Tag Archives: Salvation

Being Good Is Not Good Enough

Matthew 19:16–30: Why We Need God’s Grace, Not Our Goodness

Matthew situates the encounter with the rich young ruler within a broader discourse on the kingdom of heaven (Matthew 19). Jesus’ teachings on marriage (19:1–12) and His welcome of children (19:13–15) prepare the reader to understand that entrance into the kingdom is not achieved through human merit but through divine grace. This theme reaches its climax in the dialogue with the rich young man.

The young ruler’s question—“Teacher, what good deed must I do to have eternal life?” (19:16)—reveals a works‑oriented understanding of salvation. Jesus immediately challenges this assumption: “Why do you ask me about what is good? There is only one who is good.” (19:17; cf. Mark 10:18). By asserting that goodness belongs to God alone, Jesus exposes the man’s misplaced confidence in his own moral performance.

Jesus’ instruction, “If you would enter life, keep the commandments” (19:17), functions not as a path to salvation but as a diagnostic. Scripture consistently teaches that the law cannot justify (Romans 3:23; Galatians 2:16, 3:11). When the man claims, “All these I have kept” (19:20), he demonstrates both sincerity and self‑deception. His obedience is real, but his righteousness is insufficient.

The turning point comes with Jesus’ demand: “If you would be perfect, go, sell what you possess… and come, follow me.” (19:21). Perfection—echoing Matthew 5:48—is not moral flawlessness achieved through human effort but wholehearted allegiance to Christ. The man’s wealth is not condemned in itself; rather, his attachment to it reveals the deeper obstacle: he trusts his own goodness and security more than he trusts God.

The disciples’ astonishment—“Who then can be saved?” (19:25)—reflects the common assumption that wealth signifies divine favor. Jesus overturns this paradigm: “With man this is impossible, but with God all things are possible.” (19:26). Salvation is not human achievement but divine gift. Even the rich, whose hearts are often anchored to worldly security, can be saved when God opens their eyes to the futility of self‑reliance.

Peter’s declaration—“We have left everything and followed you” (19:27)—receives Jesus’ promise of eschatological reward: the disciples will sit on twelve thrones judging Israel in the “new world” (19:28). Moreover, all who relinquish earthly attachments for Christ’s sake will receive a “hundredfold” and inherit eternal life (19:29). This blessing is both present—in the new community of believers—and future, in the consummated kingdom.

Thus Matthew 19:16–30 teaches that eternal life cannot be earned by good deeds, secured by wealth, or achieved through law‑keeping. Only God is good, and only those who follow Christ in wholehearted surrender enter the kingdom of heaven.



Bible Study Outline: Matthew 19:16–30

“Only One Is Good — Entering the Kingdom of Heaven”

I. Setting the Context: The Kingdom of Heaven (Matthew 19)

  • Jesus’ teachings in Matthew 19 (marriage, children, wealth) all relate to entering the kingdom of heaven.
  • Matthew uses “kingdom of God” (19:24) as a synonym for “kingdom of heaven.”
  • The central theme: eternal life and how one enters it.

Key Verses: Matthew 19:13–15; Matthew 19:24

II. The Rich Young Ruler’s Question (19:16)

  • He asks: “What good deed must I do to have eternal life?”
  • Reveals a works‑based understanding of salvation.
  • He assumes goodness is something he can produce.

Discussion: Why do people today still ask this same question?

III. Jesus’ First Response: Only God Is Good (19:17)

  • “Why do you ask me about what is good? There is only one who is good.”
  • Jesus confronts the man’s assumption that human goodness can earn salvation.
  • Parallel: “No one is good except God alone.” (Mark 10:18)

Key Truth: Human goodness is not the basis of eternal life.

IV. Jesus’ Diagnostic Challenge: Keep the Commandments (19:17–20)

  • Jesus lists commandments from the Mosaic law.
  • The man claims: “All these I have kept from my youth.”
  • Scripture teaches the impossibility of law‑based righteousness:
    • Romans 3:23
    • Galatians 2:16
    • Galatians 3:11

Discussion: What does the young man’s confidence reveal about his heart?

V. The Heart of the Issue: Perfection (19:21)

  • “If you would be perfect… sell what you possess… and follow me.”
  • Perfection = wholehearted allegiance to Christ (cf. Matthew 5:48).
  • Wealth is not the problem; attachment to wealth is.
  • The man’s riches anchor him to this world and blind him to his need for salvation.

Key Truth: You cannot cling to worldly security and cling to Christ at the same time.

VI. The Man’s Response: Sorrow (19:22)

  • He goes away sorrowful because he cannot surrender what he trusts.
  • His outward obedience hides an inward bondage.

Discussion: Why is surrender often harder than obedience?

VII. Jesus’ Teaching on Wealth and Salvation (19:23–26)

  • “It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle…”
  • The disciples are shocked: “Who then can be saved?”
  • Jesus answers:
    • “With man this is impossible, but with God all things are possible.”

Key Truth: Salvation is divine, not human. Even the rich can be saved when God opens their eyes.

VIII. The Disciples’ Reward (19:27–30)

  • Peter: “We have left everything and followed you.”
  • Jesus promises:
    • Twelve thrones in the “new world” (19:28)
    • A “hundredfold” blessing for all who leave earthly attachments (19:29)
    • Eternal life

Key Truth: Sacrifice for Christ is never loss; it is always gain.

IX. Application

1. Examine Your Attachments

What competes with Christ for your trust—wealth, status, comfort, achievement?

2. Abandon Self‑Righteousness

Good deeds cannot earn eternal life. Only God is good.

3. Follow Christ Wholeheartedly

Discipleship requires surrender to Christs, not merely obedience to rules.

4. Trust God with the Impossible

He alone can free the heart from false security and open the eyes to the kingdom.

X. Key Takeaways

  • Eternal life cannot be earned.
  • Only God is good.
  • The law cannot justify.
  • Wealth can blind the heart.
  • Salvation is impossible for man but possible with God.
  • Following Christ brings both present and eternal reward.

The King They Rejected: Christ, Pilate, and the Kingdom of God (John 18–19)

Introduction

The trial of Jesus before Pontius Pilate in John 18–19 reveals a profound contrast between divine authority and earthly power. The narrative is not simply a legal trial; it is a theological drama in which Jesus’ kingship, the character of His kingdom, and the unbelief of the Jewish authorities are brought into sharp focus. The contrast between God and Caesar, between heavenly sovereignty and human political structures, is at the center of this event. John presents Pilate, the Jewish leaders, and Jesus himself as participants in a revelation of the true nature of kingship and the true identity of God’s Messiah.

Here again, though from a different angle, we provide an answer to the question of whether there is ever a case in which the statement “Jesus is king!” is incorrect, inappropriate, offensive, or “taken out of context.” And we will see that Jesus is a king even when he least resembles one, according to human understanding.

We see six great truths that run through John 18–19:

  1. Christ is the true King—even when despised.
  2. Earthly powers often carry heavenly messages without understanding.
  3. Christ’s kingdom is different from any earthly kingdom.
  4. Rejection of Christ reveals the true condition of the human heart.
  5. The cross fulfills the Scriptures and defines who God’s true people are.
  6. The King’s invitation remains—to every heart, in every age.

Pilate’s Proclamation and the Jewish Rejection of Their King

In John 19:14–15, Pilate introduces Jesus to the crowd with the words, “Behold your King.” Although spoken with political ambiguity, the words are theologically accurate. Pilate repeatedly calls Jesus “King of the Jews,” even as the Jewish authorities vehemently deny him: “We have no king but Caesar.” This acknowledgment shows their ultimate allegiance not to God but to earthly powers. Ironically, those who despise Roman authority join Caesar in rejecting the Messiah promised in their own Scriptures.

Pilate’s insistence on Jesus’ kingship, even under pressure, reveals an unwitting prophetic function. His refusal to change the inscription above the cross—“What I have written, I have written”—shows that Jesus’ true identity was proclaimed, not by His disciples, but by a pagan ruler acting under divine sovereignty. This paradox fulfills Jesus’ words: “You would have no authority at all against me unless it had been given you from above” (John 19:11). At this point, Caesar’s earthly representative becomes an unwitting messenger from heaven.

A Kingdom Not of This World

The conversation between Jesus and Pilate in John 18:36 is the theological key to the whole process: “My kingdom is not of this world.” This does not mean that His kingdom is irrelevant to earthly life, but that its origin, character, and methods are not derived from earthly systems. Earthly kingdoms rely on force, coercion, and political maneuvering. Jesus’ kingdom is spread through repentance, faith, truth, and sacrificial love. He does not allow His disciples to fight for His deliverance, for the kingdom of God cannot be established by force.

The Jews, in rejecting Jesus, show their attachment to political expectations rather than to spiritual truths. Their desire for an earthly king blinds them to the heavenly King standing before them. Thus, when they prefer Caesar to Christ, they reveal their own spiritual condition: they belong to the world, not to the kingdom of God.

The Old Testament Fulfillment and the Identity of True Israel

John emphasizes that the events of Jesus’ suffering fulfill the Scriptures. The crown of thorns (Ps. 22), the casting of lots for his garments (Ps. 22:18), Jesus’ thirst (Ps. 69:21), the unbroken bones (Ex. 12:46), and the piercing of His side (Zech. 12:10) all show that the suffering Messiah whom the Jews were expecting was before their eyes. The leaders, who prided themselves on their knowledge of the Scriptures, did not recognize their fulfillment in the Crucified Christ.

Christ is the culmination of Israel’s history. All the promises are gathered together in Him. There is no biblical hope outside of the Messiah, whom they rejected, using the authority of the Roman governor, Pilate. This rejection does not invalidate God’s faithfulness, but reveals the true Israel: the remnant of believing Jews and Gentiles grafted in by faith in Christ (Rom. 11:25–26). The new Israel is not defined by ethnicity, but by belonging to the Savior through faith.

Pilate’s Role as an Earthly Agent of God’s Sovereignty

Although Pilate exercises political authority, Jesus makes it clear that his authority is derivative, not supreme. God directs the affairs of rulers; “The heart of kings is in the hand of the Lord” (cf. Prov. 21:1). In the Passover narrative, Pilate becomes an unwitting instrument of divine revelation. He identifies Jesus as king, delivers Him to be crucified according to God’s plan, and publicly affirms His kingship in three languages ​​for the whole world to read.

Despite the resistance of the Jews and their demands that he write that Jesus is the “self-proclaimed king of the Jews,” Pilate does not back down: “What I have written, I have written!” (John 19:22).

Pilate’s role does not excuse the Jewish authorities; on the contrary, it reveals the interplay between human responsibility and God’s sovereignty. The Jews demand Jesus’ crucifixion, but God uses their rejection of the Truth to bring about salvation for all. Pilate thinks he is acting out of fear and political necessity, but in fact he is carrying out a heavenly decree.

The Tragedy of Religious Blindness and the Celebration of Passover

John contrasts zeal of the Jews to observe the ceremonial law with their desire to condemn their own King. As they prepare to celebrate Passover—a holiday commemorating God’s deliverance—they orchestrate the death of the true Passover Lamb. Their concern for ritual purity (such as taking down the bodies of the crucified before nightfall) highlights their spiritual blindness. They honor the form of religion but reject its essence. This hypocrisy reveals a deeper theological truth: outward religiosity without true repentance leads to opposition to God Himself. The leaders who should recognize the Messiah suppress the truth, “fencing it with unrighteousness” (Rom. 1:18), demonstrating the universal human tendency to reject God’s authority. But the guilt of the Jews for the conspiracy and crucifixion of Christ is unique, no matter what ideological or religious devices they use to escape it, for to whom much is given, much is expected (Luke 12:48). In the current heat of international outrage against the state of Israel and the exposure of Zionist involvement in governments and wars around the world, many supporters of the Zionist cause insist that Christians should not notice the atrocities of the Zionist establishment because “Jesus was a Jew.” As if mentioning Jesus’ “Jewishness” should magically reassure Christians about Zionist actions. Many biblical arguments show that reducing Jesus’ essential characteristic to his belonging to a tribe of humanity is, at best, highly reductionist. Jesus is the Son of God and the Savior of the world, conceived and born in the flesh by the Holy Spirit (Matt. 1; Rom. 1:1–4). But even if we accept that Jesus’ “Jewishness” is more important than it really is, and accept the argument of the Judaizing teachers, then they must answer the question, “Why then did they reject him?” The answer is contained in the passage in John 18–19 concerning Christ’s appearance before Pilate and His interactions with the Roman governor and the Jews.

The Universal Scope of Salvation and the Formation of the Church

After Jesus’ resurrection and ascension, the apostles gradually understood that the kingdom of God was not a restored ethnic state of Israel but a new community made up of all who believed. Peter’s encounter with the Gentile Roman centurion Cornelius and the outpouring of the Holy Spirit on the Gentiles (Acts 10) confirmed that salvation transcended national boundaries. It is this event that reveals to the early apostle and the early Jewish church that God wants to save not only them but also any Gentile who will believe. The church becomes the “new Israel,” the people of God from all nations.

This understanding resolves the tension in Acts 1, where the disciples anticipate an earthly restoration of Israel. Jesus directs their attention to the mission of witness, revealing that the kingdom is expanding spiritually until His return.

Conclusion

John’s account of Jesus’ trial before Pilate reveals a striking theological twist: the true King stands judged by His own subjects; Caesar’s representative unwittingly proclaims God’s kingdom; religious authorities choose political power over the promises of Scripture; and the Lamb of God fulfills the entire Old Testament through His suffering. At this point, God and Caesar meet—not as equals, but as Creator and creature. Earthly power exists only under divine sovereignty, and earthly kingdoms ultimately disappear. Only the kingdom of Christ remains. The call of the gospel remains the same: repent and believe, for the kingdom of God is at hand. To reject the King is to be in league with the world; to receive Him is to enter into the true Israel—the people of God redeemed by His blood.