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Jesus rides in as the gentle King, cleanses the temple for prayer, withers a fruitless tree, confronts evasive leaders, and claims the cornerstone role. Matthew 21 calls us to welcome him, pray boldly, and bear the fruit the Father seeks.
Matthew 20 overturns calculators and crowns: the vineyard pays by grace, the King leads by serving to the cross, and the Son of David opens blind eyes. Learn how last-first reversals shape disciples who rejoice in generosity and live mercy on the road to Jerusalem.
Matthew 19 moves from creation’s design for marriage to the blessing of little children and the rich man’s sorrow. Jesus names human impossibility, offers divine possibility, and promises renewal and reward to all who follow him.
Matthew 18 outlines the King’s household rules: become like children, guard the vulnerable, pursue the straying, reconcile under his authority, and forgive from the heart. Jesus’ presence with even two or three gives humble communities strength to live this way.
Matthew 17 reveals the Son’s glory on the mountain, his power in the valley, and his wisdom in everyday obligations. Hear the Father’s command—listen to him—and follow with mustard-seed trust and love-shaped freedom.
Matthew 16 moves from demands for signs to the Father’s revelation of the Son, from yeast-like false teaching to the solid rock of confession, and from self-rule to the freedom of cross-bearing in hope of the King’s return.
In Matthew 15, Jesus opposes traditions that cancel God’s commands, locates defilement in the heart, honors a Gentile woman’s faith, and feeds thousands. The chapter invites obedience from the inside out and compassion that reaches across borders.
Herod’s feast ends in death, but Jesus’ wilderness feast overflows with life. In Matthew 14, the King feeds, stills storms, and draws worship from fearful hearts.
Matthew 13 gathers Jesus’ parables to reveal how the kingdom works now and where it is headed. Learn to hear well, sow patiently, and prize Christ above all.
Matthew 12 sets Jesus’ mercy and authority against rigid tradition. He heals on Sabbath, binds the strong man by the Spirit, warns against calling light darkness, promises the sign of Jonah, and redefines family around the Father’s will.
Matthew 11 brings doubt and decision into focus. Jesus confirms his identity with Isaiah’s signs, warns towns that refuse to repent, reveals the Father to the humble, and invites the weary to find rest under his gentle yoke.
Matthew 10 turns disciples into messengers, sending them to Israel with Jesus’ words and works. It prepares them for hatred and help, calls them to confess the Lord openly, and promises that even a cup of cold water given to his people will not be lost.
Matthew 9 shows Jesus forgiving sins, calling a tax collector, and weaving healings that restore shame and life. The chapter ends with compassion for harassed crowds and a summons to pray for workers in a ready harvest.
Matthew 8 shows the King’s authority in action: diseases yield to his touch and word, a storm obeys his voice, and demons flee. The chapter invites costly trust and immediate service as foretastes of the coming fullness of God’s kingdom.
Matthew 7 closes the Sermon on the Mount with relational humility, confident prayer, and decisive choices. Jesus tests professions by fruit and calls us to build on his words like rock.