NT Journey--Matthew 21
The Triumphal Entry is a great microcosm of Matthew's angle when he's writing about Jesus. Over and over, he shows how Jesus is the guy the Jews are looking for, yet how different He is than what they were expecting. The reason for the discrepancy is not that God is changing, it's just that as time goes on, even His followers tend to understand things the way the world does.
So, for instance, the Jews were looking for a political or military ruler that would overthrow the Romans and raise Israel up to a glory never before seen. He would do so with power and justice. The reason they were expecting a military or political ruler is because that's the way the kingdom of the world operates. But that's not how the Kingdom of Heaven operates. Power and justice are still great values on the Kingdom of Heaven, they just have different meanings.
In the Kingdom of the World, justice comes through punishing the guilty. In the Kingdom of Heaven, justice comes through the power of self-sacrifice (isn't that what the cross is all about?). In the world, power is when we can get people to do what we want by force or coercion. In the Kingdom of Heaven, power comes when we serve.
So when all of Jerusalem (the hub of Judaism) wanted to proclaim their new king, Jesus, they were ready to give Jesus the white horse treatment. Instead, when Jesus is looking for transportation, He tells His disciples to get a donkey. Can you imagine a king riding on a donkey? Could you see Alexander the Great doing that? Not exactly the animal fit for a king--especially the King of Kings.
But this was Jesus' way of showing them that He was the same, yet different. It's actually the same picture we see in Zechariah 9, which Matthew quotes here (read it). It's a picture of the Messiah coming and dishing out justice with gentleness. Jesus doesn't deny He's the Messiah--in other accounts, He refuses to tell the crowd to stop worshiping Him--He's just not what they were expecting.
Losing the Kingdom
Skipping down to verses 33-46, we see another interesting parable. Jesus was very bold in His message. As you read and understand what He was saying, you can begin to understand why the Jewish leaders would want to kill Him. In this story, Jesus very clearly tells the Pharisees they blew it. The Jews were handed the Kingdom. Their job was to care for it. To cultivate, to prune, and to distribute its fruit to be a blessing to others.
But when the landowner sent his servants (the OT prophets) to collect the fruit, the tenants killed them. Finally, the landowner sends his own son and they kill him, too. The parable wreaks of selfishness on the part of the tenants. They were working in the vineyard that didn't belong to them, yet when the time came to produce fruit, they refused. We can presume they wanted to keep the fruit for themselves within the walls of the vineyard, But this was not the intent of the landowner. As you can imagine, things would not end well for the tenants, but it also says that not only will he kick the tenants out, but he will invite in people who will bear fruit.
This is again a parable that tells the Jews (at least the Jews leaders) that their time had come and gone. The system they set up was no longer valid. No longer was the Kingdom only available to the Jews, but it was open to everyone. The Jews were given a responsibility and they blew it. It's the misapplication of these teachings that have caused a lot of anti-semitism over the course of history. Jesus' teachings here obviously shouldn't take us there, but I do think it raised an important question for Christians today.
Are we doing any better? Do we approach faith with the same attitude as the Jews? Have we made it into a list of rules that as long as I follow them personally, I'm OK? Is that what the Kingdom is all about? Are we in danger of losing the Kingdom to someone else because we failed to be what God intended for us?
Rather than just asking ourselves the question, maybe we should actually just work to make sure we're not failing. It's no coincidence that the parable directly before this one is the parable of the two sons. One works, the other just says he will. Which are you?
Labels: Jews, Kingdom of Heaven, Matthew 21, New Testament, Triumphal Entry

