The Power of Jesus; The Faith-Rest Drill. Matthew 8:23-27
We are starting this next little
section in Matthew 8 & 9 that focuses on the credentials of the Messiah. It
is so important to understand what is going on in Matthew. It is like anything
else, when we stumble into the middle of a conversation or open up a book, or
we look at a letter and we start reading in the middle, then we can often
misunderstand what is being talked about or what is being said, simply because
we haven't read the whole thing and don't understand the framework, the
background, the purpose, the intent, whatever it is, of what we are hearing.
The same often happens with Scripture. It is a fallacy we see often today
because people do not understand hermeneutics, basic principles of
interpretation, and that we are to interpret the Bible literally. That does not
exclude figures of speech, but we are to understand it literally, understand it
in terms of its historical background, its historical context, and in light of
the purpose of each author. Like any good literature every epistle and every
bit of the Bible has a purpose. The writer chooses under the leadership of God
the Holy Spirit what he is going to include and what he is going to exclude in
order to substantiate his basic thesis.
And the basic thesis of Matthew is to
present Jesus in terms of His messianic credentials from the Old Testament.
Matthew quotes from the Old Testament more than any other Gospel writer. He is
writing to a Jewish audience some twenty years or so after the crucifixion of
Christ to encourage them in their faith, and basically answering the question
that yes, Jesus is the Messiah, He came offering the kingdom; you may wonder
why the kingdom is not here, and that is because it was rejected by Israel and is
postponed. So we are living in an interim period now in the church age that
still anticipates the future coming of the kingdom when the King comes the
second time at the end of the Tribulation period to establish His kingdom.
Matthew is not writing a biography of Jesus, he is writing to substantiate that
Jesus is who He claimed to be.
What we see when we look at a little
broader perspective of Matthew is that after we get out of the birth and
infancy descriptions in the first three chapters, starting in chapter four the
focus is on the beginning of Jesus ministry. We see His baptism by John the
Baptist at the end of chapter three, and in chapter four we have the temptation
and calling His disciples. He is arranging this material according to his
subject matter, according to a theme. He is not giving us a chronology of
events. He is taking events from different periods of Christ's ministry and
putting them together as a way of listing certain types of evidence of who He
is.
So He calls His disciples and then Matthew
has the Sermon on the Mount very early. It probably took place a little later
in Jesus' ministry, but he puts it early because it was a training message for
His disciples. He is going to send His disciples out when we have finished with
this section, in Matthew chapter ten, to proclaim the message that John the
Baptist has already proclaimed: "Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at
hand". That is a message that is focused on that Jewish audience. They
weren't told what the kingdom was because they didn't have to. They knew the
Torah; they knew all of the Old Testament prophecies and promises that God
would usher in a glorious age in the future for Israel, Jerusalem would be the
center of worship for the entire world, and the son of David, called the Messiah,
the Anointed One, would rule and reign from His throne in Jerusalem. It was a
literal kingdom where Jesus sat on a literal throne in literal Jerusalem. It
wasn't some spiritual kingdom that is in heaven where Jesus is somehow ruling
from the throne of God.
Jesus now comes on the scene, after the
preparation by John the Baptist proclaimed this message. He appears offering
Himself to Israel. His message is the same as John's: "Repent, for the
kingdom of heaven is at hand". The Israelites had rejected the Law. They
were involved with either legalism on the one hand or skepticism on the other
hand, and Jesus is saying, "You have to turn back to God". It is a
message that is grounded in Deuteronomy chapter 30, the promises of God that
after their being scattered among the nations they would turn back to God. That
is the key word and what repent means. It doesn't mean to feel sorry for your
sins, to get emotional about your sins, to be overwhelmed by your sins; it
means simply to turn, to change your mind. So they are to change their mind,
they are to refocus, as it were. For some people that would mean they needed to
get justified; they needed to trust in God for their salvation. For the vast
majority they were already justified. They were in disobedience and needed to
turn to God in obedience and to worship Him alone. So this was going to be the
message that Jesus gave the disciples. It is the message that they are to take
out, so He has to train them in that message, and that is Matthew 5, 6 and 7.
Then at the conclusion of the Sermon on
the Mount Matthew puts these two chapters in here (8 & 9) in order to give
the credentials of the Messiah. The first set of miracles that we see in
Matthew chapter eight were miracles of healing, and they are followed by a brief
interlude where Jesus is interrupted by two men who were disciples. And there
is a string of these in these sections. Then Jesus leaves Capernaum and is
going to cross the Sea of Galilee and then come back, and there are three
miracles of power that Matthew brings together. They don't necessarily happen
in this order; he is not saying that. He is just marshalling them as evidence.
How do we know Jesus was the Messiah? Well, He did these three miracles. Now He
is doing these three miracles showing His power. Then He is going to do three
more miracles as we come to the end of the section that are miracles that are
related to restoration. What is driving Matthew is that we have to understand
who Jesus is, because once we understand who He is, embedded within that
understanding is a response, and that response is to become a disciple of
Jesus; someone who really seeks to learn the Word of God, apply it in their
life, and grow to spiritual maturity. That is why Matthew inserts within each
of these three different sets of miracles this charge, or something about being
a disciple. It leads to the final statement that there is a need for workers
and a need for disciples to follow the Lord.
So what we are looking at here as we begin
this next section is on the power of Jesus. These are miracles of power, and
the first one emphasizes what we call the faith-rest drill. What we see here
under the miracles of power are three basic miracles. First of all, Jesus will
still the storm on the Sea of Galilee. Second, Jesus will cast out demons from
the two demon-possessed men after He crosses over to the other side of the Sea
of Galilee. Then third, He will heal a paralyzed man who is brought to Him in
order to demonstrate that He has the power and the authority to forgive
sins.
In this first episode where Jesus
stills the storm on the Sea of Galilee He demonstrates His authority and His
power over the forces of creation. He is showing that He is the creator God who
sustains and controls creation. As such, as the Messiah, He will reverse the
damage of sin to the environment, to creation, to nature, when He establishes
His kingdom. He is giving foretastes, previews of coming attractions, in all of
these different miracles. This is what will happen when the kingdom comes. What
is His message? Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand. If they are not
prepared and ready then He is not going to bring in the kingdom. The people
rejected Him, so the kingdom was postponed; none of these things came into
being.
In the second miracle of power here,
Jesus will demonstrate His authority and power over Satan and the fallen
angels; demonstrating that He has the power to deliver the creation from the
control of Satan who is called in the Scripture the prince of the power of the
air (Ephesians 2:2, the God of this age (2 Corinthians 4:4), and the ruler of
this world (John 12:31). Jesus will not remove Satan from this world until He
returns at the end of the Tribulation. Revelation 19 and 20:1-6 describe the
fact that Satan will be thrown into the abyss where he is bound for one
thousand years. But until then, as Peter tells us in 1 Peter 5, he goes about
like a roaring lion, seeking whom he may devour. Jesus demonstrates that He has
that authority and power to control Satan and the demons, and He shows this in
all of these episodes where He is casting out demons. But if the people don't
accept Him, that is not going to happen. Jesus shows that He has the divine
prerogative to forgive sins. This will be a hallmark of His messianic reign.
Each of these must be understood in terms of that kingdom proclamation.
Let's look at this first episode. Here
Jesus demonstrates His authority and power over the forces of creation to show,
first of all, that He is the creator God. Colossians 1:16, 17 emphasizes that
by Him and through Him all things exist. Secondly, Jesus Christ is the one who
sustains and controls creation. He holds the world together; He sustains
everything; by Him everything continues, and there is absolutely nothing that
human beings can do to ultimately destroy the environment. We may mess it up
pretty bad, we may trash it, and there have been peoples down through the
centuries that have trashed the environment. It is part of the fact that we are
sinners. That is not justifying it but ultimately Jesus Christ is the one who
controls and sustains everything. So we are not on a path of environmental
self-destruction.
The third thing that Jesus demonstrates
from all of this is that He as Messiah will reverse the damage of sin on
creation. The real problem isn't the industrial revolution; the real problem
isn't greenhouse gasses; the real problem isn't CO2 in the
atmosphere—CO2 is good; that is what makes the plants grow, they feed on CO2—it
is Adam's sin that has caused all the environmental problems; it is not man.
One of the major implications is that
Jesus has the power to calm the storm. This is a radical storm. This was
probably not just a normal storm on the Sea of Galilee. The instant He calms it
when He says, "Be quiet"—He doesn't say peace, it is not shalom and it
is not EIRENE, it is a word that means to be quiet—instantly it
became quiet. We all know that it takes a little while for a storm to calm
down, but this was radical. Instantly everything was quiet. It was an immediate
response to His command as the Lord of the universe. The implication from that
is that just as Jesus stilled that physical storm, so He has the ability to
bring peace and tranquility and calm instantly into our lives, no matter what
the storm of life may be that we face. The issue ultimately is, do we have
faith to trust in Him? Faith is not simply a matter of someone ginning up some
power within us; faith is not a power. Faith is simply believing and trusting
in something; having confidence that something is true, and relying upon it, as
we will see.
This event takes place on the Sea of
Galilee. The parallel passages to Matthew chapter eight are found in Mark
4:35-41; Luke 8:22-25. Each of those give a little different information, it is
all complementary, there are no contradictions in the Scripture, but each one
from their vantage point selects from the available data what he wants to
include in order to substantiate the kind of points that he is making.
What we see if we look back to Matthew
8:18 is that when Jesus saw great multitudes about Him He gave a command to
depart to the other side of the Sea of Galilee. He is interrupted there and
that is what takes place in vv. 19-22 when two disciples who come to Him with
questions, but then they are going to finally get into the boat (v. 23) and
they will proceed across the lake.
The Sea of Galilee is quite a large
body of water. It is 13 miles long and between five and eight miles in width.
They are crossing it diagonally so they are probably travelling a distance
close to eight miles as they move across. It is 32 miles in circumference and
at its deepest it is approximately 150-160 feet. It is 630 feet below sea
level, making it the lowest fresh water lake in the world. In the Scripture it
is given a number if different names. It is called the Sea of Kinnereth in Old
Testament passages, the Lake of Gennesaret in Luke 5:1, the Sea of Tiberias in
John chapter six, and the Sea of Galilee. Calling it a sea is a bit of a
misnomer. Sea is a term that refers to a saltwater lake, not a fresh water
lake.
Matthew 8:23, 24 NASB
"When He got into the boat, His disciples followed Him. And behold, there
arose a great storm on the sea, so that the boat was being covered with the
waves; but Jesus Himself was asleep."
The events here occurred at the end of
the day, according to the Gospel of Mark who says, "When evening had
comeÉ" Jesus had given instructions to depart to the other side in Matthew
8:18, but He is interrupted. Finally they get aboard the vessel and head out.
According to Mark this wasn't the only boat that went on to the lake. There
were others in the crowd who got on to boats to follow Him. And while they were
sailing, according to Luke 8:23, Jesus fell asleep. This indicates His
humanity. After a long day of ministry He found that there was a pillow in the
stern where He curled up, relaxed and immediately fell asleep.
Was that an accident? Did it just sort
of happen that way? I don't think so. I think what happened was that Jesus is
fully aware of what is going to happen. It is a teaching moment in the life of
His disciples. And He brings the same kind of teaching moments into your life
and mine. Suddenly we are hit by an unexpected storm. It may be financial, it may
be family related, it may be health related or career related, and all of a
sudden everything that we thought would happen and hoped to happen just didn't.
It is gone.
I have a friend from college who one
day came home and his house had burned to the ground. It so devastated him, a
man who should have had some doctrine but didn't, that he has never been the
same since. Not only do we have all of our hopes and dreams that some
situations can destroy but when we have a situation like that where everything
that we have, all of our memories, all of our family treasures, all of our
photographs, suddenly are burned up and destroyed we not only lose hopes and
dreams but we lose our past. There are things in life that are huge issues that
challenge us but there are some that are enormous, and some people just never
ever recover from those things. But God is in control of those circumstances;
they don't happen to us by chance. One of the things we need to learn when we
encounter trauma is that God is in control. It is not that He is blameworthy of
those things but He has allowed those things to occur in our life to test us,
to train us, to teach us to be dependent upon Him and not to focus our hopes
and dreams as the source of meaning and purpose in life. And sometimes the Lord
has to take those things away from us to get our attention so that we will
focus upon Him and the mission He has given us in this life.
So these storms come up and they shake us
to our very core. The word that is used here for tempest is the word from which
we get seismograph or seismology. It is the word SEISMOS in the
Greek, which means to shake. It is the word that describes earthquakes, a
financial shakedown (like an extortion), something that radically shakes a
person's life in terms of adversity that we can face.
The day started out a very normal day, a
very quiet day. The sun was out, the sky was blue, Jesus is relaxed and goes to
sleep, and then all of a sudden within a manner of ten or fifteen minutes this
storm comes up that is overwhelming the boat. They are taking in water; they
are covered with the waves. There are various descriptions of this given by the
other writers. Mark says that the waves beat into the boat so that it began to
fill. Luke adds that they were in jeopardy, using a Greek word meaning that
they were in danger. And he uses an imperfect tense with the verb, showing that
this is a continuous action; it intensifies the situation. The boat begins to rock
back and forth violently as it is tossed around, everything is out of control,
the disciples are hanging on for dear life to keep from being thrown out, fear
grips their souls, panic is setting, and the Lord is still asleep. So they run
to Him and wake Him up.
Matthew 8:25 NASB "And
they came to {Him} and woke Him, saying, 'Save {us,} Lord; we are
perishing!'"
If we read the parallel passages we see
that Luke calls Him a word that means master or chief. It is the word EPISTATES. Matthew
says that they called Him Lord, KURIOS. Mark says that they called Him DIDASKOLOS,
teacher. Is this a contradiction in Scripture? No, there are probably seven or
eight disciples all crying out different things. So when we compare what these
writers are saying we get a full picture of the pandemonium that was taking
place as different ones were calling out different things. They challenged Him,
asking basically three things. First of all, "Do you not care that we are
perishing?" He was just sleeping. Second, according to Matthew, "Save
us". This is the use of the word SOZO where saved doesn't mean saved from eternal condemnation in
the lake of fire. "É we are perishing". That is the same word that is
used in John 3:16, "will not perish but have everlasting life". But
here perishing is not eternal perishing, it is temporal perishing, being
overwhelmed by the disaster at hand. Luke tells us, "Master, master, we
are perishing", using the same word that Matthew does.
The Lord takes three actions. First, He
arose. He woke up, got up. Second, He points out their lack of faith as the
real issue. Matthew 8:26 NASB "He said to them, 'Why are you
afraid, you men of little faith?'" They are not trusting in Him. This is
an idiom. What He is saying is they don't have any faith. They are in panic.
When we are fearful we can't trust Him. We are either trusting in the Lord or
we are afraid, one or the other but not both. Faith casts out fear. He is
pointing out that their lack of faith is the real issue. This was a faith test.
We run into lots of faith tests in life. This was a faith test to see whether
they would trust in Him, and the fact that they are fearful and hitting the
panic button shows that they are not trusting in Him.
The third thing He does is rebuke the
wind. "É Then He got up and rebuked the winds and the sea, and it became
perfectly calm." What is interesting about this is that this word rebuke
often means to censure somebody, to correct somebody, to voice disapproval. It
is a personal kind of term. He almost personalizes the storm when He rebukes
it. Matthew doesn't tell us what He says but Mark does, and it is translated in
the KJV as "Peace, be still". But it is not the word EIRENE for
peace; it is the word that basically means to shut up, to hush, be quiet. And instantly
everything became quiet. That is a miracle. There is no residual wave action,
it doesn't take a few minutes or so for everything to calm down, it is just
instant.
Matthew 8:27 NASB "The
men were amazed, and said, 'What kind of a man is this, that even the winds and
the sea obey Him?'"
We see the response of the men. They
marveled, were astonished; they had never seen anything like this. Here He is
in the back of the boat and He just controls everything. That is the point that
He is making. As the Messiah He has the authority and the power to control
creation, and if He is accepted as the Messiah He will bring in the kingdom and
the curse will be partially rolled back—the curse that has plunged
creation under this particular curse.
He brings out the real issue here when
He says: "Why are you afraid, you men of little faith?" According to
Matthew, He stands up and rebukes the wind
and the sea, and there is a great calm.
In parallel passages in Mark and Luke they emphasize what he said afterwards where
He addresses the issue of their faith. So that is the point. Are they trusting
in Him?
As we look at this we see that there
are basically three doctrines, three areas of application, three areas of
instruction that we need to focus upon. The first is, understanding the
omnipotence of God. Omnipotence means that God is all-powerful; that God is
able to do whatever He intends to do. There is nothing more powerful than God,
so He is in control of everything in His creation. Not even sin or Satan can overpower
or overwhelm God. So it is always important when we think through a problem,
when we face some surprising adversity, that is takes time and that we as
Christians don't always handle every test perfectly. And some tests cannot be
handled that perfectly. We are human beings.
Take the illustration I used earlier.
If you were to come home one day were to find that your house had burned to the
ground. Your hard drive is fried; you can't access any of your personal
information; your insurance papers, everything, had burned to a crisp.
Everything is gone. You can say: "Well, God is in control". But as
you go forward in life there are going to be things that you have to deal with
for years because of that fire. Emotionally that is going to be turbulent,
tough, rugged, and there are going to be times when spiritually and emotionally
you are just vibrating. One minute you are trusting God; the next second you
are not. And it may be six to eight months before you really deal with the
consequences. If I walk up to you with my cowboy boots on and kick you in the
shin as hard as I can, it takes time for that pain to diminish.
When we hit certain things in life it
takes time for things to stabilize. We are not machines; we are not computers.
We don't just turn around and say, "Okay, Isaiah 40:31, I'm not going to
be fearful; I'm just going to trust God", and it just stabilizes right
away. It takes time, primarily because if that fire test occurred in your life
it was because that fire test was going to rick you to your soul. It might not
ever happen in my life. What happens in my life might be a financial disaster;
it might be a health crisis, something like that, because God tends to tailor
our tests for the areas where we are the weakest. So that exhibits itself, and
that takes time. The way to handle this is to go to the attributes of God and
work our way through them, and think about how they apply. In this case it is
God's omnipotence; He is more powerful than the storms of life.
Many passages in Scripture emphasize
this.
Psalm 62:11 NASB "Once God has spoken; Twice I have heard this: That power
belongs to God." It is part of His core essence.
Psalm 79:11 NASB "Let
the groaning of the prisoner come before You; According to the greatness of Your
power preserve those who are doomed to die." In other words, for those
that may be surrounded by death God is the one who preserves us by His power.
Psalm 65:6 NASB "Who
establishes the mountains by His strength, Being girded with might."
Everything that we look at in the creation is from the omnipotence of God. So
nothing that comes within the creation can be greater than the power of God.
Psalm 63:1, 2 NASB "O
God, You are my God; I shall seek You earnestly; My soul thirsts for You, my
flesh yearns for You, In a dry and weary land where there is no water. Thus I
have seen You in the sanctuary, To see Your power and Your glory."
Romans 1:20 NASB "For
since the creation of the world His invisible attributes, His eternal power and
divine nature, have been clearly seen, being understood through what has been
made, so that they are without excuse."
The second major doctrine that comes
out of this is God's grace. Christ is demonstrating His graciousness to deliver
the disciples from the horrible storm that occurred. This is God's grace. It is
His unmerited favor in our lives, and in God's grace He has provided the
solution for every problem in our life. The root problem of all the other
problems is sin, and He solved the greatest problem we will ever face at the
cross. So if Jesus Christ can solve our problem of sin then it is nothing for
Him to solve all the other problems. Whatever problems you are facing in life
it is not as great as that horrible sin penalty that Christ solved.
So storms, adversity, loss, all of the
things that we face in life are the consequences of Adam's original sin. Jesus
solved that problem, so He can get us through the little bumps and grinds and
speed bumps that we see in our life.
The third major doctrine that comes out
of this is the faith-rest drill. It involves three things. First of all, we
claim a promise. That means we have to have a promise in our head so that we
have something to grab hold of. When Jesus went through His temptation in
Matthew chapter four He wasn't just saying, well there is a theological
principle here according to Chafer vol. 3. He is quoting specific Scripture. We
claim a promise, grab hold on it and mix it with faith. And we think it through
in terms of what is this verse saying? We take a verse like "Casting all
your cares upon Him because He cares for you". What does that mean? You go
to 1 Peter 5:7 and then look at the previous verse where it says that we are to
humble ourselves under the mighty hand of God. How do we do that? By casting
our cares upon Him because He cares for us. He is telling us how we demonstrate
humility or grace orientation. So we have to look at the context, read the
verses and think them through. As we do that we arrive at certain doctrinal
conclusions about how God cares for us, and how He can take care of us and
provide for us.
When we look at Scripture, especially
in the area of fear—the problem here and the core problem we all
face—we have to God to God because He is the only one who can solve the
fear problem. In Genesis 3:10 we find that the first emotion expressed by Adam
and Eve as a result of the fall was fear. When they heard God they were afraid.
This is kind of what happened here with the disciples. When Jesus does this, as
one of the parallel passages tells us, they were afraid. Matthew says they
marveled. Fear was there as they realized the power of Jesus. Every human being
is born fearful because we are sinners. That is the core emotional sin of our
sin nature.
1 John 4:18 NASB "There
is no fear in love; but perfect love casts out fear, because fear involves
punishment, and the one who fears is not perfected in love." The Bible
juxtaposes love with fear, not love and hate. That seems strange to us. We
think the opposite of love is hate, but biblically the opposite of love is
fear. In our normal status living on the sin nature, we are fearful. It is only
when we come face to face with the love of God, and that is real in our life,
that the fear is conquered.
Isaiah 41:10 NASB "Do
not fear, for I am with you; Do not anxiously look about you, for I am your
God. I will strengthen you, surely I will help you, Surely I will uphold you
with My righteous right hand."
We need to memorize promises like that
so that when we wake up in the middle of the night and realize that we failed
to do something and something might happen, and suddenly we are gripped with
fear and panic, we can claim those promises.
If we worry we can claim promises like
Philippians 4:6, 7 NASB "Be anxious for nothing, but in everything by prayer and
supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God. And the
peace of God, which surpasses all comprehension, will guard your hearts and
your minds in Christ Jesus."