I. Jerusalem In The Kingdom Age. II. Messianic Prophecy. III. Teaching in Anticipation of Rejection.


I. Jerusalem In The Kingdom Age.

A. Because the covenants made with Israel guaranteed them the possession of the land, which is fully realized in the kingdom age, The Land Of Israel and Jerusalem figure largely in the prophetic Scriptures. 

B. Jerusalem in the Kingdom. A number of facts are made clear from a study of the prophecies concerning the place of Jerusalem in that age. 

1. Jerusalem will become the center of the millennial earth (Isa. 2:2-4; Jer. 31:6; Mic. 4:1; Zech 2: 10-11). Because the world is under the dominion of Israel’s King, the center of Israel becomes the center of the entire earth. 

2. Jerusalem will be the center of the kingdom rule (Jer. 3:17; 30:16-17; 31:6, 23; Ezek. 43:5-6; Joel 3:17; Mic. 4:7; Zech. 8:2-3). The city that was the center of David’s government will become the center of the government of David’s greater Son. 

3. The city will become a glorious city, bringing honor unto Yahweh (Isa. 52:1-12; 60:14-21; 61:3; 62:1-12; 66: 10-14; Jer. 30:18; 33:16; Joel 3:17; Zech. 2:1-13). So closely is the King associated with Jerusalem, that the city will partake of His glory. 

4. The city will be protected by the power of the King (Isa. 14:32; 25:4; 26:1-4; 33:20-24) so that it never again need fear for its safety. 

5. The city will be greatly enlarged over its former area (Jer. 31:38-40; Ezek. 48:30-35; Zech. 14:10). 

6. It will be accessible to all in that day (Isa. 35:8-9) so that all who seek the King will find audience within its walls. 

7. Jerusalem will become the center of the worship of the age (Jer. 30:16-21; 31:6, 23; Joel 3:17; Zech. 8:8, 20-23). 

8. The city will endure forever (Isa. 9:7; 33:20-21; 60:15; Joel 3:19-21; Zech. 8:4).   

II. Messianic Prophecy. 

The Prophecies Of Messiah (28-36). (P=Prophetic Verse. F=Fulfillment Verse).

28. P. He would be scourged upon spat and (Isa 50:6). F. Mt 6:67 27:26.

29. P. His price money would be used to buy a potter’s field (Jer 18;1-4; 19:1-4; Zech 11:12-13). F. Mt 27:9-10.

30. P. He would be crucified between two thieves (Isa 53:12). F. Mt 27:38; Mk 15:27-28; :Lk 22:27.

31 P. He would be given vinegar to drink (Psa 69:21). F. Mt 27:34; Jn 19:28-30.

32. P. He would suffer the piercing of His hands and feet (Psa 22:16; Zech 12:10). F. Mk 15:25; Jn 19:34, 37; 20:25-27.

33. P. His garments would be parted and gambled for (Psa 22:18). F. Lk 23:34; Jn 19: 23-24.

34. P. He would be surrounded and ridiculed by His enemies (Psa 22:7-8). F. Mt 27:39-44; Mk 15:29-32.

35. P. He would thirst (Psa 22:15). F. Jn 19:28.

36. P. He would commend His Spirit to the Father (Psa 31:5). F. Lk 23:46.

III. Teaching in Anticipation of Rejection. Matthew Chapter 16.

A. Pharisees and Sadducees Seek a Sign. 16:1-4.

1. The Pharisees, who had questioned the disciples’ disregard of their traditions, now joined by the Sadducees, sought to trap Jesus into giving them a sign from heaven. This was the first time the Pharisees and Sadducees, usually in disagreement, joined hands to trap Jesus.  Earlier  (Mt 12:38), they had asked for a sign and were given the sign of the prophet Jonah, with its prediction of the death and resurrection of Christ. Their asking for a sign indicated that they were unimpressed by the miracles and teaching of Yeshua, the very credentials predicted in the Old Testament.

2. Messiah, in His reply, alluded to their spiritual stupidity. He pointed out that when it came to seeing signs relating to weather, they could understand; but when it came to the signs of the times, they were unable to relate intelligently to them.

3. In closing His comments, Christ said that a wicked and adulterous generation will not be given a sign, except the sign He had given them earlier when they had asked the same question, the sign of the prophet Jonah. Although the Pharisees were not accused of being adulterers, spiritually, they were in the same state as those who had no morality and no religion. If He had given them some miraculous sign from heaven, they would have returned to the same accusation recorded in Matthew 12:24, that it was a miracle accomplished only by the power of Satan. Faith is not given to those who are seeking support for unbelief.

B. Leaven of the Pharisees and Sadducees. 16:5-12.

1. According to Mark 8-10, the Pharisees had questioned Him while in Dalmanutha, located on the west shore of Galilee. Upon conclusion of His exchange with the Pharisees, Messiah and His disciples again proceeded by boat to the eastern shore. When they arrived, the disciples found that they had forgotten to take bread (Mt 16:5). This would not have been so serious near Capernaum, but the eastern shore was relatively unpopulated.

2. Using this as an occasion for driving home a spiritual point, Messiah warned them against the leaven of the Pharisees and Sadducees. The disciples thought He was referring to the fact that they had taken no bread. Christ rebuked them for their concern, reminding them of the feeding of the five thousand and the feeding of the four thousand. He went on to state that He was warning them of the leaven of the Pharisees and the Sadducees. Leaven here, as elsewhere in the Scripture, is a symbol of permeating evil. They were not to be influenced by the infection of unbelief derived from these religious leaders.

C. Prediction of the Church. 16:13-20. 

1. Proceeding north and east from the Sea of Galilee, Christ came to the borders of Caesarea Philippi. There He questioned His disciples about their faith in Him, as also recorded in Mark 8:27-30 and Luke 9:18-21. He drew out of them first what others had said about Him. The response had been varied. Some people had considered Him John the Baptist raised from the dead, others Elijah the prophet, others Jeremiah or one of the other prophets. Only Matthew mentions Jeremiah.

2. Having prepared the way, Messiah then asked the important question, “But whom say ye that I am?” In reply, Simon Peter, frequently the spokesman for the twelve, declared, “You are the Christ, the Son of the living God” (Mt 16:16). Only Matthew adds the expression, “of the living God.”

3. Pronouncing a blessing on Peter as the one who had received this revelation from God the Father, Messiah made the important announcement about the church, which was not recorded in the narratives of the other gospels. He said, “And I say also unto you, That you are Peter, and upon this rock I will build My church; and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it.”

4. There is a “play on words” in the Greek of Matthew which is not clear in the English translation. Peter (Petros) means a loose stone. The “rock” is petra, a large or massive rock, like a cliff. The passage has often been cited to indicate the primacy of Peter as the first pope and the justification for the whole system built upon this concept. It is clear from other Scripture, however, that the rock upon which Christ intended to build is Himself, the solid rock, not Peter, one stone in the church composed of many living stones (1 Pet 2:5). What Messiah said, then, was, “you are a little rock, and upon this massive rock [pointing to Himself] I will build My church.” (Walvoord Commentary; John Walvoord, Th. D.).

5. It was not Peter upon which the church would be built but upon the person to whom Peter had witnessed in his confession of faith, Christ, the Son of the living God:

The church does not rest on a quality found in Peter, or in others like him. The church is not built on the confession her members make, which would change the effect into the cause. By her confession the church shows on what she is built. She rests on the reality which Peter confessed, namely, “the Christ, the Son of the living God.”

6. Some Protestants, however, continue to interpret this as referring to Peter, not as a pope, but as a believer of the first generation, a stone upon which others can build. In any case, the evidence in support of Peter as a bishop of Rome is lacking, neither is there any proof that Peter was ever in Rome. The Apostle Paul was clearly identified as being in Rome (Acts 27-28). 

7. The dynamic words, “I will build my church,” significantly are found in the gospel of Matthew, which more than the other gospels is given to the explanation of why the promised kingdom of the Old Testament was not brought in at the first coming of Christ. Here Matthew is introducing very simply the concept which is developed in the upper room discourse, John 13-17, and in the Acts and epistles, that God has a present purpose to be fulfilled in calling out His church, before the ultimate kingdom purpose is fulfilled.

8. The fact that Christ stated it as a future purpose indicates that His present ministry was not building the church, and, accordingly, even the mystery age of God’s kingdom (Kingdom of Heaven, of His authority…Ps 103:19…as opposed to the earthly Kingdom of God…2 Sam 7:8-16) was not precisely the same as the church. “The building of this spiritual temple (1 Cor 3:16-17) did not begin until after Messiah had ascended to heaven, and the Spirit of God came as the promised Comforter.” 

9. The word “build” is also significant because it implies the gradual construction of the church under the symbolism of living stones being built upon Christ, the foundation stone, as indicated in 1 Peter 2:4-8. This was to be the purpose of God before the second coming, in contrast to the millennial kingdom, which would follow the second coming of Christ (Mt 24:29-30; Rev 20:1-6). Against this program of God, the gates of hell (hades) will not be able to hold out.

10. After this great pronouncement, Christ added, “I will give unto you the keys of the kingdom of heaven: and what ever you shall bind on earth shall be bound in heaven: and whatsoever you shall loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven” (Mt 16:19). In this declaration, He was making clear the authority and important place of Peter as having the message which unlocks the entrance into the kingdom, over which Christ will rule.

11.”the keys.” The authority to open the doors to Christendom was given to Peter, who used that authority for Jews on the Day of Pentecost (Acts 2:1-36, 33 A.D.), and for Gentiles in the house of Cornelius (Acts 10:24-45, 41 A.D.). “shall have been bound…shall have been loosed.” God , in Heaven, not the apostles, initiates all binding and losing, whereas the apostles announce these things. In John 20:22-23 sins are in view; here, things (i.e.,  practices). An example of the apostles’ binding practices on people is found in Acts 15:20. (Ryrie Study Bible, Charles Ryrie, Ph. D.)

12. This, however, is no justification for attributing to Peter authority which was not shared with the other disciples. Although the singular is used here in the word “you”in 18:18, a similar pronouncement is made using “you,” applying to all the disciples. In a sense, every believer who has the gospel has the right to declare that those who believe the gospel are loosed on earth as well as in heaven, and to declare that those who reject the gospel are bound in earth as well as in heaven. (In heaven relates to the authority of God in Heaven (Ps 103:19), over heaven and over earth).

13. Yeshua concluded His discourse on this important theme by charging His disciples not to tell anyone that He was Messiah, the Christ. This strange command for silence is probably best understood as meaning that it was not propitious at this point to spread further the claim that He was indeed the Messiah. The time would come when they would proclaim it fearlessly, even though it would lead most of them ultimately to a martyr’s death.

D. Messiah Again Foretells His Death And Resurrection. 16.21-23

1. In anticipation of His ultimate rejection, Christ repeated here earlier warnings concerning His death and coming resurrection. Peter, having risen to great heights of faith in the preceding context, then demonstrated his lack of understanding by rebuking Messiah. In contrast to Christ’s commendation of Peter, in Matthew 16:17-18, Yeshua here rebuked Peter, “Get behind me, Satan: you are an offence unto me: for you are not setting your mind on God’s interests, but man’s.” The problem here was lack of spiritual discernment so common to man but not in keeping with Peter’s place of leadership among the disciples. Peter did not want to accept what did not agree with his hopes and ambitions. The disciples, who had been led to faith in the person of Christ, were not yet prepared to accept His work on the cross.

2. Earlier, Messiah had spoken of this in veiled language, as when He predicted that if the Jews destroyed the temple, He would raise it again in three days (Jn 2:18-22); this had occurred two years before. To Nicodemus, who came with his questions, in John 3, Jesus had said that He had to be lifted up, even as the serpent in the wilderness, in order to save those who believed in Him (vv. 14-18). In His interchange with the Pharisees, in Matthew 12:38-41, He had indicated that He would spend three days and nights in the heart of the earth. The same thought had been repeated in Matthew 16:4. Now, however, the time had come to speak plainly. Their faith in Him would have to be more than confidence that He was the Messiah of Israel. They would also have to believe that He was the Lamb of God, who had come to take away this sin of the world.

E. The Cost and Reward of Discipleship. 16:24-28.

1. After introducing the fact of His death, Messiah proceeded to teach His disciples the basic principles of discipleship. He had taught them earlier on the same subject (Mt 10:21-42). Discipleship would not immediately fulfill glorious expectations of reigning with Christ in His kingdom or being in places of power and influence. As Yeshua was telling His disciples, “the road to glory is a road of suffering.” 

2. As the road to triumph differs for a disciple, so also does the reward. For the world, there is immediate gain but ultimate loss: for the disciple, there is immediate loss but ultimate gain. 

3. Reaching forward prophetically to the time of His second coming, Christ declared, “Then he shall reward every man according to his works” (16:27). This applies both to the lost soul and to the one who is saved. Having prophetically reached out to the consummation, He then made the present application in the closing verse of chapter 16, “There be some standing here, which shall not taste of death, till they see the Son of man coming in his kingdom.” Jesus was not saying, as some have construed it, that the second coming would occur before those of His generation tasted death. He was introducing, rather, the transfiguration of chapter 17, which anticipated, in vision, the glory of the Son of man coming in His kingdom. (“According to his works,” 16:27: related to following Messiah…Moody Bible Commentary, Michael G. Vanlaningham, Ph. D.)

4. Taken as a whole, chapter 16 is symbolic of the broad Christian point of view of life, with its suffering and rejection by the world, the opposition of unbelief, the testing of being a disciple now, and the promise of future glory and blessing. After the cross would come the glory of the resurrection and the coming kingdom. While there are many present blessings in being a believer, the best is yet ahead. (Mt 16:18, “I will build My church.”). This chapter does not relate to the church in past tense (as there was no church in the Old Testament), or present tense (as there was no church at the time of the events of the Gospel of Matthew), but in a future tense, as Messiah is preparing His disciples for the time which would soon come into being. As with any other verse, or verse, of Scripture, context is the key factor when interpreting God’s Word. 

IV. Closing Comments On Matthew Chapter 16.

A. Nothing in Chapter 16 relates to personal salvation, that which would come through the ministry of the Church (Acts 1:8; 16:30-31). The Church is not a building or a denomination, but the born again body of believers in Christ (Rom 12:4-5; 1 Cor 1:2; 12:12-13, 20; Gal 3:28; Eph 4:4, 11-12; ).

B. The purpose of the Gospel of Matthew was to show the predetermined (Gen 3:15), Godly ordained and empowered (Ps 103:19), offer of the earthly Davidic Kingdom (2 Sam 7:8-16; Isa 2:1-9; 9:6b-7; 11:1-11; 65:9, 18-25); by Yahweh (in His Heavenly kingdom) to first century Israel through John the Baptist (Mt 3:2); Yeshua (Mt 4:17); and disciples (Mt 10:1-7). From His Heavenly Kingdom (Mt 3:2), from which He had all power and rule over the entire world (Psa 103:19), Yahweh offered to Israel the earthly kingdom over which Messiah would rule, if Israel would set over them as King the One whom Yahweh would choose (Deu 17:15), with Yeshua being Yahweh’s chosen King (Zech 14:1-5, 9; Mt 24:29-31; 25:31-46; Rev 19:11-16).

C. Members of the church (born again believers in Christ) are known as “saints.” (Acts 9:13, 32; 26:10; Rom 1:7; 15:25, 31; 16:2, 15; 1 Cor 16:15; 2 Cor 1:1; 8:4; 9:1,12; 13:13; Eph 1:1, 15, 18;  2:19; 3:8, 18; 4:12; 5:3; 6:18; Phil 1:1; 4:21-22; Col 1:2, 4, 12, 16; 1 Thes 3:13; 2 Thes 1:10; 1 Tim 5:10; Philemon 1:5, 7; Heb 6:10; 13:24; Jude 1:3; Rev 11:18; 13:17; 18:20, 24; 20:9; ).

D. The church is a local, autonomous, body of believers in Christ, which is led by Elders: Acts 11:30; 14:23; 15:2, 22; 16:4; 20:17; 21:18; 1 Tim 5:17; Tit 1:5; Jas 5:14; 1 Pet 1:1; 2 Jn 1:1).

Author: Eternity

The Church is the Church, and Israel is Israel. The Church did not replace Israel, and is not spiritual Israel. In the New Testament, “church” and “Israel” are mentioned as being separate entities. In the New Testament “church” is mentioned 112 times; Israel is mentioned 79 times; both are mentioned as being separate entities The Kingdom “has not yet come,” and will not come until the Jewish bloodline of Israel accepts God’s chosen king (Deuteronomy 17:15), which will take place at the end of the Tribulation when the nation of Israel faces decimation and calls on Messiah, Christ, in faith, to save them (Zechariah 12:10). Individual salvation is of the Jews (John 4:22), and comes through Christ (John 14:6). Things are discussed in this website that relate to God’s creation, from “eternity to eternity,” and all that is addressed within those parameters. Consider Isaiah 43:13, “Even from eternity I am He, And there is no one who can rescue from My hand; I act, and who can reverse it?” The Moody Study Bible adds a comment: “God is the ruler of all, and there is nothing that can stand against Him. His will is irresistible. The Bible Knowledge Commentary adds this thought: “No one can reverse what God puts into action or thwart His plans.” The articles that are found in this site may relate to anything that is found in the Bible, from Genesis 1:1 to Revelation 22:21. I would like to add a word of caution concerning blog writing and personal security. Many of my followers reside in foreign lands, of which many are hostile to the Word of God. Therefore, I will not provide my name, place of residence, or anything else that could lead a person to know anything about me. I recommend that all writers adopt the same method of personal security.

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