28:17-20:
On the Power of the Son of Man
17 When they saw him, they worshiped him; but they doubted. 18 Then Jesus
approached and said to them, “All power in heaven and on earth has been given to
me. 19 Go, therefore, and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name
of the Father and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, 20 teaching them to observe all
that I have commanded you. And behold, I am with you always, until the end of the
age.” 1
Introduction
This passage is the last of appearances of Christ to the disciples presented in the gospel of Matthew.
Often this passage is referred to as the Great Commission as it involves the disciples being charged with
a mission by Christ. Integral to this mission is the fact that because all power is given to Christ and He is
always with the disciples they now have received the power to fulfill their mission. The thesis of this
paper is that the meaning of the whole passage is deeply connected to the fact that all authority in
heaven and earth is given to Jesus. The paper will analyze exactly what is meant by this reference to
Christ’s authority and how it relates to the commission, baptism, and the commandments given by
Christ to his disciples.
Context
Chapter 28 of Matthew concludes the Gospel. In many ways this chapter ties all of Matthew
together and provides for the raison d’etre for the continuation of the Christian community. The Great
Commission provides the context for the passion and resurrection for without it while there would be the
resurrected Jesus Christ there would no sense of direction or connection with the disciples and their
purpose in life after the resurrection. It is the Great Commission which provides a plan of action for the
disciples and gives them a sense of mission. This mission will result in a more complete separation from
the contemporary Judaism and yet has its roots in the earlier teachings of Jesus Christ.
Matthew 28 comes after the Passion of Christ which is followed by the account of His
Resurrection. Obviously the trauma of the events surrounding the passion of our Lord produced a state
of shock in the disciples. They had recently seen their beloved teacher, the man they acclaimed as
messiah, brutally tortured and finally dying. One of them even betrayed the man of whom Peter said
“you are the Christ, the Son of the living God.” 2 In fact nearly all of them abandoned their beloved
Master. It would seem that the bond uniting the group of disciples was irretrievably broken. No doubt
1 Mt 28:17-20 (NAB)
2 Mt 16:16 (NAB)
3
many of the disciples were shaken to the core of their being. Next they received word from the women
who came running from the tomb that Jesus was alive and was to meet the disciples in Galilee. There is
no subsequent passage after Matthew 28 as it concludes the gospel.
Exegesis
Matthew’s account of the Great Commission is unique. The other gospels do not correspond to
Mt 28:16- 20 in a direct manner. Rather while Mark 16:14- 20 and Mt 28:16-20 do have connections it
would seem that the events are distinct from each other. There are some elements in Mark 16:14-18 that
are similar but the surroundings are different. In Mark 16:7 the women are commanded to tell the
disciples to go to Galilee to meet Christ but unlike the account in Matthew their fear prevented them
from doing so. It may be that Mary Magdalene went back alone and after seeing Christ then relayed the
message to the disciples as described in Mark’s account. In Mark 16:14 it is uncertain whether the
disciples actually meet Christ in Galilee as they are rebuked for their unbelief and hardness of heart.
Thus the disciples are represented more negatively in Mark than Matthew. 3 In Matthew 28:17 while
there is a mention of doubt there is no rebuke from Christ. In addition to that it occurs at a mountain top
and there is no mention of a table. In Mark 16 there is more of an emphasis on the signs that will
accompany the disciples. By these signs following them there is an implication of the disciples being
granted power but there is no explicit mention of how it is conferred other than by faith in Christ. 4 In Mt
28:16-20 the passage is more concerned with emphasizing that Christ will never abandon the disciples.
The connection between their mission and the power they receive is based on remaining in Christ’s
presence. 5 There is no explicit mention of miracles in Mt 28:16- 20 as there is in Mark 16:14- 20 but
that is implicitly assumed as they are given the power of Christ who earlier in Matthew’s gospel worked
miracles. Despite this the main emphasis in Matthew 28 is the abiding presence of Christ in the
Church. 6
3 Morna D. Hooker, The Gospel According to Saint Mark, Black’s New Testament Commentaries (Peabody:
Hendrickson Publishers, 1997), 389.
4 Ibid., 390.
5 Curtis Mitch and Edward Sri, The Gospel of Matthew, Catholic Commentary on Sacred Scripture (Grand Rapids:
Baker Academic Press, 2010), 372.
6Kurt Aland, Jesus Appears to the Eleven on a Mountain in Galilee, Synopsis of Gospels: English Edition, (New
York: American Bible Society), 322.
4
In relation to the power of Christ in the gospel of Matthew there are numerous references to the
Son of Man which indicates its thematic importance to understanding Matthew. The title Son of Man
expresses simultaneously Christ’s abasement in light of the Incarnation and Passion as well as His
exaltation as reflected through the Resurrection and subsequent glorification. While the phrase son of
Man doesn’t appear in Mt 28:16-20 there is an implied reference to Dan 7:14 which speaks of one “like
a son of man.” 7
The Literary View of Matthew’s View of the Mountains
In the Gospel of Matthew a number of important events occurred on a mountain. They are the
third temptation (as it is listed in Matthew), the Sermon on the Mount. The next occurs when Jesus goes
up a mountain to pray alone. Coming down from that mountain He walks of the Sea of Galilee to reach
the disciples who are struggling against the waves of the sea. The next mention of a mountain records
the healing of the lame, blind and subsequent feeding of the four thousand. In Matthew 17 the
Transfiguration occurs on what is emphasized as a high mountain. The next mountain mentioned is the
Mount of Olives. It is on the Mount of Olives that the Last Supper occurs on and that the Passion begins
and ends. Here the Resurrection also occurs as well. The final mountain mentioned in the Gospel of
Matthew is the one on which the disciples meet Jesus for the last time in the Gospel of Matthew and on
which they receive the Great Commission. 8 Traditionally in the Scriptures mountains are regarded as
places where one interacts with the divine in a unique way. 9 Whether the mountain of the
Transfiguration was highest due to its degree of revelation of the divine in Jesus or due to its physical
elevation or both is not absolutely certain. Perhaps it is an issue of both and instead either/ or for
Matthew.
While it is possible that all these mountains mentioned by Matthew are all different in reality it is
irrelevant to his point. In Matthew 28 occurs the seventh mention of a mountain as being the scene of
events in the life of Christ and his disciples. As there is only one word in Greek that is translated as
mount/ mountains this indicates that the significance of each of these events is interrelated on some
level. 10 The fact that the seventh time a mountain is the locus of Christ’s activity would seem to be
7 Ulrich Luz, The Theology of the Gospel of Matthew, (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1995), 116.
8 Terence Donaldson, Jesus on the Mountain: A Study in Matthew, (Sheffield, UK: JSOT Press, 1985), 3.
9 Ibid., 13, 25.
5
significant. As seven in the Hebrew mind indicated completeness and the divine it would seem that
Matthew’s message is completed with the Great Commission. In a certain sense it indicates that the
physical presence of Christ working on the earth as He did prior to the Resurrection is now completed.
It is on the eighth day that the work of the Church on earth begins in a new way and in a certain sense
the Great Commission is God’s plan for the beginning of a new Creation of heaven and earth.
Along the theme of Matthew’s view of mountains it would seem not to be coincidental that
Mount Zion, the Temple Mount, is never mentioned as a mountain even though it was frequented by
Jesus a number of times according to Matthew’s testimony. It would seem on that on the temple Mount
that the divine was veiled and its interaction with men was not on the same elevation as the other
mountain scenes. While Divine Son is not recognized in the Temple, His Father’s house, He is
worshipped in other places. Yet even though the Son of God is previously worshipped in other places in
Matthew’s gospel He is not worshipped on a mountain until the seventh reference of the events
occurring on a mountain in Matthew 28. 11 In many ways the “revelation mountain” in Matthew 28 is
the perfect completion of Christ’s revelation of His Divinity for Matthew. It is important to note that
while in the first mention of mountain in Matthew the devil is requesting worship from Jesus that in the
last mention it is Jesus who is being worshiped. 12
Doubts and Redoubts
As it had been mentioned earlier the disciples had recently seen their beloved Master whom they
believed to be the Christ suffer an agonizing death. Is it any wonder that Mathew indicates in verse 16
that while the disciples worshipped him there was some who doubted? A number of scholars dispute
whether all doubted some, some of the eleven doubted or whether the eleven were accompanied by
some who doubted. 13 According to Luz, this passage is more appropriately translated as the disciples
were divided between two opinions regarding the appearance of Jesus. 14
10 James Strong, Strong’s Expanded Exhaustive Concordance of the Bible (Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 2009), s.v.
“mount, mountain.”
11 James Strong, Strong’s Expanded Exhaustive Concordance of the Bible (Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 2009), s.v.
“worship, worshipped.”
12 Ulrich Luz, Matthew 21-28, Hermeneia (Minneapolis: Fortress, 2007), 621.
13 Daniel J. Harrignton, The Gospel of Matthew, Sacra Pagina 1 (Collegeville: Liturgical Press, 1991), 414.
14 Ulrich Luz, Matthew 21-28, Hermeneia (Minneapolis: Fortress, 2007), 623.
6
This passage is interesting because the root for the word doubt, διστάζω, Mt 28:17 is connected
to only two passages in the New Testament and both instances are in the gospel of Matthew. This does
not seem to be a coincidental choice of words upon Matthew’s part. The second instance that διστάζω is
connected to occurs in the account in Matthew of Christ walking on the Sea of Galilee. 15 In this account
between 3am to 6am Christ walks towards the disciples who are in the midst of the stormy seas. At first
the disciples are afraid for they think that Jesus is a ghost but then Christ says to them “Take courage it
is I.” 16 Peter then says if it is you call me. After Jesus says comes Peter gets out of the boat and walks to
Jesus but seeing the wind he fears and calls on Christ to save him. It is here as Jesus reaches out to Peter
that he says to him, “O you of little faith, why did you doubt?” The second Scripture verse that διστάζω
is connected to is here in Mt 14:31. Διστάζω as the root indicates a divided mind which is understood as
vacillation and uncertainty and is translated as doubt. 17 It would seem that the phrase “little faith” is
connected with doubt in both passages as Mathew’s use of it in MT 28:17 is not likely to be
coincidental. The passages are meant to evoke each other. Both are connected with Galilee. One occurs
on the mountain while the other occurs on the sea but it does occur after Jesus descends from an
unnamed mountain in Galilee. It is not certain whether this is the same mountain in Mt 28 but there is a
clear connection in either case.
In Mt 28 it is unclear whether Jesus was already present before the disciples arrived but either
way the disciples journeyed towards Him. In Mt 14 the Jesus walks towards the disciples but then Peter
comes towards Jesus part of the way. After Christ saves Peter they journey together towards the other
disciples in the boat. It would seem that this doubting is connected with journeying towards Christ.
There is faith because the disciples draw near Christ but at the same time they are double minded since
still seem to have doubts. Yet just like Christ reaches out to save Peter so in Mt 28:18 does Jesus come
to draw near to the eleven disciples. This time he does not rebuke the disciples for their little faith.
Rather, Christ goes on to say “I am with you always, until the end of the age.” 18 Just like in Mt 14:27
Jesus in Mt 28:20 he reminds them that that He is the “I am” and is with them. Since Christ is with them
15 James Strong, Strong’s Expanded Exhaustive Concordance of the Bible, (Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 2009), s.v.
“doubt, doubted.” See 1365
16 Mt 14:27 (NAB)
17 Donald A. Hagner, Matthew 14- 28, Word Biblical Commentary 33B, (Dallas, TX: Word Books, 1995 ), 885.
18 Mt 28:20 (NAB)
7
until the end of the world the disciples can trust Him to save them (Mt 14:31) even when they
experience doubt. As they approach Christ and reach out to Him it would seem their faith grows and as
their faith grows they also draw nearer to Christ.
In Mt 14:33 the account concludes with Jesus getting into the boat after which the disciples
worship Him calling Him “the Son of God.” In Mt 28:17 they also worship Him. It is no coincidence
that in Mt 28:18 it next says “and Jesus came.” It would seem that the approach of Christ saves all and
increases the faith of the disciples. As Christ draws nearer the faith of the disciples increases as the
result of being saved by Him- not only from the storms of life but from winds of unbelief.
In the ancient world the sea often represents chaos and in that sense uncertainty. With the
approach of Christ the waves of the sea are stilled as well as the winds of unbelief which stirred them
up. So with the approach of Christ in Mt 28:18 the unbelief of the disciples vanishes and the waves of
uncertainty are stilled. For Matthew henceforth the disciple’s faith is firmly founded on Christ as the
Rock. It is fitting this final revelation of Christ occurs on a mountain which is a geological foundation
that is usually associated with being made of rock or having a foundation of rock and possessing an
enduring, solid nature. The contrast between the mountain and the sea is connected by the unique root
word διστάζω and the fact that in both instances the disciples worship Christ as the Son of God. In the
first instance of διστάζω Jesus descends from on high (comes down after praying on the mountain) to
meet the soul tossed to and fro by winds of unbelief. While unbelief results from little faith, increasing
faith results from a growing certainty. This growing certainty is a form of seeing the Person of Christ
with spiritual eyes. As such the genuine faith is based on a Person and not merely random words/
statements that are disconnected from that Person. In the second instance where διστάζω occurs Christ
ascends the mountain and calls his disciples to be with Him. It is in and through Christ’s personal
presence that the faith of the disciples is made to be enduring and firm in nature. Their faith is now
rooted in their experience of Christ and is rooted in perceiving His Divine nature and power. Since they
realize the nature of Christ it is in accordance with Scriptural tradition that they ascend the mountain to
worship God. Since divinity of Christ is now the foundational stone of their faith this completely
8
transforms them. They are no longer the weak, unbelieving men they once were. The greater the faith
the more closely united the person is to Christ. 19
The Power of the Son of Man
In Mt 28:18 after Jesus comes to the disciples he states “All authority in heaven and earth has
been given to me.” Luz states that this power includes all power over creation and that this relates to the
humanity of Christ according to the Chalcedonians as the Divinity of Christ is immutable. According to
this argument as member of the Trinity the Son can’t receive more power as it already belongs properly
to the Son by nature. 20 This is consonant with what is said of one like the Son of Man in Daniel 7:14
where it is stated that he too is given an “everlasting dominion.” In fact the word for power, ἐξουσία, in
Mt 28:18 is the same as in the in Daniel 7:13, 14 of the LXX which speaks of the power/dominion of
one like the son of man. 21 It is well known that Jesus applied the term Son of Man to Himself during
His earthly ministry. In fact Christ uses the phrase Son of Man to refer to himself over 28 times in the
gospel of Matthew and numerous times in the other gospels. 22 There is a link between “one like a son of
man” in Daniel 7 and Mt 28 that is not merely accidental and no doubt would have been familiar to the
hearers of Matthew’s gospel with the Septuagint translation and its reference to all power given to one
like a son of man. 23 By connecting ἐξουσί in Mt 28 with Dan 7 and combined with the fact that in
Mt14:33 Jesus is worshipped as the Son of God it would appear that the implicit claim of Christ is that
the title Son of Man refers to the same person who is considered to be the Son of God and is the messiah
foretold in the Old Testament.
It is true that numerous modern commentators ascribe to the son of man passage in Dan 7:13, 14
as representing an angel. 24 This interpretation is based mostly on the angelogy discovered in the Dead
Sea Scrolls and its popularity is of recent origin. Yet this attribution seems to be premature. If there was
such a strong connection to the prolific angelogy of the Qumran communities then it would seem that
the phrase son of man used would frequently occur in reference to the angels in the documents. In fact it
19 Donald A. Hagner, Matthew 14- 28, Word Biblical Commentary 33B,(Dallas, TX: Word Books, 1995 ), 886.
20 Ulrich Luz, Matthew 21-28, Hermeneia (Minneapolis: Fortress, 2007), 624, 625.
21 John P. Meier, Matthew, New Testament Message 3, (Wilmington, DE: Michael Glazier Inc., 1981), 369.
22 James Strong, Strong’s Expanded Exhaustive Concordance of the Bible (Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 2009), s.v.
“Son.”
23 Scriptures were written usually for communities and not primarily for individuals. Furthermore the LXX was a
translation of the Old Testament widely known and nearly universally accepted in the ancient world during Matthew’s time.
24 Joseph A. Fitzmyer,. The One Who Is to Come, (Grand Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdmans Publ, 2007), 58, 59 .
9
doesn’t occur a single time. 25 It seems strange that this fact is regarded as insignificant by a number of
commentators.
In Dan 7:13- 14 Hartman claims what is really meant is the holy ones/ saints of the most high
that are mentioned in Dan 7:27. 26 At first glance his conclusion seems compelling. His refutation that
the term does not refer to an angelic being is persuasive for there is definitely an intrinsic link between
Dan 7:13- 14 and Dan 7:27 and such an explanation seems to create more problems than it would solve.
At the same time Harman’s claim that the term “one like a son a man” is not intended to describe an
actual person is also highly problematic. The main concern is that the figure in Dan 7:13 comes with the
clouds. There is no record of any earthly figure having an entourage of clouds. Therefore the one who is
like the son of man must have a supernatural origin despite Collin’s reservations. 27 For the holy ones/
saints to come with the clouds would indicate they possessed a divine/ supernatural origin prior to
receiving all the dominion and kingdoms and prior to obtaining an everlasting kingdom and before all
dominions shall obey them. In fact such a people would be divine before having any divine prerogatives/
attributes. This appears at best to be a highly illogical position.
Hartman claims that to regard the son of man figure as a messianic figure would be eisegesis. He
states that Daniel must be interpreted by what went before and not what comes after. In a sense he is
correct. At the same time author of Daniel and those prior to him evidently felt that the ultimate
authority and interpretation of their works did not belong merely to themselves but were in relationship
with the divine. To write off the supernatural element of Scripture without solid evidence would also be
an eisegetical exercise. Whether one believes in God or not it was evident that the inspiration of the
book is regarded to be Divine by the writer of Daniel. 28 Therefore by nature the work doesn’t
necessarily preclude a future revelation of its deeper meanings according to the mind of either the
human or the divine author. In fact the Sitz im Leben of the author of the work would seem to be open to
25 H. J. Harold , “The Dead Sea Scrolls and the Son of Man in Daniel, 1 Enoch, and the New Testament Gospels:
An Assessment of 11QMELCH (11Q13),” The Dead Sea Scrolls in Context: Integrating the Dead Sea Scrolls in the Study of
Ancient Texts, Languages, and Cultures. ed. Armin Lange, Emanuel Tov, and Matthias Weigold. (Boston, MA: Brill, 2011),
341.
26 Louis F. Hartman and Alexander A. Di Lella, Daniel , The Anchor Bible 23, (New York: Doubleday, 1978),
218, 219.
27 John J. Collins, Daniel, 1-2 Maccabees, Old Testament Message 15, (Wilmington: Michael Glazier Inc, 1981),
77.
28 Ibid., 72.
10
that for it also develops previous themes of Scripture. To not place Scripture in the context of other
Scripture would be to strip it of its meaning and render any attempt at interpretation useless. Therefore
there is no justification to rule out a messianic interpretation as the concept may have been in a seed
form at the time of the composition of the work. The holy ones/ saints are suffering and need to be
rescued. Thus it is no wonder that the son of man figure later came to be seen as messianic. 29 The
simple reason is a messiah by definition is one who saves others.
Along these lines a possible way to explain Dan 7 is that the son of man represents a unique and
actual person who is mystically united to the holy ones/ saints and represents them as a collective whole.
In fact this explanation would seem to avoid a number of the pitfalls that beset the other explanations.
Furthermore it complements Pauline Theology as presented in Col 1:10-23 where Christ is the head of
His body the Church and revealed as a divine figure towards which all of creation is directed to as its
source. This imagery is further developed by Eph 1:17-23 which indicates Christ and His Body to be the
fullness of all things. 30 The striking reference of both these Pauline passages to Dan 7:13 indicate that
in the mind of the early Church Mt 28:16-20 was deeply connected with the figure of one like the son of
man coming in power. In Dan 7:13,14 the son of man has all power given to Him which in Dan 7:27 is
also given to the holy ones/ saints. There is an ever deepening connection between all these passages
according to this interpretation. In Mt 28:18- 20 Christ receives power/ authority over all and this power
is given to His disciples, the holy ones/ saints, to usher in the fullness of His kingdom as it is in Dan
7:27 and elaborated upon in Col 10-23 and Eph 1:17-23.
Christ’s kingdom is also analogous to the rock in Dan 2:43-45. For the power of the kingdom
will spread throughout creation by the disciples bringing others into the Kingdom of Christ which is
synonymous with Christ and His body. It is through the faith of believers in Christ that His kingdom
reigns on earth. 31 In a sense the Church as the body of Christ which grows in power as it grows in size
as the rock in Dan 2 does and in doing so progressively shatters the other kingdoms. 32 Yet at the same
29 Louis F. Hartman , “Daniel.” In The Jerome Biblical Commentary, ed. Raymond E. Brown, Joseph A. Fitzmyer,
and Roland E. Murphy, (Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall, 1968), 449.
30 Lectionary year A http://usccb.org/bible/readings/052817-ascension.cfm
31 Jerome, The Great Commission 4.28.18-20, in Matthew 14- 28, ed. Manlio Simonetti, Ancient Christian
Commentary on Scripture, NT 1b, (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2002), 313.
32 Kenton L. Sparks, “Gospel as Conquest: Mosaic Typology in Matthew 28:16-20,” The Catholic Biblical
Quarterly 68 (2006): 661.
11
time Christ is present not just with the Church on a whole but each individual member for they would
cease to be connected to the one Body if they are not in relation to the Head. 33 In this way Christ has
promised His presence with each believer will remain until the end of the world. Thus it is through
baptism in the name of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit that God through faith in Christ unites Himself to
each disciple. It is through baptism that the kingdom of God triumphs over sin and the kingdoms of
darkness which oppose God’s work in the world. 34 While some scholars contest a late date or addition
due to the triadic baptismal formula this objection to the originality of the passage and its early
composition are not serious objections. This formula was firmly established by the time the Didache was
formulated and can be seen in Pauline theology as well. 35
A New Command
In Mt28:20 Jesus instructs His disciples to teach those they baptize to obey all that He has
commanded them. This passage hearkens back to the experience of Moses in Ex 24. In doing so there
are also connections to Mt17 where the Transfiguration occurs. 36 Each event occurs on a mountain. In
Ex 24 Moses and others are summoned up a mountain to worship God. Later in the passage Moses goes
up further and receives the commandments which instruct the Israelites how to live. In Mt 28:20 here
too the disciples are called to come and worship God in the Person of the Son. Here they also receive
instructions. Yet unlike the lengthy instructions given to Moses the instructions given to the disciples are
remarkably shorter. It would seem they had no need of lengthy instruction. In fact as Christ is with them
it would seem that instead they were already observing the entirety of the law. 37 In between Ex 24 and
Ex 35 the Israelites sinned and rejected God by worshipping a golden calf. Subsequently more
commands were added to the law they observed. It would seem that disobedience in the Old Testament
resulted in more laws to guide those who so easily err. Whereas to those who already observe the law
there is no need for more commandments. Here even the law given to Moses is shortened and
superseded. In fact in Mt 17 at the Transfiguration the disciples were told to listen to Christ- not Moses.
33 Chrysostom, Commentary on Matthew 4.28.14, in Matthew14- 28, ed. Manlio Simonetti, Ancient Christian
Commentary on Scripture, NT 1b, (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2002), 313.
34 Catechism of the Catholic Church, 2 nd ed. (Washington, DC: United States Catholic Conference, 2000), 1023,
1213, 1267.
35 W.F. Albright and C.S. Mann, Matthew, The Anchor Bible 26, (New York: Doubleday, 1987), 362, 363.
36 660.
37 Heb 10:16-17 (NAB)
12
Since the disciples have received the spirit of Christ which lives in them it is apparent that the law given
to Moses is no longer needed. 38 Indeed in Mt 28:20 the phrase I am with you always, to the end of the
age” evokes the name Emmanuel, God with us, in Mt 1:23. 39 Thus the disciples are to teach what Christ
has engraved upon their hearts and minds. Even so the Christ who has done this will remain always with
them to provide guidance when needed for they will never be truly alone so long as they remain with
Christ. At the same time the conclusion of the Gospel of Matthew evokes its beginning in the infancy
narrative for the God who came to us as a child is ever new and always with us till the end of the age.
Conclusion
The authority given to the disciples in Mt 28 is essentially that of identity with Christ as the Son
of Man and the Son of God. These two sonships provide a bridge whereby the disciples can be
reconciled to God and enter His kingdom which is essentially the Person of Jesus Christ. In entering into
relationship with Christ they become part of His body the Church. As a member of the body of Christ
they share in His authority over all things. The passages in Dan 7:13, 14 and Dan 28 provide a bridge to
more fully understand the unique sharing of Christ’s power with His disciples. Yet this sharing of
Christ’s power is so much more than merely a temporal power as it is a share in the divine life that is
ordinarily received through baptism. Essentially this power/ authority flows from the disciple’s share in
the Divine life of the Trinity and which is handed done to the present day by the Church.
At the same time as one enters into relationship with the divine one becomes conformed to Christ
and desires to obey the commands of God which are now written on their hearts and permeate their
minds. The main reason all power is given to the disciples is due to the fact that God is with them
always and thus has given them a share in His authority and power. Naturally as God desires the spread
of the kingdom so do the disciples and so they act in obedience to Christ’s injunction. The power and
authority are related to the commission to baptize and teach in that they flow from union with Christ.
With a share in the Divine Life comes a share in the power that flows from it. The desires of the heart
are also inflamed by the Divine Life as its essence is Divine Love. This prompts genuine believers to
share this power instead of hoarding it. Thus all creation, except the Head, is subject to those who follow
38 Gal 3:20 (NAB)
39 Daniel J. Harrington, The Gospel of Matthew, Sacra Pagina 1 (Collegeville: Liturgical Press, 1991), 415.
13
Christ. The power and authority shared are essentially inseparable from the Divine Life. In fact the
power/ authority shared flow from the dwelling of the Godhead in the human heart and the prerogatives
that flow from such a relationship.
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