Patterns (blue prints) are important. They serve as the basis for building. They also serve as the means through which the owner can communicate his vision or heart for the project or building with the intent of it being replicated and in many cases repeated. From a biblical perspective, God’s patterns are reality. They reflect how he not only sees the world, but how he created it, how he intended it to be, and how it works best. The more closely we live in and build according to that pattern, the more our results will reflect the life he intends for us and his world. Patterns that are alive and active in heaven, God desires to see repeated/built on earth. His prayer, thy kingdom come, thy will be done, is his intent to take the patterns, the reality of heaven and release it, loosen it on earth.
Matthew in writing about this interaction with Peter, Jesus, and Jesus disciples reveals the pattern of the owner. A blue print, that when it is revealed and unpacked allows us to see more clearly God’s intention. Follow the pattern and we will see the world turned upside right. Now back to the main point.It is important to realize that Jesus didn’t give Peter a pat on the back for his revelation. It is also important to see that Jesus didn’t say or do what we have believed to be the result of this type of confession, which is usually something like, “good answer you are on your way to heaven”. Instead Jesus leads the disciples to two important themes which serve as the foundation for the future of those who see Jesus as the “Messiah” the son of the living God.
Matthew in writing about this interaction with Peter, Jesus, and Jesus disciples reveals the pattern of the owner. A blue print, that when it is revealed and unpacked allows us to see more clearly God’s intention. Follow the pattern and we will see the world turned upside right. Now back to the main point.It is important to realize that Jesus didn’t give Peter a pat on the back for his revelation. It is also important to see that Jesus didn’t say or do what we have believed to be the result of this type of confession, which is usually something like, “good answer you are on your way to heaven”. Instead Jesus leads the disciples to two important themes which serve as the foundation for the future of those who see Jesus as the “Messiah” the son of the living God.
When reading Matthew’s account of Jesus interaction with Peter which resulted in Peter’s confession of Jesus as the Messiah, the Son of the Living God, we don’t see Jesus congratulating him and stating “good answer, you are on your way to heaven”. Yet if you would look today at how Christ is presented in many of our teachings, you would get the strong impression that heaven is the natural/primary outcome of the confession of faith. Hell and all of its negative implications has been avoided, and heaven with all of its positive implications has been obtained. Unfortunately what has been lost in the middle of all of this is our remaining life on earth (Paul called it “the life I now live…). Yet this is the place that Jesus focuses the attention of the disciples to and something which I believe is missed. Jesus uses two words to move us in that direction, church and Kingdom.
Both church and kingdom become the focal point of Jesus remaining comments to His disciples. They are large subjects and I am know expert, but if we can discern a pattern and understand the Father’s heart we can see that what Jesus is wanting to reveal to us is that Peter’s revelation (flesh and blood has not revealed this to you, but my Father who is in heaven) leads us toward something. It opens our eyes to seeing something that we would not have seen. And Jesus wants us to see.
Jesus first response based on Peter’s confession is, “I will build my church and the gates of hell will not prevail against it.” Peter’s confession serves as the foundation on which Christ will be build his church. This church doesn’t sound like the church we are used to. First it is a church that Christ is intentionally building, “I will..”. Secondly it is a church owned by Christ, “my church”. Thirdly it is located in places that don’t seem to be desirable or safe, “the gates of hell”. And finally it is a church that “prevails” because the “gates of hell will not prevail against it”.
In another sense Jesus statement of building His church probably ran counter to what the disciples had been taught and understood about the covenantal called out. They saw themselves as members of Moses church. They were his congregation. In a sense they were part of the house that Moses built. Jesus was not only stating I am a church builder, but it is my church not Moses. It took, Paul, to move them and us more completely away from Moses church and all it stood for, and bring us more fully into the new covenant of Christ’s church and all it would mean.
Jesus second response to Peter’s confession is to talk about the kingdom of heaven. He said to Peter, “I will give you the Keys to the kingdom, whatever you bind on earth will be bound in heaven. Whatever is loosed on earth, will be loosed in heaven”. Jesus was making it clear to Peter that his confession had allowed him to become an important key carrier, a key carrier that opens up the door into the kingdom heaven. To understand this more fully let’s contrast this statement with what Jesus said to the scribes and Pharisees (ministers if you will of the church of Moses),
Luke 11:52 "Woe to you lawyers! For you have taken away the key of knowledge; you yourselves did not enter, and you hindered those who were entering." And Matthew 23:13 "But woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites, because you shut off the kingdom of heaven from people; for you do not enter in yourselves, nor do you allow those who are entering to go in.
Moses church had become the church that would not and could not let people into the kingdom of heaven. Jesus told Peter, I am giving you keys that will unlock doors that will allow those I am calling to not only see the kingdom of heaven, but enter into the kingdom of heaven, read John 3 with Nicodemus.
Jesus wasn’t offering just a kingdom in the distant future. It was something for them right now. Notice the focus of what the loosening and binding. It was earth. “What you bind on earth, will be bound in heaven, what is loosed on earth, will be loosed in heaven.” Jesus is letting Peter know that the more you conform to the pattern I have laid out, the more you will be loosening and binding the way I see it. If you go to the book of Acts you will find that it took some prodding and pushing by the Holy Spirit to loosen Peter (Read Acts 10) to go to Cornelius’s house and unlock the kingdom of heaven for them.
If we could read the book of Acts and the rest of the NT through the lens of Jesus response to Peter’s confession we would see Christ building his church through a pattern of loosening and binding, with men and women entering the kingdom and the gates of hell not prevailing, but receding against the church. May God help us to not be known any longer as the church in the wilderness, but the church that has entered into His rest.
Before I go any further I want to say that I believe this interaction (Peter’s confession, Jesus’ response and subsequent teaching) is foundational and should serve as the lens through which we can see much of the NT teaching and life. Not everything in Jesus’s response or teaching is fully unpacked, but if we can begin to grasp the foundational truths and build on them, you will find yourself headed in the right direction. Move away from these foundational truths in your thinking or practice and you will find yourself missing much of what God has intended for us.