Tim Keller | September 15, 1996
Many people find the original Christian understanding of Jesus, the original claims from Jesus about who he is, offensive. They are not just indifferent—they’re offended, just like John the Baptist.
How amazing that we have a whole chapter in which Jesus responds to offended people. He begins to respond like this, “There’s a kind of spiritual closedness that makes people not just disagree, but be scandalized, offended, by me. I would like to show you the kind of people who are open to me, and who, therefore, meet me and find me.”
Jesus gives three descriptions in Matthew 11. Each one tells you something about what you have to be and do if you’re even going to be open to who Jesus is. Jesus describes three kinds of people who meet Jesus, who do not take offense at Jesus: 1) the poor, 2) the violent, and 3) the least.
This Month's Featured Book
In The Prodigal God, Tim Keller examines the way Jesus presents the parable to speak both to those who run from God and to those who try to earn his love by being good. It reveals the heart of the gospel—a message of hope for both the rebellious younger brother and the judgmental older brother, and an invitation for all to experience God’s grace.