Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Now Available: ‘Matthew’ by Cornelis Vonk
Now Available: ‘Matthew’ by Cornelis Vonk
Apr 22, 2025 12:45 AM

Christian’s Library Press has now releasedMatthew, the third primer in itsOpening the Scripturesseries. You can purchase it on Amazon today.

Written by Dutch Reformed pastor and preacher Cornelis Vonk, and translated by Nelson D. Kloosterman, the volume provides an introduction to the book of Matthew. Like others in the series, it is neither a mentary nor a collection of sermons, but rather an accessible primer for the average churchgoer.

Matthew focuses heavily on the Gospel itself, providing an accessible interpretation of its unique messages and themes, but always tracing each back to the larger unfolding God’s ultimate plan and to the grand totality of Scripture. This is true for all volumes in the series, but is particularly valuable here, given Matthew’s routine references to the Old Testament (no fewer than 59 pared to 25 in Mark, 32 in Luke, and 13 in John).

As an example, here an excerpt from mentary on the Fifth Beatitude (“Blessed are the merciful, for they shall receive mercy”):

Scripture does not often speak of merciful people. David was merciful toward Mephibosheth, the son of his deceased intimate friend Jonathan (2 Sam. 9). It is striking that the Lord Jesus in one of his most well-known parables identified a Samaritan as an example of mercy but a priest and a Levite as examples of mercilessness (Luke 10). Among the Jews the theory was in circulation that people who struggled with sickness, blindness, and the like, were being punished with those conditions for sin that either they or their parents mitted. From John 9:2, the story of the man born blind, we see that the disciples of the Lord were not entirely free of that notion.

But we do read about the mercy of God frequently (think of Exod. 34:6, mercy shown to Moses after the sin of Israel with the golden calf, and of Ps. 103:8). Our Savior himself was so merciful that he healed many sick people. He is even called a merciful high priest (Heb. 2:17). He manded his disciples: “Be merciful, even as your Father is merciful” (Luke 6:36). According to Matthew 5:7 he told them, “Blessed are the merciful, for they shall receive mercy.” When he executes final judgment one day, the mercy people have shown toward his needy believers will “triumph over judgment” (Matt. 25:34–40; Jas. 2:13).

Purchase the bookhereand add it on Goodreadshere.Also, see the other titles inthe Opening the Scriptures series.

For updates on new titles and promotions from Christian’s Library Press, follow us on FacebookandTwitterand subscribe to themailing list.

[product sku=”1332″]

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
If You Want to Help the Poor, Support Religious Orders
Jim Shaw at the Catholic Herald has written a provocative piece that suggests one of the best ways to fight poverty is to support Catholic religious orders. He writes about his experiences in Africa: the lack of rule of law, the petty corruption that eats away at the poor, how lack of infrastructure obstructs progress for farmers and other businesses. The density of these issues seem insurmountable. The sheer intractability of these problems should serve as a warning against utopian...
Is It Ethical to Defy Evacuation Orders?
Despite requests to evacuate the area targeted by Hurricane Sandy, numerous residents in the northeast refused to leave their homes. Their decisions to defy evacuation orders, said New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, were “selfish” and morally unjustified. But the ethics are not so clear cut, says Acton’s Ray Northstine, in a Religion News Service report published in the Washington Post: Moral justifications to ride out dangerous storms can vary. Some stay put to look after elderly neighbors who can’t evacuate,...
Is Your Church’s Short-Term Mission Trip Putting Someone Out of Work?
Too often, short term mission trips to the developing world trample on dignity or harm economic growth, says Ray Sawatsky. It’s time to stop confusing charity with generosity. With summer over, another season of short term mission trips draws to a close. Churches, schools, and agencies (both for-profit and non-profit) have sent teams to work in the developing world. These mission trips (or “internships,” or “working holidays”) are major pieces in the lives of many North American believers—both spiritually and,...
Report: Catholic Bishops Warn of Refugee Crisis in Syria
On the National Catholic Register, Joan Frawley Desmond has a round up on the deepening crisis in Syria. She writes that Pope Benedict XVI, on his recent visit to Lebanon, “urged rival political, ethnic and religious groups to e their differences and mon ground for the sake of peace.” The Vatican soon announced that it would send a papal delegation to Syria, and Cardinal Timothy Dolan of New York, president of the U.S. bishops’ conference, was selected to join the...
US Catholic Bishops Launch Website on Religious Liberty
The United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) have launched a new website, First American Freedom. The website aims to inform readers on issues surrounding religious liberty, current threats to religious liberty, and actions one may take to uphold this liberty. Religious freedom is our first American freedom. It is a founding principle of our country, protected by the First Amendment in the Bill of Rights. It’s a fundamental human right, rooted in the dignity of every human person—people of...
Russian Orthodox Bishop: Syrian Christians Facing ‘Extermination’
In an interview for Acton’s Religion & Liberty quarterly, the Russian Orthodox bishop in charge of external affairs for the Moscow Patriarchate, Metropolitan Hilarion (Alfeyev) of Volokolamsk, warned that that the situation for the Christian population of Syria has deteriorated to an alarming degree. pared the situation today, after almost two years of fighting in Syria, as analogous to Iraq, which saw a virtual depopulation of Christians following the U.S. invasion in 2003. The Russian Orthodox Church has been among...
RFK, Reagan, and Presidential Elections
The first presidential election I remember was the Ronald Reagan – Walter Mondale race in 1984. My kindergarten class in the Philadelphia suburbs held a mock vote that Reagan overwhelmingly won. It of course reflected the way our parents were voting. I can remember at the age of five, John Glenn was one of the Democrat candidates seeking the nomination and I knew he was a famous astronaut. The truth is, I’ve always been fascinated by presidential elections and Bare...
Wisdom & Wonder & Interdisciplinary Studies
I was recently invited to write an essay on the importance of interdisciplinary studies for the Calvin Seminary student publication Kerux. In my essay “The Truth is One,” I reflect on the famous quote of Abraham Kuyper, [N]o single piece of our mental world is to be hermetically sealed off from the rest, and there is not a square inch in the whole domain of our human existence over which Christ, who is Sovereign over all, does not cry: “Mine!”...
How to Explain the Entitlement Crisis to an 8-Year-Old
Based on Nicholas Eberstadt’s book, A Nation of Takers, this Seussian video depicts the dangerous dependency of entitlements and the importance of liberty. (Via: Values & Capitalism) ...
Listen for Free: Autocam’s John Kennedy on Obamacare Mandate
This morning, Autocam Corp. Chief Executive Officer John C. Kennedy joined us on AU Online to give a free presentation on ObamaCare, the HHS mandate, and the practical implications of this legislation from his perspective as a Roman Catholic businessman. His presentation was spot on and spurred some good questions from attendees. But why take my word for it? If you didn’t attend this morning’s session, you still have the chance to enroll for free to listen to a recording...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved