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Entering the Kingdom

Matthew 18:1-4
Code: 2327



Entering The Kingdom 

Matthew 18:1‑4

     Take your Bible now and let's turn together to the eighteenth chapter  of Matthew...Matthew, chapter 18.  We embark upon a new chapter and a new  adventure in the wonderful gospel of Matthew as we come to this great  eighteenth chapter.

     And as a setting for our message this morning, I want you to follow in  your Bible as I read the first four verses, beginning in Matthew 18 at  verse 1:

At the same time came the disciples unto Jesus saying, Who is the greatest in the Kingdom of heaven?  And Jesus called a little child unto Him and set him in the midst of them and said, Verily I say unto you, except ye be converted and become as little children, ye shall not enter into the Kingdom of heaven.  Whosoever therefore shall humble himself as this little child, the same is the greatest in the Kingdom of heaven.

     Now, as we look at that passage, we basically are struck by the fact  that Jesus picks up a little child in verse 2.  And that child becomes the  object lesson.  The people of God are called by many names in the Bible,  many beautiful names, many expressive names, many that describe various and  sundry elements of belonging to God.  But the most common name by which we  are ever called is that of children.  Beyond anything else, we are the  children of God, the children of the Lord, the children of promise, the  children of the day, the children of light, beloved children, dear  children.  Over and over again hundreds of times in the Old Testament and  the New Testament, the people of God are called children.

     And we rejoice in that reality.  I think, however, for the most part  we...we tend to see that as a term which links us to God.  And when we hear  that we are children, we celebrate the idea that that means we belong to  God who is our Father, and surely that is true.  And we have every reason  to rejoice in that.

     But the richness of the concept of being a child of God is not limited  to the fact that that means we belong to God and we are His children and we  are in His family.  Inherent in the concept of children is the fact that we  are children and we are well described as children.  It not only means we  belong to God, but it means like children we are imperfect, like children  we are weak, like children we are dependent, as children we are simple and  submissive and unskilled and ignorant and sometimes stubborn and very  vulnerable.  So that we see in the concept of children, not only that which  implies a relationship to God, but that which describes us as marked out as  children, with all of the foibles and failings and weaknesses that children  have.  John tells us in 1 John 2:12 that we are children.  And so he says,  "I write unto you, little children, because your sins are forgiven." 

     So, as we look at the concept of the believer, we see him as a child.   Now the whole of the eighteenth chapter of Matthew describes the child  likeness of the believer, the child likeness of the believer.  Somewhere in  your Bible at the heading of Matthew 18, you need to write that down.  This  chapter is all about the child likeness of the believer.  We're not the  high and the mighty.  We're not the noble.  We're not the lofty.  We're not  the mature and the adult and the profound.  We are children with all that  that conveys, lowly children at best. 

     And I believe that this chapter ranks as one of the great discourse  chapters of the Scripture.  There are certain chapters, for example, even  in the book of Matthew, that stand out as great chapters of thematic  teaching.  For example, the great discourse in chapters 5 to 7 we know as  the Sermon on the Mount in which Jesus teaches elements related to His  Kingdom.  And then there is the tenth chapter of Matthew where there's a  great discourse on discipleship.  And then there is the thirteenth chapter  with the great thematic teaching on the Kingdom of heaven.  And then  there's the twenty‑third chapter, the discourse on the Pharisees.  And then  there's 24 and 25, the great Olivet discourse on the events surrounding the  return of Jesus Christ.  And, I guess, lost somewhere in most people's  thinking is this eighteenth chapter which is equally a great and profound  discourse.  And its title is "the child likeness of the believer."  It's a  marvelous passage.

     It fits into a section that began in chapter 17, verse 14 and runs all  the way to the end of chapter 20.  And that whole section is a section  where Jesus teaches the Twelve.  He's getting them ready for His death.   He's getting them ready for His departure.  He's getting them ready for  their ministry.  And so He's teaching them very important truths.  The  emphasis of these months before His cross is not on the crowds, though  there were times when He met the crowds, the emphasis is on His own, His  disciples.  This is their time.  They are the object of His teaching. 

     And so, as we come to chapter 18, He is teaching them.  And we find  that indicated in verse 1, as the disciples collect around Him and He  teaches them regarding their own child likeness.

     Now the whole discussion of chapter 18 is triggered by verse 1, look  at it for a moment.  "At the same time came the disciples unto Jesus  saying, Who is the greatest in the Kingdom of heaven?"  Notice that the  verse begins with a simple little phrase, "at the same time."  Same time as  what?  Oh, the same time as the preceding event.  What was the proceeding  event?  Do you remember in our study of Matthew 17:24 to 27 how that the  tax collectors came to Peter after they had returned from many months of  being gone from Capernaum.  And when they saw Peter, they went up to him  and said, "Does your Master plan to pay His tax?"  And what they had in  mind was the half‑shekel temple tax that was due from every Jewish male  every year.  And Peter said, "Of course He pays His taxes."  And went to  Jesus and said what about that?  And the Lord said, "I plan on paying that  and I have provide...I have provided for both you and me, all you have to  do is go down to the sea and throw in a hook and pull out a fish and the  tax money will be in his mouth." 

     And we looked at that story and we concluded from that that there is  much teaching there from our Lord relative to the believer's responsibility  in the world...the believer's responsibility in the world.

     But on that same occasion, at that same time in that same place,  chapter 18 is also taught.  And this is not the believer's relationship in  the world, but the believer's relationship in the family.  And so, on the  same day they get a tremendous insight into how they are to operate as  citizens of the world and how they are to operate as children of God.  It's  at the same that that happens.

     You remember what happened.  The Lord said to Peter, "Now you go down  there and you just throw your hook in and you pull out a fish and take the  first fish you get.  Open his mouth, you'll find our tax money there."   Peter's gone fishing then between chapter 17 and 18.  And as chapter 18  opens up, the other eleven disciples arrive.  At that same time, when  Peter's been dismissed to fish, came the disciples to Jesus.  The rest of  them have been walking on their journey.  They've been walking around and  they've been discussing some things and now they arrive.  And so, the Lord  teaches them this profound passage relative to their behavior as children  in the family of God.  It's in Capernaum, it's in the house in  Capernaum...very likely, Peter's house, a familiar place.

     Notice it says, "Then came the disciples unto Jesus."  Now just to  give you a little bit of a background, look with me at Mark 9 and let me  show you what they were talking about on their trip to the house.  Mark  parallels the account with his insights under the inspiration of the Holy  Spirit.  And in verse 33 of Mark 9 he says, "And they came to Capernaum and  being in the house," now they've arrived, "He asked them‑‑that is our  Lord‑‑what was it that ye quarreled about among yourselves on the road?"   What have you guys been arguing about? 

     You see, you couldn't hide anything from Him, could you?  Even though  He wasn't there, He knew exactly what the discussion was.  He knew exactly  what they'd been talking about.  And He gives them an opportunity to admit  it.  "What have you been arguing about?"

     Verse 34, "But they held their peace."  Is there any wonder why?  They  were embarrassed.  They were ashamed.  They didn't want to admit what they  were arguing about.  "For on the way they had argued among themselves who  would be the greatest."  I mean, they were really into that.  They fought.   They were proud, self‑seeking and they wanted to be in the greatest places  in the Kingdom.  I mean, they were going to go for the whole shot.  And so,  when they're discovered‑‑you can go back now to Matthew 18‑‑when Jesus has  unmasked them as to their debate and they really can't hide it anymore, and  He asked them and they say nothing, finally they put it in the form of a  question that isn't really an admission of anything, they just say, "Who is  the greatest in the Kingdom of heaven?"  I mean, in effect they're saying  You can just settle this whole thing, Lord, if You just tell us.  Would You  just tell us who it is?

     Their arguing indicates where their hearts were.  They really sought  superiority.  And they say "who is the greatest," actually meizon in the  Greek, who is the greater?  Of all the great in the Kingdom, who is the  greater than the great?  Who stands out?  Who is greater than all the rest?   And Luke indicates to us that they really wanted to know who had the  highest ranking.  Who is going to be the chief one?

     Now this is absolutely amazing.  I mean, it just...the Lord has to  deal with this with all of us, this...this inability to see things though  they've been stated over and over again.  And they are stuck on the same  issue.  How many times has the Lord told them that the Kingdom is not yet  going to come in its earthly fullness?  I mean, all of the parables of  Matthew 13 should have given them some insight.  And the Lord has also  confessed to them that He must suffer, that He must suffer at the hands of  the scribes and the Pharisees, that He is going to die and He's given them  all of that data and they still can't compute it.  They're still saying, in  effect, we know the Kingdom is coming and we know You're going to set it up  and who is going to be the greatest in it?  And they're looking at the  Kingdom in its earthly definition.  They were seeking self‑glory, prestige,  prominence and Jesus had just been teaching them, chapter 16, verse 24,  that if any man will come after Me, let him deny himself and take up his  cross and follow Me, let him lose his life if he wants to find it.  And  He's been talking about self‑denial and humility all along.  And they still  are self‑seeking, grasping, desiring prominence.  They are bent on self‑  glory.  They are bent on sitting in the chief seats.

     And, by the way, this debate rages on.  If you were to go over to the  twentieth chapter of Matthew, which would take you a few months in advance  of this time, you would find they're still debating about this and James  and John, in the twentieth chapter around verse 20 to 28, send their mother  to Jesus and they say through their mother, "Well, could my boys be the  chief ones in the Kingdom?"

     And in case you just want to lay all the blame on James and John, you  might want to know that the Bible also tells us that all the rest of them  were filled with envy and jealousy.  They were all having the same problem.   They just didn't all have a mother around who would do what James and  John's mother did.  So they were all in the same boat.

     And you want to know something that's really sad?  The night before  Jesus' crucifixion, they were arguing about the same thing still.  I mean,  they just never bothered to get in on the fact that Jesus was going to die  and demonstrate a little sympathy and a little care and a little comfort  toward the one who would bear the sins of the world.  They never came to  that, to the very night before He died, they were still arguing about who  was going to be the greatest in the Kingdom.  I mean, they were really  stuck on that issue.  Ambition, pride, selfishness, self‑glory were behind  the discord, the dissension and the in‑fighting among the Twelve. 

     And may I tell you that's always the case.  I don't care what kind of  team it is.  I don't care if it's a team in ministry or a team in business  or a team in athletics, you get a team fighting on the inside for one or  the other to be the greatest and you will have the seeds of  destruction...it doesn't matter what it is.  I've seen it happen in  athletics.  I've seen it happen in business.  I've seen it happen over and  over and over in the church of Jesus Christ.  You get a bunch of people who  are seeking the preeminence and you will destroy everything.  And that's  exactly what was potentiated here.  Contention arising among the Twelve  about who would be the greatest.  And it goes on all these months and it  never even ends until after the cross.

     Now it may be that in part their question is prompted because of  Peter.  I mean, they knew who was the leader, Peter was the leader.  They  knew who was the spokesman, Peter.  They knew who was the water walker,  Peter.  None of them ever did that.  And they knew who was the most  intimate with Jesus Christ, the one who was always there.  They knew who  was one of the viewers of the transfiguration.  They knew who was the  object of the tax‑money miracle.  And it wasn't them.  And it would have  been easy for them to say, "Well, Peter is the leader and Peter is the  spokesman and Peter is the water walker and Peter was at the  transfiguration and he was the one who wanted to build the booths and  Peter's the one who got his tax money out of the fish mouth and all of us  have to pay our own bills."  I mean, they could easily have concluded that  Peter was the guy. 

     But that was somewhat mitigated.  I mean, none of them was ever called  "rock."  But it was mitigated by the fact that none of them had ever been  rebuked by the Lord to the extent that Peter was.  To none of them had He  ever said, "Get thee behind me...whom?...Satan."  And maybe they thought  there was a little hope for them now.  Up to now, maybe Peter was going to  be the greatest but now that he'd been shot down so devastatingly, maybe  somebody else could rise to the top.  And the two most likely guys would be  James and John since they were in the inner circle and now that Peter was  disqualified by the rebuke, it's little wonder that they thought they were  the closest to the prominence and so they sent their mother in chapter 20.   But right now at least the question's up.

     Who is the greatest?  Who's it going to be?  The very question is  stupid.  And it shows where their hearts were, doesn't it?  They were  looking into the Kingdom to see if they could be great.  They were little  different‑‑are you ready?‑‑than Judas at this point.  People ask the  question, "Are they saved now?"  I don't know.  I mean, they believe to a  certain point.  I don't know how ever individual heart can be delineated.   It's hard to know whether they were in the fullest sense redeemed.  I lean  to saying they were, but they had forgotten how that happened and they had  progressed to a state of Pauline carnality, if you will.  But the point  here is they are arguing about something that is not to be argued  about...who is the greatest. 

     I remember reading about two churches and they were trying to build a  large church and so they decided if they competed against each other it  would stimulate them.  And they had this contest to see who could get the  most people.  And the pastor that lost got sick and threw up.  I read about  it in the paper.  Now you read something like that and you get sick and  throw up.  The Kingdom is not built by people competing at that level.  But  there are people who seek the prominence, who seek the preeminence, who  want to be lifted to the top, who want to be elevated.  And that's the  thing they're in for.  They're seeking the glory and that's exactly what  was happening here.

     And so, Jesus needs to deal with their delusions of grandeur and He  does so in a rather profound way.  He launches into this entire chapter and  talks about the child likeness of the believer.  But to start with, look at  verse 2, "He called a little child," and some people think it might have  been Peter's children.  We know he was married cause his wife's mother was  sick.  And if he was married, it's very likely he had kids.  And it's also  possible that he had a little toddler.  We don't know, that's speculation.   But, Jesus called a little child to Him, "set him in the midst."

     And then Luke says He brought him to His side.  And then Mark says,  chapter 9, that He lifted him up and held him in His arms.  The Lord is in  the sitting position, that's a teaching position.  All the disciples are  gathered around.  I'm quite sure Peter had come back by this time, I just  believe the Lord wouldn't give a profound lesson like this without him  there.  I mean, he needed it. 

     And so, the Lord gathers into His arms this little toddler, this  little infant.  The word there "little child" means just that, infant.  And  you can imagine this little infant looking with wondering eyes into the  face of the very one who had created him, being totally at rest, totally at  peace in the arms of God of very gods in human flesh, lost in the wonder of  the majesty and beauty of this blessed person, in such innocency, such  weakness, such confidence, such trust, being a perfect illustration.  And  so Jesus sits there and in His arms embraces this little child.

     And I can't help but be struck as I think about that by the many, many  times that Jesus had little children in His presence.  Very, very many  times...we've already seen it in Matthew 14 and Matthew 15 and now Matthew  18, and they'll be back in 19:21, 23.  Children love to be in His presence  and He in theirs.  And so, with this little infant in His arms, He begins  to teach.

     And there are five lessons in the chapter.  We're going to take one  today and then the next four in the next four weeks.  Five lessons, all  lessons about the child likeness of the believer.

     Lesson number one is the people of the Kingdom must enter like  children.  Lesson number two, the people of the Kingdom must be treated  like children.  Lesson number three, the people of the Kingdom must be  cared for like children.  Lesson number four, the people of the Kingdom  must be disciplined like children.  And finally, the people of the Kingdom  must be forgiven like children.  The whole chapter's about children.  How  they enter the Kingdom, like children, verses 3 and 4.  How they're to be  treated like children, verses 5 to 9.  How they're to be cared for like  children, verses 10 to 14.  How they're to be disciplined like children,  verses 15 to 20.  And how they're to be forgiven like children, verses 21  to 35.  And so, we'll begin today with the first lesson, that people of the  Kingdom enter like little children, verses 3 and 4.

     Now listen very carefully because this is a very definitive text and a  very definitive message.  Jesus says in verse 3, "Unless you are converted  and become as little children, you shall not enter into the Kingdom of  heaven."  Now that is a profound and far‑reaching statement.  If you're not  like a little child, you'll never get in My Kingdom.

     Now we better find out what it means to be like a little child, then,  shouldn't we?  I mean, that's a pretty profound statement.  That's pretty  closed and pretty narrow.  There's only one condition in this verse for  entering the Kingdom, becoming like a little child.  Do you know what that  means?  You ought to know because that's the way you get in the Kingdom.   It's a profound statement.

     Let's work our way through this brief two‑verse passage.  First of  all, the Kingdom of heaven, we have to define it.  What is it?  Matthew  uses the phrase 32 times.  What is it?  Who is the greatest in the Kingdom  of heaven, they ask in verse 1?  He says you have to be converted and  become as a child to enter the Kingdom of heaven.  In verse 4 He talks  about the one who's greatest in the Kingdom of heaven.  Three times it  mentions the Kingdom of heaven, what is the Kingdom of heaven?  We've  already seen it in Matthew, so we don't need to cover all the ground again.   And it's going to be there even more in the future, so we'll come back to  it again.  Let me just say that it means this, the sphere of God's rule.   That's all.  It is a general term, the sphere of God's rule.  And it is  synonymous with the phrase "Kingdom of God."  They are not different. 

     Some have tried to get us to believe in the past that they're two  different phrases meaning two different things, they are not.  They mean  the same, the Kingdom of God and the Kingdom of heaven are the same and if  you have any question about that, look at chapter 19, verse 23 and this  should resolve that permanently.  "Jesus said to the disciples, Verily I  say unto you," Matthew 19:23, "that a rich man shall with difficulty enter  into the Kingdom of heaven."  Then verse 24 says, "It is easier for a camel  to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter into the  Kingdom of God."  And we know in the parable He is referring to the same  thing, calling it the Kingdom of heaven in verse 23 and the Kingdom of God  in verse 24, it must be the same thing, and it is.

     You say, "Why the different titles?"  Very simple.  The Kingdom of God  emphasizes the ruler.  The Kingdom of heaven emphasizes the character of  His ruling.  It is God who rules that Kingdom and He rules it with heavenly  principles and heavenly power and heavenly majesty and heavenly blessing,  as opposed to that which is earthly.

     So, what Jesus is talking about is the Kingdom of heaven insofar as it  means the rule and reign of God, the dominion of God, the sphere of God's  influence and God's power and God's rule and God's blessing coming into the  Kingdom of the Lord, coming into the sphere of God, coming in to eternal  life, if you will, being saved, being redeemed, belonging to God, under His  dominion.  So, the concept of Kingdom of heaven simply means God's sphere  of rule.

     Now when you see the term "Kingdom of heaven," in the book of Matthew  and you see it many, many times, as I said, there are many facets to that  dominion of God, that sphere of God's rule, many facets.  And when you see  the phrase, you must carefully look at the context to help you to  understand what facet of that Kingdom is in view. 

     For example, if you were to look at chapter 25 and verse 1, here you  read, "Then shall the Kingdom of heaven be likened unto ten virgins," and  you remember the virgins who had the lamps, five had them ready and five  didn't when the Lord returned.  Now there you have the Kingdom of heaven  relating to the return of Christ to set up His Kingdom.  So it is the  millennial aspect of the Kingdom of heaven in view in chapter 25.  The  future thousand year reign of Christ on the earth, that's in view with that  use of Kingdom of heaven.

     If you were to go back, for example, to the eleventh chapter of  Matthew and the eleventh verse, it says, "Among them that are born of  women, there's not a greater than John the Baptist and yet anyone who's in  the Kingdom of heaven, even the least is greater than he."  And there, I  think, the Kingdom of heaven really sort of reaches forward and touches the  eternal state.  The Kingdom of heaven that is our eternal state and says  that when we are in heaven with the Lord in eternity, we will all be  greater than anybody who ever lived on earth no matter how great they were.   Because a heavenly eternal existence is greater than any earthly existence.   So you have a millennial usage of Kingdom of heaven in 25, you have an  eternal one, certainly at least implied in Matthew chapter 11.

     Now if you look at Matthew 13, you'll find other elements there.  In  Matthew 13, verse 24 to 30, you have the wheat and the tares.  And there  the Kingdom of heaven is seen as having the true and the false.  So there  the Kingdom of heaven broadens beyond just the saved to encompass all those  who outwardly identify with Christianity.  They're in the church, they  attend the church, they say they know God but they're not genuine.  They're  the tares among the wheat.  So sometimes the Kingdom of heaven is used then  of just the title of Christianity, or the sphere of the church's influence  whether real or false.  And you need to know that.

     If you read further in Matthew 13, you're going to find out that the  Kingdom of heaven is also used to speak of the growing influence of  Christianity as the mustard seed develops or as leaven leavens the whole  lump.  The influence that moves on until Jesus comes.  And so you're seeing  it there as an influence in the world as it touches all of human life and  impacts all of human life, regenerate and unregenerate.

     And then if you go further in chapter 13, you find that there are two  parables in verses 44 to 46.  A man finds a treasure in a field and he buys  it and makes it its own...his own, having sold everything he had to do  that.  He finds a pearl of grace...of great price, liquidates all he has  and makes it his own.  Those parables speak of the personal appropriation  of the Kingdom.  That is, personally embracing God as my Lord and King  through Christ, personally entering into a relationship with God, taking  the Kingdom and making it my own, selling everything I have to purchase  that which is more valuable than everything.

      So, sometimes the Kingdom of heaven can refer to eternity.  Sometimes  it can refer to the millennial earth, sometimes it can refer to the  influence of Christianity on the world.  Sometimes it can refer to the  sphere of Christianity which includes the true and the false.  Sometimes it  refers to the personal appropriation of the Kingdom, that is coming into  the Kingdom personally, receiving Christ, being redeemed, being saved in  the genuine sense.

     Now, it is in that way as it's in verses 44 to 46 of 13 that I believe  it is referred to also in chapter 18.  And now we can turn back to chapter  18.  And I believe what the Lord is saying here is again relative to the  personal appropriation of the Kingdom.  He is not talking here about  entering the Millennium, He's not talking here particularly about entering  the eternal state, although those are all inherent in this because they  will be the final end of all of those who are in the Kingdom.  He's not  talking about the true and the false existing within the sphere of  Christian influence and the influence of the Kingdom.  He's not talking  about its influence on the world externally.  He here is saying if you want  to really genuinely enter in to God's Kingdom, if you want to become one of  His subjects, one of His followers, a child of God, a Son of God, redeemed  and saved and born again, it is a parallel, if you will, to the third  chapter of John's gospel, it's another way to talk about regeneration and  the new birth.

     So, the aspect of the Kingdom of heaven in view here is personal  appropriation, entering in to God's Kingdom by believing, receiving  salvation.  And I think that's clear from the context, it can't mean  anything else.  So, let's talk about that.  We then know what the Kingdom  of heaven is, let's talk about entering the Kingdom of heaven because He  says in verse 3, "Except you be converted and become as little children,  you shall not enter."

     Is it important to enter the Kingdom of heaven?  What does it assume?   If the Bible tells us we must enter the Kingdom of heaven, what does it  assume?  That we're born where?  Outside of it, right?  We're born outside  of it.  And that entering it is an act which we must do.  All men are born  outside of God's Kingdom and are called to enter that Kingdom.  And the  gospel is presented that men may enter the Kingdom.  "God is not willing  that any should perish but all should come to repentance."  God wants  people in His Kingdom.  Jesus looked at the city of Jerusalem and said,  "How often I would have gathered you but you would not."  He wanted to call  men to His Kingdom and He did preach the Kingdom and John the Baptist  preached the Kingdom and the Apostles preached the Kingdom and they called  men into the Kingdom.

     And that is exactly what our Lord is doing here.  He's talking about  entering the Kingdom.  And by the way, that phrase is used three times in  Matthew...chapter 7, verse 21; chapter 18, verse 3; and again in chapter  19, verse 23 as I read you earlier about the rich man.  It simply means to  become saved, to become redeemed, to become regenerate, to be born again,  to come into God's Kingdom, God's family, God's influence, God's rule,  God's dominion, God's world.  It is synonymous, for example, in chapter 18,  verse 8, with entering into life.  For entering into God's Kingdom is  entering into life.  It is synonymous with chapter 25:21, entering into the  joy of the Lord.  When you enter into the Kingdom you enter into life.   When you enter into life in God's Kingdom you enter into the joy of the  Lord.

     So, men are called to enter.  There is a gate in Matthew 17 and we are  to enter, right?  By the narrow gate, we are called to enter which assumes  we're outside and must come in...when it means to come under the rule of  Jesus Christ, of God in His Kingdom.

     Now Matthew, I believe, of all the gospels must systematically and  carefully presents the message of entrance into the Kingdom.  I believe  even more than John.  John's message is to prove the deity of Jesus Christ.   Matthew's message is to get you in the Kingdom.  And how does he do that?   By making that an emphasis.  And I thought about that this week and I sat  back in my chair and I said, now if I were an unbeliever and I wanted to  know how to get into God's Kingdom, what would I do? 

     Well, let's assume that I picked up the New Testament and somebody  told me the New Testament would give me the answer.  The place I'd start is  Matthew and I think there's a reason that God put Matthew first.  I think  God was in control of that because I believe Matthew calls men into the  Kingdom and tells them specifically how to get in there.  And so I tried to  imagine that I were an unbeliever, put away all my theology books, all the  backlog of teaching and get myself down to ground zero.  And if I just  picked up the Bible at face value, started in Matthew, what would I  discover was necessary to get into God's Kingdom?

     Take the little trip that I took.  Let's go back to Matthew chapter 3  and watch how this unfolds.  By the way, while you're turning to it, let me  say it resists a formula, the whole Bible resists formulizing.  But  especially does Matthew resist some kind of formula in the presentation of  the gospel.  Every time he talks about it, it has some kind of a different  way of saying it.  But let's see where he starts.

     You're reading along, you're reading chapter 1 about Jesus Christ  genealogy and His birth.  You come into chapter 2, you read about the  homage paid Him at His birth and the wonderful visit of the Magi, and  you're all into that.  And so you found out who Jesus is, Son of the  Highest, God in human flesh, Jesus, Savior of people for her sins.  We know  who He is.  All right, we've been introduced to Jesus Christ.

     We come into chapter 3 and what is the first thing we run into?  John  the Baptist and what's he doing?  He's preaching.  And what does he say in  verse 2?  "Repent, for the Kingdom of heaven is at hand."  Now what is the  first thing you need to do if you're going to get into the Kingdom.  What  is it?  Repent.  You don't really have to be that scholarly to figure it  out.  It just hits you right there between the eyes.

     And then you just follow a little longer and you get into chapter 4  and all of a sudden Jesus comes along to pick up where John left off in  verse 17, and from that time Jesus began to preach and to say, "Repent for  the Kingdom of heaven is at hand."  Now the first condition that you're  just hit with like a bolt is one word, "repent."  It means basically to  turn from your sin.  And later on in chapter 9, verse 13, Jesus says you  still don't understand that I am come to call sinners to...what?   Repentance.

     So, the first element of entrance to the Kingdom is repent.  What does  that mean?  Recognize your sin and desire to turn from it.  Recognize your  sin and desire to turn from it.  That's where it starts.  That's where  salvation begins in a recognition of sin and a desire to turn from it.   You've got to be sorry for your sin and desire to turn from it, to repent.

     Well, you read a little further, you come to chapter 5.  And it begins  this way, "He opened His mouth and He taught them," in verse 2.  And verse  3 says, "He said, Blessed are the poor in spirit for theirs is the Kingdom  of heaven."  And now you're saying to yourself, "O, here's another element  of entrance into the Kingdom.  What is this?  Poor in spirit?" 

     In other words, a sense of unworthiness.  This is a beggar.  The Greek  term means to beg.  You're not earning your own way, you're begging.  You  have no resources.  And so you say I want to turn from my sin, I repent,  I'm sorry for my sin, but I..I am unworthy to enter into Your Kingdom.   I...I am a beggar.  I have nothing in my hand.  I have to cry out for  anything. 

     And you see that same beggar in verse 6 and he's hungry and he's  thirsty.  And he wants to be filled and he wants to be quenched but he  knows that he doesn't have any resource.  Then this is the second thing  that strikes you strongly in Matthew about getting in the Kingdom.  There's  a sense of inadequacy triggered by the conviction of sin.  And a bankruptcy  of personal character, you just don't...I mean, you want to turn from your  sin and you want to come in the Kingdom but you know you're not adequate  for that.  And you know you have no resource. 

     And the third thing that hits you is in verse 4.  You mourn and then  verse 5, meekness.  That's lowliness and humility.  It's the kind of  meekness, verse 7, that can show mercy to other people.  The kind of  meekness that seeks purity in heart in verse 8.  The kind of meekness that  makes a peacemaker.  The kind of meekness that is willing to be persecuted.   And you see humility here.

     And so, just reading through at face value to get into the Kingdom,  you must repent.  To get into the Kingdom there's a poverty of spirit that  must be recognized.  To get into the Kingdom there must be humility that  says I'm nothing in front of you, I'm nothing, I'm nobody.  You're not  offering to God some great thing when you come to enter His Kingdom.

     And I read a little further and I got into chapter 7 and I found out  something else.  Verse 21, "Not everyone that says unto Me, Lord, Lord,  shall enter into the Kingdom."  Oh, and now I learn it's more than talk.   It's more than just saying you want to be in.  "But He that doeth the will  of My Father who's in heaven."  It's an obedience factor here.  There's a  willingness to submit to God in obedience. 

     So, here we find‑‑first of all‑‑repentance, a sorrow for sin and a  desire to change.  And then out of that comes a sense of unworthiness  knowing you don't have any resource for that, you can't change.  You're  personally bankrupt.  You can't do anything to deserve it.  And then you  feel humble before such an awesome God and an awesome Kingdom.  And then  you learn that you've got to do more than just say you want that.  It's not  just saying you belong to the Lord.  It's not external, it's something deep  inside.  And it's obedience to the will of God.  And there you have  submission to Lordship...submission to deity.

     And you go to chapter 8 and you find the same thing.  A guy comes  along and he says I want to follow You, Lord, in verse 19.  I want to be in  Your Kingdom.  I mean, I want to follow You.  And the Lord puts him off and  says, "The foxes have holes and the birds of the air have nests and the Son  of Man has no where to lay His head."  And another disciple would be came  along and said, "Permit me to go bury my father."  Jesus said to him,  "Follow Me but let the dead bury their dead."  And here you know what He's  talking about?  Submission, dropping the things of the world, coming and  following in obedience, letting go of the world.  So, if I want to be in  His Kingdom, I can't be fussing around with the stuff that doesn't matter,  I've got to be willing to follow Him at any cost.

     And then you read a little further and you come to chapter 10.  And  you're struck immediately by verse 32.  "Whosoever therefore shall confess  Me before men, him will I confess also before My Father who is in heaven."   There's that heavenly Kingdom with that heavenly Father.  And if you want  to have a relationship with Him, you've got to confess Him before men, the  Lord before men.  "And if you deny Me," He says in verse 33, "I'll deny  you."  So there has to be an outward confession.  There has to be a public  taking your place with Jesus Christ.

     How does someone enter the Kingdom?  Repentance, turning from their  sin and desiring to have a change, realizing their unworthy of such a  change and such an entrance into a Kingdom, being left with meekness and  humility and out of that a willingness to submit obediently to Christ's  Lordship no matter what it cost.  And then to outwardly confess Jesus as  Lord and be willing to state that He's your Lord before men. 

     And then you're struck by verse 37 where it says, "If you love your  father or mother more than Me, you're not worthy of Me.  And if you love  your son or daughter more than Me, you're not worthy of Me.  And he that  takes not his cross and follows after Me is not worthy of Me.  And he that  finds his life will lose it and he that loses his life for My sake will  find it."  And you come to the point of self‑denial, self‑sacrifice.  It  means you say no to everything.  No to your comforts of like, no to your  family, as we saw earlier, chapter 10, no to your own self will, your own  desires, you're abandoning yourself to the Lordship of Jesus Christ, you're  outwardly confessing Him, you're sacrificing everything, you're selling  everything to buy the pearl, you're selling everything to take the treasure  out of the field.

     And then as you come to chapter 15, you see another ingredient.  Verse  21, and Jesus is approached by this woman from Canaan and she cries out,  "Have mercy on me, O Lord, thou son of David, my daughter is grievously  vexed with a demon."  And He doesn't answer her.  And He doesn't pay any  attention to her.  But she kept up.  And she kept up.  And finally in verse  28, He says, "O woman, great is thy faith, be it unto thee even as thou  wilt."  This is another element.  She wanted Kingdom blessing.  She wanted  to receive from His hand.  And what was necessary was a sustained faith in  the sufficiency of Christ...persistent. 

     The people who enter the Kingdom press their way in it.  They go  through that narrow gate and they walk that narrow way and there's a price  but they are persistent in their confident faith that there's sufficiency  in Jesus Christ.  They can't be distracted.  They pursue it.  Like the guy  who keeps knocking and knocking and the Lord responds.

     So Matthew has laid it out for us very clearly.  If you would just sit  down and read that, you would see that in order to enter the Kingdom there  must be repentance.  There must be a sense of unworthiness.  There must be  humility.  There must be a willingness to submit obediently to the Lordship  of Christ and confession and self‑sacrifice and a persistent pursuing  faith.  And may I suggest to you that that's Matthew's formula or as close  as he's going to get to one for salvation.  All the elements are there.   And let me also say, none of those are produced in the flesh.  They are all  the work of the Spirit of God.  But they are nonetheless the elements, the  constituent parts that occur in the soul that is brought to the Kingdom.

     And now as you come to chapter 18, in a most beautiful way, the Lord  captures the essence of all of those.  He distills the truth in this one  statement.  "Except you be converted and become as little children, you  shall not enter into the Kingdom of heaven."  And what's He talking about?   Simple childlike humble trust.

     So, let's go to the third point, the requirement for entrance into the  Kingdom.  What is it?  Two things, He says.  "Except ye be converted."   Except ye be converted.  What were the disciples right now?  Proud,  arrogant, self‑seeking, selfish...were they repentant of their sin?  No, I  mean they were flaunting it among each other.  Do they have a feeling of  unworthiness?  No, they had a feeling of worthiness.  Were they humble?   No, they were proud.  Were they submissive to the Lordship of Christ?  No,  they wanted to be in control of their destiny.  Were they self‑sacrificing?   Hardly.  They were in antithesis of all of the elements of salvation.  And  so the Lord says to them, "Unless you turn around.." and it is an aorist  passive which implies that you've got to be turned around by somebody other  than yourself...now I suppose we could say unless the Lord turns you around  in the opposite direction.

     It takes us right back to the idea of repentance.  Conversion and  repentance are really two sides of the same coin.  Repentance is being  sorry for sin and wanting to turn‑‑that's the emotion.  And conversion is  the will that does it.  So entering the Kingdom begins with a repentant  heart and a will that turns to God.  And by the way, the word "converted"  here, every other time it's used in the New Testament, 17 times, it's  always translated "turned."  This is the only time it isn't.  Unless you be  turned around and become like little children.  You've got to be the  opposite of what you are, you're proud, arrogant, self‑seeking, boastful  people.  You've got to turn around.

     There's no salvation without that kind of thing, without repentance,  without turning.  It's all over the Scriptures.  It...Paul commends the  Thessalonian church because they turned to God from idols, 1 Thessalonians  1:9.  They turned.  And you look at the book of Acts, and follow the  preaching of the book of Acts with me for just a brief moment.  Let me show  you something.  Acts 3:19, "Repent therefore," here comes the same message,  "Repent therefore and be turned."  Very often the compound form of strepho  is used, epistrepho, thoroughly turned.  "Be turned that your sins may be  blotted out."

     In verse 26, "Unto you first God having raised up His Son Jesus sent  Him to bless you in turning away everyone of you from his iniquities."   There's always the turning.  You don't just go down the same road, going  the same way and add Jesus to your activity.  There's an abandoning of all  of that and a turning.

     And you go to the eleventh chapter of Acts and the message doesn't  change, it's the same message.  Acts 11:21, "And the hand of the Lord was  with them and a great number believed and turned to the Lord."  And you go  to the fifteenth chapter of Acts and it's the same message again in verse  19, "Wherefore my judgment is that we trouble not them who from among the  Gentiles are turned to God."  And you go all the way to the twenty‑sixth  chapter of Acts, the eighteenth verse and Paul says, "My ministry is to  open their eyes and turn them from darkness to light."  And in verse 20 he  preaches that they should repent and turn to God. It's the turning, it's a  turning always.

     Now let me sum all this up that we've seen in Matthew and I'll give it  some theological definition.  This is a very fast course in soteriology‑‑  the doctrine of salvation.  Follow.  Now this is an instant miracle,  salvation is, but these are constituent parts.  The first thing that  happens is election.  When Paul wrote the Thessalonians, he said, "I know  you're saved because I know your election from God."  That's where it  started.  Election...salvation is a result of these elements...election,  chosen in Him before the foundation of the world.  Elect before the  foundation of the earth...election.

     Then comes instruction.  "It is the law of the Lord that is perfect  converting the soul," Psalm 19, verse 7.  "Faith comes by hearing a speech  about Jesus Christ," Romans 10 says.  So, first is election, then comes  instruction‑‑the coming in of the Word. 

     Then comes conviction.  As the Word comes, it convicts.  Psalm 119:59,  "I thought on my ways and turned my heart unto Thy testimonies."  As a man  begins to look at his own life in the light of the Word of God, he will  draw himself to God.  Lamentations 3:40, "Let us search and test our ways  and turn to the Lord."  Psalm 78:34, I love this, "When He slew them, then  they sought Him."  When they were devastated by the instruction, then came  the conviction.

     Election, instruction, conviction...conviction leads to repentance.   When a person is convicted of their sin, they have the godly sorrow spoken  of in 2 Corinthians 7:10 that causes them to want to turn from their sin to  God.  And repentance leads to conversion.  Election, instruction,  conviction, repentance, conversion...conversion is the turning to God  prompted by the repentant heart.  And that's what our Lord is calling for  here. And then following that is obedience.  A willingness to submit  obediently.

     Now listen, the disciples are the very opposite of all of this.  Self‑  seeking, self‑willed, proud, egotistical, wanting to run their own life,  call their own shots, be the masters of their own faith, and He says if you  don't turn around you'll never even get in the Kingdom.  The point is this,  folks, how can I answer the question "who is the greatest in the Kingdom"  when you don't even know how to get in to start with?  We've got to take a  prior question.

     And what is it the second phrase says in verse 3?  How do you turn  around?  You turn around in becoming as little children.  What is a little  child like?  A little child is humble, simple, unaffected, without  hypocrisy, unambitious...that's a little child...meek.  Children don't have  great thoughts of personal greatness and grandeur and glory for themselves.   They're not even conscious about what they wear.  They could care...in fact  they get irritated when you try to dress them up.  They're not self‑seeking  in that sense.  They're simple, little tender infant in Jesus' arms, so  open, so without hypocrisy, so content to be held and directed and fed, so  content to be dependent, so willing to submit, to unpretentious.

     It's all bound up in one word, verse 4, "Where...whosoever therefore  shall humble himself," that's the word He's after.  It's that humility,  it's the humility of repentance that says I'm wrong, I've got to change  from my sin.  It's the humility of unworthiness that says I have nothing.   It's the humility of meekness that sees himself as lowly.  It's the  humility of submission that says I will follow the Lordship of Christ.   It's the humility of confession that says I don't care what the world say,  I confess Jesus as my Lord.  It's the humility of self‑sacrifice that says  I don't want anything for my life except what God wants.  It's the humility  of persistent faith that doesn't care how it looks, it just keeps pursuing.   It's that childlike humility, dependent, meek, trustful.  A child doesn't  want to push himself forward...a little infant, he just wants to have his  needs met and is content with that, no great ambition, seeks no grandeur,  wants no fancy wardrobe, fancy room, just meet the needs, just give love  and care.  That's a child.

     And they're so open.  I remember some years ago when I was in  Mississippi and I was traveling for several weeks preaching in black  schools all through Mississippi, public schools, and mostly in high schools  and junior highs, but several times had occasion to go into an elementary  school.  And went to this one little elementary school way out in the  country and it was just packed with these beautiful little shining faces,  you know, and they brought them all into this big huge like a room,  auditorium room and I was the speaker of the day.  And I looked out over  two or three hundred or four hundred, I don't remember how many, just  charming little kids from kindergarten through the sixth grade. 

     And I was going to present the gospel of Jesus Christ to them all.   And I told the story of Jesus, you know, and I just had a wonderful time.   And I told them how wonderful Jesus was and He was born and how He came  into the world.  And I...special little tidbits out of His life and some of  the miracles, you know, and I got to the cross and His death and His  resurrection.  And they just...they were just charmed by this marvelous  story of Jesus. 

     And I got all done with it and it was just very still.  And I said,  "How many of you would like to have Jesus live in your heart and forgive  all your sin and be your Lord and Savior and take you to heaven, if you  would, just let me know by putting your hand up?"  Man, it's like five  hundred little rockets, whish...those little hands went up.  "Me...me...me,  sir, me.  Please, me."  Every hand in the room.  And we had a photographer  with us who took a picture.  I'll never forget that picture as long as I  live.  Here's a room full of little hands up in the air, every single one.   Nobody was in there saying, "I'm skeptical about this whole deal.  I mean,  could you lay some proof on me?"  There wasn't any of that at all.  I mean  none.  Just a simple childlike beautiful trust, no self‑seeking at all.   And I..when I saw these hands, I just gasped.  And I thought, I must have  said that wrong.  This can't be. 

     And I said, "But how many of you are willing to let Jesus control your  life and you'll obey whatever He says?"  Every hand went up again.  Before  that day was over, we counseled with those kids in little groups, little  pockets of them all around that school and gave them little gospels.  And I  thought to myself, only God knows what really went on in the hearts of all  those children, but‑‑ you see‑‑that's the thing the Lord is after here,  that unpretentious, unhypocritical simple childlike thing that says I give  Jesus my life, He's so wonderful, I don't ask anything but that He take me.   That's the kind of thing the Lord's talking about.

     There's a last point.  We've talked about the Kingdom of heaven,  entrance into the Kingdom of heaven, the requirement for entrance into the  Kingdom of heaven and now among those who have entered into the Kingdom by  the right requirement, who are the greatest in the Kingdom?  And how He  gets to their question in verse 4.  Very simple...and then He said,  "Whosoever therefore," in other words, based on what I just told you, now  that we know how you get into the Kingdom, therefore, "whoever shall humble  himself as this little child, the same is the greatest in the Kingdom."

    And listen now carefully and here's what He's saying, if you came in by  humility, then humility is the standard.  And the humblest is the what?  Is  the greatest.  That's all.  The humblest is the greatest.  You see, you  people are all messed up because you're arguing about who's the greatest  and therefore you're all disqualified.  And that's what Jesus meant when He  said, "Whoever will be last shall be...what?...first.  And whoever would be  your chief, let him be your servant."  You see, in His Kingdom, humility is  the issue.  You came in in humility and you rise to greatness by going down  in humility. 

     That's why I hate with all my being and loathe the kinds of movements  today that propagate "self."  They are utterly antithetical to everything  Scripture presents and to the very teaching of Jesus Himself.  There is no  place for me seeking the elevation of myself.  That's disqualification.  I  can't even enter the Kingdom, let alone rise among the great to be the  greater or the greatest.  Just a simple principle.

     The word "humble" there, by the way, in verse 4 is a verb form.  It  means to lower yourself, tapeinoo.  The one who keeps lowering himself is  the one who keeps rising, see.  You know who the humble are?  The humble  are usually the people who aren't even aware of the issue, don't even think  about it.  Humility, no claims, no demands, no rights, no honors, bows low,  humble, seeks nothing, isn't saying always "I don't deserve that, I'm  better than that, I don't need to take that, they don't know how good I am,  they don't know how well they have it."  The one who in the Spirit of the  Lord Jesus Christ didn't think it something to hold on to being equal with  God but gave it all up and took on the form of a servant was made in the  likeness of human flesh and even died on a cross.  And he humbled Himself,  humbled Himself.  And he says, does Paul in Philippians 2, that's what  you're to do, looking not on your own things but on the things of others,  each esteeming others...what?...better than yourself.

     The child in Jesus' arms, looked up and depended on Jesus totally.  I  mean, he couldn't do anything for himself.  It's that childlike humble  dependence that the Lord honors here.  You rise higher within His Kingdom  as you go lower.  I love what the great Lutheran commentator, Lenski, said,  "He who thinks of making no claims, shall have all that others claim and by  claiming cannot obtain," end quote.

     It's the same message the Lord gave in the Beatitudes.  And the point  is this: who's the greatest in the Kingdom?  Well, everybody's great.   Everybody in the Kingdom is great.  The least in the Kingdom, according to  Matthew 11:11, is greater than John the Baptist.  Everybody in the Kingdom  is great.  But the greatest in the Kingdom are those who are the humblest.

     Listen to this and I close with this, someone wrote this, maybe this  can express our feelings.

     "Make me, O Lord, a child again, so tender, frail and small. In self possessing nothing, in Thee possessing all. O Savior, make me small once more that downward I may grow, And in this heart of mine restore the faith of long ago. With Thee may I be crucified, no longer I that lives. O Savior, crush my sinful pride by grace which pardon gives. Make me, O Lord, a child again, obedient to Thy call, In self possessing nothing, in Thee possessing all."

     As we humble ourselves, He exalts us.  God gives grace to the humble.   Great promise.  Let's bow in prayer. 

     Father, we thank You for Your Word again this morning.  We have  touched the very throne of heaven for we have heard the voice of God.  No  different than were we on the mount with Moses, no different than were we  on the mount with Peter, James and John, no different than we were in the  waters of the baptism of our Lord, we have heard Thy voice for Thou dost  speak through Thy Word and Thou hast reminded us of this profound truth of  humility.  Those who come to You come on Your terms, terms of repentance,  unworthiness, meekness, submissiveness to the Lordship of Christ,  confession of Christ, self‑sacrifice, persistent faith in the sufficiency  of the Lord Jesus Christ.  All expressions of humility, of a lack of  resource.  And these are the terms for entrance.  And thus become the terms  for greatness.  May we be great in Thy Kingdom, not because we seek for  greatness or glory but because we seek Thy glory and Thine alone.


 

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