• About…
    • Commenting Guidelines
  • Post Archive
    • Archive: Culture
    • Archive: Leadership
    • Archive: Theology
      • Archive: Hermeneutics
  • Bibliographies
    • Culture Bibliography (Main)
      • Apostle Paul Bibliography
      • Church History Bibliography
      • Church Turnaround Bibliography
      • Culture Bibliography
      • Missiology Bibliography
      • Socio-Rhetorical Bibliography
    • Leadership Bibliography (Main–Multicultural)
      • Brotherhood Bibliography
      • Multiethnic Church Bibliography
      • Post-Modernism Bibliography
      • Reconciliation Bibliography
    • Theology Bibliography (Main)
      • Biblical Interpretation Bibliography
      • Textual Criticism Bibliography
      • Theological Writing Bibliography
      • Theology Bibliography
  • Glossaries
    • Culture Glossary
      • Socio-Rhetorical Glossary A-F
      • Socio-Rhetorical Glossary G-L
      • Socio-Rhetorical Glossary M-R
      • Socio-Rhetorical Glossary S-Z
    • Leadership Glossary (Multicultural Church)
      • Multicultural Church Glossary A-F
      • Multicultural Church Glossary G-L
      • Multicultural Church Glossary M-R
      • Multicultural Church Glossary: S-Z
  • Faith Statement

perSpectives 12

~ Forum about culture, theology and leadership

perSpectives 12

Category Archives: Gospel of Matthew,

The Matthean Portrait of the King

04 Friday Dec 2020

Posted by drjparon in Advent, Emmanuel, Genealogy, Gospel of Matthew,, Oneness of God

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Advent, Advent Day 6, Advent2020, Emmanuel, Jesus King-Servant, Oneness of God

Advent Day 6

The Gospel authors centered their accounts on the revelation of God in Christ. It made their witness both scriptural and undeniable before an unbelieving world. Without God becoming man to die for humanity’s sins, He could not fulfill His redemptive purposes. Each Gospel’s view overlaps one to the other for interaction and account clarity. Matthew presented Jesus as a King-Servant, while Mark showed Him as a Son-Servant of the Lord. Luke testified Jesus as both Savior and Son of man. John concluded by proclamation and exposition, Jesus is the Son of God, God and man. As each account declared, His life’s purpose was to die and rise for sinners. Each book regardless of its perspective, leads to His crucifixion and resurrection. Mark’s Servant, although presented as King in Matthew, died; Luke’s Man, also called the Son of God in John, suffered crucifixion. The authors did not give a complete biography of His life. Instead, they presented a complete scriptural portrait of Jesus Christ, proclaiming His Gospel and forming the basis of New Testament writing and doctrine.

image0(4)

Matthew: Jesus, the King-Servant

Matthew wrote his Gospel to Jewish believers calling it the book of Jesus’ genealogy (Matt 1:1). It traces Jesus’ descent and describes His life based on Scripture. Proclaiming Him King of Israel, Matthew ancestrally linked Jesus to King David and Abraham through Joseph, Mary’s husband, revealing the two great covenants God established with them. This identified Jesus as David’s seed, Israel’s promised King (Davidic Covenant) and Abraham’s son in whom all nations would be blessed with salvation (Abrahamic Covenant).

The Davidic and Abrahamic covenants present Christ’s first and second comings (Gen 22:18; 2 Sam 7:11-14). His first coming brought Abraham’s promised blessing of justification for everyone by crucifixion. His return will bring kingdom establishment and blessing for Israel and all nations. Matthew thoroughly confirmed Jesus’ kingship throughout his Gospel with teachings, miracles, prophecy fulfillment, along with statements and acts of authority; however, Jesus did not fulfill His reign. Instead, Israel in unbelief, rejected their king and crucified Him so God’s promised blessing in Abraham’s son will come to all nations by faith through the Holy Ghost (Gal 3:13-15).

Matthew’s addition of Jesus’ virgin birth account to His genealogy gave essential significance to His identity. It revealed Abraham and David’s seed as the Lord God of Israel in flesh and why so many Scriptures came to fulfillment (Matt 1:21-23). Being literally Emmanuel, God with us as man, Jesus’ kingship had divine honor and authority—not human, although He descended from David and Abraham.

Matthew fashioned his writing with a kingdom emphasis affirming Jesus as Messiah-King, but midway through his narration he transitioned presenting Jesus as Jehovah’s Servant (12:15-21; Isa 42:1). Using Isaiah’s prophecy in light of Israel’s initial rejection, Matthew guided his narration of Christ, the obedient Servant, to His final rejection by Israel while continuing a literary emphasis on God’s kingdom. In obedience, the rejected King postpones Israel’s messianic kingdom for humanity’s salvation (Matt 21:43). Along with kingdom emphasis, Matthew presented the continuous theme of redemption. Before Christ comes to reign, He will give Jews and Gentiles an opportunity to enter His kingdom.

Pastor Daryl Cox

12.4.20

(Excerpt from Jesus Across the Gospels: A Portrait of Who Jesus Is)

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Pinterest
  • Email
  • Print
  • More
  • Tumblr
  • LinkedIn
  • Reddit

Like this:

Like Loading...

PerSpectives 12 Ministry


PERSPECTIVES 12 supports urban churches and ministries in a multicultural context for resources in the areas of culture, theology and leadership.

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 1,027 other followers

Search Site

Recent Posts

  • Himself Took on Our Infirmities, and Bare Our Sicknesses (Matt 8:17)
  • The Coming King: When Love Arrived (Matt 21:5)
  • Seeking the Star of Jacob: Where Can God Be Found (Unabridged Sermon)
  • Thy Kingdom Come, Thy Will Be Done (Matt 6:10)
  • The Authority of “I Say Unto You” (Matt 5:21-22)

Top Posts & Pages

  • The Beatitudes: A Servant's Character in Christ
    The Beatitudes: A Servant's Character in Christ
  • The Three Worlds of Text
    The Three Worlds of Text
  • The Ministry of Reconciliation
    The Ministry of Reconciliation
  • Biblical Interpretation: Hermeneutical Spiral and Culture
    Biblical Interpretation: Hermeneutical Spiral and Culture
  • “Word Was Made Flesh and Dwelt Among Us" Part 1
    “Word Was Made Flesh and Dwelt Among Us" Part 1
  • Apostle Paul Bibliography
    Apostle Paul Bibliography
  • Spiritual Wisdom & Revelation Knowledge
    Spiritual Wisdom & Revelation Knowledge

Archives

Categories

Twitter Feed

  • Himself Took on Our Infirmities, and Bare Our Sicknesses (Matt 8:17) specs12.wordpress.com/2020/12/15/him… 2 months ago
  • The Coming King: When Love Arrived (Matt 21:5) specs12.wordpress.com/2020/12/11/the… 2 months ago
  • Seeking the Star of Jacob: Where Can God be Found (Unabridged Sermon) specs12.wordpress.com/2020/12/10/see… 2 months ago
Follow @pastorjan

Counter

  • 32,841 hits

Google Translator

Translate this blog into different languages...

Albanian Arabic Bulgarian Catalan Chinese Simplified Chinese Traditional Croatian Czech Danish Dutch Estonian Filipino Finnish French Galician German Greek Hebrew Hindi Hungarian Indonesian Italian Japanese Korean Lativian Lithuanian Maltese Norwegian Polish Portuguese Romanian Russian Serbian Slovak Slovenian Spanish Swedish Thai Turkish Ukrainian

Blogroll

  • All Nations Leadership Institute
  • Lighthouse Church of All Nations
  • Missional Coaches Network

Location of Visitors

world map hits counter
map counter

Blog at WordPress.com.

Cancel

 
Loading Comments...
Comment
    ×
    loading Cancel
    Post was not sent - check your email addresses!
    Email check failed, please try again
    Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email.
    %d bloggers like this: