Day 16, Matthew 16 
Jesus is not only the Messiah, Son of God, and Savior.
He is also "Mr. Metaphor." It seems He
hardly spoke a sentence that didn't include at least
one figurative word, and when He did, even His closest
disciples sometimes misunderstood Him. People have
been misunderstanding Him for 2,000 years, and it
is often due to the error of interpreting literally what
was meant to be understood figuratively. Today we
read of such an instance.
"Beware of the leaven of the Pharisees and
Sadducees" (16:6). Only one word, leaven,
was figurative, and the disciples should have realized
that, as it would make little sense for Jesus to
warn them about the Pharisees' yeast. They began
discussing, however, that they had forgotten to take
bread with them! Let us learn a lesson from their
error. And let us also realize that we, too, need
to beware of false teaching that seems insignificant
and harmless at first, but then permeates everything
it touches, just like leaven. Every false
doctrine that is poisoning the church around the
world began as a single sermon.
One such global false doctrine has been spawned
by a wrong interpretation of Jesus' words to Peter
in 16:18: "You are Peter, and upon this rock
I will build My church; and the gates of Hades will
not overpower it."
Peter, or literally Petros in
Greek, means "stone." The word translated "rock" is petra,
which means "large rock," or "bedrock." The
rock of which Jesus spoke as being the future foundation
of His church was not Peter, who, incidentally, Jesus
was figuratively calling "Satan" just seconds
later (16:23). Rather, the foundation rock of the
church is God's revelation that Jesus is the Son
of God, the revelation that Peter believed and confessed.
Everything in true Christianity is built upon that.
When a person believes that Jesus is the Son of God,
he repents, is born again, and becomes a member of
Jesus' church.
Jesus follows His rock metaphor with three more
figurative expressions that, when interpreted
literally, have resulted in some strange doctrines.
The first of those three is Jesus' statement about
the gates of Hades not overpowering His church. Within
their context, they simply tell us that the church
is comprised of people who have believed that Jesus
is the Son of God, and when they do, they escape
their destiny in Hades/hell. Jesus' words have nothing
to do with the church "doing spiritual warfare" by "attacking
the gates of the enemy" and so on.
Jesus next told Peter that He would give him "the
keys of the kingdom of heaven," another obvious
metaphorical expression. His words simply indicated that
Peter would have the means (the "keys")
for people to get into heaven. Surely this was fulfilled
when Peter preached the gospel, effectively opening
the way to heaven to believers and closing it to
unbelievers. This interpretation is underscored by
the fact that Jesus told Peter---in the third metaphorical
expression---that whatever he would bind (also translated
as "imprison") on earth would be bound
in heaven, and whatever he loosed on earth would
be loosed in heaven. That is, Peter's "keys
to heaven" (the gospel) would work
on the earth. Unfortunately, those "binding"
and "loosing" words have not only been interpreted
literally, but have been also imaginatively enhanced,
so that we have folks verbally "binding" and
"loosing" angels, demons, favor, circumstances,
and thousands of other things, even though there
isn't a shred of evidence from the New Testament
that anyone in the early church practiced such things.
There are still more metaphors in today's reading,
such as "take up your cross" (embrace inevitable
suffering), "save your life by losing it for
Jesus' sake" (gain salvation by exchanging your
personal agenda for Jesus' agenda), and "gain
the whole world and forfeit your soul" (pursue
selfish gratification at the expense of salvation).
These are followed, however, by a statement we should
interpret literally: "For the Son of Man is
going to come in the glory of His Father with His
angels; and will then recompense every man according
to his deeds" (16:27). Sobering words. We will
reap as we have sown. Are you ready?
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