True & Beautiful Things About the Bible--New Testamentનમૂનો

True & Beautiful Things About the Bible--New Testament

DAY 2 OF 30

The Gospel of Matthew: The Jewish Gospel

Anyone who has walked with God will tell you—He makes you wait. The Jews had waited a long time for their promised Messiah. They hadn't heard from God, not a word, for more than 400 years.

The Gospel of Matthew is a book of transition; we could call it the Jewish Gospel. Good news... to the Jews. Their Messiah, whom God promised them in the Old Testament, has arrived. Jesus the Christ—Every time we say His name, we call Him “the Anointed,” the Jewish Messiah and Savior of the world.

The Old Testament was God’s story with His people. Matthew begins with all their names in a list, connecting Jesus to Abraham and David, the two rock stars in this 41-generational family line-up.

Matthew’s goal was to convince the Jews that Jesus was God’s promise fulfilled.

Ten times he says, All this took place to fulfill what the Lord had spoken by the prophet . . .” Even more times, he tells them about something Jesus said that echoed the ancient promises. Jesus intentionally did things that connected dots to lines across the Old Testament.

But expectations are hard to overcome. The Jews thought the Messiah was coming to bless the Jews, but it soon became clear that He was introducing a better plan. He wasn’t interested in overthrowing Rome in the first century, and He wasn’t only interested in the Jews, but was instead building a kingdom of God that included both Jews and Gentiles who embraced Him as Messiah and Savior.

This was quite different than they expected. Even Jesus’ most dedicated spokesman, John the Baptist, had his doubts. John, who acted just like an Old Testament prophet, asked Jesus to clarify His mission. Right before his very violent execution, John sent a message to Jesus, Are you the One or should we look for another? (Matthew 11:3)

An honest question from a faithful Jew. But Jesus made John’s disciples wait for an answer as He kept teaching the crowd and healing broken bodies, minds, and souls. Then He says, “Go tell John what you have seen and heard: . . . about the blind who now see and the paralyzed who now walk, about the broken-hearted who now sing, and the dead who live again” —all specific clues from the prophet Isaiah on how to recognize the coming Messiah.

So as one chapter ends, another begins. And now every person, Jew or Gentile, is invited into the story. And what Jesus brings to the world is the true and complete fulfillment of the greatest Jewish promise. What’s ahead is so much more beautiful than their expectations, better than what they hoped or prayed for.

Jesus the Christ is the promise fulfilled.

Next: Slow down, Jesus!

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About this Plan

True & Beautiful Things About the Bible--New Testament

God’s Word is both true and beautiful. In a time when you have to question if it’s real, here’s something you can trust. Verified. Worthy. You saw it in Part 1—Old Testament, now see it even clearer in Jesus’ story in Part 2—New Testament. Trace the whole true and beautiful story and you’ll see how God is doing something true and beautiful in your life, too.

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