Chapters
Matthew – The King Who Turned Everything Upside Down
What’s this Book All About?
Matthew wrote the ultimate biography of Jesus – but not the kind you’d expect. Instead of chronicling a typical king’s rise to power, Matthew shows us a Messiah who redefines what Kingdom and Kingship actually mean, turning Jewish expectations and Roman assumptions completely on their head.
The Full Context
Picture this: it’s somewhere between 70-85 CE, and the Jewish world has been shattered. The Temple is gone, Jerusalem lies in ruins, and diaspora Jewish communities are wrestling with devastating questions. How could God let this happen? What does it mean to be God’s people now? And what about this Jesus movement that’s been growing among both Jews and Gentiles? Matthew, likely a Jewish scribe who became a follower of Jesus, writes to answer these burning questions for a predominantly Jewish audience that’s trying to make sense of their new reality.
Matthew structures his gospel like a new Torah – five major teaching sections that echo Moses’ five books, but with Jesus as the new Lawgiver on a new mountain. He’s not just telling the story of Jesus; he’s making the case that Jesus is the promised Messiah who fulfills everything the Hebrew Scriptures pointed toward. But here’s the twist that would have blown his original readers’ minds: this Messiah doesn’t come to destroy Israel’s enemies or restore political power. Instead, he comes to transform hearts, welcome outsiders, and establish a kingdom that operates by completely different rules than anything they’d ever imagined.
What the Ancient Words Tell us
When Matthew calls Jesus Christos, he’s not using it as a last name – he’s making a explosive political and theological claim. Christos is the Greek translation of the Hebrew mashiach (Messiah), meaning “Anointed One.” But while most Jews expected a military leader who would kick out the Romans and restore Israel’s glory, Matthew shows us something radically different.
Look at how Matthew uses the phrase basileia ton ouranon – “Kingdom of Heaven.” This isn’t about going to Heaven when you die. In first-century Jewish thought, this was about God’s reign breaking into the present world, turning everything upside down. When Jesus says “the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand” in Matthew 4:17, he’s essentially declaring that God’s alternative society is launching right here, right now.
Grammar Geeks
Matthew loves the word pleroo (fulfill) – he uses it 16 times! But this isn’t just about checking boxes on a prophecy list. The Greek suggests something more like “filling up to the brim” or “bringing to completion.” Jesus doesn’t just fulfill individual predictions; he brings the entire story of Israel to its intended climax.
What Would the Original Audience Have Heard?
Matthew’s original readers would have immediately caught something we often miss: this gospel is structured like a legal brief. Matthew presents witness after witness, quote after quote from Hebrew Scripture, building an airtight case that Jesus is indeed the long-awaited Messiah. But he’s also preparing them for the shock of what kind of Messiah Jesus turns out to be.
When Matthew opens with that genealogy in Matthew 1:1-17, his Jewish readers would have been scanning those names like we scroll through social media. They knew these stories – the scandals, the failures, the unexpected plot twists. And they would have been stunned to see women like Tamar, Rahab, Ruth, and Bathsheba included. In a culture where genealogies typically highlighted only the most respectable male lineage, Matthew is already hinting that this Messiah will welcome the unexpected and embrace the outsiders.
Did You Know?
The Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 5-7) would have sounded like revolutionary manifesto to first-century ears. When Jesus says “blessed are the poor in spirit,” he’s not promoting weakness – he’s announcing that God’s kingdom operates by completely different values than Roman imperial power or religious hierarchy.
The parables would have hit differently too. When Jesus tells stories about masters forgiving impossible debts or laborers receiving equal pay regardless of hours worked, His audience would have heard these as descriptions of an alternative economic and social system that challenged everything they knew about how the world worked.
But Wait… Why Did They…?
Here’s something that puzzles many readers: why do the religious leaders, who spent their whole lives studying Scripture and waiting for the Messiah, end up being Jesus’ primary opponents? You’d think they’d be the first to recognize Him, right? This is one of the plot twists of all the Gospel accounts.
The answer reveals something profound about expectations versus reality. The religious establishment was looking for a Messiah who would validate their religious system, confirm their interpretation of Scripture, and elevate their status. Instead, Jesus shows up eating with tax collectors and sinners, healing on the Sabbath, and claiming authority that bypassed their entire religious hierarchy.
Wait, That’s Strange…
Notice how Matthew handles the resurrection accounts. While the other gospels focus on the disciples’ amazement and joy, Matthew emphasizes the religious leaders’ desperate attempts to cover up what happened (Matthew 28:11-15). He’s addressing rumors that were apparently still circulating in his community decades later.
Matthew also presents some genuinely puzzling moments that reveal the complexity of following Jesus. Why does Jesus seem to restrict his ministry to Jews in Matthew 15:24, only to send his disciples to “all nations” in Matthew 28:19? Matthew shows us a Messiah whose mission unfolds in stages, beginning with Israel but ultimately embracing the whole world – a pattern that would have challenged both Jewish exclusivism and Gentile assumptions about God’s people.
Wrestling with the Text
Matthew doesn’t shy away from the tensions and contradictions that following Jesus creates. Take the Beatitudes in Matthew 5:3-12. Jesus pronounces blessing on the mourning, the persecuted, the powerless – basically everyone that the ancient world (and often our world) considers unsuccessful or unfortunate. This isn’t just nice sentiment; it’s a complete reversal of honor-shame culture and worldly definitions of success.
The difficult sayings are here too. Jesus tells his followers to “turn the other cheek” and “love your enemies” (Matthew 5:39-44) – words that would have sounded impossible to people living under Roman occupation. Matthew doesn’t try to soften these hard teachings; instead, he shows us a Messiah who enables nothing less than a complete transformation of how we see and treat other people.
“Matthew shows us that following Jesus isn’t about escaping the world’s complexities – it’s about engaging them with the radical love and justice of God’s kingdom.”
Even Jesus’ harsh words to the Pharisees in Matthew 23 serve Matthew’s larger purpose. He’s not promoting anti-Semitism (Matthew himself was Jewish!); he’s warning against the spiritual pride and systemic injustice that can corrupt any religious system, including the early and modern Christian communities his readers belong to.
How This Changes Everything
Here’s what Matthew ultimately reveals: the Kingdom of Heaven isn’t just a future destination – it’s a present reality that transforms how we live right now. When Jesus teaches his disciples to pray “Your Kingdom come, Your will be done, on earth as it is in Heaven” (Matthew 6:10), He’s not asking for an escape from earthly life but for Heaven’s values to reshape earthly relationships and systems.
Matthew’s Gospel shows us that being a follower of Jesus means joining a movement that challenges injustice, welcomes outsiders, forgives enemies, and operates by the upside-down logic of divine love. The Messiah has come not to destroy the Torah (Law) and prophets but to fulfill them (Matthew 5:17) – and that fulfillment looks like radical love, costly grace, and a community where the last become first and the first become last.
This isn’t just ancient history. Matthew wrote for people trying to figure out what it means to follow Jesus in a broken world, and his message resonates just as powerfully today: the Kingdom of Heaven is still at hand, still turning everything upside down, still welcoming anyone willing to be transformed by the radical love of God.
Key Takeaway
Matthew reveals that Jesus didn’t come to meet our expectations of what a Messiah should be – He came to transform our understanding of what God’s kingdom actually looks like: a place where love wins, outsiders are welcomed, and the humble inherit the earth.
Further reading
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