|
The
Book of Matthew
Matthew was taught by Dr. James Modlish
CHAPTER
NINE
9:1
Jesus enters a ship (the good ship of Zion) because of
rejection (8:34), passes over a body of water and goes to
His own city, which is located somewhere else. This
compelled me to look at other travels of Jesus in a
ship.
[1].
(8:23) - 1st
advent.
(a).
A ship is a method of conveyance over the great deep,
and Jesus calls fishermen first to follow Him,
(4:18-22).
(b). Following Jesus can have its temperous moments,
(vs. 24-27).
(c). Jesus came to a place filled with devils,
(8:28-34).
[2].
(9:1) - Ascension
(a).
Jesus goes to His own city after being rejected in
(8:34).
(b). He then concentrates on forgiving sin more than
physical healing, (9:2-6).
(c). Jesus ministry then turns to publicans and
sinners, (9:9-13).
(d). Then He plainly tells them the day is coming when
the bridegroom will be taken from them, (9:15).
[3].
(13:3) - Rapture
(a).
The spiritual state of Israel only grows worse
(12:43-45, Rom. 11).
(b). Great multitudes were gathered together to him,
(13:2).
[4].
(14:13) - Tribulation
preservation.
(a).
John is killed (14:10-12), John is a picture of the
two witnesses in (Rev. 11:7,8).
(b). Jesus heard of it (vs. 13) - (Ex. 2:23-25).
(c). Jesus motivation is compassion.
(d). The multitude is fed in a desert place (vs.
15-21; Rev. 12:6; Mic. 7:14,15; Jer. 50:19-22; Eze.
20:35-37).
(e). After eating Jesus constrained His disciples to
get into the ship, which turned out to be a scary
experience for them, but Jesus comes to them on the
water, Peter a Jew, asks the Lord to save him (vs. 30)
and there is a general conversion (vs. 33), (Zech.
12:9-11; Rev. 10).
(f). Mid-trib appearance of Christ is made clear in
(Rev. 10:1-3; Isa. 66:7-8; Mic. 5:3)
(g). Paul says he saw Christ "as one born out of due
time" (1 Cor. 15:8). Paul is a picture of the remnant
of Israel that is saved during the Tribulation.
(h). Joseph revealed himself to his brothers in the
second year of a seven year famine. Joseph is a type
of Christ is 152 ways. He is rejected by his brothers
the first time and accepted the second time.
[5].
(15:39) - Magdala - 2nd
Advent?
(a).
Jesus comes to the home of Mary Magdaline who He cast
seven devils out of (Lk. 8:2).
(b). So this could be a picture of the Millennium when
the devil is locked up in the bottomless pit.
(c). However in (Mk. 8:10-13), Jesus leaves again with
a boat load of disciples, which could be a picture of
a Tribulation rapture for the 2nd Advent is a horse
not a ship.
9:2
[1].
Palsy is a muscle disorder, like Bells Palsy.
[2]. Sickness is connected to sin, not
necessarily his own, but a sin nature.
[3]. "Son" is a strange address give to a sick
man from a 30-31 year old man, unless the speaker is more
than human.
9:3
[1].
Blasphemy is the charge brought against Christ at His
final hearing (Matt. 26:65; Jn. 19:7). Those making the
charge were guilty of it, (Matt. 12:31,32).
[2]. In (vs. 5) Jesus offers the proof of the
pudding by doing what they could not do - so in the face
of scientific evidence they reject all evidence that
Jesus is God. The trouble is the heart, not the head.
[3]. "Son of Man" in (vs. 6) is used nowhere in
the Pauline epistles because it is specifically connected
with Christ's earthly ministry to Israel (see Eze.
1-6).
9:9-10
[1].
This Matthew is the author of the gospel and is called
"Levi" in (Mk. 2:14 and Lk. 5:29). Luke makes it clear
that Matthew was one of the publicans at the feast.
[2]. The custom was taxes levied on the Jews by
Rome. Jesus never failed to pay it (17:27), although He
was accused of it (Lk. 23:2). It was a bone of contention
between Jesus and the Pharisees, (Matt. 22:15-17).
9:11-13
[1].
The Pharisees were inclined to consider sinners to be
only from a lower social order and didn't consider sin to
be envy, laziness, exaggerations, gluttons,
self-righteousness, pride, deceit, stubbornness, and
rejection of Truth.
[2]. The proverb on the physician debunks the
idea that physicians are the devil. Luke is called the
"beloved physician" (Col. 4:14). Medicine is recommended
in both Testaments (Prov. 17:22; Matt. 8:17).
[3]. "Go ye and learn what that meaneth" is a
reference to (Hos. 6:6). The idea is God has always
emphasized mercy more than sacrifice, i.e.,
(a).
When God brought Israel out of Egypt, he said nothing
about sacrifice, (Ex. 15:26).
(b). When He did say something about it, it was
voluntary, (Lev. 1:2,3).
(c). The Passover lamb was not offered as a sacrifice,
but as a feast to commemorate mercy and grace.
(d). Jesus instructs some very self-righteous people
to learn about that!
9:14,15
From here on, the ministry of our Lord is marked by constant
questions of religious controversy. On this occasion, it was
fasting.
[1].
Fasting was not found as a commandment anywhere in the
Old Testament, but rather it was a voluntary practice
among people who were going through deep times of testing
and trouble. Many times it was malpractice, (Isa. 58:3-6;
Zech. 7:5,6).
[2]. "Children of the bride chamber" is a
reference to Israel in one of two positions; either as
Jehovah's bride, with God as the Bridegroom (Isa. 62:4,5:
Hos. 1-3; Jer. 3:1-8), or to Israel as attendants on
Christ as Bridegroom with his bride, the church (Eph.
5:23-33, Jn. 3:29).
At this
point, the meaning is veiled, but both applications were
manifest later after the death, burial and resurrection
of Christ and He was taken from them (Jn. 14:28). Where
did the tradition ever come from that the groom is not
supposed to see the bride the day of the wedding until
she comes down the aisle. A time of separation. After
Christ was taken away they began to fast, (Acts 13:1-3;
14:23; 2 Cor. 11:27). Prophetically, Israel is fasting,
weeping and wailing in the Tribulation, after Christ
comes and catches His bride out; the virgins of the
Tribulation will attend the Bridegroom when He returns.
(Psa. 45; Song. 6:8-10; Matt. 25:1-8)
9:18,19
Jesus never refused worship as the natural and right thing.
That makes Him God or an impostor. The NIV says "knelt
before" not worship. Could it be its translators are opposed
to worship of Christ?
[1].
Notice worship is connected with believing in Jesus
ability to do anything.
[2]. In (Matt. 14:33), it's connected with
believing Jesus Christ it the Son of God.
[3]. In (Jn. 9:38), it's associated with
believing in his presence.
...but in
all cases it has to do with believing an unbelieving
heart cannot worship Christ. (vs. 20-22)
Missing
details are in (Mk. 5:25-31).
[1].
The problem is a blood problem, (Mk. 5:29) calls it a
plague. Ziare plague.
[2]. The sin plague that infects the blood cannot
be healed by physicians.
[3]. The woman was afflicted 12 years (vs. 20)
and the dead maid (same chapter) was 12 years old (Mk.
5:42). Since the #12 has to do with Israel, these events
undoubtedly have a prophetic application to the future
healing and resurrection of Israel. The Lord is always
demonstrating more than the obvious.
9:13-26
Again (Mk. 5:35-43) provides details that Matt.
omits.
[1].
This is the daughter of dead religious - their problem is
believing (Mk. 5:36).
[2]. Peter, James and John, as on the Mount of
Transfiguration, accompanied Jesus. Both occasions type
the 2nd Advent. (Hos. 6:1,2).
[3]. Religion's professional mourners (minstrels
vs. 23) look very sentimonious, but laugh at the power of
Jesus words.
[4]. The scorners are ultimately put out - (Prov.
1:22-23)
9:27-31
[1].
"Son of David" indicates that the common people are
beginning to recognize Jesus as the long promised
Messiah.
[2]. The result of the recognition is Jesus goes
into the "house."
[3]. Sight comes as a result of faith.
[4]. "See that no man know it" - revelation is on
a time clock.
9:32-34
[1].
Some physical problems can be caused by spiritual forces,
however it can go either way as in (Mk. 7:31-37).
[2]. "It was never so seen in Israel" finds
amplification in (11:4,5).
[3]. The Pharisees lack of ability to do the same
is defended with the idea that Jesus did these miracles
through the power of the devil, which is interestingly
from the standpoint that there has been a long standing
belief that the Devil has that power.
9:35
[1].
Jesus taught an preached - both are essential.
[2]. This Gospel of the kingdom could not
possibly be the same Gospel of (1 Cor. 15:1-4. See Gal.
1:8,9).
[3]. The Gospel of the kingdom is a Tribulation
message preceding the 2nd Advent (Matt. 24:14).
9:36-38
[1].
The Shepherd - Sheep reference is a fulfillment of (Eze.
34) (see vs. 1-5), and is primarily concerned with
Israel's condition at the time of both Advents.
[2]. The literal interpretation concerning the
harvest is a literal harvest of Israel during the
Tribulation, (Rev. 14:14-16).
[3]. That we can transcend the application to us
in a spiritual way is verified in (Jn. 4:35), spoken
while Jesus was in Samaria.
Return
To Index |
Chapter
10
|