Jesus Calls Us to Come to Him
Matthew 11
The main theme of the eleventh chapter of Matthew I believe
is simple –that there are two kinds of cities – two kinds of people. Those who accept God and those who
don’t. Jesus is comparing the cities that
accepted God’s Word in this chapter with the cities that didn’t. When a prophet would come to a city
proclaiming God’s Word, some cities would turn from their sins and come to God –
like Nineveh did
when the prophet Jonah came to them with God’s warning- while other cities
would not turn from their sins and would reject God and the prophet too. Often prophets were stoned for bringing God’s
message.
I think Jesus was
broken hearted because even though He has healed so many, cast out demons,
raised the dead, caused the lame to walk and the blind to see as he has traveled
around Israel, these same people who wanted his healings don’t want Him or his message!
The religious leaders are influencing them, but still it hurts. Jesus has come to his own and his own are not
receiving Him.
Jesus says that John the Baptist “came neither eating or
drinking, and the people said, ‘He has a demon.’ And then the Son of Man (Jesus) came eating
and drinking, and the people said, ‘Look a glutton and a winebibber, a friend
of tax collectors and sinners!’ (Matthew
11:18-19a) Jesus seems to be saying that
the people He loves – the Jewish people of that day - are critical and rejecting
no matter how the gospel is presented to them.
Jesus goes on to say
that the city of Capernaum
(His city) rejected God even after Jesus had done many mighty works there. Jesus preached and healed many people and
performed many miracles in Capernaum .
Capernaum
was given so much light and still refused to see! And Jesus added that if the city of Sodom had experienced the mighty works that Capernaum had experienced that Sodom would still be close to God. He explained that each city will be judged by
the light that they are given. And there
will be a Judgment Day when judgment will come down for all the cities and all
the people of the world!
Jesus continues telling his disciples that if a person or a
city rejects Him they are rejecting God and if they reject God they are
rejecting Him. And of course if a person
accepts Jesus they are accepting the Father as well. We read: “All things have been delivered to
Me (Jesus) by My Father and no one knows the Son except the Father. Nor does anyone know the Father except the
Son, and the one to whom the Son wills to reveal Him.” (Matthew 11:25) At another time Jesus also said: “I am the
Way, the Truth and the Life. No person
comes to the Father but by Me.” (John
14:6) When Jesus said that He and the
Father were one it drove the religious establishment mad!
Matthew chapter 11 begins with John the Baptist sending his
friends to Jesus to ask Him if He really is the Messiah or should they look for
another. Poor John is languishing in a
dark prison and he probably is depressed knowing that he will be put to death
soon. Bible scholars believe that John
the Baptist was expecting Jesus to usher in the great judgment of sin (Matthew
3:10-12) and instead Jesus had been loving the people and healing and
preaching. It seems that physical
healing and spiritual healing go together.
Prophecies say that
Jesus will come again and usher in this great judgment at the end of the
age. But John the Baptist had expected the
judgment to come when Jesus came to earth that first time. So when Jesus came and did not bring judgment
with Him at that time, John the Baptist wondered if Jesus was the real
Messiah.
It is easy for us to make the same mistake John the Baptist made
and decide what we think God must do on our schedule. And then we get confused when God doesn’t do
what we feel He should in our time frame.
Of course God’s time frame is different than ours. We need to trust God because He sees the
whole picture and of course we don’t.
Jesus sent an answer back to John the Baptist concerning
whether He was the Messiah or not. This
is His answer: “The blind see and the lame walk: the lepers are cleansed and
the deaf hear: the dead are raised up and the poor have the gospel preached to
them. And blessed is he who is not
offended because of Me.” (Matthew
11:5-6) Jesus answered John the Baptist
by calling attention to his healings and miracles which John the Baptist would
recognize as something that only God could perform. (Isaiah 29:18-19: 35:5-6: 61:1)
And then Jesus reminds John the Baptist: “And blessed is he
who is not offended because of Me.”
(Matt.11:6) This would encourage
John the Baptist but it will also encourage all of us who are not offended by
Jesus – all of us who believe in Him.
Jesus is saying that the people who are not offended by Him – who
believe in Him - are spiritually blessed.
“by believing we have life in His Name.”
(Jn. 20:31b)
We wonder what makes people accept or reject Jesus and his
message and while Jesus was talking about this subject He made this
comment: “the kingdom suffers violence,
and the violent take it by force.”
(Matthew 11:12b) I do not know what Jesus means here, but
Bible scholars suggest that the upheaval or violence caused by the expansion of
the kingdom of God into a life or a city is not caused
by political forces or armed advance.
But this violence is the result of God’s order shaking relationships and
households and cities and nations by the entry of the Holy Spirit’s power
working in people.
The Holy Spirit comes into the hearts of those that open to
Him and He often leads these ones to do things differently than the world
around them. They may even do things
differently than the churches they are part of. Let us remember that it was the religious
establishment that insisted that pilot the Roman governor, put Jesus to
death. The Jewish people looked to their
Pharisees and Saducees – their priests and those who studied God’s Word to lead
them to God. But now these “godly”
leaders who should have recognized Jesus as the Messiah that God’s Word had
promised - these religious leaders were
the ones who were influencing the people that Jesus was not of God! Some of the violence was coming from the very
establishment that claimed to be on God’s side. And perhaps things haven’t changed that much
today.
I was watching television last night and two political advertisements
were shown within a few minutes of one another.. One ad was showing a candidate
who is running for a political office here in Texas .
First the ad showed the candidate praying with his family while holding
hands around the dinner table. Then the
ad informs us that this political candidate is a “Values” voter! (Does that imply that the person running
against him isn’t?) Next this candidate comes
on the screen seething with hate and tells us that he not only hates President Obama
but he has sued Obama. Then he shows a
dark unflattering picture of the candidate who he is running against and tells
us that this awful man allowed the little children of illegal immigrants here
in Texas to go to public schools! How
awful of him! And his opponent won’t
work as hard to stop affordable healthcare for folks who are hurting and
without it as he will. The ad closes reminding us that he is a churchgoing
man. He believes in God and guns!
Within five minutes a second political ad was shown on
television. This time a woman with long
flowing hair walks to a blackboard and begins drawing a tree with different
colors of chalk. I suppose the tree
symbolizes all the people in our country with each branch a different group of
people all building a community together and all being nourished by the same roots
of democracy that run so deeply. Soft music plays in the background as the
woman talks about the dream of everyone making a better life together and
everyone respecting each another. A civilized caring community with a safety net so no one
will fall through the cracks. Affordable
health care, people compromising with one another. There was no mention anywhere in this ad
about God or the value of praying or going to church. But somehow I felt like this ad was more
“Christian” than the other one where the candidate in between all of his hating
was shown praying and going to church!
The crowds in Jesus’ day loved Him and followed Him for His
healings. But eventually the crowds turned
on Him because the religious leaders told the people that God was on their side
and that Jesus should be killed. The
religious establishment just kept on spreading hate talk and more hate talk
about Jesus. Finally the crowds thought they were doing God’s will when they
agreed with their religious leaders to crucify Him. Reminds me a little of what is going on today
in the U.S.A.
So much political hate is constantly being
spread around today in the name of Christianity! It scares me.
Wouldn’t real Christianity be more about spreading love?
The eleventh chapter of Matthew ends with Jesus talking
about those persons who do not reject Him.
Jesus thanks God that the “babes” accept Him but often the learned and
the wise do not accept Him because the spiritual fact that He is the Son of God
is hidden from their eyes. Spiritual
awareness of Jesus and his Kingdom is not arrived at through intellect or
common sense. One may need to be humble
to recognize their own spiritual helplessness in order to receive His spiritual
teaching. The glory of the Gospel is
that both the learned and the ignorant may become babes.
Jesus calls out again for people to accept Him. He tells us what it will be like if we
do. Here’s what He says: “Come unto Me, all you who labor and are
heavy laden, and I will give you rest.
Take My yoke upon you and learn from Me, for I am gentle and lowly in
heart, and you will find rest for your souls.
My yoke is easy and My burden is light.”
(Matthew 11:28-29)
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