Matthew 4:12-17 · Jesus Begins to Preach
The Curriculum of God’s Kingdom
Matthew 4:12-17
Sermon
by Phil Thrailkill
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“Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.” We can do startling new things because God has drawn near enough to enable them." Matthew 4:17b

It was an awful time in London. In December of 1952 a toxic mix of dense fog and thick black smoke killed four thousand in four days. Coffins ran out, as did funeral flowers. It was one of the deadliest environmental disasters in English history. Here is what happened:

“As smoke pouring out of London's chimneys mixed with fog, the air turned colder. In response, chilly Londoners heaped more coal on their fires, making more smoke. It was soon so dark some said they couldn't see their own feet.

By Sunday, December 7, visibility fell to near nothing. Roads were littered with abandoned cars. Midday concerts were cancelled due to total darkness. Sunlight was filtered out by an aerial blanket of floating soot. Archivists at the British Museum found smog lurking in the book stacks. Cattle in the city's Smithfield market were killed and thrown away before they could be slaughtered and sold; their lungs were black.

Funeral director Stan Cribb has led thousands of funerals through the smoggy streets of London, and he says the 1952 event dwarfs all others he has seen. He remembers the moment he saw the first gray wisps hanging in the air: ‘You had this swirling, like somebody had set a load of car tires on fire.’”

What happened to London in December of ‘52 is an apt image of our world as it must appear to God. We don’t see the situation accurately because it’s all we’ve ever known; we were born into this polluted environment. This amazing creation, a once safe place with clear skies and clean air, now suffocates under a blanket of personal evil and pervasive disease, universal sin and unavoidable death; we inhabit an atmosphere of moral distortion and physical pain, intellectual rebellion and spiritual corruption from which there is no escape and in which our attempts to make things better often only make them worse. We breathe it in; it becomes part of who we are, and we pass on the accumulated negative effects to all who come after us, including our children. This is what the church means by original sin; it is not something we can escape by trying harder or being better; it is our world.

This event from fifty years ago is a picture of the spiritual world into which Jesus came. A malevolent, deadly darkness cloaked the world when the living Word of God came and pitched his tent of flesh behind enemy lines. It was given to the prophet Isaiah to diagnose our situation and announce the relief that what would one day appear, “The people who sat in darkness have seen a great light, and for those who sat in the region and shadow of death, light has dawned.” Jesus is the light of the world, and the beginning of his public ministry was a candle lit in a long dark room and like the first rays of the morning sun after a long night of darkness. Jesus is the approved location of divine revelation; he is where God shows up, a scene the Bible depicts as light coming into darkness and life into death.

New Testament scholar D. A. Carson writes: “When we read...in John 3:16 that ‘God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son,’ we are not to think that God's love is being praised by reference to the world's bigness…but by reference to its badness. This ugly, sinful, rebellious world, this sewer of infidelity, this glut of endless selfishness, this habitation of cruelty, this lover of violence, this promoter of greed, this maker of idols—this (is the) world God loved, and loved so much that he sent his Son.”1

We could not be rescued by another great prophet with a word from God for our moral correction. Prophet after prophet had preserved Jewish faith and kept hope for a Messiah alive, but nothing had fundamentally changed. No halfway measures would do. We could only be rescued by God coming in person, living among us as a humble servant and exposing himself to the very worst our world could deliver, which in his case was an ugly death for an innocent man, then rising from the dead and leaving behind a body of people who, with his story in books called gospels and his Spirit in their midst, would continue to worship and point to him as the world’s only Savior.

In Jesus the soot settles, the fog evaporates, and we get a clear glimpse of the Son who is the spitting image of the Father. In his presence the air is clean and crisp; we breathe freely again for the first time. In Jesus, and through the Holy Spirit that enlivened him, God has come to show the truth and make things right. To live in his light and walk in his path is what it means to be a Christian disciple. In Christ we risk seeing the world as it is and ourselves for who we are. We learn that our world, and we ourselves in it, are worse than we thought, and that God is more fierce and loving than we ever imagined.

I believe that before he offers a change in behavior, Jesus offers sight and insight. He opens our eyes to who he is and stirs within us a desire to follow and find out what he is about. He wants us to see the world and ourselves through his eyes, and when that happens we literally enter a whole new world, through we inhabit the very same space. We cross over a threshold. There is no substitute for spiritual sight, for having the eyes of our hearts opened so that we see God in every face and God’s hidden possibilities in every situation. It is a good and a dangerous thing to pray, “Open our eyes, Lord. Let us see what you see.”

Look at your own hands. Stretch them out in front of your eyes and take a good look. Those hands, your hands, we made to do the work of God in this messed up world. They are to be instruments of the kingdom and channels for the energies of the Holy Spirit. At the ends of your left and right arms are a pair of mirror images to lift in worship and to offer in work and to touch others in love.

What have your hands been doing this last week? What stories could they tell? Have they pointed the ugly finger of gossip? Have they been balled in fists of anger and rage? Has the central digit been lifted in an obscene gesture at another driver? Have they turned the pages of Scripture this week? If there is a band of gold on the ring finger of the left, has its meaning been honored the week? Who have you touched in the last seven days? Was your touch gentle, or was it intimidating? What documents and checks have they signed? Have your hands been open in gestures of generosity or tight-fisted in gestures of greed? It is a form of spiritual inventory to ask your hands on occasion, What have you guys been up to lately? There is a children’s song in our hymnal, and it is a perfect bridge into the text. It is sung to the tune of Debussy’s Claire de Lune:

“Jesus’ hands were kind hands, doing good to all,
healing pain and sickness, blessing children small;
washing weary feet, and saving those who fall;
Jesus’ hands were kind hands, doing good to all.”2

TURNING TO THE TEXT

I approach today’s text from Matthew through the image of the hands and feet of Jesus. After all, he said that the kingdom of his Father in heaven was near enough to be taken hold of; it is within arm’s reach, “Repent,” he said, starting off with a clear command, and then the reason, “for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.” It’s near, but it must be taken hold of.

It’s there between him and us, in the space we both occupy. Hands out and palms up is perhaps the first gesture of Jesus, “Turn around and come home to God,” he said, because that is the meaning of repentance. “You can change the way you think and live; and the reason you can now do this when you could not before is that the kingdom of heaven is at hand.” God is near enough to touch and be touched. And with God’s nearness, startling new human actions are now possible. Life can make a change of trajectory. 3 You can choose to choose God because the energy of your chooser has been partially restored by the grace of God’s approach. Where once you were bound, now you have some wiggle room. It is now time to respond to God’s approach. Jesus is the path to God’s future and the door through which we enter. His hands are an open gesture of invitation. To follow him means that our feet must get into the act as well. Reach for the kingdom that is at hand, and put your feet in his steps. It’s the start of a new beginning.

I grew up loving maps and geography. Perhaps because my father was a ship’s navigator during World War II and learned to take star sightings with a sextant and plot them on a map aboard the attack cargo ship Turandot, AKA 47. I loved to have him open the pages of the large atlas that sat in our bookshelves and explain maps to me. I learned terms like longitude and latitude, equator and equinox, plus or minus minutes and seconds from Greenwich Mean Time, and with my little finger to trace the voyages of his troop transport hauling Marines back from exotic places like Saipan and Tinian. It was more than a lesson in locations; it was an invitation to a larger world and eventually to a Great Commission. It was only the flat surface of map, but it richly furnished my boyhood imagination and gave me an uncanny sense of direction. Often between 7:00 and 7:30pm Lori sits in amazement as I answer obscure Jeopardy questions that have to do with cities and geography.

Matthew, it appears, was also a lover of geography, particularly of the land of Israel. So convinced was he that Jesus was God with us, Immanuel as he called him in the birth stories, that his every move from place to place was echoed in what we call the Old Testament. With Jesus there was no wasted motion and no random wanderings. His steps were ordered by the Lord; he lived under the tight constraints of divine providence. When his mentor and predecessor John the Baptist was first arrested and then relieved of his head, that was the signal for Jesus to move back home, to withdraw into Galilee. Verse 13, “When he heard that John had been handed over, he withdrew into Galilee.” What John faced, which was martyrdom, Jesus would face later on, but between now and then and between here and there was a lot of geography to be covered, and not all of it friendly or inviting.

It was natural to return to Nazareth, the mountainous and isolated hamlet he had only recently left to follow the call of God to John’s baptism and then face wilderness temptations.4 But after a hot response to his first message and an attempt on his life , Jesus left Nazareth and, as Matthew notes, “went and dwelt in Capernaum by the sea.”

Capernaum was a fishing village on the northwest shore of the Sea of Galilee, the home of the first four disciples, and situated on a major north-south trade route. So often town.”5 It was Jesus’ base of operations for his ministry trips into the countryside. It was in the Capernaum synagogue that Jesus cast out his first demon, in one of Simon’s rooms that he accomplished his first healing, that of Peter’s mother in law who had a fever, and in the courtyard of that same house that Jesus first shared the power of the kingdom by mass healings and deliverances.6 Capernaum was where Jesus, in the words of John Wimber, began to do the stuff. He taught; he preached; the Spirit performed wonders through his touch and command. It was show-and-tell time. The tragedy is that in rejecting him, Jesus’ hometown had rejected the blessing of the kingdom of God, and so it bypassed them for Capernaum. They rejected his kind hands, and so his feet went elsewhere. Just because some don’t want much of Jesus does not mean others do not. God is always looking for a receptive audience; history tells us that one time it was the Methodists who said Yes!

It was precisely in that series of movements from Judea in the south to Galilee in the north and from Nazareth in the west to Capernaum in the east that Matthew heard the echo of a passage from Isaiah chapter 9. To say that it was fulfilled in Jesus’ movements was to make the claim that the God who inspired Isaiah as a canonical prophet was the same God who directed Jesus’ paths and that there were grand continuities between what God had been doing among his people the Jews and what was now coming to light in Jesus. Matthew took care in his writing to match the movements of Jesus line by line with the words of Isaiah, “The land of Zebulun and the land of Naphtali, toward the sea, across the Jordan, ‘Galilee of the Gentiles,’ the people who sat in darkness have seen a great light....”7

It was here, in his home province of Galilee, land given to two of the twelve tribes but now with a large percentage of Gentile outsiders, that Jesus would carry out his ministry. To his own people first of all, but from the very start with an eye to a larger audience of Gentiles who did not know the one God of Israel and his plan to save the world through the cross and resurrection of Jesus of Nazareth. So whether we make the external referent that Jesus fulfilled Scripture or take the alternative route of saying that he was filled full of the Holy Spirit and so guided from within by intuition and revelation, the point is the same. In the details of Jesus’ life we trace the activity of God among us. And that, my friends, is the deepest conviction of the Christian church. Jesus is the human face of God and the second person of the Holy Trinity standing sweaty and lean in front of us, asking for us to pay attention. Where Jesus went and what he did was no accident and not the randomness of free choice. Jesus was not freelance. He did not wander as a vagabond; there was divine direction to his steps, as we note in the following string of motion verbs:

verse 12: he... withdrew into Galilee

verse 13: he left Nazareth and went and dwelt in Capernaum

verse 18: he walked by the Sea of Galilee

verse 21: and going on from there

verse 23: and he went about all Galilee teaching and preaching and healing....

This is a man with a plan, a man who knows where he is going and what he is about, even if it’s just one day at a time or one hour at a time. He is constantly getting new GPS readings and updates from the Holy Spirit as to where to go and what to say. Which means, dear friends, that if Jesus is following the will and ways of the Father in the power of the Spirit, and if we are following and fumbling along behind him, then guess what? That puts us in the middle of the will of God wherever we are and whatever we are doing.

It is not hard to find the will of God for your life. Just start following Jesus with everything you are, and if you mess up, which you will, God will still be pleased at your faith. Apart from that I have no other guidance, because if you are not following Christ as a full time disciple, which you can do in any occupation, it doesn’t matter what else you do or how well you do it. When the great missionary David Livingstone was asked if he didn’t fear that going to Africa was too difficult and dangerous, he answered, “I am immortal until the will of God for me is accomplished.”8 That is a formula both for courage and for patience, both of which are in short supply in our day. Timing is everything, “Jesus may be late, but he’s always on time.”9 Never in a rush, never in a hurry or a worry, always in the right place with the right word. That was Jesus. He lived by divine appointments. He only said what he heard the Father saying and only did what he saw the Father doing. At his best Jesus was a mimic.

I suspect that the only true place of leisure is in the center of God’s will. Jesus had neither a watch nor a day planner. He moved at the speed of walking and talking and took his cues from on high. The right time for Jesus to withdraw was when he heard that John had been arrested, and when the time to begin preaching the kingdom arrived, he knew it, verse 17: from that time Jesus began to preach.... Is it possible for our steps and words to be directed by the Lord so that no movement is wasted and no words lost? This is true effectiveness.

To describe the idea that God is not limited as we are by space and time but equally present to everything that is made, theologians have come up with the fancy word omnipresence, meaning that God is everywhere at the same time. God is closer to us than we are to ourselves. With God there is no far or near but only here. But that does not mean that God is equally available, since God must choose to unveil his presence; it is not automatic. Omnipresence is a correct idea about God which can be affirmed whether or not God is sensed to be near. It can be affirmed even in the place where God is experienced as absent. You may be bored in church one Sunday and the person next to you be in the midst of some spiritual rapture which defies expression. You might both intellectually affirm the true doctrine of God’s omnipresence, that God is theoretically here, but only one of you would say that God is near and dear at this moment.

Philosophical affirmation and religious experience are related, but they are not the same thing. And what Jesus is speaking about in his preaching of the kingdom is the later and not the former. He is not out to convince us of a speculative affirmation; he is offering a present reality which is the rule of God the Father crashing in upon life. The God who is always here is now palpably near.

If God is imagined as a solitary king, as was the custom in the ancient near Eastern world, and if God’s reign is transcendent, if it is above us in heaven and not on the earth, and if God chooses to unzip the closed heavens and come down in our midst in an open manifestation, then you could say, using the shorthand language of Jesus, that the kingdom of heaven is at hand.10 Having hidden his presence in times past, God is now invading the earth with holy presence, and Jesus is the approved announcer of such an event, which gives him quite a lot of authority and raises some interesting questions about just who he is. After hearing him say what he said and seeing what he did, people often asked, “Who is this man?”

The kingdom of heaven is at hand, close enough to touch us. In Jesus’ ministry, which is only just beginning, God’s rule has gone from being a correct theory to a present experience. God’s rule and reign is moving in like a warm front, which means that a cold front is now on the retreat. The kingdom of God is breaking in with the result that the other kingdom, the alien rule of the Evil One and those who side with him, is even now breaking down and breaking apart under the pressure of God’s invading presence. The war has begun, and this world is the field of conflict. One influence is displacing and replacing another.

Where a warm and a cold front collide, guess what happens? There is a tremendous release of energy in thunder and lightning. Tornadoes are formed; hail reigns down; lots of noise and commotion. The atmosphere shifts. That explains why there was always so much controversy around Jesus, why the demons were always screaming at him to leave them alone, and why some of the Jewish leaders were so fed up with Jesus. You had either to side with him as a follower or brand him as public enemy number one. When God shows up, and when omni-presence gives way to real presence, to abstain is not a choice; you are either for him or against him. And if the Father has shown up in the person of the Son in the power of the Spirit, there is only one proper response, and that it to turn to the God who has shown up and do business with the Triune God who asks for your attention. Repentance is not the first thing that happens but the second because it is only when God unzips the heavens and come near that we are given the ability to turn to the One who is turning his face towards us. We simply cannot do what we are commanded until God does what only God can do, which is draw near.11 You cannot repent whenever you want to, but only when God wants to. And if you do turn, it is a sign that God has already come near enough to enable your turning.

President Theodore Roosevelt of roughrider fame was a larger-than-life figure who made quite an impression on people. One journalist, William Allen White, wrote of his first meeting with Roosevelt in 1897:

“He sounded in my heart the first trumpet call of the new time that was to be. I had never known such a man as he, and never shall again. He overcame me. And in the hour or two we spent that day at lunch, he poured into my heart such vision, such ideals, such hopes, such a new attitude toward life and patriotism and the meaning of things, as I had never dreamed men had. After that, I was his man.”12

If that is true, can you imagine the effect Jesus had on people up close? Love that looked into your soul and stirred up the deep waters of all your hopes and dreams. Holiness that made you ashamed of every sinful thought and deed. Joy that made your petty pleasures seem small and manageable. Here was a man fully alive to God and fully aware of what dwelt in the murky depths of each heart. And in order to demonstrate his immediate effects, Matthew gives us a set of call stories in verses 18 through 22. What does it mean to change because the rule of God has come near? In these stories we have the beginning of an answer.

Clint Eastwood is an American film icon. Who can forget Dirty Harry and the huge 45 caliber magnum weapon he carried, more a canon than a pistol, or the sneering invitation to ‘Make my day?’ But long before he was Dirty Harry, Eastwood was Rowdy Yates on the TV show Rawhide. I can still sing part of the title song. Do you remember it? “All the things I’m missin’, the vittles, love and kissin’, are waiting at end of my ride, Rawhide!”

There is an important hand gesture I remember from that boyhood drama. On horseback, the trail boss would lift his hand, index finger up, make a rapid circling motion in the air, then point ahead with these words, “O.K. boys, head ‘em up, and move ‘em out.” It was a call to a long, tough, trail ride and along the way the promise of adventure and a pay out at the end. That is the gesture I see Jesus making in these call stories. “Simon, Andrew, James, John, head ‘em up, and move ‘em out.’ Follow me, and I will help you corral people for God,” or, in the case of their work, “Follow me, and I will make you fishers of men.”

So if Matthew has established the fact that the physical movement of Jesus and the timing of each new stage of his ministry was in accord with divine providence, then we can say the same about the call of his first four apprentices. “As he walked by the Sea of Galilee” sounds like a morning stroll when it is in fact a divine appointment. Jesus walks with a purpose. This is the day for calling disciples and forming a floating seminary in which watching Jesus operate is the primary form of spiritual and character formation. The call of Christ will meet the lives of men who have been prepared to answer. The Holy Spirit is at work on both sides of the coming transaction. He knows; they do not! 13

Fishing was a prosperous trade on the shores of the inland sea. Fish is protein; dried fish can be transported without spoiling, which makes it desirable for caravans and Roman soldiers on the march. These were not day laborers but men with a family business and their own equipment, boats and nets, and in the case of James and John extra hired laborers. The shoreline was dotted with boats and men who had spent the night fishing and were now casting circular nets in the shallows or repairing torn nets for the next night’s work.

These two set of brothers from the same village were not the only ones there that morning. Christian art that shows them as lonely fisher-folk is not historically accurate. Up and down the lake were other boats pulled up on shore, more like a marina with slips than a single dock. That it twice says that Jesus saw them is an indicator not just that they were in his field of vision but that his attention was directed to them by God. Whatever the interpersonal mechanism the Spirit employed, Jesus knew that these were the ones he was to call and not others. These four were the nucleus of what would become known as the twelve, and their number was a living symbol that Jesus was in process of recreating and redefining the people of God who had descended from the twelve tribes, each with their patriarch. Jesus would not minister alone. There must be successors to pass the work on to and eyewitnesses to guarantee the validity of what was about to happen to them all over the next three years. On this day the church began to be gathered and formed around the Jesus who was the agent of his Father’s inbreaking kingdom.

Ripe fruit is easy to pick; it practically falls off in your hand. And these men were prepared without knowing it. They started the day as seasoned professionals in one occupation and ended the day as rookie disciples. Left to themselves they would spend the rest of their lives doing the same thing day after day. “I fish; my father fished before me, and my sons will fish after me. It’s all we know. After all, as the saying goes, a man’s gotta do what a man’s gotta do.” There is a comfort to routine and a job you know well, a certain security and place in the world. Bruce Wilkinson describes it this way:

“A Comfort Zone is our cozy quilt of relationships. It’s the padding of routines that makes us feel good. It’s the security of acceptable behavior. It’s the steel mesh of our past successes and failures. Our Comfort Zone completely surrounds out life in Familiar.... Inside our Zone, we feel safe. We’re pretty sure we can succeed, look good, and feel happy here. Outside, well who knows? Outside everyone’s Comfort is the Great Unknown. That’s why we don’t want to go there.”14

All that was shattered by an invitation, “Follow me,” and a promise, “and I will make you fishers of men.” That they responded quickly and walked away from the only thing they knew is proof of two things: first, the magnetic attraction of Jesus, and secondly, that they had been prepared for such. He would use what they knew and transform it, and in the process they would be changed forever.

Picture with me the story of Jens Oveson, a Danish fisherman. One day Jens was angling for salmon in central Norway's Gaula River when he was swept away by a strong current. Kjell Wilhelmsen, 55, spotted him. Wilhelmsen had fished the Gaula for 25 years and knew where the current would carry Ovesen. He ran across a bridge, waiting for Ovesen as the current carried him down river. He later told a reporter, "He seemed paralyzed. Only his face and the tips of his boots were above water. I decided to start casting."

His homemade lure hooked Ovesen's rubber waders on the first cast of about ten yards. But Oveson weighed nearly 250 pounds. Wilhelmsen used every trick he knew to reel in the big man without breaking his light line. He landed the half-conscious Dane and hauled him onto the shore. Oveson survived the ordeal.15

Fishers of men! Catching people and saving them. It’s what disciples learn in the company of Jesus Christ. Our primary bond loyalty to Jesus overflows in service for others. Whatever work with do for him must flow from our relationship with him, which is why the follow me part always precedes the fishing for people part. Spirituality is the soil in which productivity grows. The Lord of the work comes before the work of the Lord. As I hear the Spirit whisper regularly, “Phil, if you are too busy to pray, then you are too busy with stuff I never assigned you. Follow me, and watch your life get simpler and more productive.”

The movie Star Trek V: The Final Frontier begins with a mysterious scene of healing. A human-looking alien named J'onn toils beneath a blazing sun. Ragged and malnourished, he drills in vain for water. There are hundreds of holes in the earth around him. He is alerted to the heavy pounding of hoofs. A caped rider on horseback thunders toward him. J'onn releases the drill, hurries to his rifle, and raises it toward the approaching rider.

The rider pulls up short and after a moment of silence speaks, "I thought weapons were forbidden on this planet." Powerfully built, the rider swings down from the saddle. "Besides, I can't believe you'd kill me for a field of empty holes."

J'onn replies, "It's all I have." He sags under the exhausting weight of his burdens.

"Your pain runs deep," the rider says.

Sobbing, J'onn says, "What do you know of my pain?"

"Let us explore it together," the rider says.

J'onn trembles; tears flood down his dirty cheeks.

The mystery rider continues, "Each man hides a secret pain. It must be exposed and reckoned with. It must be dragged from darkness and forced into the light. Share your pain. Share your pain with me, and gain strength from the sharing."

J'onn cries out in anguish, then rests his head on the rider's chest. A calmness comes over him. J'onn is baffled but transformed by the stranger's compassion.16

For a moment I want us to suspend our skepticism and give our friend Matthew the benefit of the doubt about what he describes in verse 23 through 25. In a series of three balanced statements he alternates between a geographical report, “And he went about all Galilee.... So his fame spread throughout all Syria.... And great crowds followed him from all four points of the compass...” and a ministry report, that everywhere he went Jesus did three characteristic things: 1) he taught the kingdom; 2) he announced the kingdom, and 3) he healed both organic and spiritual problems as a sign of what the kingdom means. It is almost as if Matthew cannot use the two little words all and every too much: all Galilee... every disease and every infirmity... all Syria... all the sick... various diseases and pains.

When the kingdom of God breaks in, life is put back right! Matthew loves to pile up whatever diagnostic categories he can muster: every disease and every infirmity, various diseases and pains, demoniacs, epileptics, and paralytics. Whatever else he was, Jesus was a channel for the healing and recreative love of God. C.H. Spurgeon wrote of these verses:

“What a mass of hideous sickness must have thrust itself under the eye of Jesus! Yet we read not that He was disgusted, but patiently waited on every case. What a singular variety of evils must have met at His feet! What sickening ulcers and putrefying sores! Yet He was ready for every new shape of the monster evil, and was victor over it in every form. Let the arrow fly from what quarter it might, He quenched its fiery power. The heat of fever, or the cold of dropsy; the lethargy of palsy, or the rage of madness; the filth of leprosy, or the darkness of ophthalmia--all knew the power of His word, and fled at His command. In every corner of the field He was triumphant over evil, and received the homage of delivered captives. He came, He saw, He conquered everywhere.”17

One day they were fishing and headed to the local pub for a few laughs; they next day they were walking around with a teacher about their own age who was a living channel of the very presence of God. Who was this Jesus, and what would his future be? That would only be answered as they took the risk of following him as junior apprentices and lifelong learners. They had crossed the threshold of divine revelation; they were now living daily in what appears to be a parallel universe where men switch jobs at the call of a stranger and where mobs of broken people come back to restored life one by one.

CONCLUSION

First the open hand of invitation, “the kingdom of heaven is at hand.” Then an uplifted hand rounding up disciples and pointing them to the mission field, “Follow me....” And thirdly, a hand that touches those broken in body and crushed in soul, “and he healed them.”

This is, I believe, according to Matthew, what the kingdom of God looks like in the hands of Jesus, at least in its early stages. Hope is restored as light dawns; people respond to the disruptive call to be his apprentices, and there is evidence of the gifts of the Spirit in signs and wonders, particularly healings and deliverances of all varieties. So when you pray, “Thy kingdom come, thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven,” be forewarned. You are praying for the utter disruption of everything you know.

Phil Thrailkill Duncan Memorial UMC March 19, 2006


1. Story and quote edited from PreachingToday.com search under Matthew 4:12-25.

2. The United Methodist Hymnal, No. 273.

3. This is the practical meaning of the Methodist teaching of prevenient grace.

4. Luke 4:16-30. was Jesus in the home of Simon and Andrew that Matthew at one point calls it “his own”?

5. 9:1. See www.christusrex.org/www1/ofm/sites/TScpIntr.html for fascinating material on Capernaum archaeology, including the home of Peter.

6. Mark 1:21-34.

7. See the Scripture sheet on vv.12-15: 1 Now when he heard that John had been “handed over”, he withdrew into Galilee; 2 and leaving Nazareth he went and dwelt in Caperna-um by the sea, 3 in the territory of Zebulun and Naphtali, 4 that what was spoken by the prophet Isaiah might be fulfilled, 3' “The land of Zebulun and the land of Naphtali, 2' toward the sea, across the Jordan, 1 ‘Galilee of the Gentiles‘—

8. Michael Green, editor, Illustrations for Biblical Preaching (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker, 1990), 394.

9. John 5:19.

10. For the image of the heavens unzipped, I am indebted to Randy Clark.

11. For a study of repentance by a long time student of revivals and awakenings, see Richard Owen Roberts, Repentance: The First Word Of The Gospel (Wheaton, ILL: Crossway Books, 2002), and on Mt. 4:12ff. see pages 27-32.

12. PreachingToday.com search under Matthew 4:12-25.

13. See K.C. Hanson, “The Galilean Fishing Economy and the Jesus Tradition,” Biblical Theology Bulletin 27 (1997) 99-111.

14. The Dream Giver (Sisters, OR: Multnomah, 2003), 88.

15. "Fisherman Hooks Drowning Dane to Save His Life," The Wenatchee World, July 20, 2001.

16. PreachingToday.com search under Matthew 4:12-25.

17. Calvin Miller, The Book of Jesus (New York, NY: Simon and Schuster, 1996), 54.

by Phil Thrailkill