The Keys of the Kingdom of Heaven

 •  2 min. read  •  grade level: 12
 
AFTER telling Peter that wonderful secret about His church, Jesus said to him, “And I will give unto thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven: and whatsoever thou shalt bind on earth shall be bound in heaven: and whatsoever thou shalt loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven.” (Matt. 16.)
When we look up into the sky on a starry night, and see those myriads of stars shining in their glory so far above us, perhaps it makes us feel that heaven must be very, very far away. But though heaven may seem far away, we know that what takes place on this earth is of very great interest in heaven, and even while we are down here we may enter into the kingdom of heaven.
It was after Jesus went back to heaven that the keys of the kingdom of heaven were given to Peter, that he might open the door for all who would turn from their sins and believe on the Lord Jesus Christ. The first time he used the keys three thousand of his own nation pressed in at the open door. The key that let in the Gentiles was used later on, when Cornelius the centurion, his family and friends, were let in. Since then millions of men and women and children have entered the kingdom of heaven, and all by the door that Peter unlocked.
You must not think that the keys he was given were great iron ones, for keys of that sort could never have opened the way into the kingdom of heaven. But Peter was the first to preach to the Jews and to tell them that though they had so wickedly put Jesus to death on the cross, God had raised Him from the dead and set Him on His throne, and made Him Lord and Christ.
By preaching to them about Jesus he opened the door and showed the only way by which they could enter the kingdom of heaven. They must change their minds about the Lord Jesus, and instead of refusing and rejecting Him, they must believe in Him and be baptized in His name, confessing their terrible wickedness in crucifying Him.
Peter was the first, too, to tell the Gentiles that Jesus is the One whom God has appointed to be the Judge of living and dead, and that we must believe on Him and receive forgiveness of our many sins.
ML-03/07/1976