Chapter 11
— the ministry of
the King continued.
Verses 1-15, the
herald of the King. This chapter is actually a continuation of the ninth
chapter. The tenth chapter was a parenthesis to demonstrate the principle that
Jesus Christ did not do all of the work Himself but He sent out His disciples.
It was their briefing, not complete instructions.
Verse 1 — the word
“commanding” here means to brief, to give the details before the assault; “he
departed thence to teach and to preach in their cities.” He is going to do two
things and the big question is, are they different or are they the same? Grammatically
they are really the same — “teach, even preach.” There are some verses which
would seem to separate the two and always one of the big problems is what the
difference is between teaching and preaching. Most people think of teaching as
some boring, academic dissertation, whereas they think of preaching as shouting
and entertaining and jumping up and down, etc. Actually, they are two parts of
the same thing. Preaching is just as much teaching as teaching is. The
difference: teaching always emphasises the content and preaching emphasises the
communication. They are two aspects of the same thing. Both of these are
present active infinitives to indicate our Lord’s purpose on earth up to the
cross. His purpose was to communicate exact information whereby people could be
saved, whereby believers could grow up.
Verse 2 — When He
begins His ministry again John at this time is held in a fortification by the
Dead Sea. Being in prison he has to send a delegation to make a reconnaissance
with regard to Jesus Christ. “ … when he had heard in the prison the works of Christ.”
John was in about the most isolated place that it was possible to be, and the
point is that people in the most isolated areas were getting information with
regard to the work and the ministry of the Lord Jesus Christ.
Verse 3 — John sent a
delegation of two to Jesus. “And said unto him, Art thou he that should come.”
“He that should come” is a technical term. In the Greek it is a participle but
it is a very technical participle which refers to the Messiah. This technical
participle is also used in Mark 11:9; Luke 13:35; 19:38; Hebrews 10:37, and in
each case it is a technical participle and it is asking a question: Are you the
Messiah? — “or do we look for another?” another who is not you, another of a
different kind.
Verse 4 — to reply to
the inquiry leads to a dissertation on John the Baptist from which we learn
certain principles about us as believers. This dissertation first of all
describes a believer in a previous dispensation but by application the things
we learn from John are applicable to us right now.
“Jesus answered and
said unto them, Go and show.” “Show” is an aorist active imperative; “John
again those things which ye do hear and see.” In other words they were so
observe and report back to John.
Verse 5 — He describes
some of the things they are going to see and have seen. This is a quotation
from Isaiah 35:6 and 61:1. These are the things that they are to go back and
announce to John. The reason that the delegation was to announce these things was
simply because the things that Jesus has accomplished in chapters eight and
nine of Matthew were the signs that He was the Messiah. And Jesus performed
these signs not to alleviate suffering, not to help human beings as such, but
to demonstrate who and what He was so that all men everywhere might receive Him
as saviour. This is a very important principle. We must understand that
miracles were not designed to alleviate suffering, they were designed with one
thing in mind: to focus the attention of the people of that day upon the person
of Christ and on His work which was about to take place so that they might have
eternal life. Alleviation of suffering is absolutely nothing compared to having
eternal life. This is an important perspective that very few people seem to
have.
“The blind receive
their sight.” The word “receive” is in the present tense to indicate not just
one blind person but on numerous occasions blind people are receiving their
sight. The same thing is true of all of these words, they are all in the
present tense for that reason: to show that these things are happening
periodically.
“and the poor have the
gospel preached to them” — not under a special program to remove their poverty,
as religion emphasises. The poor get what they need the most, the gospel, not
money, not socialism, etc. There isn’t any war on the part of mankind that is
going to cure poverty. The one thing by which the poor man can profit is the
gospel. No poor person profits by getting money. This doesn’t mean that you
don’t help people in need, not at all. But when you give money to the poor it
isn’t going to change their status. You may be surprised to know that being
poor is not a financial status but it is a mental attitude, and the only thing
that can change poverty is regeneration. Poverty is a mental attitude.
Verse 6 — here is the
reply to the inquiry. “And blessed in he, whosoever shall not be offended in
me.” This is stated in a negative way because most of the people, due to the
religious influence, were being offended. To be offended here means to be shocked.
Why was this generation so shocked by the gospel? Because they were so
saturated with religion. Jesus is trying to reach a religious society.
(Wherever you have a religious society you have poor people) What shocks people
in a religious society is the gospel and the thing that shocks them about the
gospel is the principle of grace. It is shocking to a religious type society
and Jesus says there is blessing for the one who is not shocked.
Verses 7-11, the
evaluation of the ministry of John.
Verse 7 — “What went ye
out into the desert to see?” This is addressed to a religious crowd who are
impressed with the temple down in Jerusalem, who are impressed with their many
synagogues, who are impressed with their religious activity. This is quite a
challenge to these people because the fact that they went out into the desert
means that they were seeking. They couldn’t find it in the temple or in their
synagogues so they went out to the desert.
“A reed shaken with
the wind?” A reed shaken with the wind is the first of a number of principles
which are involved with any believer who serves the Lord. Just as this
principle is connected with John , so it applies to you and to me.
The first principle:
personality does not make the man. It is a human viewpoint concept that
personality makes the man.
Verse 8 — “A man
clothed in soft raiment? behold, they that wear soft raiment are in castles
[palaces].”
The second principle:
Clothes do not make the man [believer].
Verse 9 — “But what
went ye out to see? A prophet?” someone who could tell you what is going to
happen tomorrow or the next day; “yea, I say unto you, even more than a
prophet.” John the Baptist was not a prophet as such, he was more than a
prophet.
Third principle: The
title or office does not make the man.
Verse 10 — “For this
is he of whom it is written.” Now we have some documentation from Malachi 3:1 —
“Behold I send my messenger [angel, literally. Greek: a)ggeloj],” i.e. John,
“before thy face, which shall prepare thy way before thee.” John is the herald
who announces the coming of the King, the Messiah. “Before thee” is before
Christ.
The problem of John
the Baptist begins in Malachi 4:5,6 where it is announced that he will come and
prepare the way for the Lord — also in Isaiah 40:3. The Malachi passage
anticipates, however, that Christ will be rejected and therefore will come a
second time, and therefore Jesus actually needs two sets of heralds. So for the
first advent John the Baptist is His herald; at the second advent, the two
witnesses and/or Moses and Elijah. This is amplified in Luke 1:16,17 where John
as the herald of the first advent has the same spirit and power of Elijah. So
Luke tells us that John is the herald for the first advent and Elijah is the
herald for the second advent. In John 1:21 John the Baptist specifically
declared that he was not Elijah, so we have two sets of heralds. In this
passage in Matthew 11, if Israel had received John’s message and if they had
received the Messiah, then John wouldn’t have been John, he would have been
Elijah.
“I send my messenger
before thy face, which shall prepare the way before thee.”
The fourth principle:
“It is written.” The Word makes the man, not the man the Word.
Verse 11 — “Verily I
say unto you, Among them that are born of women there hath not been a greater
than John the Baptist” is a statement made by Jesus Christ Himself and He is
actually saying to us that John the Baptist is the greatest (Paul hadn’t come
on the scene yet); “notwithstanding [in spite of that] he that is least in the kingdom
is greater than John the Baptist,” anticipating the coming of Paul. It is a
prophecy about the coming of Paul the apostle. “He that is least” refers to a
believer who is oriented to the grace of God. You cannot orient to the grace of
God except through Bible doctrine and of all of the people who have ever lived
Saul of Tarsus, after he became Paul, was better oriented to Bible doctrine
than anyone who has ever lived. Therefore of all of the people who have ever
lived “he that is least” refers to the apostle Paul. He was the least of all,
he said he was the least of all, and in 1 Corinthians 15:10 he said: “By the
grace of God I am what I am.” The word “least” describes a person who is
oriented to grace, and a person who is least is the greatest because he uses
maximum grace.
The fifth principle:
grace makes the man.
Verse 12 — opposition
to the kingdom. When you get to grace you are going to have opposition. “ … the
kingdom of heaven suffereth violence, and the violent taketh it by force.” This
is a reference to opposition to grace. Note: You do not suffer bona fide
persecution from religion, from people, until you are oriented to grace. When
you know the Word of God and you use the Word of God and are actually oriented
to the grace of God, then you are going to receive bona fide opposition and
persecution because the devil cannot stand a grace person. Religion as a system
from Satan cannot stand grace; people cannot stand grace; and as it says in the
book of Galatians, the son of the bond-woman always persecutes the son of the
free woman.
Verse 13 — the
declaration of the kingdom. “For all the prophets and the law prophesied until
John.” The prophets and the law refer to the Old Testament and all this is
saying is that the Old Testament scriptures declare grace.
Verse 14 — the
rejection of the kingdom which is declared in the Old Testament. “And if” —
first class condition of supposition; “ye will receive it [the gospel], this is
Elijah.” In other words, John is Elijah if you will receive the gospel. But if
you will not receive the gospel then John is John and Elijah comes later; “which
was for to come,” an old English way of saying, “who is predicted” or “about to
come.”
Verse 15 — the
principle of perception. Some people can understand this and some cannot. What
does it take to understand spiritual phenomena and divine truth? You have to
have ears! “to hear” is not found in the original of this verse. It reads this
way: “He who keeps on having his ears, listen [keep on listening],” an
imperative. Some of the people in the crowd were obviously puzzled and Jesus
wants them to understand what He is saying about the heralds and about the
kingdom and about John and about all these things. He recognises that many do
not understand and He says, Keep on listening, you’ll get it.
The sixth principle:
persistence in Bible study, in learning doctrine, makes the man.
Verses 16-24, the
condemnation of the Jews. Jesus is
now going to roast this crowd. In
verses 16, 17 the reason is found in the fact of their attitude.
Verse 16 — “But
whereunto shall I liken this generation?” The generation standing in front of
Him. They are religious people, they are legalistic, they are trying to be
saved by works, they are trying to be spiritual by works, etc.; “it is like
unto children,” they are adults who act like kids!; “sitting in the markets,
and calling to their friends.” They are calling to their friends in a sulky
way. They are sulking, they are complaining to their friends about the
treatment they are receiving from their friends.
Verse 17 — what they
say in their complaint. “We have piped [played music] for you, and you haven’t
danced” — the happy side — “we have mourned unto you, and you have not
lamented” — people you cannot please no matter what you do for them. One word
describes them: implacable. The reason there is nothing you can do to please
them is because they are children — small, petty minds.
Verse 18 — He
illustrates this (in two ways). The real key here is found in verse 18 — “they
say”; in the middle of verse 19 “they say.” Here we have John the Baptist and
they criticise him. What “they say” is criticism. With regard to Jesus, “they
say” is criticism. The children in the market are yelling at other children and
“they say,” etc. In other words, what the children said to the other children
was a complaint. They were complaining. John was minus eating and minus
drinking [alcoholic beverage, wine] in a day when everyone drank wine. In other
words, John satisfied the ascetic group in the religious organisation of
Israel. But he receives criticism. The difference between John and the people
who are criticising him is that he is a believer and they are not, and they
don’t like him even though he is doing everything (asceticism) that they
admire. The point is, he pleases them with his asceticism but they still don’t
like him and they criticise him. They say he has a demon — verse 18. Why?
Because he teaches or preaches grace. If you teach and preach grace you can’t
please everyone. Now Jesus comes along and He is plus eating, and he also
drank. He is just the opposite. And they say, “Behold a man gluttonous, and a wine-bibber
[alcoholic],” verse 19. He didn’t over eat but they called Him a glutton; He
didn’t over drink but they called Him an alcoholic. Notice: The modus operandi
of John and Jesus is obviously different but both of them get shot down by the
religious crowd.
Principle: No matter
what you do you can’t please people, and your job as a believer is not to
please people but to please the Lord. People make the mistake of going through
their lives trying to please people and they never get anywhere. They should
stop trying. Please the Lord and let that do the job. The battle is the Lord’s.
Verse 19 — “ … But
wisdom is justified of her children.” There is just one word that isn’t found
here and that is the word “children.” It should be: Wisdom is justified
[vindicated] from her production. The
Greek word translated “children” in the King James version is ergon, which means
production, works. It never is used for children. Where do you get your
production? You get it from God, not from people, and wisdom is knowing
doctrine and applying it. Wisdom is used here for application of doctrine to
experience and the whole point is: don’t try to please people, you please the
Lord by using Bible doctrine. You make Bible doctrine your norm and your
standard and you stick with what the Bible requires and what the Bible offers.
If you stay with these things people may or may not like you but your life will
be vindicated by its production.
So forget about
people, let the chips fall where they may. Orient to the grace of God, to the
Word of God, and your life will count.
Verses 20-24, the
condemnation of Jewish cities. The cities condemned are the cities where Jesus
has already preached, where He has presented His credentials, where He has
performed the miracles, and where He has told them about the kingdom of God,
and so on.
Verse 20 — “Then,”
after this dissertation, “began he to upbraid the cities.” Upbraid means to
reproach, to censor; “wherein most of his mighty works were accomplished,
because they repented not.”
What does repent mean?
The Greek word is metanoew, a compound
verb; noew means to think,
it does not mean to feel and has no emotional connotation whatever; meta is a preposition for
switch, and the entire word means to switch your thinking, to reverse your
thinking, to change your mind. It does not mean to feel sorry for sin. When
Jesus said “they repented not” He means that they did not change their minds
toward Him. He did the work; he did the preaching; and this word “they did not
repent” is an expression of their rejection of Christ as saviour. So why does
He condemn them? Because they have rejected Him.
Verse 21 — “Woe unto thee,
Chorazin [a city located on the Sea of Galilee].” And the point is that this
city has rejected the person of the Lord Jesus Christ.
“for if” — second
class condition [if, and it is not true], “the mighty works which were done in
you, had been done in Tyre and Sidon,” two famous cities which were destroyed
as a judgement from God, “they would have repented [changed their mental
attitude toward Christ] long ago in sackcloth and ashes.” What is the
difference between Tyre and Sidon [the two ancient cities famous for their
wickedness] and these two cities? These two cities, Chorazin and Bethsaida,
were religious.
Verse 22 — “But I say
unto you, It shall be more tolerable,” less frustrating at the point of
judgement, “for Tyre and Sidon in the day of judgement, than for you.” Because
the people of Tyre and Sidon did not get what you got. Jesus Christ did not go
to Tyre and Sidon, they had been destroyed.
Verse 23 — “And thou Capernaum,
which art exalted unto the heaven, shalt be brought down to hades: for if the
mighty works have been accomplished in thee, had been accomplished in Sodom, it
would have remained until this day.” The point is, we are dealing with people
in these cities and these judgements are judgements on individual unbelievers
in the city.
Verse 24 — “more
tolerable” again, means less frustration.
Verse 25 — “At that
time Jesus answered and said.” Jesus prays, He responds now to the message with
prayer — “I thank thee O Father.” Notice that even Jesus Himself prays to the
Father and the principle is: all prayer is addressed to the Father’ “Lord
[deity] of heaven and earth, because thou hast hid these things from the wise
[smart ones] and prudent [religious crowd].” In other words, if you get
religion in your frontal lobe you will never understand grace; “and hast
revealed them unto babes.” What is the difference between wise, prudent, and
babes? These are three systems of perception. Wise refers to rationalism;
prudent is empiricism; babes refers to faith. Rationalism and empiricism are
not the basis for understanding or responding to the gospel. Spiritual
phenomena [doctrine] is revealed to those who have the perceptive system of
faith. And Jesus is thanking the Father that this is the way, otherwise we
would never learn anything.
Verse 26 — “Even so,
Father: for it seemed good in thy sight.” In other words, this is the only way
to do it, the correct way. Jesus Christ is recognising in His prayer that the
plan of the Father is perfect, even though it is in for criticism from
religion.
Verse 27 — the plan of
the Father is now mentioned. “ … whomsoever the Son will [desires to] reveal
him.” The word “desire” means a mental desire based upon understanding the
situation, based on knowing who has positive volition at God consciousness and who
doesn’t. The Greek word is boulomai, which simply
means a mental desire based upon perception, and Jesus Christ in His
omniscience knows who has positive volition.
Verse 28-30, the
conclusion.
Verse 28 —
an invitation to the unbeliever. “Come” is not a verb, it is a particle of
exhortation. It is stronger than any verb could be and stronger than the
imperative mood. It is the strongest possible invitation. So Jesus is saying in
the strongest possible way the importance of coming to Him. (We have a twofold
invitation here. In verse 28 the invitation is to the unbeliever, but in verse
29 we have an invitation to the believer to serve the Lord); “unto me, all ye
that labour.” The word “labour” is a present active participle and it means to
have worked to the point of exhaustion in trying to save yourself. This is a
perfect invitation to the Jew because they were working to the point of
exhaustion for salvation; “and are heavy laden” is a reference to the
tremendous load of religion that they are carrying. It is in the perfect tense:
they have been burdened down with this religious load in the past and it is
about to break their backs; “and I will give you rest.” This is the rest of
salvation based upon faith in Christ.
Verse 29 — an
invitation to the believer. For those who come to Christ, believe on Him, “Take
my yoke upon you.” In other words, get into harness. A yoke is used for an
animal that is going to pull something; “and learn of [from] me.” You have to
know doctrine before you can serve the Lord; “for I am meek and lowly of
heart.” “I am meek” is a reference to the Spirit-filled life; “lowly of heart
[frontal lobe]” is orientation to grace. Jesus Christ is filled with the
Spirit; He passes it on to us. He was oriented to grace; He passes the
principle on to us — “and ye shall find rest [faith-rest] in your souls.”
Verse 30 — “My yoke is
easy.” The yoke is service in phase two. The word “easy” isn’t easy at all, it
means it is profitable, My service is profitable; “and my burden” is the burden
is opposition, suffering; “is light,” it doesn’t weigh a thing. In other words,
you are going to suffer as a believer but it is going to be wonderful. The
burden is light, easy to carry. Jesus is saying here that when you get into
harness for Him it is the greatest thing that could ever happen.