Welcome to the Kingdom
Transcript
Good morning. So, last week, on a Friday, I was getting ready to preach this sermon as we start the Gospel of Matthew. And it looked like that it would be a very small possibility that our thirdborn would come. So I called Tim Olson over at Midtown. And I was like, hey man, just letting you know, small chance this might happen. Would you be prepared to preach a sermon on Sunday just in case it does?
He said, yep. Saturday morning, it was not a small possibility. She did come. So, glad that Tim Olson got to come and preach last week. Glad we got to see some exposure. It's a grassroots kingdom network that we are a part of.
Tim and I went to seminary together. I'm excited for their church plan as they're going up to Charlotte. But we take Matthew to this week. So we're starting off Gospel of Matthew, be on page 472 in your blue Bibles that are around you. Go ahead and flip there. So in stories, in books, and even in movies, oftentimes they'll have this kind of preface, intro type beginning where you'll get some introductory details, you'll get some facts, some themes that kind of go into the rest of the story, and then the meat of the story picks up later.
Think like Jumanji, like the original Jumanji. It starts, you get a little picture of what happened with the game back in the 1800s. All of a sudden, you're in the living room, and Alan Parrish rolls the dice, and it gets sucked into the game, which, when you are eight and you see that, it is terrifying. You were fine with playing Candyland at that point. Like, it's just... And then the movie picks up.
Here's the back story, and then the rest of the story begins. And that is how the Gospel of Matthew starts. The first two chapters is a preface, it's an intro, and the story really picks up in chapter 3. So we're going to start in chapter 3, also, because we want to save Matthew 1 and 2 for Christmastime. So we'll come back to Matthew 1 and 2 in Christmas, in the Christmas season, but we will be jumping into Matthew 3.
Our encouragement for this series is that you would have a Bible. Whether you bring one, or you grab one, or you pull one up on your phone, there'll be a lot more text that we're walking through in the Bible as opposed to on the screen. So, Matthew 3, page 472 of the Blue Bibles around you. If you don't have a Bible at home, please take that. That is our gift to you. All right, so in Matthew 1 and 2, which we'll get to at Christmas, some themes are introduced.
It becomes very clear early on in the Gospel of Matthew why the early church put it at the front of the New Testament canon. So when the early church had all these scriptures, the Old Testament and the New, they had a general understanding of how the Old Testament would be done. They had to figure out what are we going to do, how are we going to organize the New Testament, where are we going to put these scriptures, these books. They placed Matthew at the front of the New Testament because it is filled with Old Testament references and Old Testament scripture quotations and allusions that look back to the Old Testament.
It is the doorway from the Old Testament into the New. But there's also a theme that picks up early in Matthew that runs throughout the whole Old Testament and then comes front and center here at the beginning, and that is the kingdom. The kingdom and the idea of king. And that is what we're going to see a lot as we walk through today in Matthew 3, but also the rest of our time in this gospel. Now, a couple things before we jump at that because we've got to work through some of our understandings. Firstly, we don't have really good references for what a king and a kingdom are, not the way the Bible talks about it.
When we think of king or we think of kingdom, we might think, oh, the closest thing we have is the president. And it's like there's some slight parallels. Each administration brings some change. But it's not the same. I mean, maybe if Trump or Obama had eight, nine turns back to back to back, that might get the feeling of what's happening here, but that's not close. Maybe some of you watched The Crown on Netflix, which is a good show.
You've gotten really into British monarchies, and you're thinking that's what kingdom looks like. And it's like not quite. She just kind of rubber stamps laws. She doesn't really have any authority in parliament. Maybe you have different things that you saw growing up. Maybe you love Lord of the Rings.
Maybe you really enjoyed when King Joffrey died. Maybe you love stories like King Arthur. We have all these different pictures of kingdoms and kings, and they don't quite relate. So a little bit later, we're going to have to readjust our mindsets and understanding what king and kingdom are. But the second thing we need to know and we need to understand, for the connections that we do make today with kingdom and king, we have to understand that we trust in some very bad kings and in some very bad kingdoms.
One of the most popular subject matters in political science, sociology, psychology right now, is the idea of tribalism. Tribalism is the idea that over our evolutionary history, we've always been tribal people. And because we're tribal, right now, we've kind of organized in tribes. It's really popular right now because everyone's trying to figure out, why are we so angry? Why do we hate each other? Why are people screaming on the TV?
Why is social media, it used to be like for nice pictures of food and kids, and now it is long, crazy, angry rants. And everyone's trying to figure this out, and they've come to this conclusion that it's tribalism, that we are a result of our evolutionary history, that we nationally form tribes, and in our tribes, whether you're in the Trump train or you're in the Bernie camp, like you have your people and you talk to your own people and you have this little echo chamber where it's just you guys talking, and then all of a sudden, when you interact with anyone else, you're lobbing grenades. And it's like that. I like some of the observations that come out of that.
I think it is helpful. I think they have missed the point. I do not think we have a tribal problem. I think we have an allegiance problem. We have an allegiance problem that we naturally give ourselves away. We pledge our allegiance, for lack of a better term.
That's what we do, because we are made in the image of God. We were made to worship God. When we, because of the fall, and because of sin, we will naturally give ourselves away to created things, to created people, and not the true king. That we have an allegiance problem, and we have trusted in bad kings and bad kingdoms, whether it is socialism or it is capitalism, whether it is sexual freedom or moral superiority. Maybe you long for the days of Kennedy or the golden era of Reagan. Maybe you love woke culture, and that is something that you have all been about.
Maybe your newfound Julian life is owning the lips. And if you could just find that meme that will make you happy, that you can just bring liberal tears, that is the camp that you have aligned yourself with. Maybe it is political correctness. Maybe it is being a jerk for the sake of being indecent. We have lined ourselves up with bad kingdoms and bad kings, whether it is people that we like, whether it is Ben Shapiro or Bill Maher or Joe Rogan or Jink Uger, Rush Limbaugh, Keith Oberman, down the line. And if you take a step back from all the chaos and all the crazy of our culture right now, you start to see this isn't really a tribal problem.
It is a problem of allegiance. We have given ourselves to bad kings and the bad kingdoms. And in this season, right now, in our culture, I am so incredibly thankful that we get the Gospel of Matthew. that we get to walk through this Gospel because out the gate, He is going to call us on it. He is going to show us that we trusted in bad kings and that a better kingdom awaits, that there is a better king. We are going to see this come out, come out. We are going to see this go throughout the Gospel of Matthew and it shows up here today.
So open up to Matthew 3 and we are going to see the moment that the king steps onto the scene and ushers in His kingdom. And as we listen to what Matthew has to say, our hope is, is that we would allow ourselves to be challenged and to be pushed, that maybe, just maybe, we've swapped out the king for some really bad kings and we've given up the kingdom for some lesser temporary kingdoms. So let me pray and then we'll get going. Lord, thank you so much for the good news of the Gospel, for the biography of Jesus that we get to spend time in. God, I pray that you would speak to us and that we would listen.
I ask this in Jesus' name. Amen. Alright, first six verses. In those days, John the Baptist came preaching in the wilderness of Judea. Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand. For this is he who was spoken of by the prophet Isaiah when he said, The voice of the one crying in the wilderness, prepare the way of the Lord, make his paths straight.
Now John wore a garment of camel's hair and a leather belt around his waist and his food was locusts and wild honey. Then Jerusalem and all Judea and all the region about the Jordan were going out to him. They were baptized by him in the river Jordan confessing their sins. Alright, I want to go back to that first phrase. In those days. Because we need to understand something before we jump into the Gospel of Matthew.
The Gospel of Matthew and the Gospels themselves and really largely a lot of the narratives in the Bible are not written the way that we understand how history is told. They are not written chronologically. There is a general chronology. Jesus was born. Later he dies and he rises. But everything in between, if you try to read the Gospel of Matthew as a sequence of events, you are going to bang your head against the wall.
They did not write the Gospels chronologically. They wrote them thematically and theologically. That is what they were doing. And that is because in our culture, we largely are influenced by historians that have a white, Western, European understanding of telling history, of telling stories. That is why we understand this event happened and this event happened and this event happened. And I will be honest, it is a little boring.
That is why a lot of people do not like history. It is the way that we tell it. That is not the Bible writers. That is certainly not the Gospel writers. They were from 2,000 years ago. They were Middle Easterners and from Asia Minor.
They were not the same as us. So here is my disclaimer. If you are a skeptic, if you consistently challenge the historicity of the Bible, the accuracy of the Bible, if you want to completely dismantle it because it doesn't fit into your, I would say, cute, white, Western understanding of how history and stories are told, I would just call you to pause for a moment and accept that maybe, just maybe, these ancient storytellers who are not like us told history a little bit differently, told stories a little bit differently. Just put that out there. Because the reality is I get really frustrated because like one of the greatest storytellers of our time is Christopher Nolan.
He did The Dark Knight and he also did a movie called Dunkirk which is the Battle of Dunkirk. Everyone loved Dunkirk because of how he told the history of it. He did it with, have you ever seen it? There's all kinds of time loops and everything's all over the place and everyone loves it when it's Christopher Nolan but when the Bible does things and when the Gospels do things a little bit out of order everyone loses their minds. And we need to know that because early as next week we're going to see some things that Matthew and Luke are doing differently. Alright, that's my disclaimer for the rest of the Gospels.
Alright, in those days John the Baptist came preaching in the wilderness of Judea. Alright, so before we get to what he was preaching let's take a look at the man, John the Baptist. John the Baptist, his last name was not the Baptist. Alright, I'm thankful that the early church gave him this distinction because there are a lot of Johns in the New Testament and it's helpful but he was known for baptizing. We could say he was Baptist he was our original Baptist. We can look back to him.
It's fine. But he was known for being Baptist. So, a couple of things about John the Baptist. Here's what we know from the Gospels. Him and Jesus were related. They were probably cousins.
That's the best we can tell is that they were cousins. That his mother Elizabeth and Jesus' mother Mary when they met in the Gospel of Luke that John the Baptist slept in his mother's womb. So there was an interaction there. Then we know that he spent the majority of his time preparing for preparing for ministry for this moment out in the wilderness. So he didn't have a whole lot of interactions.
So it's safe to say what we're going to see today might be one of the only significant interactions that they had. But he spent the majority of his time preparing for ministry in the wilderness and I would love to spend a few moments in walking you through all the theories as to why he was in the wilderness. But I'm going to spare you. If you want to nerd out on that later we can talk. But we see a description of him in verse 5 of what he looks like.
And the way that Matthew describes him is actually going to be a picture of the rest of the Gospel of Matthew. This whole section right here has tons of allusions. Meaning it alludes back to the Old Testament. And then we get a quote of what John the Baptist looks like. And every Jewish Christian who heard this in its context would understand what he was getting at. It says he wore a garment of camel's hair and a leather belt around his waist.
And that is a quote from 1 Kings 1.8. He wore a garment of hair and a belt of leather around his waist. And every Jewish Christian who hears that description thinks Elijah. This is the second coming of Elijah. This is a prophet who is just like Elijah. Elijah is one of the greatest prophets in the Old Testament.
He's beloved. He's a wild man. So the picture here is he's a wild prophet just like Elijah. And I would say probably even wilder because he ate locusts and wild honey. Which is pretty crazy. He's edgy.
He has an edgy look and his message is even more so. It says, John the Baptist came preaching in the wilderness of Judea. Repent for the kingdom of heaven is at hand. Alright. So we are going to get a very heavy dose of this understanding of kingdom.
Matthew uses kingdom of heaven over and over again in this gospel. The other gospel writers, they use kingdom of God over and over again. It means the same thing. It's getting at the same idea. So for us to understand what he is getting at and what the people would have felt when John the Baptist says the kingdom of heaven is at hand, we need to have a better understanding for what king and kingdom means.
And seminary I had a professor, his name is Jonathan Pennington, he was very helpful in expanding some of my categories here and a lot of his stuff shows up right here. So, when the first century Jews go out and they hear John the Baptist saying, repent, the kingdom of heaven is at hand. Their minds go to the promised Messiah. Messiah. See, when a king came, even if it wasn't a Jewish king, when a king came and his rule came and they conquered a nation, everything changed. Everything changed and there was this long expecting hope that a Messiah was going to come.
So when a prophet in the wilderness says, repent, the kingdom of heaven is at hand, their mind goes to Messiah, Savior King. This would have been the king that was promised, the king that was better than the greatest kings in the history of Israel. We're talking King David and King Solomon, the two biggest kings in their history. This king was going to be like them but even better. He was going to bring the protection that David brought. When David ruled as king, the people felt safe.
When David ruled as king, they had provisions. The economy was good. They had food in their bellies. That a king was going to come and bring protection and provisions. He was going to be a philosopher king, a sage like Solomon, one of the wisest men that has ever lived until Jesus comes. There's this long hope that this philosopher king, this protector, this provider, this Messiah, savior king is going to come.
And there's these prophecies that are prophesying his coming. In Jeremiah 32, there's this hope that shows up a lot in the Old Testament. It's the hope that a new covenant is going to come. In Jeremiah 32, 40, it says, I will make with them an everlasting covenant that I will not turn away from doing good to them. There's this hope that this new king was going to come. He was going to bring change.
He was going to establish this new covenant with the people. There was this hope that a king was going to come that we see in Isaiah 9 for to us a child is born. To us a son is given and the government shall be on his shoulder and his name shall be called wonderful counselor, mighty God, everlasting father, prince of peace. Feels Christmas-y, right? That's because there's this hope, this hope that this Messiah is going to come and his rule is going to be good and he's going to change their current circumstances. He'll be better than David.
He'll be better than Solomon. And he was going to bring a new covenant that would be providing, that would be the wisdom, leadership, the protection they've been thirsting for for centuries. Because it has been a long time in the land. Shortly after, David and Solomon, the nation splits in two. Then after that, they abandon God and God brings judgment.
And then one by one, nations come through and the Assyrians come in in the 8th century and completely just destroy most of the people and the land, taking the ten tribes and scattering them. And what they don't finish, the Babylonians come in in the 6th century and deport the rest of the tribes. And this is destroying their identity. Everything they were built on, they destroy and then the Persians come and rule over the people. Then the Greeks come and rule over the people of God.
And now we have the Romans at the time of Jesus. And with every kingdom and every bad king that came, they lost more of their identity and their hope started to fade. But there was this hope throughout all of it as the prophets spoke that one day a Messiah was going to come. A Messiah was going to come and he was going to change everything. And that's what they've been waiting for. And there were 500 years of silence.
No prophet in the land. No one speaking on behalf of God. Very dark. And then in the wilderness, a prophet comes. He rises and he starts to preach of this kingdom that is coming. And now the people have hope. verse 3.
For this is he who was spoken of by the prophet Isaiah when he said, the voice of the one crying in the wilderness, prepare the way of the Lord, make his paths straight. See, this is a quotation from Isaiah. And they hear this. And the original Christians that are reading this are feeling this. This is the one that Isaiah spoke of. This is the one who's going to prepare the way.
He's going to be the herald. He's announcing that the king is coming. And even in this quotation, there's a little glimmer of what this kingdom is going to look like. Because this was written by Isaiah to the Babylonian exiles, to the Israelites who were scattered abroad, saying prepare yourself for your return. And what's happening here is that he is showing us that the whole nation is in spiritual exile. They are in spiritual exile.
They are lost. They've lost identity. And John the Baptist has come to prepare the way for this new covenant, this new hope. And with each detail that we're getting, we're getting more of a picture of what this kingdom looks like. And also, John the Baptist is gaining a big following. He has got people coming out in droves to come and see what this prophet has to say.
Verse 5, it says, Then Jerusalem and all Judea and all the region about the Jordan were going out to him. And they were baptized by him in the river Jordan, confessing their sins. So, I would love right now, I would really love to take five minutes and make a plug for why we believe in baptizing, professing believers, and not infants, professing believers by immersion. Because it's John the Baptist. This is the moment, right? That I could just take some time and unpack it.
Unfortunately, I don't have the time and that is not the main point of this passage. But I will say this, that this baptism is unlike anything that anyone has seen. I mean, this is completely new. There are some loose connections in the Old Testament law talking about purification by water. There were some people that were doing some types of water rituals before John the Baptist comes. But nobody was doing this.
No one was bringing people out to the river to be baptized for their sins. That was not happening. This is a new sign. Which is why we as Baptists believe with a new covenant comes a new sign. That's all I'll say. Come talk to me later, I'll baptize you later.
Alright. So then we get to verse 7 and we get a taste of his message. And it is a message that is dangerous to the status quo. It is a wild prophet who is a threat to the political and religious system. Verse 7. But when he saw many of the Pharisees and Sadducees coming to his baptism, he said to them, You brood of vipers.
I love John. He is a renegade. He looks at the Pharisees and Sadducees who were some of the most powerful people in the land and he says, You brood of vipers. And here's why. The Pharisees and the Sadducees were in bed with the Romans. The Romans were in bed together helping keep the people in check.
They had sold themselves out. The beauty and really how the Romans conquered empires is they would conquer you and they would say, You want some of your culture? Keep it. You want some of your religious practices? Keep it. And they would keep the people in check by giving them a little bit of their culture, a little bit of what they could practice.
And then over time, they would slowly start to assimilate the culture. They'd have some power brokers they would use to keep the people in check. But slowly they would inject their culture. And that is why this period of time, this period of Judaism is called Hellenistic Judaism. It is the blending of Greco-Roman values and Judaism. And because of this, there are people that are purists.
They don't like that this pagan culture has blended with Judaism. And that is why consistently in the history of Israel and the Roman Empire, they are rebelling and rebelling and rebelling all the way up until 70 A.D. when they rebel and there are no more rebellions because they completely destroy them. So the Romans need help and they have two ways of keeping the people in check. The first is King Herod, which we will see back in Christmas and in the Gospel of Matthew. There's a long line of Herod and his sons that rule the people. And if you look at the Roman Empire, you study their history, they didn't have a lot of kings that served under Caesar.
But because the Jews were so, they were consistently rebelling, they had a king that helped keep the people in check. But the people didn't really respect Herod. They just didn't. I mean, they saw he was an obvious sellout. So the second group of people that the Romans used to keep the people in check, that was the Pharisees and the Sadducees.
These are the religious leaders. These are people that the nation respected. These are the people that they feared. When they spoke, people listened and they got in line. And on top of that, John the Baptist sees right through the religious charade. And so much of what the Pharisees and the Sadducees are doing is they have this empty legalism where you act like you were doing good.
You have this outward good, but inside you were dead. And you're just presenting good works before God. He sees and he cuts right through it. He calls them a brood of vipers, which is snake offspring. And a lot of times when you get stuff like this in the Bible, we've got to do some put this into context for us because a lot of statements like this don't translate. That one still translates.
You call somebody a snake, you have assassinated their character. You have called them sneaky, venomous, corrupt, deadly. All things that are very accurate as we see that they're the ones that help assassinate Jesus later. And what's happening here is we're getting a theme that is introduced. This is going to be Jesus versus the religious rulers, as we see throughout the gospel of Matthew. So, he calls them a brood of vipers and he says, Who warned you to flee from the wrath to come?
Bear fruit in keeping with repentance. The sad thing is the Pharisees and Sadducees thought that they were bearing fruit. They thought that they were good. They thought that they were righteous. They were presenting their good works before the people but inside they were dead. It was a charade.
It was not true repentance. It was not the correct response before a holy and perfect God which is, I am an unworthy sinner in need of grace. So, he calls them out and he keeps going. Verse 9, he says, And do not presume to say to yourselves, we have Abraham as our father. For I tell you, God is able from these stones to raise up children for Abraham. Even now the axe is laid to the root of the trees.
Every tree, therefore, that does not bear good fruit is cut down and thrown into the fire. John the Baptist comes and he preaches this message that shows up throughout the whole Old Testament and that is just because you are an ethnic descendant of Abraham does not mean you are an actual child of Abraham and does not mean that you are a child of God. He says, God can raise up children from stones. Raise up Adam from dirt. You think that because you are a child of Abraham that you are going to have a covering that this is going to work out well for you. That is not how this works.
The only people that have the right to be called children of God are those who do the will of the Father. That is a message that shows up throughout the Old Testament and John the Baptist just preaches it right to their face. bear fruit or be cut down. Repent or experience the fire. John the Baptist is the original fire and brimstone preacher. He absolutely brings it. He is fearless.
I can't undersell how powerful these groups are. And he is absolutely telling them exactly like it is and then he makes a shift. Verse 11. He says, I baptize you with water for repentance. But he who is coming after me is mightier than I.
Whose sandals I am not worthy to carry. He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and fire. His winnowing fork, which a winnowing fork was a tool that used to separate the wheat from the chaff. The wheat you use for bread. The chaff you threw away. Winnowing fork is in his hand and he will clear the threshing floor and gather his wheat into the barn.
But the chaff he will burn with unquenchable fire. And now we see John the Baptist and his purpose coming into full view. This is a man. I want you to remember this. There has not been a prophet in the land for almost five centuries. No one is speaking on behalf of God.
He shows up and the crowds are coming out. The masses are coming to see him and he pauses and he says, no, no, no, no, no, no. No, no, no. It's not me. I'm just a set up man. Now the main event is coming.
You've been to a concert and got really excited about the opening act. That's just, you don't do that. Raz's dad was in a band in Australia and they opened up for ACDC back in the day. How cool is that? And Raz, I've had dinner with Raz's dad. He's a really, he's a good mate.
Like he's, I like him. And if I could go back in time, it'd be really exciting to go to that concert. And I like his dad, but I would not be excited about him. I'd be excited about seeing ACDC. Like that. You don't get excited about the opening act.
You wait for the main event. And that is what John the Baptist is trying to show. He's like, I'm not, I'm not it. There's a greater one coming. There's a mightier one coming. You don't get it.
I'm not fit to tie his sandals. And in a culture that thought feet were so socially beneath you and dirty, this is a great statement of humility. So I'm not worthy to tie his sandals. You don't get it. I've got this water ritual. I've got this thing that I'm doing, but he's got something that is bigger.
He is going to baptize with fire. And here's what he is getting at. The king is coming. And when he baptizes, he is coming with flames. Either you will be caught up and changed by this fire, like we see in Acts 2. This is looking forward to the Pentecost of Acts 2.
Either you're going to be changed by this fire, like the early church, who placed their faith in Jesus. You'll be changed into something completely new in this brand new kingdom. Either you will be changed or you will be consumed. It is your choice. And if you do not, if you were not changed, if you do not follow this king, you will be consumed by the flames like chaff. So repent.
The kingdom is at hand. I mean, you get it. You start to understand why John the Baptist ruffled some feathers. And there's a reason why he's later killed and beheaded because of the things that he says, because of the truth that he stands in. So if this prophet who has amassed a following, unlike anyone in the land for centuries, who the people are, who the people love and who the people actually respect, because he stands up to the establishment.
If this man is saying, it's not me, there's someone mightier who is coming. The people are waiting. Who is this one? And then finally, the king shows up on the bank of the Jordan. Verse 13. Then Jesus came from Galilee to Jordan, to the Jordan to John, to be baptized by him.
John would have prevented him saying, I need to be baptized by you, and do you come to me? But Jesus answered him, let it be so now, for thus it is fitting to fulfill all righteousness. Then he consented. So Jesus shows up at the bank of the Jordan, and John the Baptist says, I'm not baptizing you. You've got to baptize me. And that's an appropriate response.
Because John the Baptist, his baptism was a baptism of repentance. It was for sins. And he's saying, no, no, no. You, I, Jesus says, no. This is to fulfill all righteousness. And in the Gospel of Matthew, righteousness means obedience to the Father.
Obedience to God. This is the necessary step in obeying this plan of God because Jesus isn't coming for a baptism of repentance. He is coming for a baptism that will initiate an entirely new kingdom. His baptism is the start of the initiation of the kingdom that is now at hand. This is part one. Part two is next week, which we'll get to in Matthew 4.
So John the Baptist consents, and here is the scene. Verse 16, Man, I want to imagine what this scene would have looked like. We get these words. It is so hard to picture how glorious this is. How miraculous this is. The heavens, Jesus goes in the water.
The heavens open up. Light shines down. The Spirit, the Holy Spirit, descends like a dove on Jesus. God the Father, I want you to feel the Trinitarian language here. God the Father speaks from heaven, says, This is my beloved Son with whom I am well pleased. This event is big.
It is bold. It is the way that a king makes his entrance. It is how a king steps on the scene to usher in his kingdom. And so it begins in the Gospel of Matthew, this unfolding kingdom of God that we're going to get to experience over the next 18 months as we walk through this Gospel. And there are so many things that we get to see. We get to see Jesus outshine the philosopher kings of old with wisdom that was never seen before and is never going to be seen.
The wisdom in the Sermon on the Mount, the wisdom in his parables, that we get to see him go toe-to-toe with the establishment. Toe-toe with fake religion and the religious leaders. We get to see Jesus care for the least of these and the sick and healing the broken, which does two things. It shows the heart of God that God cares for the hurting and the broken. But ultimately, his healings and his ministry of caring for the least of these is a greater picture of a kingdom that when it is finally finished, there will be no more sickness, there will be no more hurt, there will be no more pain.
That we get to see in this message of kingdom, we get to see discipleship on display. That throughout the Gospel of Matthew, Jesus' primary ministry is to the disciples. Over and over again, you're going to see he's teaching the disciples, he's teaching the disciples, he's spending time with the disciples, he's getting away with the disciples, that he's pouring into a few that they might impact the nations. We get to see mission as he sends out the 72 and as it closes with the Great Commission, go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I command on you.
We get to see the mission of God on display and here's what we get to see. The ultimate hope with this kingdom is that when this kingdom comes, it is for the spiritual exiles, which is you and me. Peter Gentry and Steve Wellen wrote a book called Kingdom Through Covenant. They described it so well. They said the kingdom of God refers primarily to God's kingly and sovereign rule and it is especially tied to God's saving reign that is broken into this world and the coming life, death, and resurrection of Jesus the Messiah. The ultimate hope of this kingdom is that a king came from heaven and he sought us and he initiated a kingdom and every kingdom that has ever been established in this world has been done through blood.
Every kingdom that has ever been established in this world has been done through blood. The blood of hundreds, the blood of thousands, the blood of tens of thousands, but this kingdom takes one man's blood. And his blood is so pure and so rich and so good and so powerful that it establishes an eternal kingdom that has no end. A king has come. And because of his death and because of his resurrection, all that this king requires is faith. The entrance into this kingdom is simply trusting in the king who came from heaven to rescue us and that faith is our allegiance.
It is our allegiance to the one true king. Over and over again in this gospel we are going to be challenged. Which king and kings are you trusting in that is not the true king? Which kingdoms are you hoping in that is not the eternal kingdom? You will not make it out of this book without over and over again having to ask that question. Whom do you bow the knee?
We are going to see this over and over again that it is not about history of tribalism. It is about allegiance. Who are the things that we are bowing to? What are the things that we are valuing so much in this world? Where is our allegiance? Is it in a political system?
Is it in a political party? I mean that is something front and center for our culture right now. Put so much hope in men that will be dead in a few years. So much hope in ideas that will eventually fade away. We put all this stock all this hope in people lose their minds when they don't get the temporary king that they want. We are hoping in lesser kings.
Is it the American dream? Is that the kingdom that we are building on? We are so tempted to see the here and now that it is this life with these worries with these cares with this money with this retirement with these toys. What kind of kingdom are we hoping in? Is it here and now? Is it the sexual revolution and freedom that has so come up through this culture?
Is it all about identity at this point? Is that the kingdom that we are hoping in? Is it the pride and self-righteousness of the Pharisees? And positioning yourself as better than other people. What kingdoms and kings are we hoping in? Where is our ultimate allegiance?
You will not make it out of this book without being challenged on that over and over again. But here is the good news of this book. That as we wade through the gospel of Matthew you will not make it through this book without seeing that this king is better than any king that ever came. That this kingdom is better than any kingdom that you could ever hope in. That we have a king a warrior king who came from heaven and defeated sin at the cross. That we have a philosopher king who gives wisdom and insight that is good for our souls that is eternally true that we have a provider king that provides for your needs that you don't have to worry about all the things of this world that he's going to provide for you now but more importantly he picks up your head and says no there's an eternity worth caring about.
That we have a king who holds the world in his hand and that is important for those of us that are driven by anxiety and control. We have a king who controls everything because we don't have to. We have a good king that we get to look and see and savor in the gospel of Matthew. So as we walk through this be challenged. Who do you bow the knee? Which kings are we hoping in?
Which kingdoms have we sold out to? And taste and see that we have a better king and a better kingdom and a better God and we get to celebrate that every week as we come to the table.