Matthew 14
:1-2
Herod's thoughts about Jesus
:1
Herod the tetrarch
This
is not the same Herod that tried to kill Jesus as a baby.
TSK: Herod.
This was Herod Antipas, the son of Herod the Great, by Malthace,
and tetrarch of Galilee and Peraea, which produced
a revenue of 200 talents a year. He married the daughter of Aretas, king
of Arabia, whom he divorced in order to marry
Herodias, the wife of his brother Philip, who
was still living. Aretas, to revenge
the affront which Herod had
offered his daughter, declared war against him, and
vanquished him after an obstinate
engagement. This defeat, Josephus assures us,
the Jews considered as a punishment for the death of John the Baptist. Having gone to Rome to solicit the title of king, he
was accused by Agrippa of carrying on a
correspondence with Artabanus king of Parthia, against the
Romans, and was banished by the emperor Caius
to Lyons, and thence to Spain, where he
and Herodias died in exile.
:2
mighty works
Ironic
that the last section ended with:
Matthew
13:58-AV And he did not many mighty works there because of their unbelief.
Greek
word: dunamis
:3-12
Herod kills John
:8 in
a charger
A
dish, plate, or platter
:9
for the oath's sake, and them which sat with him
Rather
than be embarrassed, or stand up for what was right, Herod gave in to the
opinion of those around him.
Lesson:
Obey
God, not man
In
contrast, when told to stop being offensive and preaching the gospel,
Acts
5:29-AV Then Peter and the [other]
apostles answered and said, We ought to obey God
rather than men.
:13-14
Mourning & Ministry
:13
When Jesus heard of it, he departed ...
Jesus
apparently leaves for the wilderness to mourn over John's death.
:14
And Jesus went forth ... with compassion ...
Lesson:
Key
to mature ministry:
You
do it even when you don't feel like it.
Here
Jesus has headed for the wilderness to be alone and grieve for His beloved
cousin's death.
And
the people follow along.
Rather
than respond in anger, chase the people away, or go on strike, Jesus steps out
and heals them.
:15-21
Feeding Five Thousand
:16
give ye them to eat
Jesus
sees the needs of the multitudes and tells the disciples to feed them.
As
they grow in ministry, they're going to realize more and more that this is the
essence of ministry.
John
21:15-17 AV So when they had dined,
Jesus saith to Simon Peter, Simon, [son] of Jonas, lovest thou me more than
these? He saith unto him, Yea, Lord; thou knowest that I love thee. He saith
unto him, Feed my lambs. 16 He saith to
him again the second time, Simon, [
son]
of Jonas, lovest thou me? He saith unto him, Yea, Lord; thou knowest that I
love thee. He saith unto him, Feed my sheep.
17 He saith unto him the third time, Simon, [son] of Jonas, lovest thou
me? Peter was grieved because he said unto him the third time, Lovest thou me?
And he said unto him, Lord, thou knowest all things; thou knowest that I love
thee. Jesus saith unto him, Feed my sheep.
That's
what ministry is all about, meeting the needs of the flock.
Feeding the sheep.
This
is The Challenge of Ministry
:17 We
have here but five loaves, and two fishes
Here
we have The Problem of Ministry
There's lots of
needs around us, but the truth is we don't have a lot to offer.
There
might be some guys in ministry who feel that everybody is lucky who gets to
spend time with them, but I'm not one of them.
I'm
constantly overwhelmed with the things I hear about, the problems people are
facing.
Each
time I start preparing for the next Bible Study, I often wonder to myself,
"Why would anybody want to come anyway?"
But
to this, Jesus says,
:18
Bring them hither to me
Here
is The Solution to Ministry
You
take what little you do have to offer, and give it all to Jesus.
See
what He can do with your few loaves and fish.
You
can stand around all day and complain that you just don't have enough to give,
or you can give what you have into Jesus' hands and stand back and watch what
He'll do with it.
Jesus
will bless it, break it, give it back to you, and expect you to hand it out to
those in need.
:20
they did all eat ... filled ... that remained twelve baskets full
Here's
a good picture of what happens to ministry when you give it over to the Lord
and see what He'll do with it.
There's
plenty for everybody.
Even the disciples.
We
talked last Sunday about the manna ceasing in Joshua 5, and the people eating
of the fruit of the Promised Land.
We
talked about how it can require more work to feed yourself once you start
growing as a Christian and step into the Promised Land.
Here's
a good picture of these disciples doing the work of the ministry, and they find
themselves fed by it in the process.
Lesson:
When
you do ministry correctly, you get fed too.
:22-33
Walking on water
:23
apart to pray
Jesus
found it necessary to spend time alone in prayer.
Should
I need any less?
:24 in
the midst of the sea
They
are attempting to cross the Sea of Galilee
It's
size:
It's
capacity for storms to come quickly
:25
the fourth watch of the night
The
Jews at this time divided the night into four watches; the first was from six o'clock in the
evening till nine, the second from nine
to twelve, the third from twelve till three,
and the fourth from three till six; so that it probably
began to be daylight before our Lord
came to his disciples.
:30
when he saw the wind boisterous
Here's
the key to Peter sinking - looking at the storm instead of Jesus.
This
is the hard part of walking by faith, keeping our eyes where they belong.
2Corinthians 4:16-18 For which cause we faint not; but though our outward man perish,
yet the inward [man] is renewed day by day. 17 For our light affliction, which is but
for a moment, worketh for us a far more exceeding [and] eternal weight of
glory; 18 While we look not at the
things which are seen, but at the things which are not seen: for the things
which are seen [are] temporal; but the things which are not seen [are] eternal.
Lesson:
If
you want to rise above the trials, keep your eyes on Jesus
:33
and worshipped him
Now
they're beginning to realize just who it is they have with them.
proskuneo
To
"kiss towards"
1) to
kiss the hand to (towards) one, in token of reverence 2) among the Orientals,
esp. the Persians, to fall upon the knees and touch the ground with the
forehead as an expression of profound reverence 3) in the NT by kneeling or
prostration to do homage (to one) or make obeisance, whether in order to
express respect or to make supplication
Worship,
respect, affection
Those
who say that Jesus was just a nice guy who taught us a good way to live, ought
to look at passages like this a little more closely.
This
is no ordinary guy.
:34-36
Healing in Gennesaret
:36
made perfectly whole
This
is a kind of more intense word than just the usual one for healing (therapeuo)
diasozo - to 1)
to preserve through danger, to bring safely through 1a) to save, i.e. cure one who is sick,
bring him through 2) to save, keep from perishing 3) to save out of danger,
rescue
It's
not just rescuing a person (sozo), but
thoroughly rescuing them, thoroughly healing them.
When
Jesus does something, He does it right!
Matthew 15
:1-20
Jesus and the Pharisees
:2
they wash not their hands
They
probably didn't wash behind their ears either.
RWP: This was the oral law, handed down by the
elders of the past and later codified in the Mishna. Handwashing before meals is not a requirement of the Old
Testament. It is, we know, a good thing for sanitary reasons, but the rabbis
made it a mark of righteousness for others at any rate. This item was magnified
at great length in the oral teaching. The washing of the hands called for
minute regulations. It was commanded to wash the hands before meals, it was one's duty to do it after eating. The more
rigorous did it between the courses. The hands must be immersed. Then the water
itself must be "clean" and the cups or pots used must be ceremonially
"clean." Vessels were kept full of clean water ready for use. So it
went on _ad infinitum_. Thus a real issue is raised between Jesus and the
rabbis. It was far more than a point of etiquette or of hygienics.
The rabbis held it to be a mortal sin. The incident may have happened in a
Pharisee's house.
:2,3
transgress the tradition ... commandment ...
Jesus
doesn't even bother to answer their question, immediately, with a direct
answer.
The
very issue that the Pharisees are asking about isn't even worth dealing with.
In
fact, more important is getting the Pharisees to realize that it's not
transgressing the traditions of men that they should worry about, it's
transgressing God's commands that they should worry about.
The Pharisees
were worried about breaking human traditions, while Jesus is going to point out
that human traditions can make you end up breaking something much more
important, God's laws.
Lesson:
Be
careful about traditions!
That's
one thing I appreciate about starting with a new church, we don't have people
saying, "Well, that's the way we've always done it!
Traditions
can be good, things like Christmas stuff, etc.
But
they can also get in the way of God's will.
We
like traditions because they are comfortable and easy for us, we know what to
expect.
But
sometimes God wants to stretch us.
Let
there be a warning flag go up when you hear yourself say, "But I've always
done it that way!"
:5 It
is a gift
There
was a magical phrase the Pharisees had come up with, "Corban"
(meaning: "It is a gift")
If
you had $500 in the bank, and your parents came up short on their house
payment, and came to you for help, all you had to do was say, "Gee, it's corban". That meant that you had dedicated that money
to use for God, and God was more important than your parents.
In
relation to taking care of your parents, Paul writes,
1Timothy
5:8-AV But if any provide not for
his own, and specially for those of his own house, he
hath denied the faith, and is worse than an infidel.
:11 defileth a man
Now
Jesus is going to deal with the question that the Pharisees raised at first,
talking about the disciples not washing their hands.
The
Pharisees had their tradition about washing their hands to keep themselves from
becoming defiled, lest they ate something with ceremonially unclean hands.
But
Jesus is saying that it's the things that come out of their mouths, namely
their words, that would bring defilement.
:13
shall be rooted up
Kind
of reminds me of the parable we saw last week of The Wheat and The Tares.
The
enemy planted tares among the wheat.
The
reapers waited until the harvest, then gathered up the tares and got rid of
them.
Jesus
doesn't mind at all that the Pharisees were bothered.
:14
Let them alone
Sometimes
it's not worth it to argue with people.
They're
going to just get madder and madder, and more defensive.
Let
them alone. Let them come to the end of
their rope.
:16
without understanding?
Remember
last week, Jesus asked the disciples, "Do you understand these
things?" (Mat.13:51)
The
disciples said, "Yes".
:17
cast out into the draught
or,
"goes into the sewer, toilet"
:20
These are the things which defile a man
It's
not what goes into you, it's what comes out of you,
out of your heart.
:21-28
Jesus and the Canaanite Woman
:22 a
woman of Canaan
This
is a Gentile woman, a Canaanite.
:24 but unto the lost sheep of the house of
Israel
Remember,
this was to be the focus of Jesus' ministry, going to the Jews first.
This
is just the way it was.
The
gospel would eventually go out to the Gentiles, but for now, it was to the
Jews.
We've
already been told:
Matthew
12:21-AV And in his name shall the
Gentiles trust.
:25
worshipped him
proskuneo
And
calls Him "Lord"
She's
really working on Jesus!
:26 it
is not meet
or,
"it isn't proper"
:26 to
the dogs
To
the Jews, the Gentiles were known as just "dogs"
Jesus
is using this common word used for the Gentiles.
But
Jesus doesn't use the word for a full sized dog, but just a "little
dog", like a trained house pet.
Jesus
is saying that it wouldn't be proper for take food from the mouths of your
children to feed your dogs with.
:27
yet the dogs
The
woman doesn't find offence in what Jesus said at all, instead she turned it
around to press her point, and to ask Jesus for His help.
:28 O
woman, great it thy faith
I
think we have a little insight into Jesus here.
It
sure seems He's kind of proud of her at this moment.
I
don't think Jesus was intending to be offensive at all to this woman, He was simply putting her to the test.
Lesson:
"No"
doesn't mean to stop asking.
Sometimes
the "no" answers we get in prayer are only meant to test us and see
what kind of faith we have.
Sometimes
God wants to see just how important our request is to us, and so He says
"no" to see how much we want it.
The
parable of the unjust judge and the widow
She
kept bugging the judge until he agreed to help her with her problems.
Luke
18:1-AV And he spake a parable unto
them [to this end], that men ought always to pray, and not to faint;
Those
of you praying for a loved one who's not saved, don't faint in your prayers!
:29-31
Great Miracles
:30
cast them down at Jesus' feet
This
is an interesting word used here.
rhipto
1) to
cast, throw 2) throw down 3) to cast forward or before 4) to set down (with the
suggestion of haste and want of care) 5) to throw to the ground, prostrate
RWP: A very strong word, flung them down,
"not carelessly, but in haste, because so many were coming on the same
errand" (Vincent).
It
reminds me of:
1Peter 5:7-AV
Casting all your care upon him; for he careth for
you.
epirrhipto
1) to
throw upon, place upon
Lesson:
Teach
me to quickly unload everything on You, Lord
:32-39
Feeding Four Thousand
:33
Whence should we have so much bread?
What's wrong, guys,
don't you remember what happened just a chapter ago?
Answer: NO, they don't remember.
In
fact, we're going to be told in the next chapter that they're going to have
basically forgotton this episode also.
I
guess we can find comfort in knowing that other people are forgetful when it
comes to God's great work in our lives, but it would sure be nicer if we had
better memories.