, the wickedest kings of Judah. Finally, he tells us that Jesus was the son of the Virgin Mary, conceived so miraculously that even her fiancé thought that she was guilty of illicit sex before marriage.⁶ When the actress Patsy Kensit discovered her own family tree, she told the BBC that It hit me so hard, I stopped washing my hair and wearing make-up.
She would not have coped with a sordid family tree like Jesus.
So what is Matthew’s point here? He wants us to grasp that Jesus is the Son of God,⁷ the promised Messiah who ushers in the Kingdom of God,⁸ so what possible benefit can he derive from starting with this terrible ancestry? Actually, he does so in order to make a very important point, and unless we grasp what he is saying we will misunderstand the very nature of the kingdom of God
Every film-maker and novelist knows that the opening scene is the crucial moment in which they either win or lose their audience’s attention. Matthew knew that. God knows that. And yet God inspired Matthew to begin his gospel, and the New Testament itself, with a genealogy that reads like a Who’s Who? of the villains of ancient Israel. He knew that it would capture the attention of Matthew’s original Jewish readership, but he also wants to use them to teach us two important principles that lie at the heart of his Kingdom Revolution.
The first thing he wants us to grasp is that his Kingdom is about God coming down to save humankind. If that sounds obvious, remember that religion is not about this at all. Religion is always about humankind stepping up to reach God. Matthew reminds us in verse 23 that the Gospel of Jesus Christ is very different from religion. Isaiah prophesied that ‘The virgin will be with child and will give birth to a son, and they will call him Immanuel’ – which means ‘God with us’
, and Matthew makes it clear that Jesus is God-With-Us, God really and truly with us. He did not come down reservedly, willing to become a man in a palace, or a Jewish nobleman with impeccable family credentials. He exchanged the highest glories of heaven for the lowest depths of humanity. He humbled himself all the way, to become God-With-Us and to pave a way for Us-With-God.
Jesus’ abject humanity is not incidental to the Gospel; it is essential to the Gospel. Because he became fully human (while remaining fully God), he was able to save the human race by undoing through his righteous life all that Adam lost through his sin.⁹ Hebrews 2:17 tells us that Jesus "had to be made like his brothers in every way" in order to deal with sin, and Paul tells us that we will only be raised from the dead and live forever with God because Jesus has been bodily raised as our human forerunner.¹⁰ The fact that God has stooped down to become the man Jesus is one of the reasons why he is not simply one way to God but the only way to God. For there is one God and one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus.
¹¹
The second thing that God wants us to grasp is that his Kingdom is about God’s grace to people who deserve nothing but his anger and judgment. Jesus is the Seed of Abraham, the moon-worshipping Mesopotamian whom God chose to be his prophet and the ancestor of the Saviour of the World.¹² Jesus is the Son of David, the shepherd-boy God chose and anointed to found a dynasty of kings – a man who sinned but who knew how to repent.¹³ Jesus is the descendant of Zerubbabel, the man who was next in line for David’s throne but whose claim was now so defunct that his heir Joseph was working as a manual labourer in the building trade.¹⁴ Matthew wants us to grasp that Jesus came to a human race steeped in sin, so that he could outweigh our sin with even more of God’s grace.
So Matthew’s opening words are not a dull series of names to endure, like a long list of credits before the real action begins. They are a clue, right from the outset, that God’s Kingdom is different, and far better than, the one people were expecting. He was not born into a palace to rub shoulders with the rich and mighty, but into a dirty stable to rub shoulders with sinners, Gentiles, outcasts and rejects – anyone who is humble enough to cry out for a Saviour and believe that they have found him in the carpenter’s boy from Galilee.
He is God-With-Us, the humble Saviour who dived deep into the human problem as the divine infiltrator, and who worked God’s solution from the inside out.
Holy Joe (1:18–25)
Because Joseph her husband was a righteous man and did not want to expose her to public disgrace, he had in mind to divorce her quietly.
(Matthew 1:19)
In June 2009, the American financier Bernard Madoff was sentenced to 150 years in prison. For almost two decades, his Madoff Securities had offered a mouth-watering 10 per cent return on investments, but he had been uncovered as a fraudster. Even though his company looked like one of the soundest financial investments in the world, he was in fact running a Ponzi
scheme and had swindled investors of over $65 billion.¹ One French investment manager committed suicide when he realized that he had lost $1.4 billion in the scheme.
God had something very precious to invest, and he was very careful where he put it. He had one precious, only-begotten Son, Jesus, and he was about to entrust him to a couple of parents on Planet Earth. Jesus told us that this was like God selling all he had
to buy treasure buried in a field or to buy a pearl of great price.² It must have been even tougher for God the Father to entrust his only Son to a pair of humans than it was for Moses’ mother to entrust her baby to the River Nile. Therefore if we want to discover what God prizes highly in his