Monday - 7th January
Topic: The King’s Credentials
Read: Matthew Chapter 3
Some 30 years passed between chapters 2 and 3 of Matthew,
during which Jesus lived in Nazareth and worked as a carpenter (Matt13:55; Mark
6:3). But the time came for Him to begin in His public ministry which would
culminate at the cross. Was he still qualified to be King? Had anything taken
place that would disqualify Him? In chapters two and three, Matthew assembled
the testimonies of five witnesses to the person of Jesus Christ, that He is the
Son of God and the King.
John the Baptist
(3: 1-15)
For over 400 years, the nation had not heard the voice of a
prophet. Then John appeared and a great revival took place. Consider four facts
about John.
His message (3:1-2,
7-10). John’s preaching centered on repentance and the kingdom of heaven. The
word repent means “to change one’s mind and act upon that change.” John was not
satisfied with regret or remorse; he wanted “fruits in keeping with
repentance”(v.8). There had to be evidence of a changed mind and a changed
life.
All kinds of people came to hear John preach and to watch
the great baptismal services he conducted. Many publicans and sinners came in
sincere humility (Matt 21:31-32), but the religious leaders refused to submit.
They thought that they were good enough to please God; yet John called them a
“generation of vipers.” Jesus used the same language when He dealt with this
self-righteous crowd (Matt 12:34, 23:33; John 8:44)
The Pharisees were the traditionalists of their day, while
Sadducees were more liberal ( see Acts 23;6-9). The wealthy Sadducees
controlled the “temple business” that Jesus cleaned out. These two groups
usually fought each other for control of the nation, but when it came to
opposing Jesus Christ, the Pharisees and Sadducees united forces.
John’s message was one of judgment. Israel had sinned and
needed to repent, and the religious leaders ought to lead the way. The ax was
lying at the root of the tree; and if the tree (Israel) did not bear good
fruit, it would be cut down. (See Luke 13:6-10). If the nation repented, the
way would be prepared for the coming of the Messiah.
His authority (3:3-4).
John fulfilled the prophecy given in Isaiah 40:3. In a spiritual sense, John
was “Elijah who was to come” for he came in the “spirit and power of Elijah”
(Luke 1:16-17). He even dressed as Elijah did and preached the same message of
judgment (2Kings 1:8). John was the last of the Old Testament prophets (Luke16:16)
and the greatest of them (Matt 11:7-15, see 17:9-13)
His baptism (3:5-6,
11-12) The Jews baptized Gentile converts, but John was baptizing Jews! His
baptism was authorized from heaven (Matt 21:23-27); it was not something John
devised or borrowed. It was a baptism of repentance, looking forward to the
Messiah’s coming (Acts 19:1-7). His baptism fulfilled two purposes: it prepared
the nations for Christ and it presented Christ to the nation (John 1:31)
His obedience (3:13-15).
Jesus was not baptized because He was a repentant sinner. Even John tried to
stop Jesus, but the Lord knew it was His Father’s will. Why was Jesus baptized?
First, His baptism gave approval to John’s ministry. Second, He identified
Himself with the publicans and sinners, the very people He came to save. But
mainly, His baptism pictured His future baptism on the cross (Matt. 5:20; Luke
12:50) when all the “waves and billows” of God’s judgment would go over Him
(Ps. 42:7; Jonah 2:3)
Thus, John the Baptist bore witness to Jesus Christ as the
Son of God, and also as the Lamb of God (John 1:29). Because of John’s witness,
many sinners trusted Jesus Christ (John 10:39-42)
Tuesday - 8th
January
Topic: The King’s Credentials
Read : Matthew Chapter 3 Again
The Holy Spirit
(3:16)
The coming of the Holy Spirit like a dove identified Jesus
to John (John1: 31-34), and also assured Jesus as He began His ministry that
the Spirit’s ministry would always be His (3:34). The dove is a beautiful
symbol of the Spirit of God in its purity and in His ministry of peace. The
first time we see a dove in Scriptures is in Genesis 8: 6-11. Noah sent out two
birds, a raven and a dove; but only the dove came back. The raven represented
the flesh; there was plenty of raven to eat outside the ark! But the dove would
not defile itself on the carcasses, so it came back to the ark. The second time
the dove was released, it returned with an olive leaf, a symbol of peace. The
third time, the dove did not return.
There may be another picture here. The name Jonah means
“dove,” and he, too, experienced a baptism! Jesus used Jonah as a type of
Himself in death , burial and resurrection ( Matt 12: 38-40). Jonah was sent to
the Gentiles, and Jesus would minister to the Gentiles.
The Father (3:17)
On three special occasions, the Father spoke from heaven: at
Christ’s baptism, at the transfiguration ( Matt 17:3) and as Christ approached
the cross (John 12:27-30). In the past, God spoke to His Son; today He is
speaking through His Son (Hebrews1:1-2)
The Father statement from heaven seems to echo of Psalm 2:7- “The Lord hath said unto Me, “
Thou art My Son; this day have I begotten Thee.’” Acts13:22 informs us that
this “begetting” refers to His resurrection from the dead, and not to His birth
at Bethlehem. This statement ties in perfectly with the Lord’s baptismal
experience of death, burial, and resurrection.
But the Father’s statement also relates Jesus Christ to the
“Suffering Servant” prophesied in Isaiah 40-53. In Matthew 12:18, Matthew
quoted from Isaiah 42: 1-3, where the Messiah-Servant is called “My beloved, in
whom My soul is well pleased.” The Servant described in Isaiah is humble,
rejected, made to suffer and die, but also see to come forth in victory. While
the nation of Israel is seen dimly in some of these “Servant Songs,” it is the
Messiah, Jesus Christ, who is revealed most clearly in them. Again, we see the
connection with Christ in death, burial and Resurrection.
Finally, the Father’s statement approved all that Jesus had
done up to that point. His “hidden years in Nazareth” were years of pleasing
the Father. Certainly, the Father’s commendation was great encouragement to the
Son as He started His ministry.
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Wednesday - 9th
January
Topic: The King’s Credentials
Read : Matthew Chapter 4
Satan (4: 1-11)
From the high and holy experience of blessing at the Jordan,
Jesus was led into the wilderness for testing. Jesus was not tempted so that
the Father could learn anything about His Son, for the Father had already given
Jesus His divine approval. Jesus was tempted so that every creature in heaven,
on earth or under the earth might know that Jesus Christ is the Conqueror. He
exposed Satan and his tactics, and He defeated Satan. Because of His victory,
we can have victory over the tempter.
Just as the first Adam met Satan, so the Last Adam met the
enemy (1 Cor. 15:45). Adam met Satan in a beautiful garden, but Jesus met him
in a terrible wilderness. Adam had everything he needed, but Jesus was hungry
after 40 days of fasting. Adam lost the battle and plunged humanity into sin
and death. But Jesus won the battle and went on to defeat Satan in more
battles, culminating in His final victory on the cross (John 12:31; Col. 2:15).
Our Lord’s experience of temptation prepared Him to be a
sympathetic High Priest (Heb. 2:16-18, 4:15-16). It is important to note that
Jesus faced the enemy as man, not as the Son of God. His first word was, “Man
shall not live by bread alone…” We must not think that Jesus used His divine
powers to overcome the enemy, because that is just what the enemy wanted Him to
do! Jesus used the spiritual resources that are available to us today: the
power of the Holy Spirit of God (Matt. 4:1), and the power of the Word of God
(“It is written…”). Jesus had nothing in His nature that would give Satan a
foothold (John 14:30), but His temptations were real just the same. Temptation
involves the will, and Jesus came to do the Father’s will (Heb. 10:1-9).
The first temptation (4:1-4) involved the love of God and
the will of God. “Since You are God’s beloved Son, why doesn’t Your Father feed
You? Why does He put You into this terrible wilderness?” This temptation
sounded like Satan’s words to Eve in Genesis 3! It is a subtle suggestion that
our Father does not love us.
But there was another suggestion: “Use Your divine powers to
meet Your own needs.” When we put our own needs ahead of our spiritual needs,
we sin. When we allow circumstances to dictate our actions, instead of
following God’s will, we sin. Jesus could have turned the stones into bread,
but he would have been exercising His powers independently of the Father; and
He came to obey the Father (John 5:30, 6:38).
The Lord quoted Deuteronomy 8:3 to defeat Satan. Feeding on
and obeying God’s Word is more important than consuming physical food. In fact,
it is our food (John 4:32-34).
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Thursday - 10th
January
Topic: The King’s Credentials
Read : Matthew 4: 1-11
Note carefully our Lord’s reply: “It is written AGAIN…”
(Matt. 4:7, emphasis mine). We must never divorce one part of Scripture from
another, but we must always “compare spiritual things with spiritual” (1 Cor.
2:13). We can prove almost anything by the Bible if we isolate texts from the
contexts and turn them into pretexts. Satan had cleverly omitted the phrase “in
all Thy ways” when he quoted from Psalm 91. When the child of God is in the
will of God, the Father will protect him. He watches over those who are “in His
ways.”
Jesus replied with Deuteronomy 6:16 : “Thou shall not tempt
the Lord thy God.” We tempt God when we put ourselves in circumstances that
force Him to work miracles on our behalf. The diabetic who refuses to take
insulin and argues, “Jesus will take care of me” may be tempting the Lord. We
tempt God when we try to force Him to contradict His own Word. It is important
for us as believers to read all Scripture, and study all God has to say, for
all of it is profitable for daily life (2 Tim. 3:16-17).
The third temptation (4:8-11) offered Jesus a shortcut to
His kingdom. Jesus knew that He would suffer and die before He entered into His
glory (Luke 24:26; 1 Peter 1:11; 5:1). If He bowed down and worshipped Satan
just once (this is the force of the Greek verb), He could enjoy all the glory
without enduring the suffering. Satan had always wanted worship, because Satan
has always wanted to be God (Isa. 14:12-14). Worshipping the creature instead
of the Creator is the lie that rules our world today (Rom. 1:24-25).
There are no shortcuts to the will of God. If we want to
share in the glory, we must also share in the suffering (1 Peter 5:10). As the
prince of this world, Satan could offer these kingdoms to Christ (John 12:31,
14:30). But Jesus did not need Satan’s offer. The Father had already promised
Jesus the kingdom! “Ask of Me, and I shall give Thee the heathen [nations] for
Thine inheritance…” (Ps. 2:8). You find the same promise in Psalm 22:22-31, and
this is the psalm of the cross.
Our Lord replied with Deuteronomy 6:13: “Thou shalt worship
the Lord thy God, and Him only thou shalt serve.” Satan had said nothing about
service, but Jesus knew that whatever we worship, we will serve. Worship and
service must go together.
Satan slunk away, a defeated foe; but he did not cease to
tempt Jesus. We could translate Luke 4:13, “And when the devil had ended every
possible kind of temptation, he stood of from Him until a suitable season.”
Through Peter, Satan again tempted Jesus to abandon the cross (Matt. 16:21-23);
and through the crowd that had been fed, Satan tempted Jesus to an “easy
kingdom” (John 6:15). One victory never guarantees freedom from further
temptation. If anything, each victory we experience only makes Satan try
harder.
Notice that Luke’s account reverses the order of the second
and third temptations as recorded in Matthew. The word “then” in Matthew 4:5
seems to indicate sequence. Luke only uses the simple conjunction “and” and
does not say he is following a sequence. Our Lord’s command at the end of the
third temptation (“Get thee hence, Satan!”) is proof that Matthew followed the
historical order. There is no contradiction since Luke did not claim to follow
the actual sequence.
After Jesus Christ had defeated Satan, He was ready to begin
His ministry. No man has the right to call others to obey who has not obeyed
himself. Our Lord proved Himself to be the perfect King whose sovereignty is
worthy of our respect and obedience. But true to His purpose, Matthew had one
more witness to call to prove the Kingship of Jesus Christ.
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Friday - 11th
January
Topic: The King’s Credentials
Read : Matthew 4: 12-23
Christ’s Ministry of
Power (4:12-15)
Matthew has already shown us that every detail of our Lord’s
life was controlled by the Word of God. Remember that between the end of His
temptation and the statement in Matthew 4:12 comes the ministry described in John
1:19 through John 3:36. We must not think that John the Baptist was thrown into
prison immediately after our Lord’s temptation. Matthew wrote his book
topically rather than chronologically. Consult a good harmony of the Gospels to
study the sequence of events.
In verse 16, Matthew quoted Isaiah (see Isa. 9:1-2). The
prophet wrote about people who “walked” in darkness, but by the time Matthew
quoted the passage, the situation was so discouraging that the people were
sitting in darkness! Jesus Christ brought the Light to them. He made His
headquarters in Capernaum in “Galilee of the Gentiles,” another reference to
the universal outreach of the Gospel’s message. In Galilee there was a mixed
population that was somewhat despised by the racially “pure” citizens of Judea.
How did Jesus bring this Light to Galilee? We are told in
verse 23: through His teaching, preaching and healing. This emphasis is found
often in the Gospel of Matthew; see 9:35, 11:4-5, 12:15, 14:34-36, 15:30, 19:2.
Matthew was quite clear that He healed “all manner of sickness and all manner
of disease” (Matt. 4:23). There was no case too difficult for Him!
The result of these great miracles was a tremendous fame for
Jesus, and a great following of people from many areas. “Syria” refers to an
area in northern Galilee. “Decapolis” means “10 cities” and was a district made
up of 10 cities originally built by followers of Alexander the Great. The
Decapolis was in the northeastern part of Galilee. “Beyond Jordan” means Perea,
the area east of the Jordan. News travelled fast, and those who had afflicted
friends or family members brought them to Jesus for healing.
Matthew listed some of the “cases” in verse 24. “Diseases
and torments” could cover almost any disease. Of course, our Lord often delivered
people from demons. The term “lunatic” did not refer to people who were insane.
Rather, it was used to describe those afflicted with epilepsy (see Matt.
17:15). “Palsy” meant “paralytic.”
Miracles of healing were but a part of Christ’s ministry
throughout Galilee; for He also taught and preached the Word. The “light” that
Isaiah promised was the Light of the Word of God, as well as the Light of His
perfect life and compassionate ministry. The word “preach” in verses 17 and 23
means “to announce as a herald.” Jesus proclaimed with authority the Good News
that the kingdom of heaven was at hand.
The phrase kingdom of heaven is found 32 times in Matthew’s
Gospel. The phrase kingdom of God is found only 5 times (Matt. 6:33; 12:28;
19:24; 21:31, 43). Out of reverence for the holy name of the Lord, the Jews
would not mention “God” but would substitute the word “heaven.” The Prodigal
Son confessed that he had sinned “against heaven,” meaning, of course, against
God. In many places where Matthew uses kingdom of heaven, the parallel passages
in Mark and Luke use kingdom of God.
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Saturday - 12th
January
Topic: The King’s Credentials
Read : Matthew 4: 12-23 again
In the New Testament, the word kingdom means “rule, reign,
authority” rather than a place or a specific realm. The phrase “kingdom of
heaven” refers to the rule of God. The Jewish leaders wanted a political leader
who would deliver them from Rome; but Jesus came to bring spiritual rule to the
hearts of the people. This does not deny the reality of a future kingdom as we
have already noted.
But Jesus not only proclaimed the Good News and taught the
people God’s truth, He also called to Himself a few disciples whom He could
train for the work of the kingdom. In Matthew 4:17-22 we read of the call of
Peter, Andrew, James and John, men who had already met Jesus and trusted Him
(John 1:29-42). They had gone back to their fishing business, but He came and
called them to give up their business and follow Him. The details of this call
may be found in Mark 1:16-20 and Luke 5:1-11.
The term “fishers of men” was not new. For centuries, Greek
and Roman philosophers had used it to describe the work of the man who “seeks”
to catch others by teaching and persuasion. “Fishing of men” is but one of many
pictures of evangelism in the Bible, and we must not limit ourselves to it.
Jesus also talked about the shepherd seeking the lost sheep (Luke 15:1-7), and
the workers in the harvest-field (John 4:34-38). Since these four men were
involved in the fishing business, it was logical for Jesus to use this
approach.
Jesus had four and possible seven men in the band of
disciples who were professional fishermen (see John 21:1-3). Why would Jesus
call so many fishermen to His side? For one thing, fishermen were busy people;
usually professional fishermen did not sit around doing nothing. They either
sorted their catch, prepared for a catch, or mended their equipment. The Lord
needs busy people who are not afraid to work.
Fishermen have to be courageous and patient people. It certainly takes patience and courage to win others
to Christ. Fishermen must have skill; they must learn from others where to find
the fish and how to catch them. Soul-winning demands skill, too. These men must
work together, and the work of the Lord demands cooperation. But most of all,
fishing demands faith: Fishermen cannot see the fish and are not sure their
nets will enclose them. Soul-winning requires faith and alertness, too, or we
will fail.
Matthew has presented to us the person of the King. Every
witness affirms, “This is the Son of God, this is the King!”
1 comment:
Prophecy Servant of God
` ` ` ` ` ` ` `
word Atmak not necessarily means ‘whom I uphold’ but is infact a name
the writing of Atmak is אתמך
the writing of Ahmad is אחמד
Isaiah 42:1
God says
“Behold, 'My Servant' (pronounced as Abd-ee), ‘whom I uphold’ (pronounced as Atmak);
God mentioning about the coming of His servant
Behold My Servant Ahmad (Isaiah 42:1) - so who is this Ahmad as in God'servant?
He is none other than
Abd-Allah Ahmad (Servant of God, Ahmad) - Prophet Muhammad s.a.w
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