Chapter Two-Jesus Loves a Rich, Young Ruler, Part 1

Through the Needle's Eye, Chapter Two

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Chapter Two

Jesus Loves a Rich Young Ruler (Mark 10:17-30)

I hope you are still praying sincerely for God’s help. If you are intending to read this chapter, that is a good indication He’s answering your prayers! Now pray that God will help you read with an open heart, honestly, just like a child. The reason that Scripture is often “difficult to understand” (as we say) is because we don’t want to accept its simple message.

The study of the rich young ruler will require two chapters, because we must consider the very nature of salvation itself. The story of the rich ruler, when interpreted honestly, raises questions about much that is often passed off as “the gospel” in modern church circles. Pray that God will give you clarity of understanding so that you can do what He wants you to do. He will answer that prayer. He always answers those kinds of prayers.

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Chapter Eight-The Rest of What Jesus Taught

Through the Needle's Eye, Chapter Eight

We’ve now completed our study of Jesus’ major statements regarding stewardship. If you’re still reading, you’ve probably made some very significant stewardship decisions. Yet the flow of the world and most of the church may well be tempting you to wonder if you are out of your mind. Let me assure you that you are not, and this chapter will assure you all the more.

In order to arrive at a balanced understanding of any biblical subject, the devoted student knows he must consider every relevant scripture. In regard to our topic, there are over one hundred scripture passages in the four Gospels that have some relevancy to the subject of money, possessions and stewardship. Thus the reason for this chapter: we want to consider everything Jesus taught on the subject, and I’ve commented on every relevant passage in the Gospels. You will first need to read the scripture passages that are referenced in order to best understand my commentary.[1]

In many cases, the scriptures we are about to examine will serve to support what we’ve already learned. In other cases, they will enlighten us to truths that we’ve not yet considered. In still others, they will bring some gentle balance to our understanding, lest we lean more to one side. It is, of course, possible to make the Bible say anything one wants it to say by isolating scriptures from their context. It never ceases to amaze me how people will justify their greed with one obscure scripture, ignoring everything else God has to say about money.

It is also important to keep in mind that the Bible is a progressive revelation. God did not reveal everything to Adam that He revealed to Paul. Moses did not have the understanding that Jesus did. Even Jesus Himself once told His own disciples that He had more revelation to share with them but would have to share it later because that they were unable to receive it at the time (see John 16:12-13).

If we ignore this fact, we may end up emphasizing early revelation at the expense of ignoring later revelation, and consequently become very unbalanced. In a nutshell, this is the error of the majority of the so-called prosperity preachers. They essentially ignore or twist every scripture relating to money, except those that promise prosperity, the majority of which are found in the Old Testament. Such scriptures, ripped from their biblical context, become a very convenient way for any greedy person to justify his sin.

This is certainly not to say that the Old Testament is somehow unbalanced regarding money, void of any direction regarding godly stewardship. It is in the Old Testament that we first find the commandment to love one’s neighbor as oneself (see Lev. 19:18), as well as numerous other scriptures that specifically spell out how that is done, in part, by the means of one’s money.

In later chapters, we’ll consider what the Old Testament and the epistles teach about money, possessions and stewardship. For now, let us examine everything else that Jesus said on the subject, as well as any scripture that is relevant to our topic that is found in the four Gospels.

2:11 The magi demonstrated their authentic belief that baby Jesus was divine by their long journey to see Him, their falling before Him, their worshiping Him, and their opening their treasures to present Him with gifts of gold, frankincense and myrrh. Their faith affected what they did with their possessions.

It is a matter of speculation as to what became of their gifts. Perhaps the selling of those items is what sustained Mary, Joseph and Jesus during their ensuing flight to, sojourn in, and return from Egypt (see 2:13-21). It is absurd to claim, however, in light of everything else we know about Jesus’ adult lifestyle and living standard, that those three gifts made Him rich all His life (see Matt. 8:20; Luke 8:1-3), as some say.

3:4-12 John the Baptist evidently lived very simply, sustained by a diet of locusts and wild honey, and wearing a garment of camel’s hair with a leather belt. It seems quite unlikely that he would have owned much more clothing than that. He told his penitent audience that if they owned two tunics, they should give one to a person who had none in order to validate their professed repentance (see Luke 3:10-11). His instruction to them was nothing more than an application of the second greatest commandment.

If modern professing Christians had been in John’s audience, would they have followed his instruction? Or would they have said, as did many then, that John had a demon (see Matt. 11:18)? Jesus, of course, did not need to repent at the preaching of John because He never sinned. He always loved His neighbor as Himself throughout His entire life. Jesus owned only one tunic.

4:17 Jesus began His ministry by preaching the identical message as John the Baptist (compare with 3:2). Are we to think that what Jesus meant by repentance was different than what John meant? If penitent people had asked Jesus what they must do, would Jesus have answered differently than John, as recorded in Luke 3:10-14? Would He have disagreed with John, one whom He considered to be the greatest man “born of women”? (see Matt. 11:11).

4:18-22 Peter, Andrew, James and John left everything behind when Jesus called them to follow Him. They would later remind Him of their sacrifice when He told them that it was easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God. He then assured them of future kingdom blessings as well as eternal life (see Matt. 19:23-30).

5:40 Does this mean that we are not to contest unfair lawsuits that could potentially result in our having to borrow a large sum of money in order to make a payment to our opponent? Beyond that, are we to borrow additional money to give our opponent more than what he wants? No, Jesus was talking in this passage about showing extra mercy when we suffer minor offenses (see 5:38-41).

The Pharisees considered it their holy obligation to take revenge for petty offenses. Their justification was based on a twisted interpretation of a commandment that was meant to insure justice in court for major offenses (such as poking out another person’s eye). In petty offenses, Christ’s followers are to be more tolerant and loving than people expect, showing them God’s love and shaming them in the process. If someone wants to knock out our teeth, Jesus does not want us to also offer our arm for breaking. He was simply correcting the practice of the Pharisees, who had a zero-tolerance policy regarding any small offense.

5:42 Followers of Christ should be characterized by their willingness to give and lend. Keep in mind, however, that Jesus was not talking about giving or lending money to people who don’t have enough cash this month to make payments on their luxuries purchased with borrowed money. Helping people with pressing, essential needs was more of what He must have had in mind (see 6:1-4).

If Christ’s followers are to lend, they must first have some surplus. What a blessing it is to have God supply more than we need, that we might have some to give or lend.

6:1-4 Note that Jesus didn’t say, “If you give alms,” but “When you give alms.” He expected His followers to give to the poor and here stressed the importance of doing it with the right motives. The Pharisees sounded trumpets at their public distributions, ostensibly to attract the poor. But God knew their true motives. Followers of Christ should give as secretly as possible.

What exactly is the reward that is promised by Christ to those who secretly give alms? Is it a larger sum of money received while we are still on earth? Perhaps, but Jesus later said that we lay up treasure in heaven by giving to charity, indicating a heavenly reward (see also Luke 14:13-14). If our reward is indeed a larger sum of money received in this life, we then must decide if we want to use that blessing to lay up treasures on earth or heaven, disobeying or obeying Jesus. Our desire to gain more ought to be so we can give more.

6:11 In this prayer we are taught to pray for our basic need of food. This should fill us with faith that it is always God’s will that we have enough food to sustain us. David testified, “I have been young, and now I am old; yet I have not seen the righteous forsaken, or his descendants begging bread” (Ps. 37:25). According to what Christ taught in this prayer, however, we should be content with only one day’s supply, our “daily bread.” If we possess more, we should consider ourselves as possessing an abundance. There is certainly no hint of greed found in this prayer. Christ’s followers are to be content with what they have, even if it is only food and covering (see Phil. 4:11-14; 1 Tim. 6:6-10; Heb. 13:5).

Notice also that we are not to pray, “give me this day my daily bread,” but “give us this day our daily bread.” Our prayer reflects our concern for everyone who is related to our Father. We sincerely desire that all of God’s children have their daily bread. How can we pray this prayer without hypocrisy if God has given us more than we need and we don’t share it with our brothers who lack daily bread?

6:19-24 Jesus’ commandment not to lay up treasures on earth is just as valid as His commandments forbidding adultery, lust, murder and hatred (see 5:21-30). It can only be ignored if it is twisted and stripped of its obvious meaning, which it has been by many professing Christians. I have fully commented on this passage in Chapter Five.

6:25-34 This passage again underscores that our real needs consist of nothing more than food and covering, and promises us that God will supply those needs. We should therefore not be concerned about lacking them and devote ourselves foremost to seeking God’s kingdom and righteousness. So many fall far short from obeying this commandment. Not only are they not seeking first God’s kingdom and righteousness, but they are seeking to possess much more than what they need. I’ve also commented on this passage in Chapter Five.

7:7-11 Practically any time North American preachers mention this passage, they are forced to explain “what Jesus really meant” in light of the fact that we don’t receive so much of what we ask for. Yet the fact remains that Jesus declared, “Ask, and it shall be given to you…For every one who asks receives.” Could part of the problem be that what we are asking for is not God’s will? Unlike the son in Christ’s example who asked only for food, our requests are often a reflection of our greed. We want more material riches so we can indulge ourselves.

Did not James warn of this very thing in his epistle that so often parallels the Sermon on the Mount?: “You ask and do not receive, because you ask with wrong motives, so that you may spend it on your pleasures” (Jas. 4:3, emphasis added; see also 1 John 5:14-15). Jesus promised that the Father would give “what is good to those who ask Him.” Would God consider something to be good if it would tether our hearts to this earth, distract us from devotion to Him, fill us with pride, make us more selfish, and ultimately drag us into hell?

8:20 If Jesus had owned a home, as some prosperity preachers claim, could He have made this statement without lying?

10:9-10 Jesus did not want His twelve disciples to take any future provision with them when He sent them out to preach and heal. Their needs would be supplied as they arose. Thus, there was no reason for any of the twelve to purchase an extra tunic or pair of sandals before their departure. They needed only one tunic and one pair of sandals. When what they had wore out, God would provide a replacement. They wore the same clothing every day, as do so many hundreds of millions of people today in the developing world. What a different perspective we have concerning our needs in contrast to Jesus, His apostles, and multitudes of people living on the earth today!

12:1 Elaborately-prepared meals were not always the means God used to meet the nutritional needs of Jesus’ disciples. Sometime they enjoyed fresh fruit, or in this case, raw heads of grain. Could you be content with such a meal and eat with thanksgiving?

13:22 I have fully commented on “the deceitfulness of riches” against which Christ warned in Chapter Six.

13:44-46 How would Jesus’ disciples, who heard Him say that it would be easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter into heaven, and who witnessed His lifestyle of self-denial, have interpreted these two parables? At bare minimum, both parables teach that gaining heaven is worth giving up everything one possesses, because heaven is of infinite value. This being so, are we then to conclude that we must not give up anything to gain heaven? Why would Jesus even communicate that gaining heaven was worth sacrificing everything if one could gain heaven without giving up anything? Was He only trying to teach those who possessed eternal life that they should value it more than anything else they possess? Or was He again trying to enlighten hell-bound people who, like the rich young ruler and rich fool (see Matt. 19:16-30; Luke 12:16-21), selfishly cling to earthly things, refuse to repent of greed, and esteem earthly riches above true heavenly wealth?

14:15-21 Is there any example in the Gospels of Jesus providing people with any other material things besides the necessities of food, drink, and money to pay taxes? No, there is not one. God has promised to supply our needs, and Jesus, the “exact representation of [His Father’s] nature” (Heb. 1:3) clearly revealed what our needs actually are. In this case, Jesus actually provided more food than the crowds needed. He gathered the excess, however, and I think it is safe to assume that it was all eventually eaten.

15:3-9 Here we learn that obeying the fifth commandment, when it is rightly interpreted, could mean giving money to support one’s elderly parents. Thus, five of the Ten Commandments can be said to have something to do with money and possessions.

The first commandment, having no other gods before God, is certainly applicable to money and possessions when we consider what Jesus said about the impossibility of serving God and mammon. Money can be one’s god.

The fourth commandment, keeping the Sabbath, obviously regulates one’s profiting through labor on one day of the week.

And the eighth and tenth commandments that forbid stealing and coveting one’s neighbor’s property teaches us our proper relationship to material things that belong to others.

All this being so, how foolish we must be to think that the topic of money, possessions and stewardship is of little importance to God. May we not ignore God’s clear commandments regarding these things, lest He also say of us: “This people honors Me with their lips, but their heart is far from Me. But in vain do they worship Me, teaching as doctrines the precepts of men” (15:8-9).

15:32-39 Again Jesus supplied people’s basic needs. If every man present was married and had just two children with him, Jesus fed at least 16,000 people. No need to worry if He can take care of you!

16:5-12 Jesus here reminds His disciples, men of little faith, that they don’t have to fear going without bread. He can and will supply their need for food, as proven by two recent miracles.

16:24-27 Obviously, Jesus was talking about salvation and damnation here. Why else would He use such expressions as, “save his life,” “loses his life for My sake,” “find his life,” “gains the whole world, and forfeits his soul”? Why else would He warn that everyone will be recompensed according to his deeds when He returns? This being so, does “denying ourselves” and “losing our lives for Jesus’ sake” affect what we do with our money and possessions? Does “gaining the whole world,” which guarantees that one forfeits his soul, have anything to do with money and possessions? If Jesus is going to repay us according to our deeds, do those deeds include what we’ve done with the money He has entrusted to us? Obviously, the answer to all these questions is yes.

17:24-27 Here is another miracle of provision for someone’s basic needs, a tax from which Peter was not exempt.

18:1-4 If the greatest in the kingdom of heaven is the one who humbles himself the most, we ought to be striving to become as humble as possible. What is humility? It is, in part, thinking of others as being more important than ourselves (see Phil. 2:3). Humble people serve others, putting their needs first. Proud people consider themselves to be more important than others. Their own needs selfishly come first. Jesus set the greatest example of humility. Although He was God, He humbled himself to die on the cross, considering that our salvation was more important than His comfort (see Phil. 2:5-8). If we view others as being more important than ourselves, will that affect what we do with our money and time? Certainly.

19:16-30 I have fully commented on the rich young ruler in Chapters Two and Three.

21:12-13 To say that Jesus was upset would be an understatement. What provoked Him to such a degree? God intended that the temple would be a place where His people would pray, prayer being an expression of their devotion to Him. However, the main activity around the temple was an expression of devotion to money. It was the perfect business location for the moneychangers and dove sellers, who apparently were not all honest in their dealings. Profits, not prayers, were on their minds.

Does one have to be selling something at Jerusalem’s temple before considering if this passage has any personal application? No. When making money supersedes our devotion to God, even if our earnings are honest, we are guilty of serving mammon.

21:22 If we are to pray believing, we must have some promise from God so that we know His will, otherwise it is impossible to pray with assurance of one’s prayer being answered. For example, it would be impossible to pray with faith that Jesus will return tomorrow or that adultery won’t be a sin during the first weekend in November. Yet many make this error when they attempt to “believe God” for more personal luxuries. How can one have faith to possess more earthly treasures when Jesus commanded us not to lay up treasures for ourselves on earth? It is absolutely impossible to have faith for earthly treasures. A greedy person may pray with hope for such things, but he cannot pray with faith for them. As I mentioned when commenting on Matthew 7:7-11, James plainly told us why God doesn’t answer such prayers: “You ask and do not receive, because you ask with wrong motives, so that you may spend it on your pleasures” (Jas. 4:3, emphasis added). On the other hand, we know it is God’s will for us to spread the gospel to the whole world, as well as feed the hungry and clothe the naked. Thus we can ask in faith that He will provide for us so we can do those things.

In light of this, it is interesting that prosperity preachers are always trying to convince everyone of how much faith they have by the abundance of their possessions. In reality, they show what little faith they have. If their faith were really so great, they would give everything away and trust God to supply their daily needs.

22:15-22 We learn here it is God’s will that we pay our rightful share of taxes, so we can trust that He will help us to do it. Jesus also affirmed that just as we have financial obligations to our governments, so we also have financial obligations to God.

22:35-40 It is amazing that this profound statement by Jesus is so rarely esteemed and emphasized. Jesus told us that God’s total will for us is embodied in just two commandments. Jesus came and died for all the times we disobeyed these commandments, and He lives in us now to enable us to obey these commandments. If a person loves God with all his heart and his neighbor as himself, will it have any affect on what he does with his money and possessions? It most assuredly will!

23:10-11 To be a servant of all should obviously be the aspiration of every follower of Christ. If one is a servant, will it have any affect on what he does with his money and possessions? Of course.

23:14 To “devour widow’s houses” must be some reference to the scribes and Pharisees’ practice of taking financial advantage of poor widows, who are often trusting and gullible, thus easy prey. Under the “pretense of making long prayers,” that is, under a guise of love and spirituality, these wolves in sheep’s clothing were somehow able to coerce donations from those who could least afford to part with them. Their houses were “devoured,” leaving them with nothing. Jesus severely condemned them for their greed. They blatantly disregarded the second greatest commandment.

23:16-17 Why are we not surprised that the scribes and Pharisees, lovers of money (see Luke 16:14), valued the gold in the temple above the temple itself? This is just one more indication that they were servants of mammon.

23:23-26 When we combine Matthew and Luke’s versions (see Luke 11:42) in order to know every word Christ said here, we come up with, “And yet [you] disregard the weightier provisions of the law: justice, mercy, faithfulness and the love of God.” Justice, mercy and faithfulness are simply facets of loving one’s neighbor. “The love of God” speaks for itself. Thus, once again, Jesus is emphasizing what is truly important. The weightier provisions of the law are loving God and one’s neighbor. Isn’t it obvious that one may scrupulously tithe, but still be guilty of laying up treasures on earth? Likewise, an ardent tither may love money, not love his neighbor as himself, live in self-indulgence (see 23:25) and not love God as He should be loved. What message is found here for those whose Christianity consists of little more than going to church on Sunday and faithfully tithing out of their abundance? Why is tithing emphasized so much of the time in so many churches at the neglect of what is most important?

25:14-46 I have fully commented on this passage in Chapter Seven. The question every person who reads this passage should ask him/herself is this: If I was to die at this moment and find myself at the sheep and goats’ judgment, would I be counted among the sheep or the goats? Perhaps more sobering is the fact that our love for Jesus is revealed by our love for His family, expressed by meeting their pressing needs. It is amazing that millions of people claim to love Jesus, but sacrifice nothing to feed and clothe His impoverished believers. They are completely deceived.

26:6-13 Mark tells us that the value of this woman’s ointment was equivalent to about three hundred days’ wages for a common laborer (see Mark 14:3-4). To bring it into some perspective, imagine a perfume worth fourteen months of your labor, working five days a week for fifty weeks each year. It was “very costly” (26:7) indeed.

The woman who poured it on Christ may have been wealthy herself to be able to afford such ointment, or she may have received it as a gift, perhaps by inheritance. Regardless, it was without any doubt, an earthly treasure, and as one who obviously loved Christ, she wanted to lay up treasure in heaven and show her love for Him.

Had she poured her perfume upon anyone other than Jesus, the disciples would have had a valid complaint. But she realized, as they should have, that Jesus was of greater importance and value than all the people of the world combined, as He was God in the flesh. Beyond that, there would always be opportunities to help the poor, but only a short time to express her great love for Him. We must, however, give the disciples credit for at least attempting to follow Jesus’ commandments regarding good stewardship. Their criticisms of this woman indicate that they cared for the poor, just as He had taught them. Their fault was that they didn’t rightly value Jesus.

26:14-16 There is no need to speculate about Judas’ reason for betraying Jesus. He had no higher motive than the love of money. Amazingly, Judas had heard Jesus say everything we have considered in this book so far, but perhaps was tired of a life of self-denial. Mammon, the god who competes for the hearts of people more than any other false god, enticed and deceived him.

Was Judas’ character tainted even from the beginning of his relationship with Jesus? Perhaps it was. We know that Judas periodically stole from the corporate moneybox, at least near the close of Jesus’ ministry (see John 12:6). Jesus once announced that one among the twelve was a devil (see John 6:70). Yet Judas had preached the gospel, healed the sick, cast out demons and fed the five thousand, just as much as the other eleven. When Jesus announced at the Last Supper that He would be betrayed by one of the twelve, no one suspected Judas (see Matt. 26:22; Luke 22:23; John 13:22). Thus it seems possible that mammon gradually enticed him. If so, what a sobering warning to us of the powerful seduction of riches! Even one who literally lives with Jesus is not beyond its temptation. If he yields and does not repent, it can also be rightfully said of him, “It would have been good for that man if he had not been born” (26:24).

Judas’ fundamental fatal flaw was yielding to the temptation to gain wealth at the expense of obedience to Christ. One is guilty of that same sin, to a lesser degree, whenever he gains or uses money in a way that is contrary to God’s will. When he does, he is serving mammon, allowing it to direct his life rather than God.

27:57-60 Joseph of Arimathea is another example of a wealthy man who became “a disciple of Jesus” (27:57). Keep in mind that biblical disciples are those who met Jesus’ requirements for discipleship, one of which is giving up all of one’s possessions (see Luke 14:33). We don’t know what Joseph did with the rest of his possessions, but his sincere devotion to Jesus is revealed in this passage as he gave his own tomb for the burial of Jesus’ body.

28:11-15 Here is one more obvious example of people who served mammon rather than God. The chief priests did not use money according to God’s will, and the Roman soldiers took money against God’s will. Anyone who knowingly gains or uses money in a way that is contrary to God’s will is serving mammon, because money, not God, is directing his life.

28:18-20 Jesus wanted His disciples to make disciples of their own, teaching them to obey everything He had commanded them, including everything he commanded concerning money, possessions and stewardship. This they did, as is so clearly revealed in the epistles and the book of Acts. Why aren’t spiritual leaders doing this today? In fact, why are so many spiritual leaders teaching what contradicts what Jesus taught regarding wealth? Why are so many living in luxury? Why are so many teaching wealthy, self-indulgent people that God loves them and thus wants them to be even more wealthy and self-indulgent? We have just surveyed Matthew’s entire Gospel for relevant scriptures about money, possessions and stewardship. Where is the modern prosperity doctrine found in Christ’s teachings? We have read scores of scriptures that contradict not only the prosperity gospel, but that also condemn standard American evangelical doctrine as well as the normal American lifestyle. Who will dare say in North America that it is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven?

Mark

There is essentially nothing regarding stewardship in Mark’s Gospel that isn’t also included in Matthew’s Gospel. I have, therefore, only given the corresponding references.

2:23 See my comments on Matt. 12:1.

4:19 I have fully commented on “the deceitfulness of riches” against which Christ warned in Chapter Six.

6:7-9 See my comments on Matt. 10:9-10.

6:33-44 See my comments on Matt. 14:15-21.

7:9-13 See my comments on Matt. 15:3-9.

8:1-9 See my comments on Matt. 15:32-39.

8:13-21 See my comments on Matt. 16:5-12.

8:34-38 See my comments on Matt. 16:24-27.

9:33-35 See my comments on Matt. 18:1-4.

10:17-31 I have fully commented on the rich, young ruler in Chapters Two and Three.

10:42-45 See my comments on Matt. 23:10-11.

11:15-17 See my comments on Matt. 21:12-13.

11:24 See my comments on Matt. 21:22.

12:17 See my comments on Matt. 22:15-22.

12:28-34 See my comments on Matt. 22:35-40.

12:41-44 I have made mention of this story in Chapter Four. Jesus’ reaction to those who give out of their surplus is no different today.

14:3-9 See my comments on Matt. 26:6-13.

14:10-11 See my comments on Matt. 26:14-16.

Luke

1:53 This Spirit-inspired utterance from a humble bond slave is a revelation of God’s justice. God delights in righting wrongs, and the hungry are so often the victims of the wrongs of others, particularly the rich. But at times in the past, God has judged the unrepentant rich by forcing them to beg just like the hungry poor they previously ignored.

This verse is not only historically true (at least to some degree), but is prophetically true as well. Although not everyone has reaped what he’s sown in this life, without exception, every person will be repaid according to his or her deeds in the next life, believers and unbelievers (see Matt. 16:27; Rom. 2:6-10). The greedy rich who never repent of ignoring the starving poor can never enter heaven, or else God would be unjust. The only thing that could make a greedy person imagine that he will enter heaven is a false gospel. The truth is, Jesus died, not just to forgive us of our selfishness, but to deliver us from it for the rest of our lives and throughout eternity.

2:22-24 From these verses, we certainly don’t get the impression that Jesus’ parents were wealthy at this point in their lives. Mary and Joseph gave the offering that was required of poor parents, being unable to afford a lamb (see Lev. 12:6-8).

3:7-18 As I mentioned in an earlier chapter, practically every specific thing that John told his convicted audience to do to validate their repentance involved money. Clearly, John wanted his hearers to realize that, unless they repented of greed and produced the fruit to prove it, hell was their eternal home. I’m afraid that many modern professing Christians, if they heard John preaching “the gospel,” as Luke calls it (3:18), would call him legalistic, unbalanced, harsh, or extreme (see also my comments on Matt. 3:4-12).

4:18 When the Holy Spirit descended upon Jesus, He was anointed to preach the gospel specifically to the poor, as Isaiah had foretold. The reason Jesus didn’t target the wealthy is not because God didn’t love them. In fact, some wealthy people repented and were saved under Jesus’ ministry. Jesus primarily targeted the poor for a number of possible reasons.

Perhaps first because it is so difficult for the rich to be saved—as difficult as it is for a camel to go through the eye of a needle (to quote an authority on the subject). The rich rarely repent of their greed. Why target the least receptive group?

Perhaps second, because of God’s justice. The poor so often get the short end of the stick, and the God of love hates injustice.

And perhaps third, because of God’s great compassion toward the marginalized citizens of the world, as Jesus’ constant ministry to the sick, to the demonized, to the hungry, to women and children, and to the poor so abundantly demonstrated. James wrote that “God choose the poor of this world to be rich in faith and heirs of the kingdom” (Jas. 2:5; see also 1 Cor. 1:26-29).

Some prosperity preachers have a standard rhetoric that revolves around this verse. It goes as follows: “Jesus said He was anointed to preach the gospel to the poor! So what is good news to the poor man? That’s simple: ‘Poor man, you don’t have to be poor any more!'” At which point the wealthy and greedy crowd wildly applauds.

Of course, we never find Jesus preaching such a gospel. Jesus also preached good news to the Pharisees, tax collectors and prostitutes. Shall we determine what Christ’s message was to them based on what they would have liked to hear? “Hey prostitutes, you can keep your profession and still go to heaven!” I’m sure prostitutes would have given Him a standing ovation.

It is indeed true, however, that those who repent of their sin (including the sin of greed) and become His followers need not worry about food or clothing. Now that’s good news to believers who are truly poor.

5:4-11 It is often pointed out by prosperity preachers how Jesus blessed Peter’s business with abundance. These same people, however, rarely point out that Peter left all those fish on the beach (along with everything else) to start following Jesus, which of course was Jesus’ original intention.

May I also ask: As Peter and his companions frantically worked to get every fish they could into their boats to the point of sinking them, all under the calm and holy gaze of Jesus, what was going through their minds? Could Peter suddenly have realized that his actions revealed his heart? Could he have realized that his frantic attempt to fill the boats to the point of sinking was a revelation of his greed? That he was only thinking of profits while he was standing in the midst of a miracle, and that his excitement was wrongly directed at the fish instead of the Miracle Worker? Could that have been why he then fell at Jesus’ feet saying, “Depart from me, for I am a sinful man, O Lord!”?

Even if not, the fact remains that as soon as Peter decided to become a disciple of Jesus, he “left everything and followed Him” (5:11). His priorities all changed with his repentance. His focus was no longer fish, but fishing for men. How do you suppose Jesus would have reacted if Peter had announced that he was seeking speaking engagements for his new message, “Secrets for Divine Prosperity”?

5:27-32 Like Peter, Andrew, James and John, Matthew also left everything behind at his workplace when Jesus called him. There was nothing more important than following Jesus. Matthew immediately began using what he possessed to serve the Lord, hosting a large banquet in Jesus’ honor as a means of introducing his corrupt associates to Him. Jesus considered Matthew’s invitation to be an opportunity to call more sinners to repentance, and Matthew hoped his friends would yield.

6:1 See my comments on Matt. 12:1.

6:20-26 This passage either begins Luke’s summary of the Sermon on the Mount, recorded more fully in Matthew 5-7, or more likely is an account of another of Jesus’ sermons in which the content was very similar to His Sermon on the Mount. Regardless, Jesus here clearly contrasts heaven’s view of people with the world’s view. Which people are to be pitied, and which ones are to be envied? God’s view is the exact opposite of the world’s. The world envies those who are rich, comfortable, well fed, laughing, and popular. But Jesus warned that their happiness is only temporary. They will ultimately be very uncomfortable, hungry and hated, as they weep and gnash their teeth in hell.

Contrasted with them are those who had decided to follow Jesus, His disciples, to whom He was speaking (see 6:20). Although they are hated and ostracized now, one day they will be living forever in a perfect society of perfect love. Although they are poor in material things, they are spiritually rich and will one day be walking on streets of gold (see Rev. 21:21). Although they are not well fed, they will one day dine at the marriage feast of the Lamb (see Rev. 19:9). Although they sometimes weep, one day their God will wipe away every tear (see Rev. 21:4), and they will enter into the eternal joy of their Master (see Matt. 25:21).

And why might Christ’s disciples weep? Because following Christ means loving God and neighbor, which means inevitable sorrow. Friends are lost, relationships broken, families are divided and persecution is endured. Beyond this, Christians weep because they care, weeping with those who weep (see Rom. 12:15). And like Paul, they carry “great sorrow and unceasing grief” (Rom. 9:2) in their hearts for those who are still in darkness.

6:29 See my comments on Matt. 5:40.

6:30 See my comments on Matt. 5:42.

6:31-35 Jesus wants to put an end to selfish lending, which always expects something in return. Unselfish lending would include lending without charging interest, as well as loaning money or goods without making a mental debit against the borrower’s account for future reference.

The Old Testament condemned usury, which was not the sin of charging exorbitant interest as it is thought today, but the sin of charging any interest to a countryman facing pressing needs (see Ex. 22:25; Lev. 25:35-37; Deut. 15:7-11; 23:19-20). Here Jesus extends the Old Testament prohibition against usury to include loans made even to one’s enemies, at the same time commanding such unheard of acts of kindness.[2]

In order to lend, one must first have something to lend. Thus, this commandment indicates that Jesus was not advocating destitution for His followers. Of the first believers it is recorded that “not one of them claimed that anything belonging to him was his own; but all things were common property to them” (Acts 4:32). This is another way of saying that they very generously lent to each other. Some must have owned contemporary conveniences, such as plows, oil presses, work animals and so on.

Good stewardship is characterized by owning only what one needs, giving away what one doesn’t need, and lending what one doesn’t always need. For example, one who owns a larger home than he needs is able to lend a room to someone who has no home of his own.

6:38 This is not a “formula for obtaining divine wealth,” as some want us to believe, because that would stand in contradiction to everything else Jesus said in this sermon about unselfish love (not to mention the entire tenure of Scripture). Giving to get is pure hypocrisy, nothing more than selfishness under the guise of love. Rather, this promise is an assurance that we need never fear impoverishing ourselves by our giving to others, because God will abundantly return our kindness. As Paul would later echo to the Corinthian Christians when he admonished them to give generously to the poor, promising them a bountiful return: “And God is able to make all grace abound to you, that always having all sufficiency in everything, you may have an abundance for every good deed” (2 Cor. 9:8, emphasis added). Notice Paul assumed that the generous Corinthians, once blessed with their return, would want to use their God-given abundance for more good deeds. Those who are motivated to give because of love for God and neighbor will naturally want to continue to lay up treasures in heaven with what God abundantly repays them.

7:2-10 Because salvation has always been offered by grace and received by a living faith (see Rom 4:1-17), it only seems reasonable to conclude that this Gentile Centurion was a saved man. Jesus declared that He had not found such great faith in Israel. His faith was evidenced by his humility (considering himself unworthy for Jesus to visit his house), his great respect for Jesus, his testimony concerning Jesus’ authority, and the Jews’ testimony about him. “He loves our nation” (7:5), they said, indicating a very unusual relationship between these Jews and a soldier who worked for the hated occupying power. Obedience to the second greatest commandment is a primary identifying mark of God’s true people (see Luke 6:35; John 13:35; 1 John 3:14).

This centurion’s living faith in God was also evidenced by the use of his money. He must have been quite generous, as the Jews gave him the credit for building their synagogue (see 7:5). This man lived his faith and others could see it. He loved God and neighbor.

7:24-25 Sadly, what Jesus said here is not true in our day. “Those who are splendidly clothed and live in luxury” are no longer found only in royal palaces—they are often found in church pulpits. Clearly, Jesus was contrasting a true man of God with those who lived in luxury. Splendidly clothed men who live in luxury can’t preach the true gospel, because their selfish lives testify that they don’t believe it themselves. Jesus considered that John was the greatest man who had ever lived (see 7:28).

8:1-3 Here we gain a glimpse of how God provided for the needs of Jesus and His band of twelve. Those who had been touched by His grace were interested in seeing Him succeed at His mission. Their faith was manifested by their self-denial.

9:1-3 See my comments on Matt. 10:9-10.

9:12-17 See my comments on Matt. 14:15-21.

9:23-26 See my comments on Matt. 16:24-27.

9:46-48 See my comments on Matt. 18:1-4.

9:58 See my comments on Matt. 8:20.

10:1-8 As when He sent out the twelve, Jesus allowed the seventy to take no future provision with them when He sent them to evangelize. As Christ’s ambassadors, they were required to demonstrate faith, contentment with little, and humilty to receive food and lodging from those who received their message.

10:30-37 The scribes and Pharisees apparently defined the word neighbor as being anyone who loved them (see Matt. 5:43-47). Thus, one fulfilled the second greatest commandment by loving one’s friends, which meant one could and should hate his enemies. In this parable, however, Jesus revealed from God’s perspective who one’s neighbors are. They include members of other ethnic groups, strangers, and even our enemies. Scripture tells us that Samaritans and Jews in Jesus’ day hated each other (see Luke 9:51-55; John 4:9).

Jesus also defined the word love in this parable. It involves meeting the pressing needs of other people in trouble, and our responsibility is based upon our knowledge of their needs and the resources we have to meet those needs. Love may require the sacrifice of time and money. How are we any different from the priest and Levite in this story if we close our hearts to starving, dying people? If there are so many hundreds of millions of Christians in the world today, why is anybody on earth starving? Are we loving our neighbors as ourselves? Finally, is it not safe to assume that two zealous tithers walked by before the Samaritan arrived on the scene of the crime?

11:3 See my comments on Matt. 6:11.

11:9-13 See my comments on Matt. 7:7-11.

11:42 See my comments on Matt. 23:23-26.

12:13-34 All of Chapter One of this book was devoted to this portion of Luke’s Gospel. While some modern preachers are telling us to believe God for more possessions, Jesus told His followers to sell what they didn’t need and give the proceeds to charity! Can you see that many modern preachers are telling people the exact opposite of what Christ said? They are telling their followers not to follow Christ.

14:12-14 Too much of our kindness extends no further than our own family or circle of friends, something that Jesus said amounts to nothing. Even the Gentiles do that much (see Matt. 5:46-47). Beyond that, our acts of kindness are often nothing more than subtle acts of selfishness, done in order to make the beneficiary feel obligated to reciprocate. We wine and dine potential clients in hopes of future profits.

God, however, expects us to use our resources to serve those who cannot repay us, the marginalized people of the world. By so doing, we are laying up treasures in heaven, something that is not accomplished when we serve those who reciprocate. Are you using a portion of your resources to serve the poor, crippled, lame and blind (particularly, but not exclusively, those who are believers), people who, in the developing world, are often forced to depend on the generosity of others for their survival?

14:16-24 A preoccupation with their newly-acquired possessions kept the first two people from accepting the gracious dinner invitation. What fools! Their earthly focus blinded them to potential heavenly joy. The poor, crippled, blind and lame face no such temptation, and in that sense are blessed.

14:25-35 The notion that one can be a believer in Christ, securely saved, but not be a disciple of Christ, is a modern theory that cannot be supported by Scripture. Those who claim that Jesus’ requirements for discipleship here stand in contradiction to “salvation by grace through faith” do not understand the nature of true grace or true faith. God’s grace instructs us to “deny ungodliness and worldly desires and to live sensibly, righteously and godly in the present age” (Tit. 2:12). The grace He offers says, “I don’t condemn you, so go and sin no more.” It does not say, “I don’t condemn you, so you may continue to live in sin.” Likewise, true faith obeys (see Gal. 5:6; Jas. 2:14-26; 1 John 2:3). Those who don’t meet the requirements listed here to be Christ’s disciples are not true believers in Him. They are not saved.

Not only must we love Jesus more than any other person (see 14:26), obediently following Him as we deny ourselves (see 14:27), but we must also “give up all [our] own possessions” (14:33). How we fool ourselves when we imagine that we fulfill this requirement by a supposed mental relinquishment that results in no actual relinquishment. If there is no actual relinquishment, neither has there been any mental relinquishment. How would the government react if you told them that you had mentally paid your taxes? How would the tax auditor respond if you said, “I’m holding my tax money loosely, and I don’t consider that money to be mine any longer, even though it is still in my bank account”?

16:1-31 I have fully discussed this portion of Scripture in Chapter Four.

18:18-30 I have fully discussed the story of the rich ruler in Chapters Two and Three. What American pastor would remain employed if he told a rich man seeking salvation what Jesus told this man? Very few. Thus, Jesus Christ, whom Scripture calls the Good Shepherd (John 10:14), the Great Shepherd (Heb. 13:20) and the Chief Shepherd (1 Pet. 5:4), would not be employed as a shepherd in most churches because He apparently doesn’t understand the truth about salvation. He believes that greedy people must repent in order to be saved.

19:1-10 I’ve already discussed the repentance and salvation of Zaccheus in Chapter Three. When Zaccheus repented of greed, salvation came. Why is it that so many today suppose that it is not necessary to repent of greed in order to be saved? The New Testament declares that no greedy person will inherit eternal life (see 1 Cor. 6:10; Eph. 5:3-6).

Note that Zaccheus repented of both forms of his greed. No longer would he make money by taking advantage of others, and no longer would he neglect the poor.

Here is a thought-provoking question: What if Zaccheus had continued to defraud people but gave all his profits to the poor? Would God have approved? An amazing phenomenon is the philanthropist who gains his money by disobeying the golden rule. Yet people applaud him for his great generosity, ignoring the fact that all he gives he has gained by selfishly exploiting other people to enrich himself! Moreover, what he donates to charity actually requires no self-denial on his part, because he continues to live in luxury. Although the world may applaud such people, in God’s eyes they are hypocrites of the worst sort, greedy people who pretend to be caring.

Finally, if you are a pastor, how would you respond if a wealthy person told you what Zaccheus told Jesus? Would you caution that wealthy person against becoming too extreme in his zeal? Would you tell him that fourfold restitution to those he defrauded was going a bit too far, because God has forgiven him? Would you suggest the money could be better used for the building fund?

19:45-46 See my comments on Matt. 21:12-13.

20:20-26 See my comments on Matt. 22:15-22.

20:46-47 See my comments on Matt. 23:14.

21:1-4 See my comments on Mark 12:41-44.

22:3-6 See my comments on Matt. 26:14-16.

22:24-27 See my comments on Matt. 18:1-4.

John

2:1-11 Jesus again provided basic needs, in this case drink for thirsty people. There is no record of Him providing anything other than food, drink and taxes.

2:14-17 See my comments on Matt. 21:12-13.

4:5-8 Have you ever considered the fact that Jesus lived His entire earthly life in what we would consider an undeveloped nation? His disciples had gone to buy food, not in a supermarket, but in a marketplace like you would find today in any village in the developing world. Moreover, Jesus drank water from wells. He never once turned on a faucet or stood under a shower in a bathroom. He never washed His clothing in a washing machine. He never opened the door of a refrigerator. He never drove a car or even a bicycle for that matter. Not once did He listen to a radio, speak to someone over a phone, cook a meal on a stove, or preach through a public address system. He never watched a television show, turned on an electric lamp, or cooled off in front of an air conditioner or electric fan. He never owned a lawnmower, a lawn chair, a wristwatch, or even a pair of sunglasses. He didn’t have a closet full of clothing. How could He have been happy?

6:5-14 See my comments on Matt. 14:15-21.

12:3-8 When we compare the specific details of Mary’s anointing of Jesus with the anointing by an unnamed woman mentioned in all three Synoptic Gospels, it seems they are not the same incident (see Matt. 26:6-13; Mark 14:3-9; Luke 7:37-39). In this case, John highlights the hypocrisy, deception, thievery and greed of Judas, who under the pretense of concern for the poor, complained about the waste. Yet Judas actually stole from the treasury that which was meant for the poor, and we are just like him when we selfishly use for ourselves what God intends that we use for the poor. Is the money that God has entrusted to us any different than the money in Jesus’ treasury?

13:27-29 Here we gain insight concerning the treasury of Jesus and His disciples. It was most commonly used for their essential needs, such as food, and to supply the essential needs of the poor. Jesus always loved His neighbor as Himself. Thus, meeting their needs was a priority. Is it not our goal to become like Him? Is that not God’s goal for us? (see Rom. 8:29; Phil. 3:12).

13:34-35 This was, indeed, a new commandment, heretofore unheard. Christ’s disciples are to love each other by a new standard. They are not just to love each other as themselves (as the second greatest commandment enjoins), but as He has loved them. They are not to view one another as being equal to themselves, but as being more important than themselves (see Phil. 2:3), just as Jesus did. Jesus elaborated on this theme a short time later in 15:12-14: “This is My commandment, that you love one another, just as I have loved you. Greater love has no one than this, that one lay down his life for his friends. You are My friends, if you do what I command you.”

Jesus loved His friends, whom He defined as those who do what He commands, by laying down His life for them. So His disciples are to love one another by laying down their lives for one another. John reiterated this thought in his first epistle: “We know love by this, that He laid down His life for us; and we ought to lay down our lives for the brethren” (1 John 3:16).

Does such a laying down of one’s life have anything to do with what one does with his money and possessions? John thought so, and continued in the very next verse, “But whoever has the world’s goods, and beholds his brother in need and closes his heart against him, how does the love of God abide in him?” (1 John 3:17). Clearly then, one who has the ability to meet the pressing needs of one of Christ’s disciples but “closes his heart against him,” does not obey Jesus’ new commandment and does not distinguish himself with the identifying mark of Christ’s true disciples, as Jesus said in 13:35.

14:15 In this statement, Jesus was not excluding His commandments regarding money, possessions and stewardship. Our stewardship is a measure of our love for Him.

14:21-24 What Jesus said here is not a promise of special bonuses for Christians who love Jesus, bonuses that will not be enjoyed by those heaven-bound Christians who don’t love Jesus. Rather, Jesus was talking about the benefits of being saved. All true believers love and obey Jesus (see John 3:36; 1 Cor. 16:22). Both Father and Son make their abode in every true Christian by the indwelling Spirit (see Rom. 8:9). Thus we once again see the correlation between faith and works, belief and behavior. Those who are truly born again love Jesus and are characterized by obedience to His commandments, including His commandments regarding money, possessions and stewardship.

15:12-14 See my comments on John 13:34-35.

19:23-24 From the information found here, some prosperity preachers have attempted to prove that Jesus was wealthy, because only wealthy people supposedly could afford a seamless inner garment! It is utterly amazing what significance can be found in the biblical text if one wants to prove what contradicts numerous other scriptures. Can you imagine presenting such evidence in court to prove that someone was wealthy?

With the completion of this eighth chapter, we have now studied everything that Jesus taught and lived concerning money, possessions and stewardship. Have we found evidence in any of the four Gospels that Jesus wants us to trust Him to prosper us even more so we can live in greater self-indulgence and ignore the poor multitudes and those who have never heard the gospel? No, we have found that Christ taught and lived the exact opposite. The essence of following Him is self-denial, yet millions of professing Christians have


[1] This chapter is written so as to serve as a reference for everything Jesus said on stewardship.

[2] Jesus, would not, of course, be commanding His followers to lend their money to enemies whose purpose in borrowing was some evil design. Loans made to enemies who were facing pressing needs was more of what He must have had in mind.

 

Chapter Nine-The Early Church Follows Jesus

Through the Needle's Eye, Chapter Nine

Have I perhaps misinterpreted what Christ taught about money, possessions and stewardship? If I have, a study of what was taught and practiced by the apostles and early church would reveal my error. Did the apostles encourage their disciples to “believe God” for more material things so they could possess their “covenant rights” and enjoy life as “king’s kids”? Did the apostles live in luxury, as do so many modern “ministers,” touting their ministerial success by their wardrobes, new cars and jewelry? Were the early Christians unconcerned about the poor, stating that people’s poverty is always a result of their sinful choices or lack of faith? Were they focused primarily on their careers and accumulating more material wealth so as to guarantee comfortable retirements? I suspect you already know the obvious answers to those questions.

The apostles, of course, obeyed Jesus’ final commandment to “make disciples of all the nations…teaching them to observe all that [He] commanded [them]” (Matt. 28:19-20). They faithfully taught their disciples what He had taught them, including all He had commanded them regarding money, possessions and stewardship. Those disciples, being true believers in Christ, obeyed Christ’s commandments, relayed through the apostles. This will have to be admitted by anyone who is honest in reading the book of Acts and the New Testament epistles, because the evidence is overwhelming.

From the very beginning, the early Christians were devoted to the apostles’ teaching (they didn’t just listen to it). Thus they laid down their lives for one another, sold their possessions, and laid up treasures in heaven, just as Jesus had commanded. Read the earliest description of common Christian life:

And they were continually devoting themselves to the apostles’ teaching and to fellowship, to the breaking of bread and to prayer…And all those who had believed were together, and had all things in common; and they began selling their property and possessions, and were sharing them with all, as anyone might have need (Acts 2:42-45, emphasis added).

Note that Luke, unlike many modern commentators, added no disparaging commentary to his report. We are told by some today that these early Christians were overly zealous, or were mistakenly treating capital as if it were income, thus insuring their own future poverty. Others claim, with no biblical support, that there were unusual circumstances that dictated unusual actions by the early Christians. For example, it is sometimes claimed that there were multitudes of Jewish pilgrims in Jerusalem during the Passover who became Christians. Supposedly, they would have wanted to stay in Jerusalem to learn more about Christ, or would have found it impossible to return to their homes elsewhere, having become (to quote one theorist) “the victims of social and economic ostracism, ecclesiastical excommunication, and national disinheritance.[1] Their business enterprises must in most cases have collapsed in ruins and family bonds been heart-breakingly severed.” Thus, the early Jerusalem church supposedly found itself with multitudes of unemployed, homeless persons from far-away places within its ranks.

This is, however, a matter of great speculation, and we must wonder why Scripture is silent about those multitudes of believing, unemployed, homeless Passover pilgrims who remained in Jerusalem after Christ’s crucifixion. I find no record of multitudes believing in Jesus from the time of His crucifixion until almost two months later on the day of Pentecost, when about three-thousand people repented at Peter’s preaching (see Acts 2:41). There is nothing said about any Pentecost pilgrims (much less Passover pilgrims) being unable to return to their homes in far-away places. What would have prevented them from doing so? How would they even have known the reaction of their families to their conversions had they not journeyed back home to tell them? (Incidentally, at this point in church history, it was said that the Christians enjoyed great favor with all the people; see Acts 2:47). Would not those newly-converted Pentecost pilgrims have had a strong desire to return home and tell their loved ones the good news about Jesus?[2]

All of this being so, why should we accept a theory for which there is no scriptural basis and that contradicts simple logic? Even if this particular theory is true, how is the early church’s supposed situation unique in Christian history, in light of the multitudes of very poor Christians living today in the developing world whom we can assist?

The truth is that the early Christians were simply obeying Jesus’ commands to sell their possessions, lay up treasure in heaven, and love each other as He loved them. They demonstrated a “faith working through love” (Gal. 5:6). Because “God’s love abided in them,” they were not “closing their hearts against brethren in need,” as the apostle John no doubt taught them (see 1 John 3:17). They were fulfilling Jesus’ prayer that they might be one (see John 17:20-23), caring for each other. The world knew they were Christ’s disciples by the love they had for one another (see John 13:35).

This was not a short-lived phenomenon in the early church. It continued to be a regular feature of New Testament life. For example, two chapters later, Luke tells us,

And the congregation of those who believed were of one heart and soul; and not one of them claimed that anything belonging to him was his own; but all things were common property to them…. and abundant grace was upon them all. For there was not a needy person among them, for all who were owners of land or houses would sell them and bring the proceeds of the sales, and lay them at the apostles’ feet; and they would be distributed to each, as any had need (Acts 4:32-35).

I cannot help but wonder how many professing North American Christians, if they read in a newspaper the above description of a modern religious group, would immediately conclude that sect was a dangerous cult?

The unity of the early church included an economic unity, so that there was no needy person among them. The reason was because believers who owned land that they didn’t need, or more than one house, sold it in order to supply the pressing, essential needs of other believers. This attitude of love and generosity was manifested not only among the wealthy of the church, but among all the members: “Not one of them claimed that anything belonging to him was his own; but all things were common property to them” (Acts 4:32). They were true believers and thus obedient followers of Christ, striving to keep His commandments and enter by the narrow gate (see Matt. 7:13-14). Keep in mind that none of them owned cars, electric appliances, lawn mowers, and so on. For the most part, they owned only what people in modern developing nations own.

Note also that the proceeds of what the early disciples sold was laid at the apostles’ feet. Those giving knew that these men who unfailingly modeled Christian contentment, stewardship and generosity could be trusted to administer the distribution.

Let us continue to explore what the remainder of the New Testament teaches regarding money, possessions and stewardship. This chapter, like the previous one, is so written so that it can be used as a reference to everything relevant to stewardship found in Acts and the epistles. You will need to have your Bible open so you can reference the relevant passages before reading my commentary.

2:38 When Peter called for repentance here and in 3:19, are we to think that the repentance of which he spoke was any different from the repentance of which John the Baptist and Jesus spoke? When John’s convicted audience asked what they should do to demonstrate their repentance, practically every specific thing he told them to do involved money (see Luke 3:10-14). Are we to think that the repentance of which Peter had in mind was unrelated to the sins of greed and covetousness?

2:45-46 We shouldn’t conclude that each Christian who owned only one house sold his home to give the proceeds to charity. Only those who owned houses sold their extra homes (see 4:34; see also Acts 2:46; 5:42; 12:12; 20:20; 21:8 for proof that Christians continued to own houses). A home provides the necessity of shelter, a place to share meals, have church gatherings and house strangers (see Matt. 25:43).

4:36-5:11 The sins of Ananias and Sapphira were lying and hypocrisy. They publicly claimed that they were giving all the proceeds from the sale of their property. It is likely, however, that some degree of greed was what motivated them to lie. If they had kept back a portion of the proceeds for themselves in order to meet some personal pressing need, why would they have lied about the selling price? They would simply have told the apostles that they were giving only a portion of the selling price, as they themselves were suffering need just as were the beneficiaries of their kindness. Wanting, however, to appear that they were just as generous as all the other Christians, they conspired to cover their selfishness. Their hypocrisy cost them their lives, and God’s judgment upon them had its intended effect: “Great fear came upon the whole church, and upon all who heard of these things” (Acts 5:11). They received a new revelation regarding God’s holiness. You have “heard these things” as well. Has “great fear” come upon you? If not, why not?

How are we to interpret Peter’s questions to Ananias regarding his land and the proceeds of its sale, “”While it remained unsold, did it not remain your own? And after it was sold, was it not under your control?” (Acts 5:4)? Does this prove, as some say, that Ananias had no obligation as a follower of Christ to sell his land, and once sold, had no obligation to give any of the proceeds away?

In light of Christ’s commandments regarding self-denial, loving fellow believers, selling possessions and laying up treasures in heaven rather than on earth, it seems unlikely that Peter was telling Ananias that he could do whatever he wanted with his land or the money gained from its sale, regardless of Christ’s commandments. Perhaps Peter simply pointing out that Ananias was responsible for his actions. It was Ananias’ land and the proceeds of its sale were completely under his control, thus he stood condemned, and had no legitimate excuse for his actions. Or perhaps Peter was exposing Ananias’ deception, namely in how the value of his land changed between the time he owned it, sold it, and brought the proceeds to the apostles. Or perhaps he was pointing out Ananias’ contradiction in his selling his land supposedly in obedience to God but then attempting to deceive the entire church regarding his generosity. Since he had supposedly decided to sell it out of conviction to obey Christ’s commandments (as were all the rest who sold their land), he was also just as obligated not to lie to the Holy Spirit and the entire church regarding the price of the land.

Even if none of those interpretations of Peter’s words to Ananias are correct, does any other interpretation annul everything that Christ taught regarding stewardship? Are we to believe that Peter was attempting to convey to the church, “None of you has any obligation to sell land that you don’t really need, even though Christ commanded us not to lay up earthly treasures”?

6:1-6 From the beginning, the church was involved in meeting the pressing needs of the poor, in this case, feeding impoverished widows. Although the apostles knew they had a higher calling, they did not neglect to see that the daily serving of food was properly administrated.

8:3 Paul ravaged the church by “entering house after house.” Again we see that those Christians who owned one house didn’t sell their houses to give the proceeds to charity. They needed places to live. We also note that the early Christians didn’t live together in a commune. The “salt of the earth” was sprinkled throughout society for maximum seasoning. (For other references to houses owned by Christians, see Acts 2:46; 5:42; 12:12; 20:20; 21:8).

8:9-24 We are tempted to think that Peter overreacted to Simon’s request to purchase the authority to impart the Holy Spirit. Peter sternly rebuked him, warning Simon that he was in danger of perishing with his silver, and creating doubts in his mind that the Lord would forgive him. Did Peter really believe what he said to Simon? Apparently, yes.

9:36-39 Tabitha was an exemplary disciple, “abounding in deeds of kindness and charity, which she continually did” (Acts 10:36). She was no “Sunday Christian,” and her faith in Jesus was expressed by her practical deeds of love, which required not an occasional, but a regular expenditure of her time and money. One facet of her ministry was the making of clothing for poor widows. Jesus eventually said to her, “I was…naked, and you clothed Me” (Matt. 25:35-36).

10:1-4 Luke specifically sites Cornelius’ continual prayers and his generous giving to the poor as the evidence that he was devout and feared God. The angel who appeared to him declared that God had taken note of both. How is it that Cornelius, as a Gentile without the indwelling Holy Spirit, was more devout than many professing Christians, who pray only on Sundays and give nothing to the poor?

11:27-30 Note that it was not just a few of the disciples who contributed to the relief of the brethren living in Judea, but all of the disciples who had means to help. Every believer in Antioch gave in proportion to his resources. Keep in mind that the early church did not subscribe to the modern theory that one can be a believer in Christ without being a disciple of Christ. In fact, it was in Antioch where “the disciples were first called Christians” (Acts 11:26). Thus, when Luke tells us that every disciple made a contribution according to his means, he was not referring to a special group of very committed believers, distinct from the “regular” Christians. He was referring to all the Christians. Because the Christians in Antioch were true believers in Jesus, they loved other believers and demonstrated their love. Jesus would one day say to them, “I was hungry, and you gave Me something to eat” (Matt. 25:35).

12:12 Here is another example of a believer who didn’t sell her home to give away the proceeds. She put it to good use for God’s kingdom as a gathering place for the church to pray. It was also probably used for regular church gatherings as well.

17:30 Paul, like Peter, Jesus, and John the Baptist, preached the necessity of repentance for salvation (see also 20:21). Paul also believed that repentance involved much more than just a change of mind about who Jesus is. He later testified that he “kept declaring both to those of Damascus first, and also at Jerusalem and then throughout all the region of Judea, and even to the Gentiles, that they should repent and turn to God, performing deeds appropriate to repentance” (Acts 26:20, emphasis added). Would such appropriate deeds include anything to do with what one did with his money? Paul clearly believed that one had to repent of greed and covetousness to be saved, as he wrote to the Corinthians that covetous people would be excluded from God’s kingdom, just as would be idolaters, homosexuals, drunkards, and thieves (see also Eph. 5:3-6).

19:18-19 Some treasures should not be sold and the proceeds given to the poor. Don’t sell your music and movie collection if the contents might cause others to stumble. Dispose of them.

20:33-35 Speaking to the spiritual leaders of Ephesus, Paul reminded them of the example he had set before them, an example worthy of their imitation. He had shown that his motives were pure. He did not desire to possess what belonged to others. Rather, he desired to give to others what belonged to him, proven by the fact that his own labor helped provide for the needs of his traveling band. The Ephesian elders should likewise live to serve rather than to be served, remembering what Christ said, recorded only here in Scripture: “It is more blessed to give than to receive” (Acts 20:35).

24:17 Even as Paul journeyed to Jerusalem, knowing that “bonds and afflictions” (Acts 20:23) awaited him there, he remembered the poor, bringing alms with him.

24:26 Felix, a lover of money, hoped for a bribe from Paul in exchange for his release. This does not prove that Paul was wealthy, as some want us to believe, especially in the light of so many other scriptures that indicate otherwise (see, for example, 1 Cor. 4:11). Felix must have noted that Paul had many friends and supporters who ministered to him (see 24:23). This was a prisoner whose loyal friends would surely pool their money in order to gain his release.

28:30 Just because Paul lived in his own rented quarters in Rome does not prove he was wealthy, as some would like us to think. Because someone has the ability to rent a house, does that make him rich? Paul was obviously assisted by the brethren in Rome, to whom he had previously written a letter which revealed that he knew quite a few of them even before he arrived (see Rom. 16:1-15). This scripture simply reveals that God supplied Paul’s needs.

Romans

1:28-32 Paul listed the sin of greed, along with many other sins, as plain evidence that God has given people over to depraved minds because they did not see fit to acknowledge Him any longer. Clearly, Paul did not believe that greedy people are saved people.

12:13 Here Paul lists “contributing to the needs of the saints” and “practicing hospitality” as being an expected practice of all Christians. He must have known what Jesus said in Matthew 25:31-46.

12:19-21 Not only are we not to take revenge upon our enemies, but as followers of Christ, we are to do good to them, loving them as ourselves, which includes meeting their pressing, essential needs. Yet professing Christians today ignore the essential needs of their own spiritual family around the world!

15:25-32 The early Christians did not excuse themselves from helping fellow believers who lived far away from them, as do so many modern professing Christians. The saints in Macedonia and Achaia entrusted Paul with an offering for the poor believers in Jerusalem, a thousand-miles away.

So much of benevolence money that American churches distribute helps local people who are wealthy by the world’s standards, and who are facing financial difficulties only because they are unwilling to lower their standard of living. In some cases, it is because they will not forsake their sins. As a pastor in past years, I’ve often been tempted to ask those who request benevolence help, “Has it gotten so bad yet that you’ve had to cancel your cable-TV subscription, quit smoking, drive a used car and no longer have pets?”

1 Corinthians

4:8 If Paul’s words here are proof that the Corinthians had “applied God’s prosperity principles and reaped an abundant financial harvest” (as some think), we would have to wonder why he didn’t apply those supposed principles and deliver himself from his own present poverty. Just three verses later he wrote, “To this present hour we are both hungry and thirsty, and are poorly clothed, and are roughly treated, and are homeless” (1 Cor. 4:11). So what did Paul mean in this verse?

Clearly, pride had crept in among the Corinthian believers. Having received an abundance of God’s gracious gifts (see 1:7), they boasted about them, revealing their arrogance. They regarded themselves as “superior” (4:7). By their own estimation they were like kings who were “already filled,” as well as “rich…prudent…strong…[and] distinguished” (4:8-10). All of this revealed their pride.

Paul, however, did not consider them to be “superior” (4:7), and he reminded them that they didn’t have any reason to boast, because their blessings were “received,” not earned (see 4:6-7). Neither did he consider them to be kings, although it would be great if they were, he mused, so that in light of his current situation he could reign with them (see 4:8-13)!

Clearly, Paul’s purpose in this portion of his letter was to admonish the Corinthian Christians to repent of their arrogance and imitate him (see 4:16).

5:9-13 Paul could not have made it more clear that covetous people, just like idolaters, swindlers, drunkards, revilers, and those who are immoral, are not true Christians regardless of their professing to be. They are only “so-called” (5:11) Christians. Such hypocrites should be excommunicated from the church, and true Christians should not associate with them.

The question is, How can we know if a person is covetous or not? If covetousness is only an attitude of the heart, as so many think, then there would be no way of identifying those who are guilty of this sin and thus worthy of excommunication. Paul, however, obviously believed that covetousness was manifested by a person’s actions, and that it could be identified just as could drunkenness, idolatry and immorality. Keep in mind that the word translated covetous here is translated elsewhere as greedy. A person can be identified as greedy or covetous by his actions. What actions characterize greedy and covetous people?

Certainly, one who “has the world’s goods, and beholds his brother in need and closes his heart against him” (1 John 3:17) reveals his greed by his actions. John declared that God’s love does not dwell in such a person. Certainly, he does not love his brother as Christ commanded, nor does he possess the mark of the true disciple of Christ (see John 13:34-25). Did not the actions of the “goats” of which Jesus spoke in Matthew 25, who ignored the pressing, essential needs of His brethren, reveal their selfish, greedy hearts?

In the early church, those who had the resources, but who did not relieve the sufferings of impoverished brethren, were marked as covetous or greedy, and deserving of excommunication. They were obviously not true believers, showing no love for the brethren. If such discipline were practiced in the modern church, it would significantly thin the ranks.

6:9-11 Repeating the message of 5:9-13, Paul emphatically states that no unrighteous person shall inherit the kingdom of God. Clearly, Paul was speaking of those who lacked practical righteousness, not imputed, legal righteousness, because he immediately listed certain examples of unrighteous people, including the covetous. They, just like fornicators, idolaters, adulterers, effeminate, homosexuals, thieves, drunkards, revilers and swindlers, will not enter heaven.

Some have theorized that Paul’s phrase, “inherit the kingdom of God,” is not a reference to entering heaven, but to experiencing God’s best on the earth (or something similar). Supposedly then, some people who don’t inherit God’s kingdom on earth will inherit God’s kingdom in heaven.

This theory is easily disproved, however, by considering Paul’s use of the same phrase later in the same epistle. In 15:50, Paul writes, “Now I say this, brethren, that flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God; nor does the perishable inherit the imperishable” (emphasis added). Paul is clearly speaking of entering heaven in the future, as he goes on to reveal how true believers will receive new, glorified bodies “at the last trumpet” (see 15:51-53).

Paul probably borrowed the expression, inherit the kingdom, from Jesus, who used it in reference to entering heaven. He told of the future judgment of the sheep and goats, when He will say to those who loved His brethren, “Inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world” (Matt. 25:34, emphasis added).

9:7-14 The overriding message of these verses is summed up in verse 14: “So also the Lord directed those who proclaim the gospel to get their living from the gospel.” True ministers of the true gospel should be supported financially by those who have received the good news through them. Those who claim to believe the gospel but have no interest in supporting those who brought them the gospel or those who are spreading the gospel are fooling themselves. They don’t really believe the gospel.

Although Paul had the divine right to make his living from the Corinthians’ support while he preached the gospel to them, he waived his right so that he would “cause no hindrance to the gospel” (9:12). That is, because he received no money from the Corinthian Christians, no one could rightfully accuse him of preaching just for personal financial gain, using that judgment as an excuse to dismiss his message. Paul did, however, receive money from Christians in other cities while he was in Corinth according to his own testimony (see 2 Cor. 11:7-9).

Every minister should have the same concern as Paul, lest the gospel be hindered by his financial dealings. He should live humbly enough so that no one can justifiably accuse him of being a minister for the sake of gaining money. Even if he is well paid, he should live humbly and use the excess to be a blessing.

10:6-8 These verses are a further warning against greed, idolatry and sexual immorality, the practice of which Paul had previously declared will exclude one from inheriting God’s kingdom (see 1 Cor. 6:9-10).

Paul’s admonition against “craving evil things” is probably a reference to the story found in the eleventh chapter of the book of Numbers, when the Israelites, not satisfied with the manna God provided each day, wept for meat. Angered by their complaining, God promised to send meat the next day that would last for a month, “until it comes out of your nostrils and becomes loathsome to you; because you have rejected the Lord” (Num. 11:20). The next day, God sent quail that fell in piles all around the Israelites’ camp about three feet deep, so that the Israelites spent the next two days gathering them. Scripture tells us that the person who gathered the least gathered 110 bushels of quail (see Num. 11:32). We then read, “While the meat was still between their teeth, before it was chewed, the anger of the Lord was kindled against the people, and the Lord struck the people with a very severe plague. So the name of that place was called Kibroth-hattaavah [meaning, ‘the graves of greediness’], because there they buried the people who had been greedy” (Num. 11:33-34).

God killed people who were greedy, and their greed only related to food. Paul wrote, “These things happened as examples for us” (10:6).

13:3 Here we learn that it is possible to give all one’s possessions to feed the poor but not have love. Such a person must be motivated by some form of selfishness, perhaps to receive the praises of people. Thus we see the importance of checking our motives when we assist those with pressing needs. Giving in secret is a good way to avoid selfish giving.

16:1-4 Paul instructed each of the Christians of Galatia and Corinth to “put aside and save, as he may prosper” on behalf of a collection for the poor believers in Jerusalem. This indicates that he was not writing to wealthy people who could liquidate some of their assets in order to give, but to those who lived week by week from their earnings. Their “prospering” consisted of what they earned above what they needed each week when the collection was made. To “prosper” in this context certainly didn’t mean that one had an abundance of wealth, but simply that one had more than he needed, thus enabling him to share with others.

I mention this because a favorite proof text for some prosperity preachers is 3 John 2. There the apostle John wrote to Gaius, “I pray that in all respects you may prosper and be in good health, just as your soul prospers” (emphasis added). John was not praying that Gaius would become fabulously wealthy so that he could disobey Jesus and lay up earthly treasures for himself. Rather, he was praying that God would bless Gaius with more than he needed so that he could continue to experience the joy of giving and laying up heavenly treasures. What a blessing it is to have more than you need in order to be an agent of God’s blessing. As Jesus said, “It is more blessed to give than to receive” (Acts 20:35).

Note that this was an offering for poor Christians, a common practice in the early church (see Acts 11:27-30; 24:17; Rom. 15:25-28; 1 Cor. 16:1-4; 2 Cor. 8-9), a true expression of Christian love.

2 Corinthians

6:10 Here Paul describes himself and his associates as being “poor” and “having nothing,” hardly the picture of material wealth. Yet, although he was poor, Paul had the satisfaction of “making many rich.” He obviously did not mean that he made other people materially rich, but spiritually and eternally rich, a much more significant wealth. If Paul had somehow been able to make others materially rich, we would have to wonder why he didn’t make himself materially rich as well, if by no other means, at least by the offerings he received from all the people he made materially rich.

Just two chapters later in this epistle, Paul used a similar expression that is often used as a proof text for modern prosperity preachers. In 8:9 we read, “For you know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that though He was rich, yet for your sake He became poor, that you through His poverty might become rich.”

Some prosperity preachers claim that it is material poverty and material wealth that Paul had in mind throughout this entire verse. That is, Jesus was materially rich in heaven, but He became materially poor in His incarnation, living with little all His earthly life. The result of His material poverty is that we can supposedly become materially rich. Bigger houses, more expensive clothing, and exotic vacations are now ours to be claimed by faith because Jesus became poor that we might become rich.

It is certainly true that Paul was speaking of material wealth when he wrote that Jesus was rich but became poor. We could think of Jesus as being very wealthy in heaven, walking on streets of gold, but becoming very poor by comparison during His incarnation.

There is certainly good reason to doubt, however, that earthly, material wealth was the benefit Paul had in mind when he wrote of our becoming rich because of Christ’s poverty. Such an interpretation stands in contradiction to its immediate biblical context (not to mention the entire context of the New Testament). Paul was writing to the Corinthians in chapters 8 and 9 to admonish them to participate in an offering for poor Christians. If Jesus became poor so that Christians might become materially rich on earth, why were there any poor Christians who needed an offering? Let them claim their gospel right as “king’s kids”! And why did Paul describe himself as being poor in 6:10? Why didn’t he also claim his rightful, earthly, material wealth that Jesus made possible?

Also keep in mind that just because Paul was writing about material wealth or poverty in one part of a sentence, that doesn’t prove that he was talking about material wealth in another part of the same sentence. For example, Jesus Himself said to the poor believers in Smyrna, “I know your tribulation and your poverty (but you are rich)” (Rev. 2:9, emphasis added). Who would debate that Jesus was saying that the Christians in Smyrna were material poor and also materially rich? No, Jesus was saying that they were materially poor but spiritually rich, and He said it all in one sentence.

When Paul wrote that Jesus became poor that we, through His poverty, might become rich, his meaning was similar to what he wrote just 33 verses earlier, when he said that he himself was poor, yet made others rich. Jesus, because of His incarnation and death on the cross (during which He lost even His clothing, the ultimate poverty), has provided spiritual and eternal riches for us beyond our dreams. So too, Paul, impoverished as he was at times, through His ministry was able to make many people spiritually wealthy through the gospel.

8:1—9:15 (I have fully commented on 8:9 in the previous comments regarding 6:10.) These two chapters beautifully reveal a full and balanced picture of Christian stewardship. An honest reading here exposes many modern myths.

The occasion was the receiving of an offering by Paul from the churches on behalf of poor believers. He began by informing the Corinthians of what had recently happened among the churches of Macedonia. Even though they were suffering “an ordeal of affliction” as well as “deep poverty” (8:2), they had given liberally. In fact, by God’s grace, and without being pressured, they had given even “beyond their ability” (8:3), to the degree of “begging…with much entreaty for the favor of participation in the support of the saints” (8:4). The Macedonian Christians were the ultimate cheerful givers, and Paul expected that the Corinthian Christians would follow their example.

Paul stressed that one’s giving is limited by his resources (see 8:12) but that one’s responsibility is also determined by his resources (see 8:13), twice using a word that is almost anathema in capitalistic vocabulary, the word equality (see 8:13-15). If one Christian has abundance, he should use it to supply another Christian’s need (see 8:14). And if that formerly-poor Christian prospers while the formerly-prosperous one becomes needy, their roles should then be reversed (see 8:14). It amounts to nothing more than “loving our neighbors as ourselves” and “doing unto others as we would have them do unto us” (see Mark 12:31; Luke 6:31). This is perhaps the most foundational principle of Christian stewardship, yet one that professing Christians in wealthy countries have ignored. God loves all His children equally; thus, those with more should share with those who have less, and it’s just that simple.

Paul also understood the need for accountability in the administration of such benevolence projects, and he was careful to insure that the offering he received would be used for the purpose for which it was collected. A number of men who had proven their trustworthiness would be involved in the project (see 8:16-23). Financial accountability is of utmost importance in corporate offerings to the poor, otherwise people are given an excuse to cling to their treasures, claiming that their potential gifts might be mishandled.

The Corinthians had previously promised a “bountiful gift” (9:5), which would of course be made possible only by bountiful giving. Thus Paul cautioned against covetousness (or better translated greed)[3] that might affect the Corinthian’s giving (see 9:5). Here again, we clearly see that covetousness/greed is not just an attitude; it is an attitude revealed by actions. If the Corinthians yielded to greed, they would give less. Their selfish attitude would affect their actions.

Paul continued with a warning to those who might yield to greed and a promise to those who would be generous: “Now this I say, he who sows sparingly shall also reap sparingly; and he who sows bountifully shall also reap bountifully” (9:6).

Paul was not revealing “divine secrets for abundant prosperity,” encouraging his readers to “sow a big financial seed and reap abundant riches” so that they could then own many possessions and enjoy a lavish lifestyle, as some prosperity preachers might want us to believe. If he was, then he was promoting the very thing he was warning against in 9:5, that is, greed. If people give just so they can grow rich and have many possessions, that is nothing more than giving from a motive of selfishness. Giving to get is hypocritical—it is selfishness under the guise of love.

Thus, the reason one should want to “sow bountifully” and thus “reap bountifully” is so one can “sow even more bountifully,” blessing more people. This truth Paul plainly repeats three times in the next few verses:

And God is able to make all grace abound to you, that always having all sufficiency in everything, you may have an abundance for every good deed; as it is written, “He scattered abroad, he gave to the poor, His righteousness abides forever.” Now He who supplies seed to the sower and bread for food, will supply and multiply your seed for sowing and increase the harvest of your righteousness; you will be enriched in everything for all liberality, which through us is producing thanksgiving to God (9:8-11; emphasis added).

Once a sower reaps, he then must decide what to do with his harvest. If he still has more than he needs, and there are still others with pressing needs, then there is no doubt what he should do. His former self-denial certainly wouldn’t give him the right to be greedy now. The whole reason to reap is not so one may lay up earthly treasures in disobedience to Christ, but so that one may sow some more.

What constitutes sowing that is “sparing” or “bountiful”? That, of course, is different for each person. The widow who put her two copper coins into the treasury gave more than all the rich people who put in large gifts, according to Jesus (see Mark 12:41-44). She “sowed bountifully” while they “sowed sparingly,” even though their gifts were much larger. What impresses God is self-denial. Bountiful and sparing sowing are determined by what one keeps.

Another reason the Corinthians should give liberally was because it was an opportunity for them to show their faith by their works. Their giving was an indication of their “obedience to [their] confession of the gospel of Christ” (9:13). Those who believe the gospel of Christ act like it, obeying Christ and loving the brethren.

Finally, Paul also instructed each of the Corinthians to “do just as he has purposed in his heart; not grudgingly or under compulsion; for God loves a cheerful giver” (9:7). This verse has often been ripped from its context and twisted to relieve the consciences of selfish people. They are told, “God wants only what you can give cheerfully, so let that be your gauge. Only give what you can give without grudging.” Consequently, greedy people give little or nothing, demonstrating no self-denial or love, and think God approves, since He doesn’t want what they can’t give cheerfully.

Paul, however, was not trying to make greedy people think that God is comfortable with their greed, as the context so clearly reveals (see 9:5). He was trying to help each person consider what is in his heart. If one is giving under compulsion or grudgingly, he is not giving because he loves needy brethren. By the same token, the reason God “loves a cheerful giver” is because a cheerful giver is motivated by love for God and neighbor. He finds joy in sacrificing on behalf of those with pressing needs because he loves them. The one who gives grudgingly or under compulsion, however, reveals a greedy heart, and thus gives hypocritically, because he is doing what his heart would prefer not to do. Thus, it would be better for him not to give at all, but let him not think that God approves of him in either case. God wants him to repent of his selfishness, be transformed by His grace, and become a cheerful giver who denies himself with joy. God, and only God, can turn greedy people into cheerful givers. They then become imitators of Him, who gave sacrificially from a heart of grace and love (see 9:15).

10:14-16 Paul expressed his hope to preach the gospel in the future, with the help of the Corinthian Christians, beyond the regions of Corinth. This is a perfect example of church/missionary partnership, working together to fulfill the Great Commission.

11:7-9 While Paul was preaching the gospel in Corinth, he received no money from them, as we previously learned reading 1 Cor. 8:6-15. This fact was apparently used against him by certain false apostles (see 11:1-4, 12-15, 20-33) to somehow undermine the legitimacy of his ministry (see also 12:11-18).

11:27 Reluctantly boasting of his devotion to Christ in order to authenticate his apostleship and win back the Corinthians’ full affections, Paul mentioned some of the hardships he had endured. They included temporary hunger and thirst as well as exposure to the elements, all for the sake of the gospel. If Paul were alive today, he would be disdained in many “Christian” circles as lacking faith for prosperity.

12:11-18 Again, the issue of Paul’s not receiving money from the Corinthians surfaced. From his repeated defense, it once more seems that this fact was somehow being used against him by certain false apostles. We don’t know the particulars, however.

Paul promised that on his next visit he would again not be a burden to the Corinthian believers (see 12:14). The reason, he said, is because he wasn’t seeking to gain their money, but was seeking them (see 12:14). He also added, “Children are not responsible to save up for their parents, but parents for their children” (12:14).

This principle and practice is certainly endorsed by Paul through his using it to explain and justify his own actions. Thus, Christian parents may rest assured that they have a legitimate reason to save some money on their children’s behalf if possible, to help them get a start in life. This can be considered part of parents’ God-given responsibility to provide for their own children. On the other hand, parents sometimes foster their children’s irresponsibility by providing too much for them. A balance is needed.

Galatians

2:10 Considering the context of the first two chapters of Galatians (Paul’s defense of his gospel of grace), this verse almost seems out of place. It is not, however, because Peter, James, John and Paul all believed that ministering to the poor was an essential part of what it meant to follow Christ.

3:10-14 These verses are often used as proof texts for prosperity preachers. Before we consider their reasoning, however, let us not forget everything we’ve learned from pertinent New Testament passages already, as well as what we just read in Galatians 2:10 about the importance of ministering to the poor. Also, let us keep in mind that the same man who wrote these verses also wrote that no greedy/covetous person will inherit the kingdom of God (see Eph. 5:3-6).

According to what is written in the Mosaic Law, anyone who didn’t keep the entire Law was “under a curse” (3:10). Paul directly quoted the last verse in Deuteronomy 27 to prove this fact (see 3:10).

In the very next verses in Deuteronomy, in fact in all of chapter 28, Moses told the Israelites the specific blessings that would be enjoyed by those who kept the Law (see Deut. 28:1-14), as well as the specific curses that would be suffered by lawbreakers (see Deut. 28:15-68). The specific curses certainly included material poverty (see Deut. 28:17-18, 29-31, 33, 38-40, 42-44, 47-48, 51-63), as well as sickness, disease, war, famine, and deportation to a foreign land.

Paul wrote, “Christ redeemed us from the curse of the Law, having become a curse for us” (Gal. 3:13). Prosperity preachers argue that, since we’ve been redeemed from the Law’s curse, we’ve been redeemed from the curse of poverty that is part of the Law’s curse.

I have no objection to such teaching, as long as we are talking about being redeemed from what the Bible refers to as poverty as opposed to what North Americans refer to as poverty. If we will do that, then Jesus taught the very same thing, promising His followers that God will supply the needs of His children, supplying their food and covering (see Matt. 6:25-34). Let us not overlook, however, the fact that Jesus only promised to supply the needs of those who sought first His kingdom, which certainly includes obeying everything He commanded regarding stewardship. Thus, those who attempt to claim God’s promise to supply their needs while neglecting what He said about stewardship are fooling themselves.

Now back to our text. If Paul was saying that we are redeemed from the curses promised to law-breakers in Deuteronomy 28, then we must first ask if we are suffering those curses. Specifically, are any of us suffering the kind of poverty described in Deuteronomy 28:17-18, 29-31, 33, 38-40, 42-44, 47-48, 51-63? Very few, if any of us, are suffering anything close to what is described there. Most people in North America, even those who are unsaved, would identify more with the blessings of prosperity described in Deuteronomy 28:4-5, 8, 11-13. Why then do we imagine that we need to claim our redemption from the Law’s curse of poverty if we aren’t experiencing that curse, but are already enjoying the blessings?

Prosperity preachers sometimes attempt to show a correlation between the Israelites when they were delivered from Egypt and New Testament Christians, pointing out how God prospered the Israelites by their plundering of the Egyptians. Thus, we too, should supposedly expect abundant wealth now that we’ve been delivered from the kingdom of darkness.

Are we, however, really economically comparable to slaves prior to our salvation? North American Christians, already extremely wealthy by the world’s standards, are more comparable to the Egyptians, who became rich at the expense of the slavery of others. We, above all people on earth, should be content as well as generous, holding so much of the world’s wealth in our hands. For us to “believe God” for more wealth so we can live in greater self-indulgence must be reprehensible in God’s eyes.

Prosperity preachers also want to convince us that “the blessing of Abraham,” of which Paul wrote in 3:14, is another promise that God will make us rich. Because God made Abraham rich, if we receive “the blessing of Abraham” that is promised to the Gentiles, we will also become rich. Abraham’s Blessings are Mine is a favorite song and sermon topic.

I must wonder, however, why these preachers don’t claim that they will live in a tent, like Abraham did all of his life (see Gen. 12:8; 13:3, 18; 18:1-2, 6, 9-10). Or why they don’t claim that they will have a child in their old age, also like Abraham, since Abraham’s blessings are theirs!

In reality, the “blessing of Abraham” of which Paul wrote, is a reference to God’s promise to Abraham that in his seed “all the nations of the earth [would] be blessed” (Gen. 22:18), as the context reveals (see 3:8-9, 16). That singular seed, as Paul explained in 3:16, is Christ, and everyone who is in Him is truly blessed in many ways. Thus, in 3:14, Paul was only describing how Christ, who became the curse that redeemed us from the Law’s curse, fulfilled God’s promise to Abraham that all the nations would be blessed in his seed.

Two things I have often observed about those who follow the teaching of the prosperity preachers.

One is that they usually aren’t very prosperous at all, but maintain some appearance of prosperity through borrowing money. Yet, not having to borrow is one of the facets of the prosperity that God promised Israel (see Deut. 28:12). The primary reason such people borrow is because of their lack of contentment with what they possess, and because of the desire to appear prosperous, which is nothing more than pride. I found that when I became content with what God gave me, I was soon out of debt, and I was enabled to give more. If I own an eight-year-old car debt-free worth $3,000, and someone else drives a one-year-old car worth $20,000 on which they owe $23,000, who is more prosperous?

Second, a small percentage of the disciples of prosperity preachers are indeed wealthy by American standards, and they live luxuriously. This is often because greedy people are attracted to teaching that they think will help them become even wealthier. These people will agree to tithe (which requires little if any self-denial on their part), but they can only be motivated to do so by the promise of a big return on their giving. Every financial achievement they consider a direct blessing from God (in spite of the fact that nonbelievers receive the same “blessings’ when they put forth the same effort), which in turn seals their deception to a greater degree. These kinds of people are in for a rude awakening when they stand before Christ’s judgment seat.

The primary people who really get rich as a result of modern prosperity preaching are the prosperity preachers themselves, who are always encouraging people to sow financial seeds into their ministries, promising them riches in return.

5:14 God clearly stated the standard by which we are to love our neighbors: as ourselves. Some have twisted this commandment, teaching that it is, first of all, a commandment to love ourselves, because we must first love ourselves if we are to love our neighbor as ourselves. Therefore, we must work on loving ourselves more. This interpretation effectively nullifies the very purpose for the commandment.

Paul once said that husbands should “love their own wives as their own bodies” (Eph. 5:28). He certainly wasn’t trying to convince husbands to work on first loving their own bodies so that they could then really love their wives. Rather, he was stating what is obvious, that all husbands naturally love their own bodies, which is why they take care of them. Likewise, they should love their wives just as they naturally love their own bodies. This becomes obvious in the very next verse, where Paul says, “For no one ever hated his own flesh, but nourishes and cherishes it” (Eph. 5:29).

So, too, God knows that people naturally love themselves. Self-interest is endemic. All people are very much wrapped up in their own comfort, fulfillment, happiness and so on. No one needs to work on loving himself more, regardless of what today’s pop psychologists want us to believe. The whole problem with the world is that people only love themselves, and they don’t love their neighbors. This is called sin.

Thus, God commands us to love others as we love ourselves, being interested in their fulfillment and happiness as we naturally are in our own. If we love our neighbor as ourselves, will that affect what we do with our money and possessions?

5:22-23 If one is manifesting the fruit of the Spirit, particularly love, kindness, goodness and self-control, will it have any affect on what he does with his money and possessions?

6:2 The phrase, the law of Christ, is found only twice in the New Testament, here and in 1 Corinthians 9:21. In both cases, it is clear that the law of Christ is something that Christians are supposed to obey. It seems reasonable to conclude that the law of Christ consists of everything Jesus commanded, just as the Law of Moses consists of everything Moses commanded. Jesus told His apostles to make disciples, teaching them to obey everything He had commanded them (see Matt. 28:19-20).

The Law of Moses can be summarized by the commandment to love one’s neighbor as one’s self, or to treat others as you want to be treated (see Matt. 7:12; Rom. 13:10; Gal. 5:14). Perhaps the law of Christ can also be summarized by His commandment to love each other as He has loved us (see John 13:34). Those who bear the burdens of fellow believers are certainly fulfilling this law, imitating Christ’s love for all of us.

Since His love for His own is the standard by which we are to love each other, may I point out that there is no evidence that Jesus enjoyed a higher standard of living than His apostles. He shared with them what was His, and their needs were met from a common treasury (see John 12:6; 13:29). He loved them as Himself, of course, perfectly obedient to the second greatest commandment. If we obey the law of Christ, will we not share our material substance with our impoverished brothers and sisters in Christ, bearing their financial burdens?

6:6-10 What did Paul mean when he wrote, “For the one who sows to his own flesh shall from the flesh reap corruption, but the one who sows to the Spirit shall from the Spirit reap eternal life”? (6:8). What is the “seed” that we sow into these soils of flesh and Spirit? What is the “corruption” that is reaped from sowing to the flesh? And how is it that “eternal life” is reaped by sowing to the Spirit?

These questions can be answered by considering the immediate context. Paul wrote in the previous chapter of the battle between the flesh and Spirit that every Christian faces: “But I say, walk by the Spirit, and you will not carry out the desire of the flesh. For the flesh sets its desire against the Spirit, and the Spirit against the flesh; for these are in opposition to one another, so that you may not do the things that you please” (Gal. 5:16-17).

Paul continued by describing the “deeds of the flesh,” which included “immorality…idolatry…strife…drunkenness” and so on, warning that “those who practice such things shall not inherit the kingdom of God” (Gal. 5:21). Obviously, if Christians face a battle between the flesh and Spirit, then it is possible for them to yield to the flesh, practicing the very sins against which Paul warned. The result could ultimately be that they would not inherit the kingdom of God. That is precisely why Paul was warning the Galatian Christians (see Gal. 5:21).

Of course, those who believe, contrary to Scripture,[4] that a truly saved person could never forfeit his salvation have difficulty accepting this interpretation. And since they can’t argue against the fact that all Christians face the battle of the Spirit and flesh, nor can they debate that those who practice the deeds of the flesh will not inherit God’s kingdom, they are left to redefine what it means to inherit God’s kingdom. They usually claim that it doesn’t mean that one won’t get into heaven, but that one will forfeit inheriting all of God’s blessings on the earth.

I have, however, already proved that the phrase, “inherit the kingdom of God,” as Paul uses it, is clearly a reference to entering into heaven. In 1 Corinthians 15:50, Paul wrote, “Flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God; nor does the perishable inherit the imperishable” (emphasis added). Paul then continued by revealing how God will change our bodies from being mortal to immortal when we inherit the kingdom of God.[5] Obviously, he was referring to the future time when we enter heaven.

All this being so, it is quite possible for authentic Christians to forfeit their salvation by returning to the practice of sin.[6] That is what is meant by the phrase, “sowing to the flesh.” Those who practice the deeds of the flesh reap the harvest of “corruption,” or as the NIV translates it, “destruction.” Note that in the passage under consideration, Paul contrasts the reaping of corruption/destruction with the reaping of eternal life, leading us to believe that corruption/destruction is a reference to eternal death and damnation.

On the other hand, “sowing to the Spirit” is a reference to following and being obedient to the indwelling Holy Spirit. One who does so will be characterized by the “fruit of the Spirit,” which Paul listed in 5:22: “love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness [and] self-control.”

This interpretation of what it means to “sow to the Spirit” is buttressed by the two verses that follow the verse containing the phrase. Paul wrote, “And let us not lose heart in doing good, for in due time we shall reap if we do not grow weary. So then, while we have opportunity, let us do good to all men, and especially to those who are of the household of the faith” (Gal. 6:9-10). If we continue “doing good…especially to those who are of the household of the faith,” not losing heart, “we shall reap” eternal life.[7] Thus we see that “sowing to the Spirit” and “doing good” are used synonymously.

Clearly, “doing good” and “sowing to the Spirit” include the sharing of our material resources with other Christians. This, in fact, is the initial reason Paul wrote what he did in this passage, as he began it by saying to his readers, “And let the one who is taught the word share all good things with him who teaches” (6:6). True believers in Jesus want to learn and grow spiritually. Thus they will avail themselves to the ministry of God-called teachers, to whom they have a responsibility to support materially. Supporting such teachers is one aspect, among many, of “sowing to the Spirit.”

Ephesians

4:17-19 Here again, Paul declares that greediness, like sensuality and impurity, is a sin that characterizes one as being unsaved.

4:28 Paul expects the former thief to do just the opposite of what he used to do. Not only should he cease taking from others what does not belong to him, he should also work to gain more than he needs so that he can give of his surplus to others. This should be the motivation for any Christian who labors, not just former thieves.

5:3-6 The Greek word translated greed in verse 3 (pleonexia) comes from the root word that is translated covetous in verse 5 (pleonektes). It is obvious that Paul saw little difference between these two Greek words, as we compare his triplet in verse 3, immorality, impurity and greed, with his parallel triplet in verse 5: immorality, impurity and covetousness.

Greed should be not “even be named” (5:3) among Christians, as Paul says, because it so improper among saints, a word that means “holy ones.”

Paul also equates greed/covetousness with idolatry, because it amounts to serving another god (see 5:5). He is only echoing Jesus’ teaching about the impossibility of serving two masters. For this very reason, no covetous person has “an inheritance in the kingdom of Christ and God” (5:5). Greedy/covetous people will go to hell. Paul solemnly warns against being deceived in this matter, because God hates greed. His wrath will one day fall in fury, in part, because of that very sin. How foolish it is to think that one can be a Christian and greedy.

6:5-9 Clearly, there were Christians in Paul’s day who had slaves (see also Col. 4:1; 1 Tim. 6:2). Is not the holding of slaves an indication of opulent wealth and selfishness? Not necessarily.

According to Wayne A. Grudem, a professor at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School, first-century slaves “were generally well treated and were not only unskilled laborers but often managers, overseers, and trained members of various professions (doctors, nurses, teachers, musicians, skilled artisans). There was extensive Roman legislation regulating the treatment of slaves. They were normally paid for their services and could expect eventually to purchase their freedom.” Thus, Grudem informs us that, “the word ‘employee’, though not conveying the idea of absence of freedom, does reflect the economic status and skill level of these ancient ‘slaves’ better than either of the words ‘servant’ or ‘slave’ today.”[8]

For this reason, the Christian masters to whom Paul writes, who lived within the framework of the Roman economic system, were very much like modern employers, and their slaves were very much like modern employees who sign legal contracts to work for a specified time period. And certainly it is not wrong to own one’s company or farm and employ others, as long as one treats his employees as he would want to be treated as an employee, and as long as one uses his personal profits from his business according to God’s will.

Philippians

2:3-7 If we “do nothing from selfishness” and “regard one another as more important than” ourselves, looking out “for the interests of others,” that will be the end of selfish spending and the beginning of real Christ-like generosity. For many Christians, obedience to these commands would mean dramatically scaling down their standard of living so that they could be enabled to share more. If they did, they would certainly be imitating Jesus, who dramatically “scaled down” in His incarnation in order to save us.

2:25-30 As we will discover in the fourth chapter, the Philippians had recently sent an offering to Paul, delivered by a man named Epaphroditus who apparently became deathly ill on his journey.

3:17-20 Here Paul contrasts Christians with non-Christians, writing that the latter are those who “set their minds on earthly things” (3:19). The former, whose citizenship is in heaven, have their minds focused on the return of their heavenly Savior. Thus, they are always thinking about how they can be more prepared to see Him, and every earthly thing, including every possession, is considered in the light of eternity.

4:10-19 As Paul closes his letter, he expresses his gratitude for the offering he has received from the Philippians via their messenger, Epaphroditus. As those who believed the gospel, the Philippian Christians naturally wanted to help one whom God was using to take the gospel to others. What a privilege it is to “participate in the gospel” (see 1:5) by supporting God’s messengers!

Paul made it clear that, although he “rejoiced in the Lord greatly” when he received their gift, it wasn’t because he was in “want” (4:11) that is, suffering destitution, although he admitted to being in an “affliction” (4:14). His joy had more to do with the fact that the Philippians were laying up heavenly treasures, or as Paul beautifully said it, “Not that I seek the gift itself, but I seek for the profit which increases to your account” (4:17).

Even prior to the arrival of Epaphroditus, Paul was content in his circumstance by the power of Christ (see 4:11, 13). He had learned to “get along with humble means” as well as “live in prosperity” (4:12).

Of course, when Paul referred to being periodically prosperous, he did not mean that there were times when he lived in lavish luxury and self-indulgence. That would make him a hypocrite, since he instructed the Philippians to “do nothing from selfishness” (2:3) and so on. Paul more clearly defined the periodic prosperity he enjoyed in verse 12. When he was prosperous, he was “filled” rather than “hungry.” When he was prosperous, he had an “abundance,” that is, more than he needed, contrasted with when he found himself “suffering need.” As a result of the Philippians’ offering, he was now again enjoying an “abundance” and was “amply supplied” (4:18). Obviously, he did not mean that he could now live in luxury like a modern prosperity preacher, as he was in jail when he wrote those words. Yet Paul considered himself prosperous even while incarcerated.

The gift sent by the Philippians was sacrificially given (see 4:18), and “well-pleasing to God” (4:18). Paul was confident that because the Philippians had “sought first God’s kingdom” (see Matt. 6:33), God would keep His promise to supply all their needs “according to His riches in glory” (Phil. 4:19). The only Christians who can rightfully claim the promise of 4:19 are those who meet the conditions of the promise thereby imitating the Philippians.

Colossians

3:1-7 Christians are obviously subject to the temptations of immorality, impurity and greed, otherwise Paul would not have admonished the Colossian Christians to “consider the members of [their] earthly body as dead” (3:5) to those sins. We may have formerly “walked” (3:7), or lived, in them, but now we must avoid them at all costs. Those who want to please God will not want to be guilty of these sins because “the wrath of God will come” (3:6). As those who are spiritually alive, we should now set our minds “on the things above, not on the things that are on earth” (3:2).

Notice that Paul, once again, equated greed with idolatry, the worship of a false god (see 3:5). His teaching about money was, of course, perfectly consistent with Christ’s.

1 Thessalonians

2:3-9 It is quite possible to do the right thing for the wrong reasons. Our motives may be hidden from people, but they are known to God, “who examines our hearts” (2:4). No one should preach the gospel in order to enrich himself. We have to wonder, however, how many modern “ministers” preach the gospel “with a pretext for greed” (2:5) when the majority of their sermons are designed to motivate people to give to their “ministries” and they live in lavish luxury. In many congregations, the pastor is the wealthiest member. How do these pastors compare to Paul, who labored “night and day, so as not to be a burden” (2:9) to the Thessalonians?

On the other hand, pity the poor pastor whose congregation is too stingy to support him! That is a form of greed on the part of the congregation. Paul wrote, “the Lord directed those who proclaim the gospel to get their living from the gospel” (1 Cor. 9:14). He also wrote, “Let the elders who rule well be considered worthy of double honor, especially those who work hard at preaching and teaching” (1 Tim. 5:17).

4:9-12 The “love of the brethren” does not consist solely of warm sentiments within the heart, but includes (among other things) working hard so as not to be a burden upon others. Laziness is a sin because it violates the second greatest commandment. One who loves his neighbor as himself would not expect to be supported by his neighbor’s labor when he is capable of supporting himself.

This is not to say that we have no obligation to assist those with pressing needs. If, however, the needy one is capable of work but lazy, no one is obligated to assist him (see 2 Thes. 3:10). He should be left in his laziness until Proverbs 16:26 becomes a reality to him: “A worker’s appetite works for him, for his hunger urges him on.” When charity removes the incentive to work from those who are capable of work, such charity is void of authentic love, hurting those it is supposed to help.

2 Thessalonians

3:6-12 Paul addressed more pointedly a problem that he alluded to in his first letter to the Thessalonians (see 2 Thes. 4:11-12). Some of the Thessalonian Christians were “leading an undisciplined life, doing no work at all, but acting like busybodies” (3:11). Such behavior is a violation of the second greatest commandment, because we won’t want to be a burden on someone if we love that person. Lazy people should not expect or receive charitable assistance. If those who are capable of work are unwilling to work, they should be allowed to go hungry.

I read some years ago about a pastor who was periodically visited by unemployed men requesting financial help. He would ask them, “Have you searched for a job?” They would always reply in the affirmative but explain that no work was available. “Would you be willing to work if I could find a job for you?” would be the pastor’s second question. Again, the answer would always be in the affirmative. Finally, the pastor would say, “Out behind the church is a cord of wood that needs splitting, and there’s an ax in a shed beside it. Go out and split as much wood as you can, and then come see me, and I’ll pay you fairly.” In almost every case, the men would thank the pastor for the job, walk out the door, and never return.

1 Timothy

2:9 To spend excessive time and money on one’s outward appearance is nothing more than vanity, a form of selfishness. Better to spend your money on providing clothing for the naked than in elaborately decorating your body to gain the stares of others. Immodest dress is also displeasing to God, as it can cause the opposite sex to stumble into impure thoughts and actions. God is looking for “the beauty of holiness” (Psalm 96:9, KJV).

3:3 A candidate for overseer, which is the same office as biblical pastor (shepherd) and biblical elder (compare Acts 20:17, 28; 1 Pet. 5:1-2; Tit. 1:5-7), must be “free from the love of money.” How does one know if he is free from the love of money? The author of the book of Hebrews (perhaps Paul, who authored 1 Timothy as well), wrote, “Let your character be free from the love of money, being content with what you have” (Heb. 13:5). Thus, biblical pastors display contentment with what they have, and those who don’t should be avoided.

Later in this same epistle, Paul definitely links discontentment with the love of money. There he wrote, “If we have food and covering, with these we shall be content. But those who want to get rich fall into temptation and a snare and many foolish and harmful desires which plunge men into ruin and destruction. For the love of money is a root of all sorts of evil, and some by longing for it have wandered away from the faith, and pierced themselves with many a pang” (1 Tim. 6:8-10, emphasis added).

3:8 A fondness for illegitimate gain disqualifies candidates for the office of deacon, as well as the office of elder (see Tit. 1:5-7).

5:3-16 The primary theme of this passage is the church’s responsibility to support worthy widows who would otherwise be destitute. Because a major part of church-life was taking care of the poor, naturally it was something of which people might take advantage. Good stewardship made it necessary to lay down strict ground rules. The church should provide only for those who are “widows indeed” (5:3, 5, 16). What characterizes a “widow indeed”?

Paul first stated that the church should not support those widows who have children or grandchildren who can support them. In fact, in terms that couldn’t be stronger, Paul declares that the church shouldn’t support anyone who has family members who can provide assistance. Any professing Christian who “does not provide for his own [his household and extended family], and especially for those of his own household…has denied the faith, and is worse than an unbeliever” (5:8).

Second, the church should only provide for widows who were and are wholly devoted to Christ, as evidenced by their prayer lives, their good reputations, and their deeds of mercy and kindness (see 5:5, 10). A widow who “gives herself to wanton pleasure is dead even while she lives” (5:6). She has no warrant to claim to be Christ’s follower; nor is the church obligated to subsidize her carnal life.

Third, the church should only support older widows, at least sixty years of age, who are unlikely to be remarried. Younger widows should seek to be remarried and supported by their husbands (see 5:9-14).

It seems as if qualifying widows practically became employees of the church, as they apparently took a pledge to Christ, a pledge of singleness and devotion (see 5:11-12). No doubt their ministry provided rich blessings to the body. What a contrast are they with so many modern widows who profess to be Christians but who live the final years of their lives in a continual testimony of their devotion to self.

Finally, if a female believer, out of devotion to Christ, provided food and covering for widows, that is a worthy ministry that relieves the church of some responsibility (see 5:16).

5:17-18 Biblical elders, who are the equivalent of biblical pastors and overseers (see Acts 20:17, 28; 1 Pet. 5:1-2; Tit. 1:5-7), are paid church employees. This is made clear, first by the language Paul uses in 5:17, which is similar to his language in 5:3, regarding “honoring” widows, and second by his expressions in 5:18.

Surely “double honor” at least indicates that elders should not be paid less than what they need, and probably indicates they should be paid more, giving them the blessed opportunity to have something to share.

6:3-10 To “suppose that godliness is a means of gain” (6:5) is obviously a wrong supposition, and one that is held by “men of depraved mind and deprived of the truth” (6:5). Because their lives consist of their possessions, because money is their god, because they find their joy in material things, because they have no higher goal than accumulating more, they foolishly think that the only reason someone might live in a godly fashion is to gain earthly wealth.

Lest Timothy think that he was saying that nothing was to be gained by godliness, Paul quickly states that godliness, when accompanied by contentment, is indeed a means of great gain (see 6:6). He was speaking, of course, of eternal heavenly gain, not temporal earthly gain, as he makes so clear in the very next verse. There he says that we can take nothing more with us at death than we brought with us at birth. Thus the godly person sees the utter foolishness of devoting his life to gaining what he must one day forfeit. Likewise, he is wisely content with what he has for the present, even if it is only food and covering (see 6:8). He knows that his contentment, an indication of his freedom from greed, will ultimately be a means of “great gain” (6:6), for he will one day live forever in heaven, since God, not mammon, is his Master. Beyond that, any sacrificial giving, made possible by his contentment with little, will reap for him abundant heavenly rewards.

Those who are not content with having only their needs met, that is, those who “want to get rich” (6:9), face inevitable temptations that plunge them, according to Paul, into “ruin and destruction” (6:9). Paul certainly had more than financial ruin and destruction in mind here. He was referring to temporal and eternal consequences. He, as well as other New Testament authors, frequently used the word destruction (Greek, apoleia) to signify eternal damnation (see Matt. 7:13; Rom. 9:22; Phil. 1:28; 3:19; 2 Thes. 2:3; Heb. 10:39; 2 Pet. 2:1, 3; 3:7, 16; Rev. 17:8, 11). The King James Version translates the last of part of this verse, “destruction and perdition” (emphasis added).

In the very next verse, 6:10, Paul makes it even more obvious that he was thinking not just of the temporal consequences of desiring to be rich, as he states that some believers began to love money and consequently “wandered away from the faith, and pierced themselves with many a pang.” To “wander away from the faith” is to no longer meet the qualification for salvation, that is, faith; thus one has forfeited his salvation. At death, unless he repents beforehand, he will be eternally condemned.

If desiring to be rich can result in eternal damnation, it would be helpful to know what it means to be “rich.” When we consider Paul’s contrast in 6:8-9, it seems he believed that anyone who had more than what he needed is rich: “And if we have food and covering, with these we shall be content. But those who want to get rich fall into temptation and a snare and many foolish and harmful desires which plunge men into ruin and destruction” (emphasis added). If Paul had said, “If we have a three-bedroom house, two cars, and plenty of clothing, with these we shall be content. But those who want to get rich fall into temptation,” would we not assume he meant that anyone who isn’t content with a three-bedroom house, two cars, and plenty of clothing, is among those who “want to get rich”? Certainly.

Webster’s New World Dictionary defines the word rich no differently than Paul. It helps us to understand the modern definition of the word rich by comparing it with other synonyms:

Rich is the general word for one who has more money or income-producing property than is necessary to satisfy normal needs; wealthy adds to this connotations of grand living, influence in the community, a tradition of richness, etc. [a wealthy banker]; affluent suggests a continuing increase of riches and a concomitant lavish spending [to live in affluent circumstances]; opulent suggests the possession of great wealth as displayed in luxurious or ostentatious living [an opulent mansion]; well-to-do implies sufficient prosperity for easy living.[9]

Thus we see that our own modern definition of the word rich reveals that if ones desires more than what “is necessary to satisfy normal needs,” then one desires to be rich. Let us not fool ourselves then, to think that Paul’s warning to “those who want to get rich” (6:9) applies only to those who long to be wealthy, affluent or live opulently. Most Americans don’t see themselves as being rich, yet billions of people in the world consider all of us to be very rich, and rightfully so. And still we strive to gain more. Discontentment is the driving force in our materialistic culture, and the American church appears to be keeping right in step. Consequently, we continually “fall into temptation and a snare and many foolish and harmful desires which plunge men into ruin and destruction” (6:9).

The love of money is taking North Americans to hell by the millions, many of whom think they are Christians. Yet what North American would admit that he is guilty of either “the love of money,” or “longing for it”? I suspect very few. Even though our lives revolve around the acquiring and selfish spending of money, surely we don’t love it. Yet Paul made his point very clear. If one’s needs are met and he is not content, longing for more, he loves money. Is this not also made clear in Hebrews 13:5: “Let your character be free from the love of money, being content with what you have.” If one is not content with having his needs met, he loves money.

Into what kind of temptations, snares and “foolish and harmful desires” (6:9) do lovers of money inevitably fall? One temptation is to gain wealth by unrighteous means. If one has no desire to get rich, one is not tempted to do something unrighteous to enrich himself. Yet how many of us are doing something or investing in what we know to be sinful? And why? Because getting rich is more important to us than obeying God. We love money more than Him, and it is just that simple.

The greatest temptation that lovers of money fall into is the temptation not to love God as He should be loved, making money one’s master. The one who is discontent with having his needs met, who longs for more, will be devoting his life to money, making it impossible for him to devote his life to God. “No servant can serve two masters; for either he will hate the one, and love the other, or else he will hold to one, and despise the other” (Luke 16:13). It is impossible to serve God and mammon.

The lover of money also faces great temptation to act selfishly, not loving one’s neighbor as he should (see 6:18), keeping what he ought to share, ignoring the second greatest commandment.

Does all this mean that every Christian should scale down to the point of having only food and covering? No, because as I’ve stated in an earlier chapter, our needs often exceed those bare necessities. However, Paul’s words, which harmonize perfectly with what Jesus taught, indicate that every Christian should scale down to owning only what he needs (and there could be some variance from what one Christian needs compared to another depending on their circumstances). Those who have more or gain more than they need should generously share their excess, as Paul points out in 6:17-19 (the next passage we will consider).

6:17-19 In light of what we’ve just read eight verses prior to this passage, we don’t have to wonder whom Paul means when he refers to “those who are rich” (6:17). They include everyone who has more than he needs, probably most people reading this book. What should they do?

First, because they will be tempted to think themselves as better than those who have less, Paul admonishes them not to be conceited, guarding themselves against pride (see 6:17).

Second, because they will be tempted to “fix their hope on the uncertainty of riches” (6:17), Paul reminds them to keep their hope fixed on God. To “fix one’s hope on the uncertainty of riches” is to be looking to a better future because of what wealth might bring. This is a very “uncertain” hope indeed, because it may well be a hope that never materializes. Moreover, one who is hoping in riches is thinking selfishly and perhaps hoarding his excess, as he hopes for a better personal future.

In contrast, the one who is “hoping in God” is looking forward to the brighter eternal future that He promises, and thus doesn’t have his hope set on the “uncertainty of riches.” Neither is he yielding to the temptation to think only of himself, hoarding for his future, while others suffer lack. His hope is in God, who holds the future in His hands, who has promised to supply all our needs, and who often gives us more than we need, or as Paul says, “who richly supplies us with all things to enjoy” (6:17, emphasis added).[10]

For this reason, Paul’s final instruction for those who have more than they need is “to do good, to be rich in good works, to be generous and ready to share” (6:18). Those who are “rich” should be equally rich in good works.

Moreover, because their hope is fixed on God and not on the uncertainty of riches, they should be living their lives with their eternal future, not just their temporal, earthly future in focus. By being generous and sharing, they will be “storing up for themselves the treasure of a good foundation for the future” (6:19), an echo of Jesus’ promise to those who lay up heavenly, rather than earthly, treasures.

If they will do this, they will then “take hold of that which is life indeed” (6:19). To me, this sounds like salvation, the promise of true life, eternal life, which begins when one believes in Jesus with a living faith. The King James Version translates the last part of 6:19: “that they may lay hold on eternal life” (emphasis added). As I have stated previously, if Paul had written, “Instruct them to believe in Jesus so that they may take hold of that which is life indeed,” we would have interpreted him to mean that one must believe in Jesus to be truly saved. Then why not interpret what he did write to be consistent with what the rest of the New Testament teaches, namely, that rich people must repent of greed if they hope to be saved?

2 Timothy

3:1-2 In Paul’s list of what will make the “last days difficult times” (3:1), he first lists that “men will be lovers of self, lovers of money” (3:2). Many of us think that we are living in the last days, and it is quite possible that “the love of money” is the most prevalent sin in the world today, yet the one that is least recognized because of its pervasiveness. The church hardly recognizes it, and sometimes even promotes it. This should not surprise us, as Paul later wrote in this same letter that “the time will come when they will not endure sound doctrine; but wanting to have their ears tickled, they will accumulate for themselves teachers in accordance to their own desires; and will turn away their ears from the truth, and will turn aside to myths” (2 Tim. 4:3-4).

All of the various characteristics Paul lists of the ungodly during the end times (see 3:1-7) could be summarized by the first one Paul lists—”lovers of self.” Certainly the love of money is a specific way that people reveal their love of self.

4:13 If Paul was so rich, as some want us to believe, why did he request that Timothy bring a cloak to Rome that he had left in Troas, 750 miles away? Surely he could have easily bought a new one with all his money, thus ensuring his warmth during the coming winter (see 4:21).

Titus

1:7-11 A fondness of “sordid gain” disqualifies one from being an elder/overseer as well as a deacon (see 1 Tim. 3:8). We gain a little better idea of what Paul means by the phrase “sordid gain” from 7:11, as he states that certain false teachers are motivated by sordid gain. They are making their money illegitimately, being paid for doing something that is in opposition to God’s will. If a spiritual leader is receiving money for teaching people what is not true, he is guilty of making his money by “sordid gain.” How many pastors, those who tickle people’s ears by telling them what they want to hear, fall into this category? All of them. They are making their living illegitimately.

1:16; 2:14; 3:1, 8, 14 Five times in this short epistle Paul emphasizes the importance of believers doing good deeds. One’s deeds are what validate one’s relationship with God. Those whose lives are void of any good deeds effectively prove that they don’t know God, even if they profess otherwise (see 1:16). God’s purpose in showing us His grace was, in part, that we might become “zealous for good deeds” (2:14; emphasis added). Thus, we should always “be ready for every good deed” (3:1; emphasis added) and be “careful to engage in good deeds” (3:8; emphasis added).

What kind of good deeds did Paul have in mind as he so frequently wrote of them in this epistle? 3:14 gives us a better idea: “And let our people also learn to engage in good deeds to meet pressing needs” (emphasis added). These kinds of good deeds, as do all good deeds, require one’s time and/or money. Paul goes on to say that, if we don’t engage in such good deeds, we are “unfruitful” (3:14).

Philemon

1:18-19 Having run away from his Christian master, Philemon, a slave named Onesimus found himself incarcerated in the same prison as the apostle Paul, who then led him to Christ. Providentially, Paul and Philemon were friends in Christ, and Paul wrote this letter to him, sending it with Onesimus on his return to his master. Paul thus informed Philemon of his runaway slave’s authentic conversion.

Onesimus had either stolen some money from his master or had incurred a certain debt by the absence of his labor. Paul now graciously requested that Philemon charge Onesimus’ debts to his own account (see 1:18). Ironically, however, Philemon was already indebted to Paul, although it is not clear whether his debt was spiritual or monetary. Regardless, it certainly seems foolish to use these two verses to prove that Paul was wealthy. I rather think they prove that money was not Paul’s god, and that he was gracious in the use of what God entrusted to him.

In regard to the question of how a Christian could have a slave, see my comments on Ephesians 6:5-9.

Hebrews

7:4-10 This is the only place in the New Testament epistles where tithing is mentioned, a fact that is often used to prove that under the new covenant, Christians need not concern themselves with tithing. Certainly, one would think that tithing would be mentioned more often in the epistles if it were as important as many think. Even in this passage, tithing is not spoken of in order to promote the practice of it among Christians. Rather, it is mentioned to prove the superiority of Melchizedek’s priesthood over the Levitical priesthood, thus revealing Christ’s superior ministry, who became a high priest “according to the order of Melchizedek” (6:20).[11]

Some also argue that since there is no longer a valid Levitical priesthood, there is no valid reason to tithe, as tithes were given under the old covenant to support their ministry. In contrast, however, one could argue that Christ’s priesthood is certainly valid now, and there is indeed scriptural precedent for paying tithes to Melchizedekian priests in the very story mentioned in this passage. Thus, is could be said that modern ministers, who are authorized by our High Priest and members of His body, should be supported by the tithes of God’s people. And isn’t it also true that tithing was practiced long before the Law of Moses, so that it would be wrong to consider ourselves excused from practicing it on the basis that we are no longer under the Mosaic Law?

In my mind, however, all of these arguments reveal an inherent flaw on both sides: they ignore Christ’s most basic lessons about stewardship. People who know that they can’t be disciples of Christ unless they give up all their possessions (see Luke 14:33), who know that their Lord forbids them to lay up earthly treasures (Matt. 6:19), and who know that He expects them to love one another as He has loved them (see John 13:34), don’t see the point of arguing about tithing. They aren’t trying to find out how little they can give without feeling guilty.

This is precisely why there is no endorsement of tithing in the New Testament epistles. It is a mute point. Christ’s true disciple’s are not like the Pharisees who scrupulously tithed their garden herbs while neglecting “the love of God” (Luke 11:42) and the love of neighbor (see Matt. 23:23). Christ’s true disciples live to please the One who redeemed them from sin.

10:32-39 We gain some insight into the persecution endured by the recipients of this letter: Hebrew believers who were being tempted to renounce Jesus and return to the practice of Judaism. Incredibly, they had “accepted joyfully the seizure of [their] property,” knowing that a “better possession” (10:34) waited them in heaven. Public Jewish sentiment was so aroused against these “traitorous” followers of Christ that forcefully confiscating their property became acceptable, perhaps even virtuous. Yet these devoted Hebrew believers reacted with joy, knowing their loss was really gain. Here was an opportunity to demonstrate their living faith in their Messiah with a heavenly attitude about their possessions.

What possessions they lost, specifically, would be a matter of speculation. It would also be speculative to say that these Jewish believers had previously maintained wealthy lifestyles before their property was seized, proven only by the fact that Scripture states they owned property that could be seized. (They may even have lost their homes, as perhaps intimated in 11:37-38.) One could just as well speculate that God allowed the seizure of their property as a means of disciplining them (see 12:4-11) because they were lax in sharing or in contentment (see 13:5).

11:8-10, 24-26, 37-38 This entire eleventh chapter is a masterful encouragement to first-century Hebrew believers who were being tempted to revert to Judaism because of the persecutions they were suffering. The author shows how their experience is not unusual for those whose faith is alive. In fact, many of the patriarchs and well-known characters of Scripture endured afflictions because they took God at His word. Yet they were all anticipating a future reward. Likewise the Hebrew Christians should not “throw away [their] confidence, which has a great reward” (10:35).

Note that, for some of the “faith heroes” listed in this chapter, their faith resulted, not in financial prosperity, but in their having less. For example, Moses chose to “endure ill-treatment with the people of God…considering the reproach of Christ greater riches than the treasures of Egypt” (11:25-26). Others, because of their faith, “went about in sheepskins, in goatskins, being destitute, afflicted, ill-treated…wandering in the deserts and mountains and caves and holes in the ground” (11:38). All of these examples would serve to comfort and encourage the Hebrew believers who were also less prosperous now that they had come into the faith (see 10:34).

13:5 Clearly, one whose character is free from the love of money is one who is content with what he has. Thus, one who is not content with what he has is not free from the love of money. Such a concept is completely foreign to our thinking because our culture is built on discontentment. The goal of life is to improve one’s life by gaining more money and possessions. A professing Christian once even accused me, without apology, of “ruining people’s incentive to better their lives” when I’ve taught what the Bible says about contentment!

13:16 Because the Spirit wars against the flesh, we are continually tempted to be selfish. Thus the reason for admonitions like the one found in this verse.

James

1:9-12 James apparently wrote this general epistle during a time when the church was suffering persecution, perhaps what is recorded in Acts 8:1-4. There we read, “On that day a great persecution arose against the church in Jerusalem; and they were all scattered throughout the regions of Judea and Samaria” (Acts 8:1). We note that James addressed his letter to Jewish believers who were “dispersed abroad”(1:1) and who were enduring trials of their faith (see 1:2-3, 12; 5:10-11).

If the recipients of James’ letter had been scattered because of persecution, we can easily understand why James had good reason to encourage “the brother of humble circumstances” (1:9). Scattered Christians would likely be suffering materially. Moreover, they would be more susceptible than usual to the temptation of envying those who had more. Thus James contrasted God’s view of the “brother of humble circumstances” and the “rich man” (1:9-10).

The brother of humble circumstances should “glory in his high position,” while the rich man should “glory in his humiliation” (1:9-10). The reason is because of their ultimate ends. The rich man will “like flowering grass…pass away…in the midst of his pursuits” (1:10-11), just like the rich fool of Luke 12 and the rich man who ignored starving Lazarus. The brother of humble circumstances, however, who “perseveres under trial…will receive the crown of life” (1:12), which is eternal life, given to all who love the Lord (see 1:12). Thus it is far better to be a poor believer than a rich unbeliever.

1:27 How often do professing Christians think that what is most important is to believe the correct doctrine? We are quick to write off anyone who has a little different perspective on the Trinity or speaking in other tongues. Yet, as James points out in this verse and all through his epistle, what a person does, not what he professes to believe, is what is most important to God. Throughout Scripture, He has repeatedly declared His concern for the marginalized of society. Thus, His true people will share His compassion and demonstrate it, taking care of those can’t take care of themselves and assisting those with pressing needs.

Looking after widows and orphans consists of more than just praying, “God bless all the widows and orphans.” It requires time and money. If you are looking for a way to help an orphan in a developing nation, visit www.OrphansTear.org.

2:1-9 Once again we have the opportunity to compare the church in James’ day with the modern American church. James relates how a poor man dressed in dirty clothes might come into a gathering. If anyone is that poor in America, he would probably not consider visiting a church service due to his embarrassment about his clothing. He would also know that he runs a very good chance of not being permitted to enter many churches.

James also describes a rich man who might come into an assembly. Interestingly, what marks him as being rich is that he has “a gold ring and [is] dressed in fine clothes”! (2:2). That description fits the large majority of Americans who attend churches. Even if they aren’t wearing “fine clothes,” it is only because they chose to leave their fine clothes at home. Once again we are faced with the fact that by biblical standards we are rich, even though we may not be by American standards.

The sin James addresses here is the sin of showing partiality. When a rich person receives favored treatment over a poor person, the second greatest commandment is broken (see 2:8). One is not loving his neighbor as himself. He is not treating the poor person as he wants to be treated.

James questions why such partiality would be shown. Why would we automatically honor a rich man and dishonor a poor man, both of whom we know nothing about, when we know what God esteems and despises? We know that God loves the poor, having special compassion for them, choosing them to be “rich in faith and heirs of the kingdom” (2:5). Indeed, God has chosen “the base things of the world and the despised…the things that are not, that He might nullify the things that are” (1 Cor. 1:28). In contrast, the rich are often guilty of sins that arouse God’s anger, not the least of which is their explointing the poor, whom He loves so much, in order to enrich themselves. They also often blaspheme God’s name (see 2:6-8). Thus how foolish it is to honor automatically a rich man and dishonor a poor man based on no other criteria than their apparent wealth or poverty.

If we are to err in the matter, better to err by honoring the poor over the rich. In most instances, the rich man is likely to be far from God, while the poor man is more likely to respond to God’s love. Not knowing what is in the heart of either, however, we should honor them both with good seats when they visit our gathering. And we shouldn’t be surprised when the poor man responds to the gospel while the rich man remains devoted to mammon.

The only reason that someone would show partiality to the rich is because of an evil motive, probably the hope of personal gain (see 2:4). As Solomon astutely observed, “Wealth adds many friends….and every man is a friend to him who gives gifts” (Prov. 19:4, 6). This phenomenon can be easily observed in American churches, where pastors often yield to the temptation of showing favoritism to those with the most wealth. This sin can at least be partially mitigated if the pastor does not know what any individual contributes to his church.

2:14-17 It is interesting that the example James uses to illustrate dead, useless faith is one about meeting the pressing needs of a fellow believer. Verbalizing one’s concern for a homeless and hungry fellow believer while doing nothing to assist him is of no use. So faith, without works, is also utterly useless and dead. One cannot be saved by such a faith. Yet this dead faith is the predominant kind of faith today in the North American church. Multitudes of greedy people are deceived into thinking that they are on the way to heaven when in reality they will spend eternity in hell. Having done nothing to meet the pressing needs of suffering believers, they will join the other “goats” of which Jesus spoke in Matthew 25:31-46.

4:1-4 James addresses the problem of quarrels and conflicts in the church, immediately attacking the root, which was selfishness in various forms. They were desiring (probably a better translation for the word lust in 4:2) what they did not possess, and consequently committed murder. (I certainly hope that James was speaking metaphorically of the sin of cursing a brother, which Jesus condemned as being equally deserving of hell as murder; see Matt. 5:21-22.) They were envious of what others possessed, and so they fought and quarreled. Even their prayers revealed their selfishness, as they asked only for what they planned to use for self-indulgence (see 4:3).

Note that all of this selfishness seems to be related to material things. Such a focus makes one guilty of serving mammon, which is perhaps the reason James calls them “adulteresses” in verse 4. This expression is borrowed from the Old Testament prophets who equated idolatry with spiritual adultery, or unfaithfulness to the Lord (see Is. 1:21; Jer. 2:20; Ezek. 16:15-17). Greed is idolatry (see Col. 3:5).

Because the unsaved world is focused on money and is serving mammon (see Matt. 6:32), James additionally warns his readers that, “whoever wishes to be a friend of the world makes himself an enemy of God” (4:4). While selfish, worldly people live each day in servitude to Mammon, the love-filled servants of Christ live to show their love for God and fellow man. They are envious of no one, knowing that happiness is not found in material things. They pray for God to bless them with more than they need, not so they can indulge themselves, but so they can be a blessing to others.

4:13-17 James is not saying that it is wrong to travel to a distant city for a year to engage in profitable business. He is only saying that to declare what one will be doing in the future, without acknowledging God’s sovereignty, is arrogant. As James states, we really don’t even know what will happen to us tomorrow, much less over the next year. Being just a “vapor that appears for a little while and then vanishes away” (4:14), we could “vanish” at any time! Thus to assume that we can make any plans that God might not change is arrogant. We ought to say, “If the Lord wills, we shall live and also do this or that” (4:15). You will be alive tomorrow only if God wills it (see Luke 12:20). You will accomplish your plans only if God wills that you do.

James’ theology certainly stands in contrast to the modern idea of speaking prosperity or long life into existence by one’s faith. He would call such “positive confessions” boastful, evil arrogance.

5:1-6 James returns to his earlier theme (see 1:10-11; 2:6-7) of condemning the rich. He begins by telling them to weep and howl for the miseries that are coming upon them, a clear warning of hell (see also 5:3).

As we read the first verse of this passage, two inevitable questions come to our minds: “Is James talking about all rich people, or just evil rich people?” And, “If James is referring to all rich people, how much does one have to possess in order to be characterized as rich?” James does not leave these questions unanswered.

In the next two verses, James enumerates specific indications of the wealth of those he is condemning. They own riches that have “rotted” (5:2). It would seem reasonable to conclude that James was speaking of their possessing so much food that much of it rotted before it could be consumed. They had more than they obviously needed, and it could have been shared with those who needed it. Perhaps James was alluding to Jesus’ story of the rich fool, whose stored-up treasure consisted, at least in part, of abundant food (see Luke 12:16-21). Regardless, one who has more food than he needs or uses is rich.

The garments of the rich whom James condemns “have become moth-eaten” (5:2). This certainly echoes Jesus’ command that forbade His followers to lay up for themselves earthly treasures, ” where moth and rust destroy” (Matt. 6:19; emphasis added). Moths eat clothing that isn’t frequently worn. Having clothing that one doesn’t need or use characterizes one as being rich.

The rich whom James condemns own “gold and silver” that has “rusted,” or perhaps better rendered, “tarnished.” That is, they have so much that they have some that is never touched or used. They don’t need it, and it could be used to help others.

We might, perhaps, convince ourselves that we are not condemned by James if none of our food is rotting, none of our clothing is being eaten by moths, and we don’t have stacks of tarnished gold coins. But is it not true that what characterizes the rich whom James condemns is simply the selfish use of their wealth, that they keep more than they need while others go without? They “lived luxuriously on the earth and led a life of wanton pleasure” (5:5), what seems to be the primary pursuit of so many.

Not only have the rich whom James condemns used their wealth selfishly, they have gained it selfishly. We learn in 5:4 that they had hired laborers to mow their fields but never paid them. Thus, they prospered by exploiting others.

Certainly one is not automatically exempt from James’ condemnation if he owns no fields or hires no laborers to mow them. The principle behind James’ example is universal. Enriching oneself by exploiting others is selfish, a violation of the second greatest commandment. James could have condemned the doctor who performs unnecessary surgery, the lazy welfare recipient, the used-car salesman who turns back odometers, the employee who lies about how many hours he worked, or the citizen who cheats on his taxes.

As I have mentioned in Chapter Five, those of us who live in North American cannot escape from benefiting from laborers in other nations who are often exploited by large corporations. Although such laborers do agree to work for low wages by American standards, and although the companies who hire them do pay them their agreed-upon hourly rate, we cannot help but question if James would not condemn such a practice as a means of enriching oneself by exploiting others. It certainly seems to violate the golden rule and the second greatest commandment. What would Jesus do?

What if the rich to whom James wrote had come by their money completely honestly? Would he then have written, “Your riches have rotted and your garments have become moth-eaten. Your gold and your silver have rusted, and it is in the last days that you have stored up your treasure! You have lived luxuriously on the earth and led a life of wanton pleasure; but you have no need to be concerned, because you came by your money honestly”? Obviously not. Greed is expressed not just by how money is gained, but also by how money is used.

James’ words apply to anyone who has more than he needs, even if he gained his wealth without sinning in the process. If he did gain his wealth in an unrighteous way, he is all the worse off in God’s eyes.

1 Peter

3:3-4 Spending excessive time and money on outward beauty reveals selfishness; inward beauty is characterized by selflessness.

5:2 See my comments on Titus 1:7-11.

2 Peter

2:3, 14-15 False teachers are characterized by, among other things, their greed. Their primary goal is to gain the money of their followers, thus they “exploit [them] with false words” (2:3). Many modern “successful ministers” fall into this category. They preach just what the servants of mammon want to hear, fueling their greed with twisted logic and out-of-context scriptures, enriching themselves in the process. As Peter warns, “their judgment from long ago is not idle, and their destruction is not asleep” (2:3).

1 John

2:15-17 Loving the world and “the things in the world” proves that one does not love the Father. John specifically warned against those things that the flesh and eyes desire, and what tempts people to be prideful, all of which would certainly include material wealth. He was echoing Jesus’ declaration that one cannot serve God and mammon, because he will hate one and love the other (see Matt. 6:24).

3:14-20 Without dispute, John declares that the authenticity of one’s salvation can be determined by his generosity toward fellow believers in need. “We know that we have passed out of death into life, because we love the brethren” (3:14). The kind of love of which John wrote is sacrificial, which imitates Christ, and that goes beyond just caring “with word or with tongue” (3:18). One who does not relieve the pressing need of his brother by sharing his excess does not posses this love, and confirms by his actions the unbelief in his heart. He is deceived if he thinks he is a Christian.

On the other hand, the one who opens his heart to his brother in need knows he is “of the truth” and assures his heart before God (see 3:19). That is, if he doubts in his heart his standing before God, his love in action restores his heart’s assurance, relieving him of any condemnation. God, knowing everything, is thus “greater than our heart” (3:20), because He knows about us what sometimes even our own hearts don’t know. Our giving to a brother in need does not earn our right standing with Him, it only confirms to our hearts what He already knew.

3 John

1:2-8 Verse 2 of this book is often used by prosperity preachers to prove that God wants His people to prosper. Certainly if the apostle John, a very spiritual man, desired that Gaius would prosper, then there is nothing wrong with wanting to prosper.

I have no problem with that conclusion, but must take exception with how prosperity preachers define prosperity and with their understanding of what God expects of Christians who do prosper.

In light of what we just read from John’s first epistle, it would be incredibly foolish for us to conclude that John hoped Gaius would become rich so he could live in luxury and self-indulgence. The only reason John would want Gaius to prosper would be so Gaius would have more to share. Is this not abundantly clear from the verses that follow? Gaius was a loving servant of the brethren, a financial supporter of traveling missionaries (see 1:5-8), and if he prospered (and enjoyed good health, John’s other desire) he could serve and give all the more.

To prosper financially simply means to gain more than one presently has. Very poor people can prosper and still have very little.

All of this being so, certainly it should be our desire that everyone who is seeking first God’s kingdom prosper, because more good would be done by their obedience to Christ and their love for the brethren. But to teach that 3 John 2 proves that God wants us all to enjoy luxury homes and autos, designer clothing and exotic vacations is poor exegesis at best and a sign that one is a false teacher at worst.

Jude

1:11 Like Peter in his second epistle (see 2 Pet. 2:15), Jude also cites the prophet Balaam as illustrative of contemporary false prophets and teachers who were motivated mostly by money in their “ministries.” Holiness is foreign concept to such greedy teachers, “who turn the grace of our God into licentiousness” (1:4). The only ones who can’t discern their deception are their greedy followers, attracted to their meetings like hopeful gamblers are drawn to Las Vegas.

Revelation

2:9 Here is another example of a group of believers who were facing financial hardship, perhaps because of the persecution they were currently enduring. Although they were suffering poverty, Jesus told them that they were rich, and He could only have meant that they were spiritually rich, being destined to share His eternal glory. He did not rebuke them for their lack of faith (as modern prosperity preachers often do to Christians who aren’t prosperous). In fact, of the seven churches Jesus addresses in Revelation 2-3, there were only two that Jesus doesn’t find fault with, and Smyrna was one of them.

3:15-20 We shouldn’t be surprised that, of the seven churches Jesus addresses in Revelation 2-3, the one He accuses of being lukewarm was wealthy. Jesus warned that God’s word can be choked by the ” worries and riches and pleasures of this life” (Luke 8:14), a concept we considered in much more detail in Chapter Six. Nothing pulls people’s hearts away from devotion to the Lord like money, which is why Jesus warned that we can’t serve God and mammon (see Luke 16:13).

Indeed, money was the draw in Laodicea. They had grown wealthy and proud, now thinking they needing nothing. Jesus, however, had a vastly different viewpoint. To Him, they were “wretched and miserable and poor and blind and naked” (3:17), materially rich but spiritually impoverished. It was a cutting, humbling appraisal.

Jesus then graciously offered a remedy for their ills. They, being so wealthy, should buy three things from Him: (1) “gold refined by fire,” that they “may become rich,” (2) “white garments” to cover their nakedness, and (3) “eye salve to anoint [their] eyes” that they might see (3:18).

How much we should read into these figures of speech is debatable. At minimum, Jesus was calling for a repentance that would result in their being truly rich, righteous, and spiritually perceptive. Taking a little more liberty, could we not interpret Jesus’ advice to buy refined gold from Him, that they might “become rich” (3:18), to be a command to use their wealth to lay up heavenly treasures? What else could one whom Jesus considers spiritually poor do with his money that would result in Jesus appraising him as then being rich?

A more important question concerns the Laodiceans’ eternal status. Materially rich, laying up earthly treasures, spiritually poor, without white garments,[12] spiritually blind, needing to repent, and about to be spit out of Jesus’ mouth even though He loves them—I wonder, were they saved, in danger of forfeiting their salvation, or unsaved? What was their eternal destiny if they didn’t repent? Are people whom Christ considers wretched, miserable, poor, blind and naked on the narrow road that leads to life? That seems unlikely.

Jesus’ final words to the Laodicean church raise even more doubts. He portrays Himself as standing on the outside, knocking at the door, waiting for the one inside to hear His voice and open the door that He might come in and dine with him (see 3:20). Jesus indwells all those who are born again (see Rom. 8:10; 2 Cor. 13:5).

6:15-16 As we are told in Proverbs 11:4, “Riches do not profit in the day of wrath, but righteousness delivers from death.”

17:4-5; 18:3, 7, 11-19 Whatever world-renowned city this great harlot, also called Babylon, turns out to be, it is evident that it will be full of wealth when God’s judgment falls upon it. Although her luxurious wealth is not the only thing God will hold against her, it will at least be part of the reason for His wrath upon her, as we read in 18:7: “To the degree that she glorified herself and lived sensuously (or luxuriously, as the margin indicates in the NASB), to the same degree give her torment and mourning….” The basis of her allotted wrath will be the degree of her glorifying herself and her luxurious living.

Having now considered the large majority of relevant scriptures in the New Testament epistles regarding money, possessions and stewardship, we can safely conclude that there is nothing within them that contradicts what Jesus taught on the subject. Rather, what Paul, Peter, James, John and Jude teach only reinforces what Jesus plainly taught, as we would expect, since He commanded them to teach their disciples to obey all that He commanded them (see Matt. 28:19-20).

So let me conclude asking the same question I asked at the outset. Have I misinterpreted what Jesus taught about money, possessions and stewardship? No, my interpretation has proved to be consistent with the apostles’ interpretation of what Christ taught. Greed is equivalent to idolatry. It is impossible to serve God and mammon. Greedy people won’t go to heaven unless they repent of greed, which is an attitude that is expressed by actions. Those who profess to be Christ’s disciples should, by their good stewardship, prove themselves to be so. They should live simply, sell what they don’t need, and not lay up earthly treasures, realizing how foolish that would be in light of eternity. They should give all they can to support the gospel intelligently and assist fellow believers who are suffering pressing needs. They should be content if they have no more than what they legitimately need. If they have more or gain more, they should keep only what they need, giving as God directs. This is the essence of what Christ and His apostles taught about money, possessions and stewardship.

I rest my case. All that remains now is this question: Are you through the needle’s eye yet? In the next chapter, I want to tell you about my own journey.


[1] Why are we more easily persuaded that someone knows what he is talking about if he uses impressive words? Rather, we should be suspicious that he is trying to replace with language what he lacks in logic and facts.

[2] I must add that the multitudes of Jews from foreign countries who gathered to witness the Pentecost miracle were not said to be visiting Jerusalem. Rather, it is twice stated that they lived in Jerusalem (see Acts 2:5, 14). If Luke meant that they permanently resided in Jerusalem, then they would not have become a burden to the church.

[3] The word translated covetousness here is translated greed in Luke 12:15; Rom. 1:29; Eph. 5:3; Col. 3:5; 1 Thes. 2:5; and 2 Pet. 2:3, 14.

[4] See, for example, Matt. 18:21-35; 24:4-5, 11-13, 23-26, 42-51; 25:1-30; Luke 8:11-15; 11:24-28; 12:42-46; John 6:66-71; 8:31-32, 51; 15:1-6; Acts 11:21-23; 14:21-22; Rom. 6:11-23; 8:12-14, 17; 11:20-22; 1 Cor. 9:23-27; 10:1-21; 11:29-32; 15:1-2; 2 Cor. 1:24; 11:2-4; 12:21-13:5; Gal. 5:1-4; 6:7-9; Phil. 2:12-16; 3:17-4:1; Col. 1:21-23; 2:4-8, 18-19; 1 Thes. 3:1-8; 1 Tim. 1:3-7, 18-21; 4:1-16; 5:5-6, 11-15; 6:9-12, 17-19, 20-21; 2 Tim. 2:11-18; 3:13-15; Heb. 2:1-3; 3:6-19; 4:1-16; 5:8-9; 6:4-9, 10-20; 10:19-39; 12:1-17, 25-29; Jas. 1:12-16; 4:4-10; 5:19-20; 2 Pet. 1:5-11; 2:1-22; 3:16-17; 1 John 2:15-2:28; 5:16; 2 John 6-9; Jude 20-21; Rev. 2:7, 10-11, 17-26; 3:4-5, 8-12, 14-22; 21:7-8; 22:18-19.

[5] In Matthew 25:34, Jesus also used the expression, “inherit the kingdom,” in reference to entering into heaven.

[6] For further information about the believer’s conditional security as well as God’s discipline of wayward believers, see pp. 184-208 in my book, The Great Gospel Deception.

[7] Because salvation is only secure for those who continue to believe in and follow Jesus, Scripture speaks of salvation as something that believers experience in the present tense and as something they can experience in the future.

[8] Wayne Gruden: 1 Peter of the Tyndale New Testament Commentaries (Inter-Varsity Press: Leicester, England; 1988) p. 124.

[9] Webster’s Dictionary likewise helps us understand the word poor by comparing it with common synonyms: “Poor is the simple, direct term for one who lacks the resources for reasonably comfortable living; impoverish is applied to one who having once had plenty is now reduced to poverty [an impoverished aristocrat]; destitute implies such great poverty that the means for mere subsistence, such as food and shelter, are lacking [left destitute by the war]; impecunious applies to one in a habitual state of poverty and suggests that this results from personal practices [an impecunious gambler]; indigent implies such relative poverty as results in a lack of luxuries and the endurance of hardships [books for indigent children].” By these definitions, God certainly does not want His children to be destitute, lacking food and shelter. And it could be said that He doesn’t want them to be poor, if “reasonably comfortable living” means having food and covering.

[10] Paul does not necessarily have yachts and mansions in mind here. Grateful people can enjoy what greedy people cannot—God’s provision of food and covering, as well as what He gives us beyond those things, because the excess allows us the blessed opportunity to be a blessing to others, as well as lay up heavenly treasures. True enjoyment comes from knowing, loving and serving God.

[11] Some feel that 7:8 is an endorsement of New Testament tithing because it speaks of Christ receiving tithes. In disagreement, I would say that the author is contrasting the Levites receiving tithes and Melchizedek receiving tithes. This is revealed from the context, and especially 7:9-10, which makes clear that the author was referring to a time in history when Melchizedek received tithes, and not to Christ presently receiving tithes.

[12] In the book of Revelation, having white garments is indicative of salvation; see Rev. 3:4-5; 4:4; 6:11; 7:9, 13-14; 19:14.

 

Chapter Six – Jesus’ Greatest Salvation Sermon

The Great Gospel Deception, Chapter Six

About two thousand years ago, the Son of God, then living on earth in human form, spoke to a multitude of people who had gathered to hear Him on a mountainside along the Sea of Galilee. Today we refer to the words He spoke that day as the “Sermon on the Mount.”

Jesus was the greatest communicator who ever existed, and He was teaching people whom we would consider to be uneducated. Thus, His teaching was simple and easy to understand. He used everyday objects to illustrate His points.

Today, however, many think that we need someone who has a Ph.D. to interpret what Jesus said. And unfortunately the basic premise of some of those interpreters is that Jesus couldn’t have meant what He said. Thus they’ve concocted elaborate theories to explain what Jesus really meant, theories that the people whom He originally spoke to wouldn’t have guessed at in a thousand years, nor would they have understood those theories if someone had explained them. For example, some modern “scholars” want us to believe that Jesus’ words had no application to either His audience or to modern Christians. Rather, they say that His words will be applicable only during the time when we’re living in His future kingdom. This is an astounding theory, in light of the fact that, as Jesus addressed His audience, He used the word you (not them) in this short sermon over one hundred times.

The purpose of this chapter and the next is to study Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount. As we do, we will discover that it was a message about salvation, holiness and the relationship between the two. It is a sermon that repeatedly warns against antinomianism. Caring dearly for the spiritually hungry people who had gathered to hear Him, Jesus wanted them to understand what was most important—how they could inherit the kingdom of heaven. It is imperative that we, too, pay attention to what He said. This was the one about whom Moses wrote: “The Lord God shall raise up for you a prophet like me from your brethren; to Him you shall give heed in everything He says to you. And it shall be that every soul that does not heed that prophet shall be utterly destroyed from among the people” (Acts 3:22-23).

Let us begin at the beginning.

The Beatitudes

In the first section of Jesus’ sermon, what are called the Beatitudes, Jesus promised specific blessings to people who possess certain character traits. Many different traits are listed and many specific blessings are promised. Casual readers sometimes read the Beatitudes like people peruse their horoscopes, thinking that each person should find himself in one, and only one, Beatitude. As we read more closely, however, we soon realize that Jesus was not listing different kinds of people who will receive varied blessings. Rather, He was speaking of one kind of person who will receive one all-encompassing blessing: inheriting God’s kingdom. There is no other reasonable way to interpret His words.

Let’s read the first twelve verses of the Sermon on the Mount:

When Jesus saw the crowds, He went up on the mountain; and after He sat down, His disciples came to Him. He opened His mouth and began to teach them, saying, “Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. “Blessed are those who mourn, for they shall be comforted. “Blessed are the gentle, for they shall inherit the earth. “Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they shall be satisfied. “Blessed are the merciful, for they shall receive mercy. “Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God. “Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called sons of God. “Blessed are those who have been persecuted for the sake of righteousness, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. “Blessed are you when people insult you and persecute you, and falsely say all kinds of evil against you because of Me. Rejoice and be glad, for your reward in heaven is great; for in the same way they persecuted the prophets who were before you” (Matt. 5:1-12).

The Blessings and Character Traits

First, consider all the blessings promised. The blessed shall (1) inherit the kingdom of heaven, (2) receive comfort, (3) inherit the earth, (4) be satisfied, (5) receive mercy, (6) see God, (7) be called God’s sons, and (8) inherit the kingdom of heaven (a repeat of #1) where they shall be rewarded.

Does Jesus want us to think that only the poor in spirit and those who have been persecuted for righteousness (#1 and #8) will inherit God’s kingdom? Will only the pure in heart see God and only the peacemakers be called sons of God, but neither shall inherit God’s kingdom? Will the peacemakers not receive mercy and the merciful not be called sons of God? Obviously that is not what Jesus wants us to think.

Now consider the different traits Jesus describes: (1) poor in spirit, (2) mournful, (3) gentle, (4) hungering for righteousness, (5) merciful, (6) pure of heart, (7) peacemaking, and (8) persecuted.

Does Jesus want us to think that a person can be pure in heart yet unmerciful? Can one be persecuted for the sake of righteousness but not be one who hungers and thirsts after righteousness? Again, obviously not.

Therefore, it is only safe to conclude that the numerous blessings promised are the manifold blessings of one big blessing—inheriting God’s kingdom. Moreover, the many character traits of the blessed are the manifold traits shared by all the blessed.

Clearly, the Beatitudes describe the character traits of Jesus’ true followers, in which, by enumerating those traits, He encouraged His followers with promises of the many blessings of salvation. The blessed are saved people, so Jesus was describing the traits of people who are going to heaven. People who do not fit Jesus’ description are not blessed and will not inherit the kingdom of heaven. Thus it is fitting that we should ask ourselves if we fit Jesus’ description. This is a sermon about salvation, holiness, and the relationship between the two.

The Character Traits of the Blessed

The eight characteristics Jesus listed of blessed people are not necessarily all easily understood, and they are thus variously interpreted. For example, what is virtuous about being “poor in spirit”?

Personally, I’m inclined to think that Jesus was describing the first essential trait a person must possess if he is going to be saved. That is, he realizes his own spiritual poverty. One must first see his need for a Savior before he can be saved.

This first trait eliminates all self-sufficiency and any thought of meriting salvation. The truly blessed person is one who realizes that he has nothing to offer God, and that his own righteousness is as “filthy rags” (Is. 64:6, KJV). He sees himself among the company of those who are “separate from Christ…having no hope and without God in the world” (Eph. 2:12).

Jesus did not want anyone to think that by his own self-effort he might attain to the standards He was about to enumerate. No, people are blessed, that is, blessed by God if they possess the characteristics of the blessed. They have tasted of God’s grace. They are blessed, not only because of what awaits them in heaven, but because of the work God has done in their lives on earth. If I see the traits of the blessed in my life, it should remind me not of what I’ve done, but of what God has done in me by His grace.

If the first characteristic is listed first because it is the first necessary trait of the heaven-bound, perhaps the second trait is also listed meaningfully: “Blessed are those who mourn” (Matt. 5:4).

Could Jesus have been describing heartfelt repentance and remorse? I think so, especially since Scripture is clear that godly sorrow results in a repentance that is necessary for salvation (see 2 Cor. 7:10). The mournful tax collector who humbly bowed his head in the Temple, beating his breast and crying out for God’s mercy, was indeed a blessed person. He, unlike the proud Pharisee who simultaneously prayed in the Temple, left that place justified, forgiven of his sins (see Luke 18:9-14).

If Jesus was not speaking of the initial mourning of the repentant person who is just coming to Christ, then perhaps He was describing the sorrow all true Christians sense as they continually face a world that is in rebellion against the God who loves them. Paul expressed it as “great sorrow and unceasing grief in [his] heart” (Rom. 9:2).

The third characteristic, gentleness, is listed in Scripture as one of the fruits of the Spirit (see Gal. 5:22-23). Gentleness is not a self-generated attribute. Those who have received the grace of God and the indwelling of the Spirit are also blessed to be made gentle. Harsh and violent “Christians” beware. You are not among those who will inherit the earth. You are not among the blessed ones.

Hungering for Righteousness

The fourth characteristic, hungering and thirsting for righteousness, describes the God-given inward longing that every true born-again person possesses. He is grieved by unrighteousness in the world and in himself. He hates sin (see Ps. 97:10; 119:128, 163) and loves righteousness.

Too often, when we read the word righteousness in Scripture, we immediately translate it, “the legal righteousness imputed to us by Christ,” but that is not always what the word means. Quite often it means, “the quality of living right by God’s standards.” That is obviously the meaning Jesus intended here, because there is no reason for a Christian to hunger for what he already possesses. He already has an imputed righteousness.

Those who have been born of the Spirit long to live righteously, and they have assurance that they will one day “be satisfied” (Matt. 5:6), certain that God, by His grace, will complete the work He’s begun in them (see Phil. 1:6).

Jesus’ words here also foresee the time of the new earth, “in which righteousness dwells” (2 Pet. 3:13). Then there will be no sin. Everyone will love God with all his heart and love his neighbor as himself. We who now hunger and thirst for righteousness will then be satisfied. Finally our prayer will be answered, “Your will be done on earth as it is in heaven” (Matt. 6:10).

Mercy and Purity

The fifth trait, mercifulness, is also one that every born-again person naturally possesses by virtue of his having the merciful God living within him. Those who possess no mercy are not blessed of God and reveal that they are not partakers of His grace. The apostle James concurs: “Judgment will be merciless to one who has shown no mercy” (Jas. 2:13). If you stand before God and receive a merciless judgment, do you think you will go to heaven or hell?[1]

Jesus once told a story of a servant who had received great mercy from his master, but who was then unwilling to extend some mercy to his fellow servant. When his master discovered what had happened, He “handed him over to the torturers until he should repay all that was owed him” (Matt 18:34). All his formerly-forgiven debt was reinstated. Then Jesus warned His disciples, “My heavenly Father will also do the same to you, if each of you does not forgive his brother from your heart” (Matt. 18:35). Again, non-merciful people will not receive mercy from God. They are not among the blessed.

The sixth trait of the heaven-bound is purity of heart. True followers of Christ are not just outwardly holy. By God’s grace, their hearts have been made pure. They truly love God from their hearts, and it affects their meditations and motives. Jesus promised that they shall see God.

Again may I ask, are we to believe that there are true Christian believers who are not pure in heart and who therefore will not see God? Is God going to say to them, “You can come into heaven, but you can’t ever see Me”? No, obviously every true heaven-bound person has a pure heart.

Blessed to be Peacemakers

Peacemakers are listed next. They will be called sons of God. Again, Jesus must have been describing every true follower of Christ, because everyone who believes in Christ is a son of God (see Gal. 3:26).

Those who are born of the Spirit are peacemakers in at least three ways.

First, they’ve made peace with God, one who was formerly their enemy.

Second, they live in peace, as far as possible without disobeying God, with other people. They’re not characterized by dissensions and strife. Paul wrote that those who make a practice of strife, jealousy, outbursts of anger, disputes, dissensions and factions will not inherit God’s kingdom (see Gal. 5:19-21). True believers will go the extra mile to avoid a fight and keep peace in their relationships. They do not claim to be at peace with God while at odds with a brother (see Matt. 5:23-24; 1 John 4:20).

Third, by sharing the gospel, true followers of Christ also help others make peace with God and their fellow man.

The Persecuted

Finally, Jesus called blessed those who are persecuted for the sake of righteousness. Obviously, He was speaking of people who are living righteously, as they are the ones whom nonbelievers persecute. Those are the sort of people who will inherit God’s kingdom.

What kind of persecution was Jesus talking about? Torture? Martyrdom? No, He specifically spoke of the persecution of being insulted and spoken against on His account. This means that when a person is a true Christian, it is obvious to nonbelievers, otherwise nonbelievers wouldn’t say evil things against him. How many so-called Christians are so indistinguishable from nonbelievers that not a single unbeliever speaks against them? They are not really Christians at all. Jesus warned, “Woe to you when all men speak well of you, for in the same way their fathers used to treat the false prophets” (Luke 6:26). When all men speak well of you, that’s a sign that you’re a false believer. The world hates true Christians (see also John 15:18-21; Gal. 4:29; 2 Tim. 3:12; 1 John 3:13-14).

Does anyone hate you? This is a sermon about salvation, holiness, and the relationship between the two.

Salt and Light

In the next few verses, Jesus continued describing His true followers, the blessed ones, comparing them to salt and light. Both have certain obvious characteristics. Salt is salty and light shines. If it isn’t salty, it isn’t salt. If it doesn’t shine, it’s not light.

You are the salt of the earth; but if the salt has become tasteless, how can it be made salty again? It is no longer good for anything, except to be thrown out and trampled under foot by men. You are the light of the world. A city set on a hill cannot be hidden; nor does anyone light a lamp and put it under a basket, but on the lamp stand, and it gives light to all who are in the house. Let your light shine before men in such a way that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father who is in heaven (Matt. 5:13-16).

In Jesus’ time, salt was used primarily as a preservative of meats. As obedient followers of Christ, we are what preserves this sinful world from becoming completely rotten and corrupt. But if we become like the world in our behavior, we are truly good for nothing. Jesus warned the blessed to remain salty, preserving their unique characteristics. They must remain distinct from the world around them, lest they become “unsalty,” deserving to be “thrown out and trampled under foot.” This is one of many clear warnings against backsliding directed at true believers that is found in the New Testament. If salt is truly salt, it is salty. Likewise, followers of Jesus act like followers of Jesus, otherwise they aren’t followers of Jesus, even if they once were.

Christ’s true followers are also the light of the world. Light always shines. If it isn’t shining, it isn’t light. In this analogy, light represents our good works (see Matt. 5:16). Christ admonished His followers to do their good works so that others would see them. That way they would glorify their heavenly Father because He is the source of their good works.

Notice Jesus didn’t say we should create light, but to let the light we have shine before others so that they’ll see our light. He wasn’t exhorting those who have no works to drum some up, but exhorting those who have good works not to hide their goodness. Christ’s followers are the light of the world. They are blessed, by God’s grace, to be lights in darkness.

The Importance of Keeping God’s Commandments

Now we begin a new paragraph (in the NASB). Here, Jesus began talking about the Law and its relationship to His followers.

Do not think that I came to abolish the Law or the Prophets; I did not come to abolish but to fulfill. For truly I say to you, until heaven and earth pass away, not the smallest letter or stroke shall pass from the Law until all is accomplished. Whoever then annuls one of the least of these commandments, and teaches others to do the same, shall be called least in the kingdom of heaven; but whoever keeps and teaches them, he shall be called great in the kingdom of heaven. For I say to you that unless your righteousness surpasses that of the scribes and Pharisees, you will not enter the kingdom of heaven (Matt. 5:17-20).

If Jesus warned His audience against thinking that He was abolishing the Law or the Prophets, then we can safely conclude that at least some in His audience were making that assumption. Why they were making such an assumption we can only guess. Perhaps it was His stern rebukes of the scripture-twisting scribes and Pharisees that tempted some to think He was abolishing the Law and Prophets.

Regardless, Jesus clearly wanted everyone in His audience to realize the error of such an assumption. He was God, the divine inspirer of the entire Old Testament, so certainly He was not going to abolish everything He’d said through Moses and the Prophets. On the contrary, He would fulfill the Law and Prophets.

Exactly how would He fulfill the Law and Prophets? Some think that Jesus was talking only about fulfilling the messianic predictions. Although Jesus certainly did (or will yet) fulfill every messianic prediction, that is not entirely what He had in mind. Clearly, the context indicates He was also talking about all that was written in the Law and Prophets, down to “smallest letter or stroke” (v. 18) of the Law, and to the “least of” (v. 19) the commandments.

Others theorize Jesus meant that He would fulfill the Law by fulfilling its requirements on our behalf through His obedient life and sacrificial death. But this, as the context also reveals, is not what He had in mind. In the verses the follow, Jesus mentions nothing about His life or death as being a reference point for the fulfilling of the Law. Rather, in the very next sentence, He states that the Law will be valid at least until “heaven and earth pass away” and “all is accomplished.”

So what did Jesus mean when He declared that He would fulfill the Law? Jesus would fulfill the Law by revealing God’s true and original intent in it, filling back “to the full” what the scribes and Pharisees had effectively emptied from it. He would fully endorse and explain it, and completing what was lacking in peoples’ understanding of it.[2] The Greek word translated fulfill in verse 17 is also translated in the New Testament as complete, finish, fill, and fully carry out. That is exactly what Jesus was about to do, beginning just four sentences later.

No, Jesus did not come to abolish the Law, but to fulfill it, that is, “fill it to the full.” Concerning the commandments found in the Law and Prophets, Jesus couldn’t have made His point more forcefully. He expected everyone to obey them. They were as important as ever. In fact, how one esteems the commandments will determine how he is esteemed in heaven: “Whoever then annuls one of the least of these commandments, and so teaches others, shall be called least in the kingdom of heaven; but whoever keeps and teaches them, he shall be called great in the kingdom of heaven” (5:19).[3]

Then we come to verse 20: “For I say to you, that unless your righteousness surpasses that of the scribes and Pharisees, you shall not enter the kingdom of heaven.”

Notice that this is not a new thought, but a concluding statement that is connected with previous verses by the conjunction for. How important is keeping the commandments? One must keep them better than the scribes and Pharisees in order to enter the kingdom of heaven. Again we see that this is a sermon about salvation and holiness, and how they are related.

Of What Kind of Righteousness Was Jesus Speaking?

When Jesus stated that our righteousness must surpass that of the scribes and Pharisees, was He not alluding to the legal righteousness that would be imputed to us as a free gift? No, He was not, for at least two good reasons. First, the context does not fit this interpretation. Before and after this statement (and throughout the entire Sermon on the Mount), Jesus was talking about keeping the commandments, that is, living righteously. The most natural interpretation of His words is that we must live more righteously than the scribes and Pharisees.

Second, if Jesus was talking about the imputed, legal righteousness that we receive as a gift for believing in Him, why didn’t He at least hint at it? Why did He say something that would be so easily misunderstood by the uneducated people to whom He was speaking, who would have never guessed that He was talking about imputed righteousness?

Our problem is that we don’t want to accept the obvious meaning of the verse, because it sounds to us like legalism. But our real problem is that we don’t understand the inseparable correlation between imputed righteousness and practical righteousness. The apostle John did, however. He wrote: “Little children, let no one deceive you; the one who practices righteousness is righteous” (1 John 3:7). Nor do we understand the correlation between the new birth and practical righteousness as John did: “Everyone also who practices righteousness is born of Him” (1 John 2:29).

Jesus could have added to His statement of 5:20, “And if you repent, are truly born again, and receive through a living faith My free gift of righteousness, your practical righteousness will indeed exceed that of the scribes and Pharisees as you cooperate with the power of My indwelling Spirit.”

The Righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees

The other important question that is naturally raised by Jesus’ statement in Matthew 5:20 is this: How righteous (practically speaking) were the scribes and Pharisees?

At another time, Jesus referred to them as “whitewashed tombs which on the outside appear beautiful, but inside they are full of dead men’s bones and all uncleanness” (Matt. 23:27). That is, they appeared outwardly righteous but were inwardly evil. They did a great job at keeping the letter of the Law, but ignored the spirit of it, often justifying themselves by twisting or even altering God’s commands.

This Jesus brought to light in the next portion of the Sermon on the Mount. He quoted several of God’s commandments, and then showed the difference between keeping the letter and spirit of them. Jesus showed how the scribes and Pharisees interpreted and outwardly obeyed each law, and then revealed what was God’s true intent in each case. He began each example with the words, “You have heard,” and then told God’s view of what they had heard. The sixth commandment is the subject of His first example:

You have heard that the ancients were told, “You shall not commit murder” and “Whoever commits murder shall be liable to the court.” But I say to you that everyone who is angry with his brother shall be guilty before the court; and whoever shall say to his brother, “Raca,” shall be guilty before the supreme court; and whoever shall say, “You fool,” shall be guilty enough to go into the fiery hell. If therefore you are presenting your offering at the altar, and there remember that your brother has something against you, leave your offering there before the altar, and go your way; first be reconciled to your brother, and then come and present your offering. Make friends quickly with your opponent at law while you are with him on the way, in order that your opponent may not deliver you to the judge, and the judge to the officer, and you be thrown into prison. Truly I say to you, you shall not come out of there, until you have paid up the last cent (Matt. 5:21-26).

The scribes and Pharisees prided themselves that they were not murderers. That is, they never actually killed anyone. In their minds, they were keeping the sixth commandment. They would have loved to kill, however, if it wasn’t prohibited, as revealed by the fact that they did everything but murder those they hated. Jesus listed a few examples of their murderous behavior. From their mouths they spewed forth vicious words of contempt toward those with whom they were angry. They were inwardly bitter, unforgiving and irreconcilable, embroiled in lawsuits, either suing or being sued for their murderously selfish actions.[4] The scribes and Pharisees were murderers at heart who had only restrained themselves from the physical act.

The truly righteous person, however, is much different. His standard is much higher. He knows God expects him to love his brother, and if his relationship with his brother isn’t right, his relationship with God isn’t right. He won’t hypocritically go through the motions of his religion, pretending to love God while he hates a brother (see Matt. 5:23-24). As the apostle John would later write, “The one who does not love his brother whom he has seen, cannot love God whom he has not seen” (1 John 4:20).

The scribes and Pharisees thought that only by the act of murder could they incur guilt. But Jesus warned that the attitude of a murderer makes one worthy of hell. True Christians are blessed of God to the degree that He puts His love in them, making them lovers (see Rom. 5:5), all by His grace.

God’s Definition of Adultery

The seventh commandment was the object of Jesus’ second example of how the scribes and Pharisees kept the letter while neglecting the spirit of the Law:

You have heard that it was said, “You shall not commit adultery”; but I say to you, that everyone who looks on a woman to lust for her has committed adultery with her already in his heart. And if your right eye makes you stumble, tear it out, and throw it from you; for it is better for you that one of the parts of your body perish, than for your whole body to be thrown into hell. And if your right hand makes you stumble, cut it off, and throw it from you; for it is better for you that one of the parts of your body perish, than for your whole body to go into hell (Matt. 5:27-30).

First, note once again that this is a sermon about salvation and holiness, and the relationship between the two. Jesus warned about hell, and what one must do to stay out of it. That is crystal clear.

The scribes and Pharisees couldn’t ignore the seventh commandment, so they outwardly obeyed it, remaining faithful to their wives. Yet they fantasized about making love to other women. They would mentally undress women they watched in the marketplace. They were adulterers at heart, and thus were transgressing the spirit of the seventh commandment. (How many professing Christians are no different?)

God, of course, intended for His people to be completely sexually pure. Obviously, as I’ve stated earlier in this book, if it is wrong to have a sexual relationship with your neighbor’s wife, it is also wrong to dream of yourself having a sexual relationship with her.

Were any among Jesus’ audience convicted? Probably they were. What should they do? They should immediately repent as Jesus instructed. Whatever it took, no matter what the cost, those who were lustful should stop lusting, because those who are lustful go to hell.

Of course, no reasonable person thinks Jesus meant that lustful people should literally pluck out an eye or cut off a hand. A lustful person who cuts out his eye simply becomes a one-eyed luster. Jesus was dramatically and solemnly emphasizing the importance of obeying the spirit of the seventh commandment. Eternity depended on it.

Are you convicted? Then “cut off” whatever it is that is causing you to stumble. If it’s cable TV, get the cable disconnected. If it’s regular TV, then throw out your TV. If it’s what you see when you go to a certain place, stop going there. If it’s a magazine subscription, cancel it. If it’s the Iinternet, get off line. None of those things are worth spending eternity in hell. No one in hell is going to say, “Yeah, I’m in hell, but I sure enjoyed a lot of sexually-explicit movies when I was on the earth. I’ve got no regrets, even though my sin will have eternal consequences.

God’s View of Divorce

Jesus’ next example is very much related to the one that we just considered, which is probably why it is mentioned next. It should be considered a further elaboration rather than a new subject. The subject is, “Another thing people do that is equivalent to adultery”:

And it was said, “Whoever sends his wife away, let him give her a certificate of divorce”; but I say to you that everyone who divorces his wife, except for the cause of unchastity, makes her commit adultery; and whoever marries a divorced woman commits adultery (Matt. 5:31-32).

Here is another illustration of how the scribes and Pharisees kept the letter of the law while rejecting the spirit of it.

Let’s create an imaginary Pharisee in Jesus’ day. Across the street from him lives an attractive woman after whom he has been lusting. He flirts with her when he sees her each day. She seems attracted to him, and his desire for her grows. He would love to see her unclothed, and imagines her regularly in his sexual fantasies. Oh, if he could only have her!

But he has a problem. He is married and so is she, and his religion forbids adultery. He doesn’t want to break the seventh commandment (even though he’s already broken it every time he’s lusted). What can he do?

There is a solution! If they both were divorced from their present spouses, he could marry the mistress of his mind! But is it lawful to get a divorce? Yes! There is a scripture for it! Deuteronomy 24:1 talks about giving your wife a divorce certificate when you divorce her. Divorce must be lawful under certain circumstances! But what are those circumstances? He reads closely what God said:

When a man takes a wife and marries her, and it happens that she finds no favor in his eyes because he has found some indecency in her, and he writes her a certificate of divorce and puts it in her hand and sends her out from his house… (Deut. 24:1).

Ahah! He can divorce his wife if he finds some indecency in her! And he has! She’s not as attractive as the woman across the street![5]

And so he lawfully divorces his wife by giving her the required certificate (you can pick one up in the lobby of the local office of the Pharisees’ Club), and quickly marries the woman of his fantasies, herself just legally divorced. And all without incurring an ounce of guilt because God’s Law has been obeyed.

But, of course, God sees things differently. The “indecency” of which He spoke in Deuteronomy 24:1-4 for lawful divorce was something very immoral, probably something just short of adultery.[6] That is, a husband could lawfully divorce his wife if he discovered that she was promiscuous before or during their marriage.

In God’s mind, the imaginary man I’ve just described is no different than an adulterer. He has broken the seventh commandment. In fact, he’s even more guilty than the average adulterer. He is guilty of “double adultery.” How is that? First, he’s committed adultery himself. Jesus later said, “Whoever divorces his wife, except for immorality, and marries another woman commits adultery” (Matt. 19:9).

Second, because his now-divorced wife must seek another husband to survive, in God’s mind the Pharisee has done the equivalent of forcing his wife to have sex with another man. Thus, he incurs guilt for her “adultery.”[7] Jesus said, “Everyone who divorces his wife, except for the cause of unchastity, makes her commit adultery” (Matt. 5:32, emphasis added).

Jesus may even have been charging our lustful Pharisee with “triple adultery” if His statement, “and whoever marries a divorced woman commits adultery” (Matt. 5:32), means that God holds the Pharisee accountable for the “adultery” of his former wife’s new husband.[8]

This was a hot issue in Jesus’ day, as we read in another place where some Pharisees questioned Him, “Is it lawful for a man to divorce his wife for any cause at all?” (Matt. 19:3). Their question reveals their hearts. Obviously, at least some of them wanted to believe any cause was a lawful cause for divorce.

I must also add what a shame it is when Christians take these same scriptures about divorce, misinterpret them, and place heavy shackles on God’s children. Jesus was not talking about the Christian who was divorced when he or she was a sinner, and who, upon finding a wonderful potential mate who also loves Christ, marries that person. That is not anywhere close to being equivalent to adultery. And if that is what Jesus was talking about, we’ll have to change the gospel, because no longer does it provide forgiveness for all the sins of sinners. From now on we’ll have to preach, “Jesus died for you, and if you repent and believe in Him, you can have all your sins forgiven. However, if you’ve been divorced, make sure you never get remarried or else you’ll be living in adultery, and the Bible says that adulterers will go to hell. Also, if you’ve been divorced and remarried, before you come to Christ you need to commit one more sin and divorce your present spouse. Otherwise you’ll continue to live in adultery, and adulterers aren’t saved.”[9] Is that the gospel?

On Being Truthful

Jesus’ third example of the unrighteous conduct and scriptural misapplication of the scribes and Pharisees is related to God’s commandment to tell the truth. The scribes and Pharisees had developed a very creative way to lie. We learn from Matthew 23:16-22 their belief that they were not obligated to keep their vows if they swore by the temple, the altar, or heaven. However, if they swore by the gold in the temple, the offering on the altar, or by God in heaven, they were obligated to keep their vow! It was an adult equivalent of a child’s thinking he is exempt from having to tell the truth as long as his fingers are crossed behind his back.

This item of hypocrisy was next in Jesus’ most famous sermon:

Again, you have heard that the ancients were told, ‘”You shall not make false vows, but shall fulfill your vows to the Lord.” But I say to you, make no oath at all, either by heaven, for it is the throne of God, or by the earth, for it is the footstool of His feet, or by Jerusalem, for it is the city of the great King. Nor shall you make an oath by your head, for you cannot make one hair white or black. But let your statement be, “Yes, yes” or “No, no”; and anything beyond these is of evil (Matt. 5:33-37).

Of course, there is nothing wrong with making a vow, which is simply a promise. Jesus was not contradicting the Old Testament Law that He inspired, saying that it is now wrong to make any vows. Rather, He was correcting the practice of the scribes and Pharisees of swearing with an oath. God’s original commandment concerning vows said nothing about making an oath by swearing. God simply intended for His people to keep their word. When people have to swear with an oath to convince others to believe them, it is an outright admission that they often lie. Our word should be good, needing no oath-swearing. Does your righteousness exceed that of the scribes and Pharisees in this area?

The Sin of Revenge

The next item on Jesus’ list of grievances was a Pharisaic perversion of a very well-known verse in the Old Testament.

You have heard that it was said, “An eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth.” But I say to you, do not resist him who is evil; but whoever slaps you on your right cheek, turn to him the other also. And if anyone wants to sue you, and take your shirt, let him have your coat also. And whoever shall force you to go one mile, go with him two. Give to him who asks of you, and do not turn away from him who wants to borrow from you (Matt. 5:38-42).

The Law of Moses declared that when a person was found guilty in court of injuring another person, his punishment should be equivalent to the harm he caused. If he knocked out someone’s tooth, in fairness and justice, his tooth should be knocked out. This commandment was given to insure that justice would be served in court cases for major offenses. Once again, however, the scribes and Pharisees had twisted it, turning it into a commandment that made getting revenge a holy obligation. Apparently, they’d adopted a “zero tolerance” policy, seeking revenge for even the smallest offenses.

God, however, has always expected more from His people. Revenge is something He expressly forbids (see Deut. 32:35). The Old Testament taught that God’s people should show kindness to their enemies (see Ex. 23:4-5; Prov. 25:21-22). Jesus endorsed this truth by telling us to turn the other cheek and go the extra mile when we are dealing with evil people. When we are wronged, God wants us to be merciful, returning good for evil.

But does Jesus expect us to allow people to take gross advantage of us, allowing them to ruin our lives if they desire? Is it wrong to take a nonbeliever to court, seeking justice for an illegal act committed against us? No. Jesus was not talking about obtaining due justice for major offenses in court (something endorsed by the Mosaic Law that He inspired), but about getting personal revenge for petty, ordinary infractions. Notice that Jesus did not say that we should offer our neck for strangling to someone who has just stabbed us in the back. He didn’t say we should give someone our house when they demand our car. Jesus was simply telling us to show tolerance and mercy to a high degree when we daily encounter petty offenses and the normal challenges of dealing with selfish people. He doesn’t expect us to “go the extra hundred miles,” but “go the extra one mile.” He wants us to be more kind than selfish people expect, and be unselfish with our money, generously giving and lending it. To this standard, the scribes and Pharisees didn’t come close. Does your righteousness exceed theirs in this area?

Loving Our Neighbors

Finally, Jesus listed one more God-given commandment that the scribes and Pharisees had altered to accommodate their hateful hearts:

You have heard that it was said, “You shall love your neighbor, and hate your enemy.” But I say to you, love your enemies, and pray for those who persecute you in order that you may be sons of your Father who is in heaven; for He causes His sun to rise on the evil and the good, and sends rain on the righteous and the unrighteous. For if you love those who love you, what reward have you? Do not even the tax-gatherers do the same? And if you greet your brothers only, what do you do more than others? Do not even the Gentiles do the same? Therefore you are to be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect (Matt. 5:43-48).

In the Old Testament, God had said, “Love your neighbor” (Lev. 19:18), but the scribes and Pharisees had conveniently assumed that if God wanted them to love their neighbors, He must have meant for them to hate their enemies. It was their holy obligation. According to Jesus, however, that is not at all what God meant, and that is not what He said.

Jesus would later teach in the story of the Good Samaritan that we should consider every person to be our neighbor. God wants us to love everyone, including our enemies. That is God’s standard for His children, a standard by which He Himself lives. He sends crop-growing sun and rain, not only on good people, but also on evil people. We should follow His example, showing kindness to undeserving people. When we do, it shows that we are “sons of [our] Father who is in heaven” (Matt. 5:45). Authentic born-again people act like their Father.

The love God expects us to show our enemies is not an emotion or an approval of wickedness. God is not requiring us to have warm fuzzy feelings about those who oppose us. He is not telling us to say what is untrue, that our enemies are really wonderful people. But He does expect that we will love them and take willful action to that end, at least by greeting them and praying for them.

What About You?

By now you realize that the scribes and Pharisees weren’t very righteous at all. They had some degree of outward righteousness, but, like too many professing Christians, they were hateful, lustful, selfish, revengeful, unmerciful, greedy, Scripture-twisting liars. According to Jesus, however, true believers are characterized as gentle, hungering for righteousness, merciful, pure in heart, peacemaking, and persecuted. Thus, this part of the Sermon on the Mount should either fill you with assurance that you’ve been truly born again, or fill you with terror because you realize you are no different than those whom Jesus condemned. If you are in the former category, you, like everyone else in that category, know you still have room for improvement. But perfection is your goal because it is God’s goal for you, as Jesus said (see Matt. 5:48; see also Phil. 3:12-14).

If you are in the latter category, you can repent and become a slave of Jesus’ by believing in Him. You will instantly experience being moved by God into the former category by His grace!

Footnotes

[1] Interestingly, the very next verse in the book of James is, “What use is it, my brethren, if a man says he has faith, but he has no works? Can that faith save him?” (Jas. 2:14).

[2] This would be true of what is often referred to as the “ceremonial law” as well as the “moral law,” although much of His fuller explanation concerning the ceremonial law would be given by His Holy Spirit to the apostles after His resurrection. We now understand why there is no need to sacrifice animals under the new covenant, because Jesus was the Lamb of God. Neither do we follow the old covenant dietary laws because Jesus declared all foods to be clean (see Mark 7:19). We don’t need the intercession of an earthly high priest because Jesus is now our High Priest, and so on. Unlike the ceremonial law, however, no part of the moral law was ever annulled or altered by anything Jesus did or said, before of after His death and resurrection. Rather, Jesus expounded upon and endorsed God’s moral law, as did the apostles by the inspiration of the Spirit after His resurrection.

[3] Although Jesus’ words here are a strong motivation not to annul or teach others to disregard any commandment, including lesser ones, His words also offer hope that heaven’s population will include people who have been guilty of that very thing.

[4] It is possible that Jesus was intimating that the scribes and Pharisees, so at home in the courtroom, needed to realize that they were heading for God’s courtroom, and that they were quite disadvantaged to have Him as their “opponent at law.” He thus warned them to settle out of court, lest they face the eternal consequences.

[5] This is not a far-fetched example. According to Rabbi Hillel, who had the most popular teaching regarding divorce in Jesus’ day, a man could lawfully divorce his wife if he found someone prettier, because that made his current wife “indecent” in his eyes. Rabbi Hillel also taught a man could divorce his wife if she put too much salt on his food, or spoke to another man, or didn’t produce a son for him.

[6] Under the Old Covenant, those who committed adultery were to be stoned.

[7] Of course, God doesn’t hold her accountable for adultery when she remarries; she was just the victim of her husband’s sin. Obviously, Jesus’ words make no sense unless she does remarry. Otherwise, there is no sense in which she could be considered to be an adulteress.

[8] Again, God would not hold the new husband accountable for adultery. He’s doing a virtuous thing, marrying and providing for a divorced woman. However, if a man encouraged a woman to divorce her husband so he could marry her, then he would be guilty of adultery, and that is more likely the sin Jesus had in mind here.

[9] There are, of course, other situations that could be addressed. For example, the Christian woman whose unsaved husband divorces her is certainly not guilty of adultery if she remarries a Christian man.

Chapter Seven – Jesus’ Greatest Salvation Sermon Continues

The Great Gospel Deception, Chapter Seven

How many pastors would consider it complimentary if someone labeled them a “holiness preacher”? How many professing Christians would use such a term in a way that is not derogatory? Why is holiness such a negative topic in the minds of so many people who claim to believe in a book that contains the words holy or holiness over six-hundred times, which promises them a future in a holy city where resides the “holy One,” whose very name is holy, who gives them His Holy Spirit, and whose holy throne is surrounded by four living creatures who day and night do not cease to say, “Holy, holy, holy, is the Lord God, the Almighty”? (see Rev. 21:2; Is. 40:25; Lev. 22:32; 1 Thes. 4:8; Ps. 47:8; Rev. 4:8, emphasis added).

If the first portion of the Sermon on the Mount has taught us anything, it has taught us that Jesus was a holiness preacher. That was His topic—holiness and how it relates to salvation.

The Sermon on the Mount is recorded in Matthew’s Gospel, chapters 5, 6 and 7. So far we’ve considered only chapter 5. There, in the Beatitudes, we learned the characteristics of the heaven-bound. We also discovered that Jesus did not come to abolish the Law, and that keeping the commandments is as important as ever. We learned that we will not enter the kingdom of heaven unless our righteousness exceeds that of the scribes and Pharisees, who kept the letter but ignored the spirit of the Law.

The second part of the Sermon on the Mount, Matthew 6 and the first half of chapter 7, consists of more commandments Christ gave to His followers. Does keeping them have anything to do with salvation? It certainly does. The entire last half of chapter 7 makes that point unmistakably clear, as we will see.

Let’s continue reading what Jesus commanded His true followers, those who believed He was God’s Son, the Messiah. We can, and should, ask the very revealing question: If Jesus’ audience didn’t believe in Him, why else would they obey Him? Why would they even listen to Him make demands that would affect every area of their lives? The answer is obvious: Because they believed, they wanted to obey. They would show their faith by their works.

Chapter Six Begins

Notice in this first section that Jesus assumes His followers will practice righteousness, and warns them to make sure their motive is to please God rather than impress men:

Beware of practicing your righteousness before men to be noticed by them; otherwise you have no reward with your Father who is in heaven. When therefore you give alms, do not sound a trumpet before you, as the hypocrites do in the synagogues and in the streets, that they may be honored by men. Truly I say to you, they have their reward in full. But when you give alms, do not let your left hand know what your right hand is doing that your alms may be in secret; and your Father who sees in secret will repay you (Matt. 6:1-4).

Jesus fully expected that His followers would give alms to the poor (as we learned in chapter three of this book). The Law commanded it (see Ex. 23:11; Lev. 19:10; 23:22; 25:35; Deut. 15:7-11), and the scribes and Pharisees did it with the blowing of trumpets, ostensibly to call the poor to their public distributions. Yet how many professing Christians (and professing Christian churches) give nothing to the poor? They haven’t even made it to the point of needing to examine their motives for alms giving. If selfishness motivated the scribes and Pharisees to advertise their alms giving, what is it that motivates professing Christians to ignore the plight of the poor? Does our righteousness surpass that of the scribes and Pharisees?

As Paul would echo in 1 Corinthians 3:10-15, we can do good works that will go unrewarded if our motives are not pure. True followers of Christ should have pure motives in every good deed, but not all do. Paul wrote that it is possible even to preach the gospel from impure motives (see Phil. 1:15-17). The best way to be sure our giving is purely motivated is to give as secretively as possible.

Jesus also expected that His followers would pray and fast. That was a given. He did not say, “If you pray,” but “When you pray.” The danger was that they might allow their motives to become tainted, as were the motives of unregenerate people who prayed and fasted. If that happened, they would lose the reward they would have received had their motives been pure. So He admonished them:

And when you pray, you are not to be as the hypocrites; for they love to stand and pray in the synagogues and on the street corners, in order to be seen by men. Truly I say to you, they have their reward in full. But you, when you pray, go into your inner room, and when you have shut your door, pray to your Father who is in secret, and your Father who sees in secret will repay you. And when you are praying, do not use meaningless repetition, as the Gentiles do, for they suppose that they will be heard for their many words. Therefore do not be like them; for your Father knows what you need, before you ask Him…

And whenever you fast, do not put on a gloomy face as the hypocrites do, for they neglect their appearance in order to be seen fasting by men. Truly I say to you, they have their reward in full. But you, when you fast, anoint your head, and wash your face, so that you may not be seen fasting by men, but by your Father who is in secret; and your Father who sees in secret will repay you (Matt. 6:5-8, 16-18).

Again, how many professing Christians rarely spend time in prayer and have never fasted? How does their righteousness compare with that of the scribes and Pharisees, who practiced both (albeit for the wrong reasons)?

Holy Praying

Jesus also told His disciples how they should pray. His model prayer is a telling revelation of His expectations for their devotion, obedience and priorities:[1]

Pray, then, in this way: “Our Father who art in heaven, hallowed be Thy name. Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven. Give us this day our daily bread” (Matt. 6:9-11).

The true disciple’s foremost concern should be that God’s name be hallowed. That is, that God’s name be respected, revered, and treated as holy.

Of course, those who pray that God’s name be hallowed should be holy, hallowing God’s name themselves. It would be hypocritical to do otherwise. Thus this prayer reflects our desire that others would submit themselves to God as we have. And, as I asked in a previous chapter, to what degree does a person reflect his longing for God’s name to be hallowed when he entertains himself by viewing actors who continually blaspheme the name of God and His Son? According to my observations, this is something that many professing Christians do with regularity. Would you be offended by a movie where the actors used your name as a swear word?

The second request of the prayer is similar: “Thy kingdom come.” The idea of a kingdom implies the idea of a King who rules His kingdom. The Christian disciple longs to see his King, the one who rules his life, rule over the whole earth. Oh, that everyone would bow their knee to King Jesus in obedient faith!

The third request echoes the first and second: “Thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.” Again, how can we sincerely pray such a prayer without being submitted to God’s will in our own lives? The true disciple desires that God’s will be done on earth just as it is in heaven—perfectly and completely.

That God’s name be hallowed, that His will be done, that His kingdom would come, should be more important to us than sustaining food, our “daily bread.” This fourth request is placed fourth for a reason. Even in itself, it reflects a right ordering of our priorities, and no hint of greed is found here. This praying disciple serves God and not mammon.

The Model Prayer Continues

So far the theme of holiness streams from every supplication of the Lord’s Prayer. And it continues to flow from its final lines:

“And forgive us our debts, as we also have forgiven our debtors. And do not lead us into temptation, but deliver us from evil. For Thine is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory, forever. Amen.” For if you forgive men for their transgressions, your heavenly Father will also forgive you. But if you do not forgive men, then your Father will not forgive your transgressions (Matt. 6:12-15).

Jesus’ true disciple desires to be holy, so when he sins, it troubles him greatly.[2] He realizes that his disobedience has offended God, and he feels ashamed. He wants the stain of unholiness to be removed, and thankfully, his gracious heavenly Father is willing to forgive him. But he must ask for forgiveness, the fifth request found in the Lord’s prayer.

Our being forgiven, however, is conditional upon our forgiving others. Because we’ve been forgiven of so much, we have an obligation to forgive everyone who requests our forgiveness, and to love even those who don’t. If we refuse to forgive, God won’t forgive us. Do unforgiven people gain entrance into God’s eternal kingdom? Again we see that this is a sermon about holiness, salvation, and the relationship between the two.

The sixth and final request, too, is one obviously related to holiness: “Do not lead us into temptation, but deliver us from evil” [or “the evil one”]. So much does the true disciple long for holiness that he asks God not to lead him into a situation where he might be tempted, lest he succumb. Additionally, he requests that God would rescue him from any evil that might entrap him. This final request of Jesus’ model prayer is certainly nothing less than a cry for God’s help to be holy.

Why are all six requests of this prayer appropriate? The final line tells us: God is a great King who rules over His kingdom in which we are His servants. He is all-powerful, and no one should dare resist His will. All glory will belong to Him forever: “For Thine is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory, forever” (Matt. 6:13). He is worthy to be obeyed.

What is the dominant theme of the Lord’s prayer? Holiness. Christ’s disciples desire that God’s name be hallowed, that His reign would be established over the earth, and that His will be perfectly done everywhere. This is more important to them than even their daily bread. They want to be pleasing in His sight, and when they fail, they want forgiveness from Him. As forgiven people, they extend forgiveness to others. They long to be perfectly holy, to the degree that they desire to avoid temptation, because temptation increases their chances of sinning.

The Disciple and His Material Possessions

The next topic of the Sermon on the Mount is perhaps the most disturbing section for professing Christians whose primary motivation in life is the accumulation of things:

Do not lay up for yourselves treasures upon earth, where moth and rust destroy, and where thieves break in and steal. But lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor rust destroys, and where thieves do not break in or steal; for where your treasure is, there will your heart be also. The lamp of the body is the eye; if therefore your eye is clear, your whole body will be full of light. But if your eye is bad, your whole body will be full of darkness. If therefore the light that is in you is darkness, how great is the darkness! No one can serve two masters; for either he will hate the one and love the other, or he will hold to one and despise the other. You cannot serve God and mammon (Matt. 6:19-24).

Jesus commanded that we not lay up for ourselves treasures upon earth. What then constitutes a “treasure”? Literal treasures are normally kept in treasure chests, stored away somewhere, never used for anything practical. Jesus defined them as things that attract moths, rust and thieves. Another way of saying it would be, “non-essentials.” Moths eat what is in our attic and the far ends of our closets, not what we wear frequently. Rust eats away at the toys and “tools” we never use, piled in the corners of basements, garages and storage sheds. Thieves break in and steal things people really don’t need: art, jewelry, expensive gadgets, and what can be pawned. They normally don’t take beds, stoves, food or tennis shoes (at least they don’t in wealthy nations such as ours).

The point is that we are God’s and so is everything we “own.” We are stewards of God’s money, so every decision to spend money is a spiritual decision. What we do with our money reflects who is controlling our lives. When we accumulate “treasures,” hoarding money and buying what is not essential, we reveal that Jesus is not in control, because if He was, we would do better things with the money He’s entrusted to us.

What are those better things? Jesus commands us to lay up treasure in heaven. How can we do that? He tells us in Luke’s Gospel: “Sell your possessions and give to charity; make yourselves purses which do not wear out, an unfailing treasure in heaven, where no thief comes near, nor moth destroys” (Luke 12:33). By giving to charity, we lay up treasure in heaven. Jesus is telling us to take what is sure to depreciate to the point of being worthless, and invest it in something that will never depreciate. How many professing Christians are doing that? Why do the large majority of professing Christians in North America, who enjoy one of the highest standards of living in the world, not even give anywhere close to a tenth of their income, which was required under the Law?[3]

The Bad Eye

What did Jesus mean when He spoke about the eye being “the lamp of the body”? His words must have something to do with how we view money and material things, because that is what He was talking about before and after.

Just as He first contrasted the person who lays up earthly treasures with the person who lays up heavenly treasures, Jesus was again contrasting two kinds of people, one with a clear eye whose body is full of light, and one with a bad eye whose body is full of darkness. In the verses that immediately follow, He also contrasts two people, saved and unsaved, one who serves God and one who serves money. Thus it is safe to conclude that the person with the clear eye corresponds to the one who lays up treasures in heaven and who serves God, while the one with the bad eye corresponds to the one who lays up treasures on earth and serves money.

From other scriptures, we learn that an “evil eye” is an idiom for having a greedy heart (see Matt. 20:15 and Prov. 28:22). A “clear eye” is the opposite, so it must signify one who does not have a greedy heart. A person with a clear eye is full of light, that is, truth, whereas the person with the evil eye is full of darkness. Remember, he is the same person who is laying up treasures on earth. He is the same person whose god is money.

What does it mean to have money as your god? It means that money has a place in your life that only God should rightfully have. Money is directing your life. It consumes your energy, thoughts and time. It is the main source of your joy. You love it.[4] That is why Paul equated greed with idolatry, stating that no greedy person will inherit God’s kingdom (see Eph. 5:5; Col. 3:5-6).

In this passage, Jesus is not contrasting two kinds of Christians. He is contrasting a true believer with an unbeliever. Those who are laying up treasures on earth are full of darkness and not serving God, but money. They reveal their unbelief by what they do. Again, this is a sermon about holiness, salvation, and the relationship between them.

The Covetous Poor

A preoccupation with material things is not only wrong if those things are luxury items. A person can be wrongly preoccupied with material things even when those things are basic necessities. Jesus continued:

For this reason I say to you, do not be anxious for your life, as to what you shall eat, or what you shall drink; nor for your body, as to what you shall put on. Is not life more than food, and the body than clothing? Look at the birds of the air, that they do not sow, neither do they reap, nor gather into barns, and yet your heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not worth much more than they? And which of you by being anxious can add a single cubit to his life’s span? And why are you anxious about clothing? Observe how the lilies of the field grow; they do not toil nor do they spin, yet I say to you that even Solomon in all his glory did not clothe himself like one of these. But if God so arrays the grass of the field, which is alive today and tomorrow is thrown into the furnace, will He not much more do so for you, O men of little faith? Do not be anxious then, saying, “What shall we eat?” or “What shall we drink?” or “With what shall we clothe ourselves?” For all these things the Gentiles eagerly seek; for your heavenly Father knows that you need all these things. But seek first His kingdom and His righteousness; and all these things shall be added to you. Therefore do not be anxious for tomorrow; for tomorrow will care for itself. Each day has enough trouble of its own (Matt. 6:25-34).

Most readers of this book will not be able to relate at all to the people Jesus was addressing. When was the last time you worried about having food, drink or clothing?

However, Jesus’ words certainly have application to us. If it is wrong to be preoccupied with the essentials of life, how much more wrong is it to be preoccupied with nonessentials? Jesus expects His disciples to be primarily focused on seeking two things: His kingdom and His righteousness. When a professing Christian can’t afford to tithe, but can afford dog food, cable TV, payments on a new car or furniture, designer fashions, or junk food, is he living up to Christ’s standard of seeking first His kingdom and righteousness? No, he’s only fooling himself if he thinks he’s a follower of Jesus.

Specks and Logs

Jesus’ next set of commandments to His followers concerns the sins of judging and fault finding:

Do not judge lest you be judged. For in the way you judge, you will be judged; and by your standard of measure, it will be measured to you. And why do you look at the speck that is in your brother’s eye, but do not notice the log that is in your own eye? Or how can you say to your brother, “Let me take the speck out of your eye,” and behold, the log is in your own eye? You hypocrite, first take the log out of your own eye, and then you will see clearly to take the speck out of your brother’s eye (Matt. 7:1-5).

What does it mean to judge another person? A judge is someone who looks for faults in people who are brought to court. That’s the judge’s job, and there’s nothing wrong about what he does, as long as he judges according to proven facts. Judges are supposed to judge people, measuring them by the standard of the law of the land. If there were no judges, criminals would never be brought to justice.

Many people seem to think, however, that they have been appointed as judges, and thus they are always looking for faults in others. That is wrong. Furthermore, they often judge people without knowing all the facts, jumping to wrong conclusions. To make matters worse, these self-appointed judges usually measure people by standards that they themselves fall short of, making themselves hypocrites. “He who is without sin among you, let him be the first to throw a stone” (John 8:7).

This is the kind of behavior Jesus was talking about. The apostle James wrote, “Do not complain, brethren, against one another, that you yourselves may not be judged; behold, the Judge is standing right at the door” (Jas. 5:9). This is one of the most prevalent sins in the church, and those who are guilty of judging others place themselves in a dangerous position of being judged. When we speak against a fellow believer, pointing out his faults to others, we’re playing the part of a judge. We’re breaking the golden rule, because we don’t want others to speak ill of us in our absence. And when we speak to a fellow believer about his faults while we have greater faults, we are the man with the log in his eye.

Notice, however, that Jesus did not forbid spiritually appraising other people. He said in the very next verse:

Do not give what is holy to dogs, and do not throw your pearls before swine, lest they trample them under their feet, and turn and tear you to pieces (Matt. 7:6).

In order to obey this commandment, we must appraise if someone is a “spiritual dog” or “spiritual pig.” that is, someone who does not appreciate valuable spiritual things, such as God’s Word. And we will shortly read how Jesus commanded His followers to appraise all spiritual leaders by examining their fruit.

Encouragement to Pray

Finally we come to the last section of Jesus’ sermon. It begins with some encouraging prayer promises:

Ask, and it shall be given to you; seek, and you shall find; knock, and it shall be opened to you. For everyone who asks receives, and he who seeks finds, and to him who knocks it shall be opened. Or what man is there among you, when his son shall ask him for a loaf, will give him a stone? Or if he shall ask for a fish, he will not give him a snake, will he? If you then, being evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more shall your Father who is in heaven give what is good to those who ask Him (Matt. 7:7-11).

“Aha!” a reader somewhere is saying. “Here’s a part of the Sermon on the Mount that has nothing to do with holiness.”

That all depends on what it is we’re asking, knocking and seeking for in prayer. As those who “hunger and thirst for righteousness,” we long to obey all that Jesus has commanded in the preceding sermon, and that longing is certainly reflected in our prayers. In fact, the model prayer that Jesus previously shared in this same sermon was the expression of a desire for God’s will to be done and for holiness. Additionally, Luke’s version of these same prayer promises under consideration ends with, “If you then, being evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more shall your heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit to those who ask Him?” (Luke 11:13). Apparently, Jesus was not thinking of motor homes and sailboats when He promised us “good gifts.” In His mind, the Holy Spirit is a “good gift,” because the Holy Spirit makes us holy and helps us spread the gospel that makes other people holy. And holy people go to heaven.

A Summarizing Statement

Now we arrive at a verse that should be considered a statement that summarizes practically everything Jesus said up to this point. Many commentators miss this, but it is important that we don’t. This particular verse is obviously a summarizing statement, as it begins with the word therefore. It is thus connected to previous instructions, and the question is: How much of what Jesus has said does it summarize? Let’s read it and think:

Therefore, however you want people to treat you, so treat them, for this is the Law and the Prophets (Matt. 7:12).

This statement can’t be a summary of just the few verses before it about prayer, otherwise it would make no sense.

Remember that early in His sermon, Jesus had warned against the error of thinking that He had come to abolish the Law or the Prophets (see Matt. 5:17). From that point in His sermon until the verse at which we’ve now arrived, He did essentially nothing but endorse, explain and expand God’s Old Testament commandments. Thus, He now summarizes everything He’s commanded, all of which He derived from the Law and Prophets: “Therefore, whatever you want others to do for you, do so for them, for this is the Law and the Prophets” (7:12). The phrase, “the Law and the Prophets,” connects everything Jesus said between Matthew 5:17 and 7:12.

The relation between salvation and keeping what we now know as “the golden rule” is made clear in the two verses that follow:

Enter by the narrow gate; for the gate is wide, and the way is broad that leads to destruction, and many are those who enter by it. For the gate is small, and the way is narrow that leads to life, and few are those who find it (Matt. 7:13-14).

Obviously the narrow gate and the way that leads to life, which few find, is symbolic of salvation. The wide gate and broad way that leads to destruction, the route of the majority, symbolizes damnation. If everything Jesus said prior to this statement means anything, if this sermon has any logical progression, if Jesus possessed any intelligence as a communicator, then the most natural interpretation would be that the narrow way is the way of following Jesus, obeying His commandments. The broad way would be the opposite. How many professing Christians are traveling the narrow way that Jesus revealed from Matthew 5:17 to 7:12? If you are going along with the crowds, you can be sure you are on the broad way.

It is disturbing to many professing Christians that Jesus said nothing about faith or believing in Him in this salvation sermon. However, to those who understand the inseparable correlation between belief and behavior, faith and works, this sermon presents no problem. People who obey Jesus show their faith by their works. Those who don’t obey Him don’t believe He is the Son of God. Not only is our salvation an indication of God’s grace toward us, so is the transformation that has taken place in our lives. Our holiness is really His holiness.

How to Recognize False Religious Leaders

Next, Jesus warned His audience about false prophets, religious leaders who lead the unsuspecting down the broad road to destruction. They are those whose message is not truly from God, and so false teachers fall under this category as well. How can they be recognized as being false? By the same way a person can be recognized as being a false believer:

Beware of the false prophets, who come to you in sheep’s clothing, but inwardly are ravenous wolves. You will know them by their fruits. Grapes are not gathered from thorn bushes, nor figs from thistles, are they? Even so, every good tree bears good fruit; but the bad tree bears bad fruit. A good tree cannot produce bad fruit, nor can a bad tree produce good fruit. Every tree that does not bear good fruit is cut down and thrown into the fire. So then, you will know them by their fruits. Not everyone who says to Me, “Lord, Lord,” will enter the kingdom of heaven; but he who does the will of My Father who is in heaven. Many will say to Me on that day, “Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in Your name, and in Your name cast out demons, and in Your name perform many miracles?” And then I will declare to them, “I never knew you; depart from Me, you who practice lawlessness” (Matt. 7:15-23).

False teachers are very deceptive. They have some exterior indications of being genuine. They may call Jesus their Lord, prophesy, cast out demons and perform miracles. But the “sheep’s clothing” only hides the “ravenous wolf.” They aren’t of the true sheep. How can it be known if they are true or false? Their true character can be known by examining their “fruits.”

What are the fruits of which Jesus was speaking? They are the fruits of obedience to all He has taught. Those who are true, teach and do the will of the Father. Those who are false, teach what is not true and “practice lawlessness” (7:23). Our responsibility, then, is to compare their teaching and lives with what Jesus taught and commanded.

False teachers abound today in the church, and we should not be surprised, because both Jesus and Paul forewarned us that, as the end approaches, we should expect nothing less (see Matt. 24:11; 2 Tim. 4:3-4). The most prevalent false prophets of our day are those who teach that heaven awaits the unholy. They are responsible for the eternal damnation of millions of people. Of them, John Wesley wrote,

How terrible is this!—when the ambassadors of God turn agents for the devil!—when they who are commissioned to teach men the way to heaven do in fact teach them the way to hell….If it be asked, “Why, who ever did…this?”…I answer, Ten thousand wise and honourable men; even all those, of whatever denomination, who encourage the proud, the trifler, the passionate, the lover of the world, the man of pleasure, the unjust or unkind, the easy, careless, harmless, useless creatures, the man who suffers no reproach for righteousness’ sake, to imagine he is in the way to heaven. These are false prophets in the highest sense of the word. These are traitors both to God and man….They are continually peopling the realms of the night; and whenever they follow the poor souls they have destroyed, “hell shall be moved from beneath to meet them at their coming!”[5]

Interestingly, Wesley was specifically commenting about the false teachers whom Jesus warned against in Matthew 7:15-23.

Notice that Jesus again plainly said, contrary to what so many false teachers tell us today, that those who don’t bear good fruit will be cast into hell (see 7:19). This applies not just to teachers and prophets, but to everyone. Jesus said, “Not everyone who says to Me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ will enter the kingdom of heaven; but he who does the will of My Father who is in heaven” (Matt. 7:21). Forgive me for saying it again, but this is a sermon about the correlation between salvation and holiness. People who aren’t obeying Jesus are heading for hell.

Also notice the connection Jesus made between what a person is inwardly and what he is outwardly. “Good” trees produce good fruit. “Bad” trees can’t produce good fruit. The source of the good fruit that shows up on the outside is the nature of the person. God has changed the nature of those who have truly believed in Jesus.[6]

The Final Summary

Jesus concludes His entire sermon with a summarizing example. As you would expect, it is an illustration of the relation between obedience and salvation:

Therefore everyone who hears these words of Mine, and acts upon them [literally, “does them”], may be compared to a wise man, who built his house upon the rock. And the rain descended, and the floods came, and the winds blew, and burst against that house; and yet it did not fall, for it had been founded upon the rock. And everyone who hears these words of Mine, and does not act upon them [literally, “does not do them”], will be like a foolish man, who built his house upon the sand. And the rain descended, and the floods came, and the winds blew, and burst against that house; and it fell, and great was its fall (Matt. 7:24-27).

Jesus’ final illustration is not a formula for “success in life” as some use it. The topic of the context is not how to prosper financially during tough times by having faith in Jesus’ promises. This is the summary of all that Jesus has said in His Sermon on the Mount. Those who do what He says are wise and will endure; they need not fear the wrath of God. Those who don’t obey Him are foolish and will suffer greatly, paying “the penalty of eternal destruction” (2 Thess. 1:9).

Answer to an Objection

Is it not possible that Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount was only applicable to those followers of His who lived prior to His sacrificial death and resurrection? Were they not under the Law as their temporary means of salvation, but after Jesus died for their sins, were then saved by faith, thus invalidating the means of salvation expounded in this sermon?

This theory is a bad one. No one has ever been saved by his works. It has always been by faith, prior to and during the Old Covenant. Paul argues in Romans 4 that Abraham and David were justified by faith and not works.

Moreover, it was an impossibility that any of Jesus’ audience could be saved by works, because they had all sinned and fallen short of God’s glory (see Rom. 3:23). Only God’s grace could save them, and only faith can receive His grace.

Unfortunately, too many in the church today view all of Jesus’ commandments as serving no higher purpose than to make us feel guilty so we’ll see the impossibility of earning salvation by works. Now that we’ve “gotten the message” and have been saved by faith, we can ignore most of His commandments. Unless, of course, we want to get others “saved.” Then we can pull out the commandments again to show people how sinful they are so they will be saved by a “faith” that is void of works.

Jesus did not tell His disciples, “Go into all the world and make disciples, and make sure they realize that, once they’ve felt guilty and are then saved by faith, My commandments have served their purpose in their lives.” Rather, He said, “Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations…teaching them to observe all that I commanded you…” (Matt. 28:19-20, emphasis added)

Footnotes

[1] Some unfortunately claim that this is not a prayer that Christians should employ because it is not prayed “in Jesus’ name.” Applying this logic, however, we would have to conclude that many prayers of the apostles recorded in the book of Acts and epistles were not “Christian prayers.”

[2] This verse is one of many that tell us that true disciples are not perfect or sinless. However, it also proves that true believers are concerned when they do sin.

[3] According to a Gallup poll, only 25% of evangelical Christians tithe. Forty percent claim that God is the most important thing in their lives, yet those who make between $50-75,000 per year give an average of 1.5 percent of their incomes to charity, including religious charity. Meanwhile, they spend an average of 12% of their incomes on leisure pursuits. George Barna reports in his book, The Second Coming of the Church, that his polls indicate that non-Christians are actually more likely than born-again Christians to give to nonprofit organizations and the poor.

[4] On another occasion, Jesus made the same statement about the impossibility of serving God and mammon, and Luke tells us, “Now the Pharisees, who were lovers of money, were listening to all these things, and they were scoffing at Him” (Luke 16:14).

[5] The Works of John Wesley (Baker: Grand Rapids, 1996), by John Wesley, reprinted from the 1872 edition issued by the Wesleyan Methodist Book Room, London, pp. 441, 416.

[6] I can’t resist taking the opportunity to also comment here about a common expression people use when trying to excuse sins in others: “We don’t know what is in their hearts.” In contradiction to this, Jesus said that the outside reveals the inside. In another place, He told us that “the mouth speaks out of that which fills the heart” (Matt. 12:34). When a person speaks words of hate, it indicates hatred fills his heart. Jesus also told us that “from within, out of the heart of men, proceed the evil thoughts, fornications, thefts, murders, adulteries, deeds of coveting and wickedness, as well as deceit, sensuality, envy, slander, pride and foolishness” (Mark 7:21-22). When a person commits adultery, we do know what is in his heart: adultery.

Le Plus Grand Sermon De Jésus Sur Le Salut.

SEPT

Combien de pasteurs prendraient cela pour compliment si quelqu’un les appelait «prédicateur de la sainteté»? Combien de ceux qui se disent chrétiens utiliseraient ce terme dans un sens qui n’est pas péjoratif? Pourquoi la sainteté est-elle un sujet négatif dans la pensée de gens qui déclarent croire dans le livre qui contient plus de six cents fois les mots saint et saintetéet qui leur promet un avenir dans la cité sainte où réside le Saint des saints dont le nom est saint, qui leur donne son Saint Esprit et dont le saint trône est entouré de quatre êtres vivants qui jour et nuit disent sans cesse «Saint, saint, saint est le Seigneur Dieu Tout-Puissant»? (Apoc. 21:2, Esaie 40:25, Lev. 22:32, I Tess. 4:8, Ps. 47:8, Apoc; 4:8).

Si nous avons à apprendre quelque chose de la première partie du Sermon sur la Montagne, c’est que Jésus était un prédicateur de la sainteté. C’était cela son sujet et son rapport avec salut.

On trouve le Sermon sur la Montagne dans Matthieu chapitres 5, 6 et 7. Nous avons appris, dans les Béatitudes, les caractéristiques de ceux qui sont destinés au ciel. Nous avons aussi découvert que Jésus n’est pas venu pour abolir la Loi et que le respect des commandements est d’une haute importance. Nous avons appris que nous n’allons pas entrer dans le royaume des cieux si notre justice ne dépasse pas celle des pharisiens et des scribes qui gardent la lettre de la loi mais en ignore l’esprit.

La deuxième partie de ce sermon, dans Matthieu 6 et dans la moitié du chapitre 7, renferme la plupart de commandements que Jésus avait donnés à ses disciples. Est-ce que leur observation a quelque chose à voir avec le salut? Bien sûr que oui! La deuxième moitié du chapitre 7 que nous allons voir après explique clairement cela.

Continuons à lire ce que Jésus avait ordonné aux vrais chrétiens, à ceux qui avaient cru qu’il était le Fils de Dieu, le Messie. Nous pouvons, et nous devrions poser cette question révélatrice: Si l’audience de Jésus n’avait pas cru en Lui, pourquoi alors Lui avait-elle obéi?

Pourquoi ils devaient même l’écouter leur demander d’obéir à des choses qui vont affecter tous les aspects de leur vie? La réponse est claire: C’est parce qu’ils avaient cru qu’ils voulaient obéir. Ils devaient prouver leur foi par les oeuvres.

Le Debut du chapitre Six.

Remarquez que dans cette première section, Jésus suppose que se disciples pratiqueront la justice, et leur demande d’être sûrs qu’ils doivent être motivés par le désir de plaire à Dieu plutôt qu’aux hommes.

«Gardez-vous de pratiquez votre justice devant les hommes pour en être vus; autrement, vous n’aurez point de récompense auprès de votre père qui est dans les cieux. Lorsque donc tu fais l’aumône, ne sonne pas la trompette devant toi, comme font les hypocrites dansles synagogues et dans les rues, afin d’être glorifiés par les hommes. Je vous le dis en vérité, ils reçoivent leur récompense. Mais quand tu fais l’aumône, que ta main gauche ne sache pas ce que fait ta droite, afin que ton aumône se fasse en secret; et ton père, qui voit dans le secret, te le rendra». (Matt.6:1-4)

Jésus voulait de tout cœur que ses disciples donnent l’aumône aux pauvres (comme nous l’avons appris au chapitre trois de ce livre). La Loi l’ordonne aussi (Ex. 32:11; Lev. 19:10, 23:22, 25:35; Deut. 15:7-11). Les pharisiens et les scribes le faisaient, au son de la trompette pour appeler les pauvres à la distribution publique. Mais combien de Chrétiens et des églises confessant Jésus ne donnent rien aux pauvres? Ils ne sont pas arrivés au point où ils peuvent examiner les motifs pour lesquels ils donnent l’aumône! Si l’égoïsme avait motivé les pharisiens et les scribes à faire leur publicité de leur aumône, quel peut être le motif poussant les chrétiens à ignorer le malheur des pauvres? Notre justice surpasse t-elle celle des scribes et des pharisiens?

Comme Paul en faisait l’écho dans 1 Corinthiens 3:10-15, nous pouvons avoir de bonnes œuvres mais qui ne seront pas récompensés si nos motifs ne sont pas purs. Les vrais chrétiens doivent avoirs de motivations pures dans tous leurs actes. Paul avait écrit qu’il était possible de prêcher l’évangile pour des raisons impures (Phil1:15-17). La meilleure manière de nous assurer que nos motifs sont purs, c’est de donner dans le plus grand secret possible.

Jésus voulait aussi que ses disciples prient et jeûnent. C’était un fait. Il n’avait pas dit: «Si vous priez», mais «quand vous priez…». La raison est qu’ils risquaient de permettre à leurs motifs d’être teintés comme l’étaient ceux des personnes non régénérées qui priaient et qui jeûnaient. Et si cela arrivait, ils perdraient les récompenses qu’ils auraient obtenues si leurs motivations étaient pures. Ainsi, Il les avait mis en garde:

«Lorsque vous priez, ne soyez pas comme des hypocrites, qui aiment prier debout dans les synagogues et aux coins des rues, pour être vus des hommes. Je vous le dis en vérité, ils reçoivent leur récompense. Ne leur ressemblez pas; car votre père sait de quoi vous avez besoin, avant que vous le lui demandiez.

Lorsque vous jeûner, ne prenez pas un air triste, comme les hypocrites, qui se rendent le visage tout défait, pour montrer aux hommes qu’ils jeûnent. Je vous le dis en vérité, ils reçoivent, leur récompense. Mais quand tu jeunes, parfume ta tête et lave ton visage, afin de ne pas montrer aux hommes que tu jeunes, mais à ton père qui est là dans le lieu secret; et ton père, qui voit dans le secret, te le rendra» (Matt 6:5-8, 16-18).

Encore, combien de chrétiens passent difficilement du temps dans la prière et qui n’ont jamais jeûné? Comment leur justice peut-elle être comparée à celle des scribes et des pharisiens qui pratiquent les deux (bien que pour de mauvaises motivations)?

La prière sainte.

Jésus avait aussi enseigné à ses disciples comment ils devaient prier. Son modèle de prière est une révélation de ce qu’il veut que leur dévotion, obéissance et priorités [1] soient.

«Voici donc comment vous devez prier: notre père qui est aux cieux! Que ton nom soit sanctifié! que ton règne vienne; que ta volonté soit faite sur la terre comme au ciel. Donne-nous aujourd’hui notre pain quotidien» (Mat 6:9-11)

La préoccupation première de tout véritable chrétien devait être que le nom de Dieu soit sanctifié. Ceci signifie que le nom de Dieu doit être respecté, vénéré et considéré comme saint.

Evidemment, ceux qui prient que le nom de Dieu soit sanctifié doivent être saints, sanctifiant eux-mêmes le nom de Dieu. Autrement, ce serait hypocrite. Donc cette prière reflète notre désir de voir les autres se soumettre eux-mêmes à Dieu comme nous l’avons fait. Et comme je l’ai demandé dans le chapitre précédent, comment quelqu’un peut-il refléter son désir de voir le nom de Dieu sanctifié lorsque son loisir consiste à regarder les acteurs qui continuellement blasphèment le nom de Dieu et de son Fils? Selon mes observations, ceci est quelque chose que beaucoup de chrétiens font régulièrement. Serez-vous offensé par un film où les acteurs utilisent votre nom comme un juron?

La deuxième requête de la prière est identique: «Que ton règne vienne». L’idée d’un royaume insinue celle d’un roi qui domine sur Son royaume. Le disciple chrétien soupire du désir de voir son roi, celui qui est le maître de sa vie et qui domine sur toute la terre. Oh! Si chacun pouvait fléchir ses genoux devant le Roi Jésus dans une foi obéissante.

Le troisième point de prière va dans la même ligne que la première et la deuxième:«Que ta volonté soit faite sur terre comme». En outre comment pouvons-nous sincèrement faire une telle prière sans que nous ne soyons soumis à la volonté de Dieu dans notre propre vie? Le vrai chrétien veut que la volonté de Dieu soit faite sur terre comme au ciel–parfaitement et complètement.

Que le nom de Dieu soit sanctifié, que sa volonté soit faite, que son royaume vienne, doit être pour nous plus important que la nourriture qui nous soutient,«notre pain quotidien». Ce quatrième point vient en cette position pour une raison. Et en elle-même, elle reflète l’ordre normal des priorités. On ne trouve ici aucune trace de cupidité. Cette prière de disciple sert Dieu et non Mammon.

La prière modèle continue.

Jusqu’ici, la sainteté découle de toute supplication contenue dans la prière du Seigneur. Et elle continue à couler dans ses dernières lignes:

«Pardonne nos offenses, comme nous aussi nous pardonnons à ceux qui nous ont offensés; ne nous induis pas en tentation, mais délivre-nous du malin. Car c’est à toi qu’appartiennent dans tous les siècles, le règne, la puissance et la gloire. Amen. Si vous pardonnez aux hommes leurs offenses, votre père céleste vous pardonnera aussi; mais si vous ne pardonnez pas aux hommes, votre père ne vous pardonnera pas non plus vos offenses.» (Matt 6: 12-15). Le désir du vrai disciple de Christ, c’est d’être saint. Il est vraiment [2] troublé lorsqu’il pêche. Il se rend compte que sa désobéissance a offensé Dieu et il a honte. Il veut que cette tache d’impureté soit enlevée. Il est déjà reconnaissant parce que son gracieux père céleste est disposé à le pardonner. Mais il doit demander pardon, ce qui est le cinquième commandement dans la prière de Seigneur.

Notre pardon est conditionné par notre propre capacité de pardonner les autres. Car nous avons été tellement pardonnés que nous sommes sous l’obligation de pardonner ceux qui nous en font la demande et d’aimer ceux qui ne nous aiment pas du tout. Si nous refusons de pardonner, Dieu ne nous pardonnera pas à son tour. La dernière et sixième requête est aussi en rapport avec la sainteté. Ne nous soumets pas à la tentation, mais délivre-nous du mal (du Mauvais). C’est ce que font les vrais disciples désirant que Dieu ne les mène pas vers une situation où ils pourraient être tentés de peur qu’ils ne succombent. En plus, ils demandent à Dieu de les délivrer de tout mal qui pouvait leur arriver. Cette dernière demande du modèle de prière de Jésus n’est rien d’autre qu’un cri d’appel à Dieu pour nous aider à être saint.

Pourquoi toutes les six requêtes de cette prière sont-elles appropriées? La dernière ligne nous dit: Dieu est le grand Roi qui règne sur le royaume dans lequel nous sommes des serviteurs. Il est le Tout-Puissant et personne ne peut oser résister à sa volonté. Toute la gloire lui appartient pour toujours: «Car c’est à toi qu’appartiennent le règne, la puissance et la gloire pour toujours» (Mat. 6: 13). Il métrite d’être obéi.

Quel est le thème dominant de la Prière du Seigneur? La sainteté. Les disciples de Christ désirent que le nom de Dieu soit sanctifié, que son règne soit établi sur toute la terre et que sa volonté soit parfaitement faite partout. Ceci est plus important que notre pain quotidien. Ils veulent Lui plaire et là où ils chancèlent, ils veulent recevoir son pardon. Puisqu’ils ont été pardonnés, ils accordent le pardon aux autres. Ils soupirent après la sainteté tellement qu’ils veulent éviter toute tentation car celle-ci multiplie leurs chances de tomber dans le péché.

Le disciple et ses biens matériels.

Le point suivant du Sermon sur la Montagne est peut-être la section la plus perturbant pour les chrétiens dont la première motivation dans la vie est l’accumulation de richesses:

«Ne vous amassez pas de trésors sur la terre la teigne et la rouille détruisent, et où le voleur dérobe; mais amassez-vous des trésors dans le ciel, où la teigne et la rouille ne détruisent point; et où le voleur ne perce ni ne dérobe. Car là où est ton trésor, là aussi sera ton cœur. L’œil est la lampe du corps. Si ton œil est en bon état, tout ton corps sera éclairé; mais si ton œil est en mauvais état, tout ton corps sera dans les ténèbres. Si donc la lumière qui est en toi est ténèbres, combien seront grandes ces ténèbres! Nul ne peut servir deux maîtres. Car, ou il haïra l’un, et aimera l’autre; ou il s’attachera à l’un, et méprisera l’autre. Vous ne pouvez servir Dieu et Mammon» (Matt 6 19-24).

Jésus avait ordonné que nous n’amassions pas de richesses pour nous- mêmes sur terre. Qu’est-ce qui constitue alors les trésors? Les vrais trésors sont gardés dans les coffres forts, gardés quelque part et non réellement utilisés pour quelque chose pratique. Jésus les avait définis comme des choses qui attirent la teigne, la rouille et les voleurs. On peut aussi dire, des choses «non essentielles». La teigne ronge ce qui est dans nos greniers et dans les coins les plus cachés. La rouille s’attaque aux jouets et aux instruments que nous n’utilisons pas et qui sont empilés dans les coins les plus bas de nos granges et étagères. Les voleurs cassent et dérobent les choses dont les gens n’ont pas réellement besoin: les œuvres d’art, les bijoux, les objets de valeur et ce que nous pouvons mettre en gage. Ils ne prennent généralement pas les lits, la nourriture, les réchauds, les chaussures de tennis ( au moins pas dans les pays riches).

Le fait est que nous appartenons à Dieu, de même que nous ce que nous possédons. Nous sommes les gestionnaires de l’argent de Dieu, dès lors, toute décision que nous prenons sur nos dépenses est une décision spirituelle. Ce que nous faisons de notre argent reflète ce qui contrôle notre vie. Lorsque nous accumulons les «trésors» et que nous amassons de l’argent et que nous achetons ce qui n’est pas essentiel, nous révélons que ce n’est pas Jésus qui contrôle parce que si c’était le cas, Il ferait de meilleurs choses avec l’argent qu’Il nous a confié.

Quelles sont ces meilleures choses? Jésus nous a ordonnés d’amasser les trésors dans les cieux. Comment pouvons-nous le faire? Il nous dit dans l’évangile de Luc:«Vendez ce que vous possédez et donnez-le en aumône. Faites-vous des bourses qui ne s’usent point, un trésor inépuisable dans les cieux, où la teigne ne détruit point, où la rouille ne détruit point» (Luc 12:33). En donnant aux pauvres, vous amassez des trésors dans les cieux. Jésus nous dit de considérer ce qui se déprécie comme quelque chose de sans valeur et d’investir dans des choses qui ne se déprécieront jamais. Combien de ceux qui se déclarent chrétiens le font? Pourquoi beaucoup d’américains qui se disent chrétiens et qui jouissent de l’un de plus élevés niveaux de vie dans le monde ne donnent même pas le dixième de leur revenu, comme demandé sous la Loi [3]?

Le mauvais oeil.

Qu’est-ce que Jésus voulait dire lorsqu’il présentait l’œil comme étant «la lampe de du corps»? Ses paroles avaient un rapport avec notre façon de considérer l’argent et les autres biens matériels car, c’est de cela qu’Il avait parlé avant et après.

Jésus faisait une fois de plus la distinction entre deux types de personnes, l’une avec un œil clair et corps bien éclairé, et l’autre avec un mauvais œil et le corps plongé dans les ténèbres. Et dans le verset qui suit, il compare aussi deux personnes, le sauvé et le païen, l’un servant Dieu et l’autre servant l’argent. Il est donc facile d’arriver à la conclusion selon laquelle, celui qui a un œil bon sert Dieu et l’autre avec un mauvais œil sert l’argent.

La personne avec un œil clair symbolise celle qui recherche la vérité, et qui permet à la lumière de la vérité d’entrer en lui. Elle sert Dieu. La personne qui a un mauvais œil empêche la lumière de la vérité d’entrer, parce qu’elle pense avoir déjà la vérité, et donc elle est remplie de ténèbres et croit aux mensonges. Elle pense que la raison de son existence, c’est la satisfaction personnelle. L’argent est donc son dieu.

Qu’est-ce que cela signifie avoir l’argent pour dieu? Cela signifie que l’argent occupe dans sa vie une position qui de droit revient à Dieu seul. C’est l’argent qui dirige sa vie. Il consume toute son énergie, ses pensées et son temps. C’est l’argent qui est la source principale de sa joie. Il l’aime [4]. Voilà pourquoi Paul met sur le même pied ‘égalité l’avarice et l’idolâtrie, disant que ceux qui sont cupides n’hériteront pas le royaume de Dieu (Eph:5, Col. 3:5-6).

Les deux, Dieu et l’argent veulent être les maîtres de nos vies, et Jésus a dit que nous ne pouvions pas servir les deux. Remarquez aussi que la seule alternative qu’il offre en ce qui concerne Dieu, c’est de Le Servir.

L’option selon laquelle l’on peut croire en Lui et ne pas le servir n’existe pas. Si nous le servons, Il sera le Seigneur de nos possessions. Ce n’est pas à faire plus tard, à un moment de «consécration profonde», c‘est une décision à prendre au moment de la conversion.

Un pauvre cupide.

La préoccupation pour les biens matériels n’est pas seulement mauvaise lorsque ces choses sont luxueuses. Une personne peut être préoccupée de mauvaise façon pour les biens matériels même s’il s’agit des biens de premières nécessité. Jésus avait continué:

«C’est pourquoi, je vous le dis: ne vous inquiétez pas pour votre vie de ce que vous mangerez, ni pour votre corps de quoi vous serez vêtus. La vie n’est-elle pas plus que la nourriture, et le corps plus que les vêtements? Regardez les oiseaux du ciel, ils ne sèment ni ne moissonnent, et n’amassent rien dans le grenier; et votre père céleste les nourrit. Ne valez-vous pas beaucoup plus qu’eux? Qui de vous par ses inquiétudes, peut ajouter une coudée à la durée de sa vie? Et pourquoi vous inquiétez au sujet des vêtements; considérez comment croissent les lis des champs: ils ne travaillent ni ne filent; Cependant je vous dis que Salomon même, dans toute sa gloire n’ a pas été vêtu comme l’un d’eux. Si Dieu revêt ainsi l’herbe des champs, qui existe aujourd’hui et qui demain sera jeté au four, ne vous revêtira-il pas à plus forte raison, gens de peu de foi? Ne vous inquiétez donc point, et ne dites pas, que mangerons-nous? Que boirons-nous? De quoi serons-nousvêtus? Car toutes ces choses, ce sont les païens qui les recherchent. Votre père céleste sait que vous en avez besoin. Cherchez premièrement le royaume et la justice de Dieu; et toutes ces choses vous seront données par-dessus. Ne vous inquiétez donc pas du lendemain; car le lendemain aura soin de lui-même. A chaque jour suffit sa peine (Matt 6:25-34).

Beaucoup de lecteurs de ce livre n’ont aucun point en commun avec les gens à qui Jésus parlait. Quand vous êtes-vous inquiétez de la nourriture, de la boisson ou des vêtements pour la dernière fois?

Cependant, ces paroles s’appliquent bien à nous aussi. Si ce n’est pas bon de nous inquiéter des choses essentielles à combien plus forte raison est-il mauvais de s’inquiéter pour celles qui ne sont pas de premières nécessités? Jésus veut que ses disciples soient préoccupés par la recherche de deux choses: le royaume de Dieu et sa justice. Lorsqu’un chrétien ne peut payer sa dîme, mais peut nourrir son chien, s’offrir de connections câblées, de nouvelles voitures, les habits à la mode, les meubles, vit-il selon les requis de Christ qui est de chercher d’abord le royaume et la justice de Dieu? Non. Il se trompe lui-même s’il pense être un disciple de Christ.

Les brindilles et les poutres.

La série suivante des commandements de Christ à ses disciples porte sur le jugement et les fautes des autres:

«Ne jugez point, afin que vous ne soyez point jugés. Car on vous jugera du jugement dont vous jugez, et l’on vous mesurera avec la mesure dont vous mesurez. Pourquoi vois-tu la paille qui est dans l’œil de ton frère, et n’aperçois-tu pas la poutre qui est dans ton œil? Ou comment peux-tu dire à ton frère: laisse-moi ôter une paille de ton œil, toi qui as une poutre dans le tien? Hypocrite, ôte premièrement la poutre de ton œil, et alors tu verras comment ôter la paille de l’œil de ton frère» (Matt. 7:1-5).

Que signifie juger quelqu’un d’autre? Un juge est celui qui cherche la faute commise par une personne traînée devant la cour. C’est son travail et il n’y a rien de mal en ce qu’il fait tant qu’il juge selon les preuves à sa disposition. Les juges doivent prononcer des jugements sur les gens en se basant sur la loi du pays. S’il n’y avait pas de juges, les criminels ne feraient jamais face à la justice pour répondre de leurs actes.

Cependant, beaucoup de gens pensent qu’ils ont été désignés juges et dès lors, cherchent les fautes dans la vie des autres. Ceci est mauvais. En plus, ils jugent généralement les gens sans connaître tous les faits, arrivant ainsi à de mauvaises conclusions. Et pour tout empirer, ces juges auto-désignés jugent souvent les gens pour les fautes qu’ils commettent eux-mêmes, se rendant ainsi hypocrites. «Que celui n’a jamais péché, soit le premier à jeter la pierre» (Jean 8:7)

C’est de ce genre de comportement que Jésus parlait. L’apôtre Jacques avait écrit: «Ne vous plaignez pas les uns des autres, frères, afin que vous ne soyez pas jugés: Voici, le juge est à la porte». (Jacques 5:9). Ceci est le péché le plus récurent dans l’église et ceux qui jugent les autres se placent eux-même dans une position dangereuse, celle d’être jugés à leur tour. Lorsque nous parlons contre un autre chrétien, montrant sa faute aux autres, nous jouons une part du rôle de juge. Nous brisons la loi d’or, parce que nous ne voulons pas que les autres parlent du mal nous en notre absence. Et lorsque nous parlons à un frère à propos de ses fautes alors que les nôtres sont plus grandes, nous sommes cet homme qui a une poutre dans son œil. Les critiques aimables et constructives ne peuvent pas être faites par ceux qui sont autant ou plus coupables que ceux qu’ils critiquent. Beaucoup de personnes spirituelles que je connais donnent très peu, ou même pas, de conseils si elles ne sont pas consultées, parce que la plupart de gens n’aiment pas les écouter. C’est peut-être ce que Jésus avait en tête dans le verset suivant:

«Ne donnez pas des choses saintes aux chiens, et ne jetez pas vos perles devant les pourceaux, de peur qu’ils ne le foulent aux pieds, ne se retournent et ne vous déchirent». (Matt. 7:6).

De même un proverbe dit:«Ne reprends pas le moqueur de peur qu’il ne te haïsse; reprends le sage, et il t’aimera» (Proverbes 9: 8).

Exhortation a la priere.

Finalement, nous arrivons à la dernière section du sermon de Jésus avec quelques encouragements à la prière pour les promesses:

«Demandez, et l’on vous donnera; cherchez, et vous trouverez; frappez et l’on vous ouvrira, car quiconque demande reçoit, celui qui cherche trouve, et l’on ouvre à celui qui frappe. Lequel de vous donnera une pierre à son fils, s’il lui demande du pain? Ou, s’il demande un poisson, lui donnera t-il un serpent? Si donc, méchants comme vous l’êtes, vous savez donner de bonnes choses à vos enfants, à combien plus forte raison votre père qui est dans les cieux donnera t-il de bonnes choses à ceux qui les lui demandent». (Matt. 7:7-11).

«Ah! ah!», dira un lecteur quelque part. «Voici une partie du sermon qui n’a rien à voir avec la sainteté».

Tout dépend de ce que nous demandons, c’est pourquoi nous frappons et de ce que nous cherchons, dans la prière. Comme ceux qui ont «faim et soif de la justice», nous désirons ardemment obéir à tout ce que Jésus à ordonner dans la partie précédente du sermon et ce désir se reflète certainement dans nos prières. En fait,, la prière modèle que Jésus avait donné dans ce sermon était l’expression du désir de l’accomplissement de la volonté de Dieu et de la sainteté. En plus, la version de Luc de la même prière que nous étudions se termine par,«si donc vous étant mauvais, savez donnez de bonnes choses à vos enfants, à combien plus forte raison votre père céleste vous donnera t-il le Saint-Esprit à ceux qui le lui demandent» (Luc 11:13). Apparemment, Jésus ne pensait pas aux caravanes et aux yachts quand Il avait promis de«bonnes choses». Dans sa pensée, le Saint-Esprit est un «bon don», parce que le Saint-Esprit nous rend saints et nous aide à répandre l’évangile qui rend d’autres saints. Et les gens saints iront au ciel.

Une declaration qui resume.

Nous arrivons maintenant au verset qui doit être considéré comme une déclaration qui résume pratiquement tout ce que Jésus a dit jusqu’à ce point. Beaucoup de commentateurs échouent à ce point. Mais nous ne voulons pas faire de même. Ce verset particulier est évidemment une déclaration qui résume car il commence par donc Il est donc relié aux instructions antérieures, et la question est la suivante: De tout ce que Jésus a dit, sur quoi porte ce résumé? Lisons-le et réfléchissons:

«Tout ce que vous voulez que les hommes fassent pour vous, faites-le de même pour eux, car c’est la loi et les prophètes» (Matt. 7:12).

Cette déclaration ne peut être le résumé de juste de ces quelques versets qui le précède, autrement, cela n’a aucun sens.

Rappelez-vous qu’au début de son sermon, il avait prévenu contre la pensée selon laquelle il était venu pour abolir la loi et les prophètes (Matt. 5:17). De cette partie de son sermon jusqu’à ce verset où nous sommes arrivés, Il ne fait essentiellement rien d’autre si ce n’est qu’entériner, expliquer et propager les commandements de l’Ancien Testament. Dès lors, Il résume tout ce qu’il avait ordonné et qui découlait de la loi et des prophètes.: «Donc, tout ce que vous voulez que les hommes fassent pour vous, faites-le de même pour eux car c’est la Loi et les prophètes» (Matt.7:12).

L’expression «la Loi et les prophètes» relie tout ce que Jésus a dit depuis Matthieu 5:17 jusqu’à 7:12.

La relation entre le salut et l’observation de ce que nous savons maintenant être la «règle d’or» est clarifié dans les deux versets qui suivent:

«Entrez par la porte étroite. Car large est la porte, spacieux est le chemin qui mènent à la perdition, et il y en a beaucoup qui entrent par là. Mais étroite est la porte, resserré est le chemin qui mènent à la vie, et il y en a peu qui les trouvent» (Mat.7:13-14).

Il est clair que la porte étroite, et la voie qui conduit à la vie, que très peu trouvent, symbolisent le salut. La porte large et le chemin spacieux qui conduisent à la destruction, route suivie par la majorité, symbolise la condamnation. Si tout ce que Jésus a dit avant ceci signifie quelque chose, si le sermon a une progression logique, si Jésus est assez intelligent en tant que communicateur, alors l’interprétation la plus naturelle doit être que le chemin étroit consiste à suivre Jésus et à obéir à ses commandements. Le chemin spacieux doit être le contraire. Combien de ceux qui se disent chrétiens suivent le chemin étroit que Jésus a montré de Matthieu 5:17 à 7:12? Si vous marchez avec la foule, vous pouvez être sûr que vous êtes sur le chemin spacieux.

C’est perturbant pour beaucoup de dits-chrétiens que Jésus n’ait rien dit à propos de la foi ni de la croyance en lui pour le salut dans le sermon. Et pourtant, pour ceux qui comprennent la relation inséparable entre la foi et le comportement, la foi et les œuvres, ce sermon ne constitue aucun problème. Les gens qui obéissent à Jésus montrent leur foi par leurs œuvres. Ceux qui ne lui obéissent pas ne croient pas qu’il est le Fils de Dieu. Ce n’est pas seulement le salut qui est l’indication de la grâce de Dieu sur nous, mais la transformation qui s’est opérée dans nos vies. Notre sainteté est réellement sa sainteté.

Comment reconnaître les faux chefs religieux.

Ensuite, Jésus a mis en garde son audience contre les faux prophètes, les chefs religieux qui conduisent les non méfiants sur la route spacieuse, vers la destruction. Ce sont ceux dont le message ne vient pas réellement de Dieu, de même que les faux enseignants qui tombent aussi dans cette catégorie. Comment peut-on reconnaître leur fausseté? De la même manière qu’une personne peut-être reconnue comme étant un faux chrétien:

«Gardez-vous de faux prophètes. Ils viennent à vous en vêtements de brebis, mais au-dedans, ce sont des loups ravisseurs. Vous les reconnaîtrez à leurs fruits. Cueille t-on des raisins sur des épines, ou des figues sur des chardons? Tout bon arbre porte des bons fruits, mais le mauvais arbre porte de mauvais fruits. Un bon arbre ne peut porter de mauvais fruits, ni un mauvais arbre porter de bons fruits. Tout arbre qui ne porte pas de fruits est coupé et est jeté au feu. C’est donc à leurs fruits que vous les reconnaîtrez. Ceux qui me disent: Seigneur, Seigneur n’entreront pas dans le royaume de cieux, mais celui-là seul qui fait la volonté de mon père qui est dans les cieux. Plusieurs me diront en ce jour-là, Seigneur, Seigneur, n’avons-nous pas prophétisé en ton nom? N’avons-nous pas chassé les démons par ton nom? et n’avons-nous pas fait beaucoup de miracles par ton nom? Alors, je leur dirai ouvertement, je ne vous ai pas connu, vous qui commettez l’iniquité» (Mat. 7:15-23)

Les faux enseignants sont très manipulateurs. Ils ont quelques indications extérieures montrant leur sincérité. Ils peuvent appeler Jésus leur Seigneur, prophétiser, chasser les démons et opérer les miracles. Mais les «vêtements de brebis» ne font que couvrir les «loups ravisseurs». Ils ne sont pas de véritables brebis. Comment peut-on savoir si ce sont de vraies ou de fausses brebis? Leur vrai caractère se voit à travers l’examen de leurs «fruits».

De quels fruits Jésus parlait-il? Ce sont les fruits de l’obéissance à tout ce qu’il a enseigné. Ceux qui sont des vrais enseignent et font la volonté du Père. Ceux qui sont des faux enseignent ce qui n’est pas vrai et pratiquent ce qui est interdit (7: 23). Notre responsabilité est donc de comparer leurs enseignements et leur vie en rapport avec ce que Jésus a enseigné et ordonné.

Les faux prophètes sont nombreux aujourd’hui dans nos églises, et nous ne devons pas être surpris car, les deux, Jésus et Paul, nous avaient prévenus qu’ à l’approche de la fin, nous ne devions pas nous attendre à autre chose ( Mat. 24:11, Timothée 4:3-4). Les faux prophètes les plus en vogue de nos jours sont ceux qui enseignent que le ciel attend ceux qui ne sont pas saints. Ils sont responsables de la condamnation éternelle des millions de gens. A leur propos, John Wesley avait écrit:

«Comme c’est terrible!- que les ambassadeurs de Dieu se transforment en agents du diable!- Quand ils enseignent aux gens le chemin qui conduit en enfer alors qu’on les avait envoyé pour montrer le chemin des cieux… Et si on peut demander, «Pourquoi?…Qui a déjà fait…ceci?» Je réponds, dix mille hommes sages et honorables, et même ceux-là, de quelque dénomination que ce soit, qui encourage l’orgueil, les querelles la passion, l’amour du monde, l’homme de plaisir, l’injuste, le méchant, aimant la facilité, la négligence et ne supportant pas de reproche pour la justice. Et l’on ne peut imaginer qu’un tel homme soit sur le chemin du ciel. Ils sont des faux prophètes au sens le plus élevé du terme. Ceux trahissent Dieu et l’homme. Ils peuplent continuellement le royaume de ténèbres, et chaque fois qu’ils suivent les pauvres âmes qu’ils ont détruits, «l’enfer sort des profondeurs de la terre pour les accueillir»[5].

C’est intéressant que Wesley ait commenté sur les faux enseignants dont Jésus nous avait mis en garde (Mat. 7:15-23).

Remarquez que Jésus disait clairement que, contrairement à ce qu’enseignent les faux prophètes,,ceux qui ne portent pas de bons fruits seront jetés en enfer (7:19). Ceci ne s’applique pas seulement aux faux enseignants et prophètes, mais à tout le monde.

«Tous ceux qui disent: Seigneur!Seigneur! n’entreront pas dans le royaume de Dieu, mais ceux qui font la volonté de mon père qui est dans les cieux» Matt 7: 21). Excusez-moi de le répéter, mais le sermon sur la montagne ne parle que du salut, de la sainteté et de la relation entre les deux. Ceux qui n’obéissent pas à Jésus se dirigent droit vers l’enfer.

Notez aussi le lien que Jésus a fait entre ce que l’homme est extérieurement et ce qu’il est dans son intérieur. «Les bons» arbres produisent des bons fruits. Les «mauvais arbre ne peuvent produire de «bons» fruits. La source de bons fruits qu’une personne peut exhiber de l’extérieur est la nature même de cette personne. Dieu a changé la nature de ceux qui ont réellement cru en Jésus [6].

Resumé final.

Jésus conclut tout son sermon en donnant un exemple qui résume le tout. Comme vous pouvez vous rendre compte, c’est une illustration de la relation existant entre l’obéissance et le salut:

«C’est pourquoi, quiconque entend ces paroles que je dis et les met en pratique sera semblable à un homme prudent qui a bâti sa maison sur le roc. La pluie est tombée, les torrents sont venus, les vents ont soufflé et se sont jetés contre cette maison: elle n’est point tombée, parce qu’elle était fondée sur le roc. Mais quiconque entend ces paroles que je dis, et ne les met pas en pratique sera semblable à un homme insensé qui a bâti sa maison sur le sable. La pluie est tombée, les torrents sont venus, les vents ont soufflé et battu cette maison: elle est tombée, et sa ruine a été grande» (Matt.7:24-27).

La dernière illustration de Jésus n’est pas une formule pour la «réussite dans la vie» comme certain l’utilise. Son objectif n’est pas de montrer comment prospérer financièrement dans les moments durs en ayant foi aux promesses de Jésus. Ceci est le résumé de tout ce que Jésus a enseigné dans son sermon sur la montagne. Ceux qui font ce qu’il a dit sont sages et résisteront. Ils n’ont pas à craindre la colère de Dieu. Ceux qui ne lui obéissent pas sont des insensés et souffriront terriblement en subissant la «peine de la destruction éternelle» (2 Tessal. 1:9).

Reponse a une objection.

N’est-il pas possible que le sermon de Jésus sur la montagne ne s’appliquait qu’ à, ses disciples qui avaient vécus avant le sacrifice de sa mort et sa résurrection? N’étaient-ils pas sous la Loi qui était le moyen momentané du salut mais après que Jésus soit mort pour leurs péchés, n’étaient-ils pas sauvés par la foi, rendant ainsi sans valeur la voie vers le salut dont il est question dans ce sermon?

Cette théorie est vraiment mauvaise? Personne ne peut être sauvée par ses œuvres. Cela a toujours été par la foi, que ce soit avant ou pendant l‘Ancien Testament. Paul démontre dans le chapitre 4 de l’épître aux Romains qu’Abraham et David étaient justifiés par la foi et non par les œuvres.

En outre, il était impossible qu’un auditeur de Jésus soit sauvé par ses œuvres parce qu’ils avaient tous péché et étaient privés de la gloire de Dieu (Romains 3:23). Il n’y a que la grâce de Dieu qui pouvait les sauver et seule la foi pouvait recevoir Sa grâce. Malheureusement, beaucoup dans l’église, aujourd’hui considèrent tous ces commandements de Jésus comme n’ayant qu’un seul but, celui de nous faire sentir coupables afin que nous rendions compte de l’impossibilité qu’il y a d’être sauvé par les œuvres. Maintenant que nous avons «reçu le message» et que nous avons été sauvés par la foi, nous pouvons ignorer la plupart de ses commandements. A moins que nous ne voulions que d’autres soient «sauvés». Alors, nous pourrons encore ressortir les commandements pour montrer aux gens leur degré de péché afin qu’ils soient sauvés «la foi sans les œuvres».

Jésus n’avait-il pas dit à ses disciples:«Allez dans le monde et faites des disciples et assurez-vous qu’ils comprennent que dès qu’ils se sentent coupables et qu’ils sont sauvés par la foi, mes commandements ont accompli leur but dans leur vie». Au contraire, il leur avait dit: «Allez et faites des disciples, leur enseignant à observer tout ce que je vous ai ordonné» (Matt 28:19-20).


[1] Certains déclarent que ceci n’est pas une prière que les chrétiens ne doivent pas employée car elle n’est pas faite au «nom de Jésus». En appliquant cette logique, nous devons conclure que beaucoup de prières faites par les apôtres dans le livres des Actes et dans les épîtres n’étaient pas «de prières chrétiennes».

[2] Ce verset est l’un des ceux qui nous disent qu’un vrai chrétien n’est pas parfait ou sans péché. Cela cependant nous prouve aussi que les vrais chrétiens sont préoccupés lorsqu’ils pèchent.

[3] Selon un sondage, seulement 25% de chrétiens évangéliques paient leur dîme. 40% déclarent que Dieu est la chose la plus importante dans leur vie et pourtant, ceux qui gagnent entre 50 et 75.000 dollars par an donnent une moyenne de 1.5% de leur revenu aux œuvres caritatives, même charité dans l’église. En même temps, ils dépensent en moyenne 12% de leurs revenus pour les loisirs. George Barna dit dans son livre, La seconde venue de l’église, que son sondage indique que les non chrétiens semblent plus disposés à donner aux organisations à but non lucratif et aux pauvres plus que les chrétiens nés de nouveau.

 

[4] En une autre occasion, Jésus avait fait la même déclaration concernant l’impossibilité de servir Dieu et Mammon, et Luc nous dit:«Les pharisiens qui étaient avares écoutaient aussi tout cela et ils se moquaient de lui» (Luc 16:14).

[5] Les œuvres de John Wesley ( The works of John Wesley- Baker: Grand Rapids, 1996), par Joh Wesley, réédité à partir de l’édition de 1872, une édition deWesleyan Methodist Book Room, London, pp. 441,446.

 

[6] Je ne peux m’empêcher de saisir cette occasion de commenter une expression utilisée par les gens lorsqu’ils veulent les péchés des autres:«Nous ne savons pas ce qui est dans leur cœur». Contrairement à ceci, Jésus avait dit l’extérieur révèle l’intérieur. Quelque part ailleurs, il nous avait dit: «Le cœur parle de l’abondance du cœur» (Mat.12:34). Lorsqu’une personne prononce des paroles de haine, cela indique son cœur est rempli de haine. Jésus nous avait aussi dit que l’ «intérieur du cœur de l’homme viennent les mauvaises pensées, la fornication, les vols les meurtres adultères, convoitise, ainsi que la méchanceté autant que la tromperie, l»escroquerie, la sensualité, l’envie, l’orgueil et autres folies» (Marc 7:21-22). Quand quelqu’un commet l’adultère, nous savons ce qui se trouve dans son cœur: l’adultère.

 

Le Plus Grand Sermon De Jesus Sur Le Salut

SIX

 

Il y a deux mille ans environ, le Fils de Dieu, qui alors, vivait sur terre sous la forme humaine parlait à la foule qui s’était rassemblée pour l’écouter sur le flanc de la montagne au bord du lac de Galilée. Aujourd’hui, nous présentons les paroles qu’il avait prononcées ce jour comme «le Sermon sur la Montagne».

Jésus était le plus grand communicateur qui n’ait jamais existé, et Il enseignait des gens qu’on peut considérer comme des illettrés. Ainsi, son enseignement était simple et facile à saisir. Il utilisait les objets pour illustrer son enseignement. Aujourd’hui, cependant, nous pensons qu’il nous faut quelqu’un qui a un doctorat pour interpréter ce que Jésus avait dit. Malheureusement, le premier point sur lequel ces gens se basent est que Jésus ne voulait pas réellement dire ce qu’il avait dit. Alors, ils fabriquent des théories pour expliquer ce que Jésus voulait réellement dire, des théories que les illettrés à qui il avait parlé n’ont pas essayé de deviner et n’auraient même pas compris si quelqu’un avait essayé de leur expliquer, il y a deux mille ans. Par exemple, certains théologiens modernes croient que les paroles de Jésus n’étaient pas applicables à son auditoire et ne le sont même pas présentement. Mais qu’elles s’appliqueront lorsqu’ils vivront dans son royaume avenir. Quelle étonnante théorie! En fait quand Jésus parlait à son audience, il utilisait le mot vous ( et non eux) et il l’avait plus de cent fois dans son sermon. Ces «connaisseurs de la bible» font de Jésus un menteur.

Puis-je faire ressortir aussi que ce sermon de Jésus n’était pas seulement adressé à ses proches disciples, mais aussi à la multitude qui s’était rassemblée pour l’écouter (Matt. 7: 28). Et elles ont une application directe sur tout être humain comme tout lecteur honnête de ce fameux sermon peut s’en rendre compte.

Le but de ce chapitre et de celui qui suit est d’étudier le sermon sur la montagne. En le faisant, nous découvrirons que c’était un message concernant le salut, la sainteté et la relation entre les deux. C’est un message qui continuellement met en garde contre les antinomiques. En prenant soin des pauvres, mais aussi de gens spirituellement affamés qui s’étaient réunis autour de lui, Jésus voulait qu’ils comprennent ce qui était le plus important – comment ils pouvaient hériter le royaume des cieux. Il est impératif qu’à notre tour, nous fassions attention à ce qu’il avait dit. C’est à propos de lui que Moïse avait une fois écrit: «Moïse a dit: Le Seigneur, votre Dieu, vous suscitera d’entre vos frères un prophète comme moi; vous l’écouterez dans tout ce qu’il vous dira, et quiconque n’écoutera pas ce prophète sera exterminé du milieu du peuple» (Actes 3:22-23).

Les Beatitudes.

Dans la première section du sermon de Jésus, qui est appelé les béatitudes, Jésus a promis des bénédictions spécifiques à ceux qui font montrent de certains traits de caractère. Beaucoup de traits sont énumérés et beaucoup de promesses spécifiques sont faites. Les lecteurs occasionnels lisent les béatitudes comme les gens consultant leur horoscope, pensant que chacun doit se retrouver dans une et une seule béatitude. En lisant attentivement, nous comprenons que Jésus ne faisait pas la liste de différentes personnes qui recevraient des bénédictions diverses, mais un seul type de gens qui recevraient le paquet total de bénédiction: hériter le royaume de Dieu. Il n’y a pas d’autres manières intelligentes d’interpréter ses paroles.

Lisons d’abord les douze premiers versets du Sermon sur la Montagne:

«Voyant la foule, Jésus monta sur la montagne; et, après qu’il se fut assis, ses disciples se rapprochèrent de lui. Puis, ayant ouvert la bouche, il les enseigna et dit:

Heureux les pauvres en esprit, car le royaume des cieux est à eux! Heureux les affligés car ils seront consolés! Heureux les débonnaires, car ils hériteront la terre! Heureux ceux qui ont faim et soif de la justice, car ils seront rassasiés! Heureux les miséricordieux, car ils obtiendront miséricorde! Heureux ceux qui ont le cœur pur, car ils verront Dieu! Heureux ceux qui procurent la paix, car ils seront appelés fils de Dieu! Heureux ceux qui sont persécutés pour la justice, car le royaume de cieux est à eux! Heureux serez-vous, lorsqu’on vous outragera, qu’on vous persécutera et qu’on dira faussement de vous toute sorte de mal, à cause de moi. Réjouissez-vous et soyez dans l’allégresse, parce que votre récompense sera grande dans les cieux; car c’est ainsi qu’on a persécuté les prophètes qui ont été avant vous» (Matthieu 5:1-12)..

Les benedictions et les traits de caractere.

D’abord, considérons toutes les bénédictions qui ont été promises. Les bien-heureux (1) hériteront le royaume des cieux, (2) seront consolés, (3) hériteront la terre, (4) seront rassasiés de justice, (5) obtiendront la miséricorde; (6) verront Dieu, (7) seront appelés fils de Dieu, (8) hériteront les cieux (répétition du point 1) où ils seront récompensés.

Jésus veut-il nous faire croire que seuls ceux qui sont pauvres en esprit et ceux qui sont persécutés à cause de la justice hériteront le royaume de Dieu? N’y a-t-il que ceux qui ont un cœur pur qui verront Dieu et ceux qui procurent la paix seront appelés fils de Dieu mais qu’ils n’hériteront pas le royaume de Dieu? Ceux qui procurent la paix n’obtiendront-ils que miséricorde et les miséricordieux ne seront-ils pas appelés fils de Dieu? Il est clair que ce n’est pas ce que Jésus veut que nous pensions.

Voyons maintenant les différents traits de caractère que Jésus décrit: (1) pauvre en esprit; (2) Les affligés, (3) les doux, (4) le affamés pour la justice, (5) miséricordieux, (6) pur de cœur, (7)les pacificateurs, (8)les persécutés.

Jésus pensait-il qu’une personne peut être pure de cœur et ne pas être miséricordieux? Quelqu’un peut-il être persécuté à cause de la justice, mais ne pas avoir soif et faim de la justice? Une fois de plus, non évidemment.

Dès lors, il est plus sûr de conclure que beaucoup de bénédictions qui ont été promises ne sont que des parties de la plus grande bénédiction: hériter le royaume de Dieu. Les différents traits de caractère de ceux qui sont déclarés heureux sont les caractères de tous ceux qui sont dits heureux.

En clair, les béatitudes décrivent les traits de caractère des vrais disciples de Jésus, qui, en énumérant ces traits de caractère, encourage avec les promesses qui rassemblent toutes les bénédictions qui suivent le salut. Les bien-heureux sont tous ceux qui sont sauvés; ainsi, Jésus décrivait les traits de caractère des gens qui se dirigent vers le ciel. Les gens qui ne répondent pas à la description de Jésus ne sont pas heureux et n’hériteront pas le royaume de Dieu. Il est dont important que nous nous demandions si nous répondons à la description de Jésus. Ce sermon concerne le salut, la sainteté et la relation entre les deux.

Les traits de caracteres des bien-heureux.

Les huit caractéristiques des gens heureux que Jésus a citées peuvent subir quelques variations d’une interprétation intelligente. Par exemple quelle vertu y a t-il à être pauvre en esprit? Je suis poussé à penser que Jésus décrivait le premier trait de caractère que toute personne doit avoir si elle veut être sauvée – il doit reconnaître sa pauvreté spirituelle. On doit reconnaître son besoin pour le salut avant d’être sauvé.

Le premier trait élimine toute auto-suffisance et toute pensée de salut méritée. Une personne réellement heureuse est celle qui comprend qu’elle n’a rien à offrir à Dieu et que sa justice est comme «des vêtements souillés» (Esaie 64: 6). Il se voit lui-même parmi «ceux qui sont séparés de Christ… n’ayant aucun espoir, sans Dieu, dans le monde» (Ephésiens 2:12).

Jésus ne voulait pas que quelqu’un pense que par son propre effort il pouvait atteindre le niveau qu’Il allait établir. Non. Les gens sont bien-heureux, ce qui signifie, bénis par Dieu, s’ils possèdent les caractéristiques requises. Tout vient de la grâce de Dieu. Les gens heureux dont Jésus parle le sont, non à cause de ce qui les attend au ciel, mais à cause de ce que Dieu a fait dans leur vie ici sur terre. Lorsque je vois les traits de ces gens bénis dans ma vie, cela ne doit pas me rappeler ce que j’ai fait, mais plutôt ce que Dieu a fait dans ma vie, par sa grâce.

Si la première caractéristique sur la liste l’est parce qu’elle est la première caractéristique de ceux qui sont destinés au ciel, peut-être que la seconde occupe cette position aussi à raison: «heureux ceux qui sont affligés»(Mat 5:4). Jésus était-il en train d’exprimer une repentance sincère du cœur et des remords? Je croit qu’il en est ainsi, spécialement lorsque la Bible dit que la tristesse pieuse amène à la repentance qui est nécessaire pour le salut (2 Corinthiens 7:10). Le collecteur d’impôts affligé qui baissait sa tête dans le temple, battant sa poitrine et implorant la miséricorde de Dieu était en effet un homme heureux. Contrairement au pharisien orgueilleux qui priait aussi dans le temple, le collecteur d’impôts avait quitté cet endroit justifié et pardonné de ses péchés (Luc 18:9-14).

Si Jésus ne parlait pas de premiers pleurs de repentance de cette personne qui vient juste à lui, alors il décrivait la tristesse que tout véritable chrétien ressent pendant qu’il continue à regarder ce monde rebelle à l’endroit d’un Dieu qui l’aime. Paul le traduit comme«une grande tristesse et un chagrin continuel dans le cœur» (Romains 9:2).

La troisième caractéristique, la douceur, est aussi citée par la Bible comme l’un des fruits de l’Esprit (Galates 5:22-23). La douceur n’est pas un attribut généré de soi-même. Ceux qui ont reçu la grâce de Dieu et la présence du Saint-Esprit en eux sont aussi bénis, étant rendus doux.

«Chrétiens» durs et violents, faites attention. Vous ne faites pas partie de ceux qui hériteront la terre. Vous êtes en réalité destiné à l’enfer, car vous n’êtes pas parmi les bien-heureux.

La Faim pour la Justice.

La quatrième caractéristique, la faim et la soif pour la justice, décrit un grand désir intérieur donné par Dieu que toute personne réellement née de nouveau possède. Il est attristé par l’injustice dans le monde et en lui-même. Il déteste le péché ( Ps 97:10; 119:128; 163) et aime la justice.

Bien souvent, quand nous lisons le mot justice dans les écritures, nous la traduisons immédiatement «la justice légale qui nous a été imputée par Christ», mais ce n’est toujours pas ce que signifie le mot. Souvent il signifie «la qualité d’une vie droite selon les requis de Dieu». C’est clair que c’est ça que Jésus voulait dire ici, car il n’y a pas de raison qu’un chrétien ait faim pour quelque chose qu’il possède déjà. Il a déjà la justice imputée. Ceux qui sont nés de l’Esprit soupire pour une vie de justice, et ils ont l’assurance qu’un jour, ils seront «satisfaits» (Mat 5:6), étant convaincus que Dieu, par sa grâce, va parfaire l’œuvre qu’il a commencé en eux ( Phil. 1:6).

Les paroles de Jésus ici présente le temps de la nouvelle terre, «dans laquelle la justice demeure» (2 Pierre 3:13). Il n’y aura alors aucun péché. Chacun aimera Dieu de tout son cœur et aimera son voisin comme lui-même. Nous qui maintenant avons faim et soif de la justice serons alors satisfaits. Finalement notre prière, «que ta volonté soit faite sur terre comme au ciel»(Mat 6:10) sera exhaussée.

Le cinquième trait, la miséricorde, est aussi ce que chaque chrétien né de nouveau possède en vertu de ce que le Dieu miséricordieux vit en lui. Ceux qui ne sont pas miséricordieux ne sont pas bénis de Dieu et révèlent qu’ils ne prennent pas part à sa grâce. Et l’apôtre Jacques de dire:«Le jugement sera sans pitié pour celui qui n’a pas fait montre de miséricorde» (Jacques 2:13). Si vous vous tenez devant Dieu et que vous recevez un jugement impitoyable, pensez-vous que vous irez au ciel ou en enfer [1]? Evidemment, la réponse est claire.

Jésus avait une fois raconté l’histoire d’un serviteur qui avait bénéficié d’une grande miséricorde de son maître, mais qui n’était pas disposé à faire autant pour son collègue serviteur. Quand son maître avait découvert ce qui s’était passé, il «l’avait remis aux mains de tortionnaires jusqu’à ce qu’il paya tout ce qu’il lui devait» (Mat. 18: 34). Il devait payer toute sa dette qui avait été annulée auparavant. Alors, Jésus avait prévenu ses disciples: «Mon père céleste fera de même pour vous, si chacun de vous ne pardonne pas son frère de tout son cœur»(Mat 18:35). En outre les gens sans pitié ne recevront pas la miséricorde de Dieu. Ils ne sont pas parmi les bien-heureux.

Le sixième trait de ceux qui sont destinés au ciel est la pureté de cœur. Contrairement à plusieurs chrétiens de confession, les disciples du Christ ne sont pas saints extérieurement. Par la grâce de Dieu, leurs cœurs ont été rendus purs. Ils aiment vraiment Dieu du fond de leur cœur et cela affecte leurs méditations et leurs motivations. Jésus avait promis qu’ils verraient Dieu.

Puis-je encore demander? Devons croire qu’il y a des vrais chrétiens dont les cœurs ne sont pas purs et qui par conséquent ne verront pas Dieu? Dieu leur dira t-il: «Vous pouvez entrer dans le ciel mais vous ne pourrez pas me voir»? Non, évidemment. Toute personne destinée au ciel a un cœur pur.

Heureux seront les pacificateurs.

Ceux qui procurent la paix viennent après. Ils seront appelés fils de Dieu. Une fois de plus, Jésus était certainement en train de décrire chaque véritable disciple de Christ parce que toute personne qui croit en Christ est un fils de Dieu (Galates 3: 6).

Ceux qui sont de l’esprit sont pacificateurs au moins de trois manières:

D’abord, ils ont fait la paix avec Dieu qui avant était leur ennemi.

En deuxième lieu, ils vivent en paix avec les autres, sans, autant faire se peut, désobéir à Dieu. Ils ne sont pas caractérisés par des disputes et des dissensions. Paul avait écrit que ceux qui vivent dans la jalousie, les disputes, les colères violentes et les divisions n’hériteront pas le royaume de Dieu (Galates 19: 19-21). Les vrais chrétiens feront tout ce qui est possible pour éviter la bagarre et être en paix avec tous. Ils ne disent pas être en paix avec Dieu alors qu’ils se battent avec un frère (Matt. 5:23-24;I Jean 4:20).

Troisièmement, en partageant l’évangile, un vrai chrétien aide aussi les autres à faire la paix avec Dieu et avec leurs voisins.

Finalement, Jésus avait appelé bien-heureux ceux qui sont persécutés à cause de la justice. Il parlait évidemment des gens qui vivent dans la justice. Ce sont ceux que les non croyants persécutent. C’est le genre de gens qui vont hériter le royaume de Dieu.

De quel genre de persécution Jésus parlait-il? La torture? Être martyrisé? Non, Il avait spécifiquement parlé de la persécution d’être insulté et d’être calomnié à cause de Lui. Ceci signifie que lorsqu’une personne est un vrai chrétien, cela est connu des non croyants, sinon ils ne diraient rien de mal contre elle. Combien de ceux qui se disent chrétiens ne sont pas différents des païens au point que pas un seul incrédule ne dit du mal d’eux! Ils ne sont pas du tout des chrétiens. Comme Jésus avait dit:«Malheur à vous lorsque tout le monde dit du bien de vous car c’est de la même manière que leurs pères traitaient les faux prophètes» (Luc 6:26). Quand tout le monde dit du bien de vous, cela est un signe que vous êtes un faux chrétien. Le monde déteste les vrais chrétiens (Jean 15:18-21; Galates 4:29; 2 Tim 3:12; 1 Jean 3: 13-14). Y a t-il quelqu’un qui vous déteste? Ceci est un sermon à propos du salut, de la sainteté et de la relation entre les deux.

Le Sel et la Lumière.

Dans les versets suivants, Jésus avait continué à decrier les varis croyants, les bien-heureux, les comparant au sel et à la lumière. Les deux ont certaines caractéristiques évidentes. Le sel est salé, et la lumière brille. Si ce n’est pas salé, ce n’est pas le sel. Si ça ne brille pas, ce n’est pas de la lumière.

«Vous êtes le sel de la terre. Mais si le sel perd sa saveur, avec quoi la lui rendre t-on? Il ne sert plus qu’à être jeté dehors et être foulé au sol par les hommes. Vous êtes la lumière du monde. Une ville perchée sur une colline ne peut être cachée; et on n’allume pas une lumière pour être mis sous le boisseau, mais on la met sur le chandelier et elle éclaire tous ceux qui sont dans la maison. Que votre lumière luise ainsi devant les hommes, afin qu’ils voient vos bonnes œuvres et qu’ils glorifient votre père qui est dans le cieux» (Mat.5:13-16).

Au temps de Jésus, le sel était d’abord utilisé comme préservatif de la viande. En tant que disciples de Christ, nous sommes ce qui préserve ce monde pécheur de la totale corruption et dépravation. Mais si nous devenons comme le monde dans notre comportement, nous ne sommes bons à rien. Jésus avait prévenu les bien-heureux à demeurer salés, préservant ainsi leurs uniques caractéristiques. Ils doivent être distincts du monde qui les entoure de peur qu’ils ne perdent leur saveur et qu’ils ne soient jetés dehors et foulés au pied. Ceci est parmi les multiples avertissements contre le recul dans la foi donnés aux vrais chrétiens dans le nouveau testament. Si le sel est réellement le sel, il doit être salé. De même, les disciples de Jésus doivent agir comme Jésus, sinon, ils ne sont pas ses disciples, même s’ils l’étaient au paravent.

Les vrais chrétiens sont aussi la lumière du monde. La lumière brille toujours. Si ça ne brille pas, ce n’est pas la lumière. Dans cette analogie, la lumière représente nos bonnes œuvres (Mat. 5:16). Christ avait averti ses disciples qu’ils devaient faire de bonnes œuvres pour que les autres les voient. C’est de cette façon qu’ils pourront glorifier leur Père parce qu’Il est la source de leurs bonnes œuvres.

Remarquez que Jésus n’avait pas dit que nous devions créer la lumière, mais que nous devons permettre à la lumière qui est en nous de briller devant les autres afin qu’ils puissent voir la lumière. Il n’exhortait pas ceux qui n’avaient pas de bonnes œuvres d’en produire certaines, mais ceux qui en avaient de bonnes à ne pas cacher leur bonté. Les disciples de Christ sont la lumière du monde. Ils sont heureux, par la grâce de Dieu, d’être la lumière dans les ténèbres.

L’importance de garder les Commandements de Dieu.

Maintenant, nous commençons un nouveau paragraphe. Ici, Jésus commence à parler de la loi et de son rapport avec les disciples.

«Ne croyez pas que je sois venu pour abolir la loi ou les prophètes; Je suis venu, non pour abolir, mais pour accomplir. Car, je vous dis la vérité, tant que le ciel et la terre ne passeront point, il ne disparaîtra pas de la loi un seul iota ou un seul trait de la lettre, jusqu’à ce que tout soit arrivé. Celui donc qui supprimera l’un de ces petits commandements, et qui enseignera aux hommes à faire de même, sera appelé le plus petit dans le royaume des cieux. Mais celui qui les observera et qui enseignera à les observer sera appelé grand dans le royaume des cieux. Car, je vous le dis, si votre justice ne surpasse pas celle des pharisiens et des scribes, vous n’entrerez pas dans le royaume des cieux». (Jean 5:17-21).

Si Jésus avait prévenu ses disciples contre la pensée qu’il était venu pour abolir la Loi et les prophètes, nous pouvons alors avec assurance conclure que dans son auditoire il y avait une telle présomption. Nous pouvons deviner pourquoi faisaient-ils une telle présomption. Peut-être que c’était son habitude de réprimander les pharisiens et les scribes légalistes qui les avaient poussé à penser qu’il allait abolir la Loi et les prophètes.

Cependant, Jésus voulait que chacun comprenne clairement l’erreur d’une telle présomption. Il était Dieu, le divin inspirateur de tout l’Ancien Testament; il n’allait donc rien abolir de ce qu’il avait dit à Moïse et aux prophètes. Au contraire, Il allait accomplir la Loi et les prophètes.

Comment allait-il exactement accomplir La loi et les prophètes? Certains pensent que Jésus ne parlait que de l’accomplissement de prédictions messianiques. Bien qu’il l’avait fait, cela n’était pas tout ce qu’il avait dans sa pensée. En clair, le contexte indiquait qu’il parlait de tout ce qui était écrit dans la Loi et les prophètes, jusqu’à la «plus petite lettre ou au plus petit trait»(v.18) de la Loi, et le«moindre» des commandements.

D’autres pensent que Jésus voulait dire qu’il accomplirait la Loi en obéissant totalement à ses exigences à notre place par sa vie d’obéissance et sa mort sacrificielle. Mais ceci, comme le montre le contexte, n’est pas ce qu’il avait en tête. Dans le verset qui suit, Jésus ne dit rien concernant sa vie ou sa mort comme étant un point de référence pour l’accomplissement de la loi. Au contraire, dans la phrase qui suit, Il déclare que la Loi sera toujours valide jusqu’à ce que «le ciel et la terre passent» et «que tout est accompli». Il déclare alors que l’attitude des gens envers la Loi affectera leur statut dans le ciel (v. 19), et que les gens doivent obéir à la Loi mieux que les scribes et les pharisiens ou ils n’entreront pas au ciel (v. 20).

En cela, à part l’accomplissement des prophéties messianiques et les ombres de la Loi, Jésus pensait aussi à ce que les gens devaient garder la Loi et faire ce que les prophètes avaient dit. Dans un sens, Jésus accomplira la Loi en révélant la véritable et première intention de Dieu dans la Loi, en l’entérinant et l’expliquant et en complétant ce qui manquait dans la compréhension [2]des gens en ce qui concerne la Loi. Le mot grec traduit par accomplir est aussi traduit dans le Nouveau Testament comme compléter, remplir, et totalement réaliser. Et c’est exactement ce que Jésus était sur le point de faire, juste quatre versets plus loin.

Non, Jésus n’était venu pour abolir la Loi, mais pour l’accomplir, ce qui est la «remplir totalement». Concernant les commandements qui sont dans la Loi et les prophètes, Jésus ne pouvait être autrement plus clair. Il voulait que tout le monde les observe. Ils étaient toujours importants. En fait, la façon dont chacun estimera les commandements déterminera comment il sera traité au ciel:«Quiconque annule l’un de plus petits commandements et qui enseigne les autres à faire de même, sera appelé le plus petit dans le royaume des cieux; mais quiconque garde et enseigne les autres à faire de même, sera appelé grand dans le royaume des cieux» ( 5:19)[3].

Alors, nous arrivons au verset 20:«Car, je vous dis, si votre justice ne surpasse pas celle des scribes et des pharisiens, vous n’entrerez pas dans le royaume des cieux».

Remarquez que ceci n’est pas une nouvelle pensée, mais une déclaration concluante qui est connectée aux versets précédents par la conjonction car. Quelle est l’importance de l’observation des commandements? On doit les garder mieux que les scribes et pharisiens pour entrer dans le royaume des cieux! Nous voyons une fois de plus que ceci est un sermon à propos du salut, de la sainteté et du rapport existant entre les deux.

De quel type de Justice Jésus parlait-il?

Quand Jésus avait affirmé que notre justice devait dépasser celle des pharisiens et des scribes, ne faisait-il pas allusion à la justice légale qui devait nous être imputé comme un don gratuit? Certainement, non! Pour deux bonnes raisons. D’abord le contexte ne s’accordait pas avec cette interprétation. Avant et après cette déclaration ( et pendant tout le Sermon sur la Montagne), Jésus parlait de garder les commandements, ce qui revient à vivre dans la droiture. L’interprétation la plus naturelle de ses paroles est que nous devons mener une vie plus juste que les pharisiens et les scribes.

Deuxièmement, si Jésus parlait de la justice imputée et légale, qui était reçue comme don lorsqu’on croyait en lui, pourquoi n’y avait-il au moins fait mention? Pourquoi devait-il dire quelque chose qui serait facilement mal comprise par des paysans illettrés à qui Il parlait et qui n’auraient jamais deviné qu’Il parlait de la justice imputée?

Notre problème est que nous ne voulons pas accepter la signification claire du verset parce que cela nous paraît légaliste. Mais aussi notre vrai problème est que nous ne voulons pas comprendre la relation inséparable entre la justice imputée et la justice pratique. L’apôtre Jean l’avait cependant compris. Il avait écrit:«Petits enfants, que personne ne vous trompe; Celui qui pratique la justice est juste» (I jean 3:7). Ou ne comprenons-nous pas la corrélation entre la nouvelle naissance et la justice pratique comme Jean: «Celui qui pratique la justice est né de Dieu» (I Jean 2:29). Jésus pouvait ajouter Sa déclaration de 5:20, «Et si vous vous repentez, que vous êtes réellement nés de nouveau et si vous recevez par une foi vivante Mon don gratuit de justice, votre pratique de la justice excédera en effet celle des scribes et des pharisiens alors que vous coopérez avec Mon esprit qui demeure en vous»

La justice des pharisiens et des scribes

L’autre question importante que soulève naturellement la déclaration de Jésus dans 5 :20 est celle-ci? Comment était ( pratiquement parlant) la justice des scribes et des pharisiens?

A un autre moment, Jésus parlait d’eux comme étant des «tombeaux blanchis qui sont beaux à l’extérieur mais qui sont pleins d’os des morts et d’impureté» (Matt. 23:27). Ceci signifie qu’ils apparaissent justes de l’extérieur, mais sont mauvais à l’intérieur. Ils font tout pour garder la lettre de la Loi, mais ignorent son esprit, se justifiant en tordant ou en changeant les commandements de Dieu.

Jésus l’avait bien fait connaître dans la portion suivante du sermon sur la montagne. Il avait cité beaucoup de commandements de Dieu et avait montré la différence entre garder leur lettre et leur esprit. Jésus avait montré comment les scribes et les pharisiens interprétaient et gardaient de l’extérieur la Loi; Il avait ensuite réveillé l’intention de Dieu dans chacun des cas. Il avait commencé chaque exemple par «vous avez entendu» et alors disait la vue de Dieu sur ce qu’ils avaient entendu. Le sixième commandement fait l’objet de son premier exemple:

«Vous avez entendu qu’il a été dit aux anciens: tu ne tueras point; celui qui tue mérite d’être puni par les juges. Mais moi, je vous dis que quiconque se met en colère contre son frère mérite d être puni par le sanhédrin et celui qui lui dira insensé mérite d’être puni par le feu de la géhenne. Si donc tu présentes ton offrande à l’autel et que là, tu te rappelles que ton frère a quelque chose contre toi, laisse là ton offrande devant l’autel, va d’abord te réconcilier avec ton frère puis viens présenter ton offrande. Accorde-toi avec ton adversaire pendant que tu es en chemin avec lui, de peur qu’ilne te livre au juge et que le juge ne te livre à l’officier de justice, et que tu ne sois mis en prison. En vérité, je te le dis, tu ne sortiras pas de là que tu n’aies payé le dernier quadrant» (Matt. 5:21-26).

Les pharisiens et les scribes se vantaient de ne pas être des meurtriers. Ce qui signifie qu’ils n’avaient effectivement tué personne. Dans leur pensée, ils observaient le sixième commandement. Cependant, ils auraient tué si cela n’était pas prohibé, comme le révèle le fait qu’ils ne faisaient rien d’autre que tuer ceux qu’ils haïssaient. Jésus avait donné cinq exemples de comportements meurtriers. De leurs bouches sortaient des paroles méchantes et de mépris à l’endroit de ceux contre qui ils étaient en colère. Ils étaient intérieurement rancuniers, ne pardonnant pas, irréconciliables, engagés dans les poursuites judiciaires, comme plaignants ou comme accusés, pour leurs actions meurtrières [4]. Les pharisiens et les scribes étaient des meurtriers dans leurs cœurs mais qui s’abstenaient de passer à l’acte physique.

Celui qui est réellement juste est totalement différent. Il est d’un niveau plus élevé. Il sait que Dieu veut qu’il aime son frère; et si sa relation avec son frère n’est pas bonne, celle avec Dieu n’est pas non plus bonne. Il ne peut pas continuer ses activités religieuses hypocritement, prétendant d’aimer Dieu alors qu’il hait son frère (Matt. 5:23-24). Et comme l’apôtre Jean écrira plus tard:«Celui qui n’aime pas son frère qu’il voit ne peut pas aimer Dieu qu’il ne voit pas» (I Jean 4:20).

Les pharisiens et les scribes pensaient que c’était seulement par acte qu’on était coupable de meurtre. Mais Jésus avait prévenu que une attitude meurtrière rend une personne digne d’enfer. Combien de chrétiens ne sont-ils pas différents des pharisiens et des scribes, remplis de haine et non d’amour? Les vrais chrétiens sont bénis par Dieu au point qu’Il met son amour en eux, les rendant capables d’aimer (Romains 5), et tout cela, par sa grâce.

La Definition de l’adultereselon Dieu.

Le septième commandement était l’objet du deuxième exemple de la manière dont les scribes et les pharisiens gardaient la lettre et négligeaient l’esprit de la loi:

«Vous avez appris qu’il a été dit: Tu ne commettras point d’adultère. Mais moi, je vous dis que quiconque regarde une femme pour la convoiter a déjà commis l’adultère avec elle dans son cœur. Si ton œil droit est pour toi une occasion de chute, arrache-le et jette-le loin de toi; car il est avantageux pour toi qu’un seul de tes membres périsse et que ton corps entier ne soit pas jeté dans la géhenne. Et si ta main droite est pour toi une occasion de chute, coupe-la et jette-la loin de toi, car il est avantageux pour toi qu’un seul de tes membres périsse et que tout ton corps entier n’aille pas dans la géhenne ( 5:27-30).

Notez une fois de plus que ceci est un sermon sur le salut et la sainteté ainsi que sur la relation existant entre les deux. Jésus avait mis en garde contre l’enfer et ce que chacun doit faire pour ne pas y entrer.

Les pharisiens ne pouvaient pas ignorer le septième commandement, ainsi, ils y obéissaient extérieurement et restaient fidèles à leurs femmes. Ils dénudaient mentalement les femmes qu’ils voyaient sur la place publique. Ils étaient adultérins dans leurs cœurs, donc ils violaient l’esprit du commandement. Combien de chrétiens ne sont-ils pas différents d’eux?

Dieu, veut évidemment que son peuple soit sexuellement pur. Et comme je l’ai clairement indiqué dans ce livre, si c’est une mauvaise chose de coucher avec la femme de votre voisin, il est aussi mauvais d’avoir mentalement de relations sexuelles avec elle.

Quelqu’un dans l’audience était-il convaincu? Que devait-il faire? Il devait immédiatement se repentir comme Jésus l’avait dit. Tout ce qu’il faut, quel que soit le prix, ceux qui convoitent doivent arrêter de le faire car ceux qui le font iront en enfer.

Evidemment, aucune personne sensée ne peut penser que Jésus voulait que ceux qui convoitent doit littéralement arracher son œil ou couper sa main. Si une personne qui convoite arrache son œil, il devient seulement borgne, mais continuera dans son mal. Jésus avait sérieusement et solennellement insister l’importance d’obéir à l’esprit de lettre du septième commandement. L’entrée du ciel en dépend.

Etes-vous convaincu? Alors «coupez» tout ce qui vous amène à chuter. Si c’est votre connexion télé sur câble, alors, déconnectez-vous. Si c’est votre téléviseur ordinaire, jetez-le. Si c’est ce que vous voyez lors que vous allez à un certain endroit, arrêtez s’y aller. Si c’est l’abonnement à un magazine, annulez-le. Si c’est l’Internet, coupez la liaison. Aucune de ces choses ne vaut l’enfer. Personne en enfer ne pourra dire: «Oui! Je suis en enfer, mais sur terre, je m’étais bien réjoui de films pornographiques. Je n’ai pas de regret, bien que je vais souffrir éternellement pour cela».

Le point de vue de Dieu sur le divorce.

L’exemple que Jésus donne après est en rapport direct avec ce que nous venons de voir et qui constitue la raison pour laquelle ce sujet est mentionné. En fait, on doit le considérer comme une explication approfondie du précédant plutôt qu’un nouveau sujet. Le sujet est «une autre chose que vous faites qui équivaut à l’adultère»:

«Il a été dit: que celui qui répudie sa femme lui donne une lettre de divorce. Mais moi, je vous dis que celui qui répudie sa femme, sauf pour cause d’infidélité, l’expose à devenir adultère, et que celui qui épouse une femme répudiée commet un adultère» (Matt.5:31-32).

Voici une autre illustration de la manière dont les scribes et les pharisiens gardaient la lettre de loi et en rejetaient l’esprit.

Imaginons un pharisien au temps de Jésus. De l’autre coté de la rue où il vit, il y a une belle femme qu’il convoite. Il flirte avec elle chaque fois qu’il la voit. Elle semble attirée aussi par le monsieur et son désir pour elle grandit chaque jour. Il aimerait la voir dévêtue et l’imagine régulièrement ayant des relations sexuelles avec lui. Oh! S’il pouvait l’avoir!

Mais il a un problème: il est marié et elle, à son tour, l’est aussi; et sa religion interdit l’adultère. Il ne veut pas briser le septième commandement (bien qu’il la brise déjà chaque fois il la convoite). Que peut-il faire?

Voici la solution! Si tous les deux étaient divorcés de leurs conjoints respectifs, il pourrait épouser la maîtresse de pensée! Mais est-il légal de divorcer? Oui! Il y a un passage Biblique pour cela! Deutéronome 24: 1 dit qu’il faut donner à une femme un certificat de divorce lorsqu’on la divorce. Le divorce doit être légal et soumis à certaines circonstances! Mais quelles étaient ces circonstances? Il lit attentivement ce que sont ces conditions:

«Lorsqu’un homme aura pris et épousé une femme qui ne trouverait plus grâce à ces yeux, parce qu’il a découvert en elle quelque chose de honteux, il écrira pour elle une lettre de divorce, et, après lui avoir remis cette lettre, il la renverra de sa maison» (Deut. 24:1).

Ah! Il peut divorcer d’avec sa femme s’il découvre en elle quelque chose d’indécent. Elle n’est pas aussi attirante que la femme de l’autre coté de la rue! [5]

Alors, il divorce d’avec sa femme en lui donnant un certificat requis (vous pouvez en prendre un à la réception du bureau du club des pharisiens) et épouser la femme de ses rêves qui vient aussi de divorcer légalement. Et tout cela, sans éprouver la moindre culpabilité parce que la loi a été observée.

Evidemment, Dieu voit les choses différemment. L’ «indécence» dont il parle dans Deutéronome 24:1 pour un divorce légal était quelque chose d’immoral, certainement quelque de chose aussi grave que l’adultère [6]. C’est qu’un mari peut répudier sa femme s’il découvre qu’elle avait été infidèle, avant ou pendant le mariage.

Dans la pensée de Dieu l’homme qui fantasmait que je viens de décrire n’est pas différent d’un adultérin. Il avait brisé le septième commandement. En fait, il est plus coupable que l’adulte ordinaire car, il est coupable d’un «double adultère». Comment est-il possible? D’abord il a lui même commis l’adultère [7]. Jésus avait dit: «Quiconque divorce sa femme, excepté pour raison d’immoralité, et qui épouse une autre femme commet l’adultère» (Matt 19:9).

Deuxièmement, La femme d’avec qui il a divorcé peut aussi chercher à coucher avec un autre homme. Il est donc coupable de «l’adultère» de son ex-épouse. Jésus avait dit: «Quiconque divorce de sa femme, sauf pour cause d’infidélité l’expose à l’adultère» (Matt 5:32).

Jésus peut aussi accuser notre pharisien de «triple adultère» si la déclaration «et quiconque épouse une femme divorcée commet l‘adultère» (Matt 5: 32) signifie que Dieu tient le Pharisien pour responsable de l’adultère de l’ex-mari de sa nouvelle femme [8].

C’était un problème très sérieux du temps de Jésus comme nous pouvons le voir en lisant un autre passage où les pharisiens lui demandaient:«Est-il illégal pour un homme de répudier sa femme pour une quelconque raison?» (Matt 19: 3 ). Leur question révèle leur cœur. On voit clairement que certains d’entre eux croyaient que toute cause était suffisante pour le divorce. Je me dois aussi d’ajouter qu’il est honteux de voir les chrétiens prendre ces versets, leur donner une mauvaise interprétation et placer de fardeaux sur les épaules des enfants de Dieu. Jésus ne parlait pas de chrétien qui divorçait lorsque l’un des conjoints était un pécheur, et qui épousait un autre partenaire chrétien qu’il trouvait. Ceci n’est en rien l’équivalent d’un adultère. Et si c’est de cela que Jésus parlait, nous devons changer la Bible parce qu’elle n’offre plus le pardon des péchés à tous. Désormais, nous devons prêcher:«Jésus est mort pour vous. Si vous vous repentez et que vous croyez en lui, tous vos péchés vous seront pardonnés. Cependant, si vous êtes déjà divorcé, ne vous remariez plus, sinon, vous allez vivre dans l’adultère, et la Bible dit que les adultères iront en enfer. Et si vous étiez mariés et divorcé avant de venir à Christ, vous devez commettre un péché de plus en divorçant de votre présente femme. Sinon, vous allez continuer à vivre dans l’adultère, et les adultères ne sont pas sauvés [9]». Est-ce cela l’évangile?

Dire la verite.

Le troisième exemple de Jésus d’une conduite injuste et de la mauvaise interprétation de la Bible par mes Pharisiens et des Scribes est en rapport avec le commandement sur la vérité. Les pharisiens et les scribes ont développé un style de vie très créatif. Nous apprenons dans Matthieu 23:16-22 qu’ils n’étaient pas obligés de respecter les vœux, s’ils avaient juré par le temple, l’autel ou sur le ciel. Cependant, s’ils avaient juré sur l’or dans le temple, l’offrande sur l’autel ou par Dieu qui est dans le ciel, ils sont obligés de respecter leurs vœux. C’est l’équivalent du raisonnement que tient un enfant selon lequel, il doit dire la vérité si ses doigts sont croisés derrière son dos.

Cet exemple d’hypocrisie est l’élément suivant dans ce fameux Sermon:

«Vous avez encore appris qu’il a été dit aux anciens: tu ne te parjureras pas, mais tu t’acquitteras envers le Seigneur de ce que tu as déclaré par le serment. Mais moi, je vous dis de ne jurer aucunement, ni par le ciel parce que c’est le trône de Dieu; ni par la terre parce que c’est son marche-pied: ni par Jérusalem parce que c’est la ville du grand roi. Ne jure même pas par ta tête car tu ne peux rendre blanc ou noir un seul de tes cheveux. Que votre parole soit oui, oui, non, non; ce que l’on y ajoute vient du malin» ( Mat. 5:33-37).

L’ordre original de Dieu concernant les vœux ne dit rien à propos des serments faits en jurant sur quelque chose. Il voulait simplement que ses enfants puisent respecter leurs paroles. Lorsque les gens doivent jurer avec serment pour amener les autres à croire en leurs paroles, cela démontre qu’ils sont en train de mentir. Notre parole doit être sérieuse, n’exigeant pas de serment. Votre justice dépasse t-elle celle des pharisiens et des scribes dans ce domaine?

Le péché de vengeance.

Le point suivant sur la liste de Jésus parle de la perversion pharisienne de ce verset bien connu dans l’Ancien Testament:

«Vous avez appris qu’il a été dit: œil pour œil et dent pour dent. Mais moi, je vous dis de ne pas résister au méchant. Si quelqu’un te frappe sur la joue droite, présente-lui l’autre. Si quelqu’un veut plaider contre toi et prendre ta tunique, laisse-lui encore ton manteau. Si quelqu’un te force à faire un mille, fais-en deux avec lui Donne à celui qui te demande et ne te détourne pas de celui qui emprunter de toi» (Matt 5:38-42).

La loi de Moïse déclarait que si quelqu’un était déclaré coupable par la cour pour avoir blessé quelqu’un, sa punition devait être l’équivalent du tort qu’il avait causé. Si quelqu’un casse la dent d’une autre personne, selon la justice, sa propre dent doit lui être arrachée. Ce commandement était donné afin de servir dans la cour dans le règlement des cas graves. Une fois de plus, les pharisiens l’avaient tordu et l’ont présenté comme un commandement rendant obligatoire la vengeance. Apparemment, ils avaient adopté la politique de «la tolérance zéro», cherchant à tirer vengeance même pour de petites offenses.

Dieu attend toujours un peu plus de son peuple. Il avait exprès interdit toute vengeance (Deut. 32:35). L’Ancien Testament enseignait que le peuple de Dieu devait faire montre de bonté envers leurs ennemis (Exod.23:4-5; Prov. 25:21-22). Jésus a réaffirmé cette vérité en nous demandant de donner l’autre joue et de faire deux milles, lorsque nous avons à faire à des gens mauvais. Lorsque le mal nous a été fait, Dieu veut que nous soyons miséricordieux et que nous rendions le bien pour le mal.

Mais Jésus veut-il que ces gens profitent de nous et que nous leur laissions champ libre pour ruiner nos vies, si tel est leur désir? Y-a t-il un mal à traîner un païen devant la cour, cherchant à obtenir justice pour un acte illégal commis contre nous? Non, Jésus ne parlait pas d’obtenir justice pour les grandes offenses commises contre nous. Il parlait de petites choses et des infractions ordinaires. Remarquez que Jésus n’avait pas dit de donner notre cou à celui qui nous a déjà poignardés dans le dos. Il n’avait pas dit que nous devions donner notre maison à celui demande notre voiture. Jésus nous disait simplement de faire montre de pitié et de tolérance à un niveau élevé lorsque rencontrant quotidiennement les petites offenses et les défis habituels dans nos relations avec les égoïstes.

Ilne nous demande pas de faire cent miles de plus, mais un seul de plus. Il veut que nous soyons plus gentils que ne le pensent les païens. Il veut aussi que nous ne soyons pas égoïstes avec notre argent et que nous puissions le prêter à celui qui en fait la demande. Les pharisiens et les scribes ne pouvaient s’approcher de ce standard. Votre justice dépasse t-elle la leur dans cet aspect?

L’amour envers nos voisins.

Enfin, Jésus a donné un autre commandement de Dieu que les scribes et les pharisiens avaient altéré pour l’accommoder à leurs cœurs rancuniers:

«Vous avez appris qu’il a été dit: tu aimeras ton prochain, et tu haïras ton ennemi. Mais moi, je vous dis: aimez vos ennemis, bénissez ceux qui vous maudissent, faites du bien à ceux qui vous haïssent, et priez pour ceux qui vous maltraitent et qui vous persécutent, afin que vous soyez fils de votre père qui est dans les cieux; car il fait lever son soleil sur les méchants et sur les bons, et il fait pleuvoir sur les justes et sur les injustes. Si vous aimez ceux qui vous aiment, quelle récompense méritez-vous? Les publicains aussi n’agissent-ils pas de même? Et si vous saluez seulement vos frères, que faites-vous d’extraordinaire? Les païens aussi n’agissent-ils pas de même? Soyez donc parfaits, comme votre père céleste est parfait (Mat 5: 43:48).

Dans l’Ancien Testament, Dieu avait dit: «Aime ton prochain» (Lévitique 19:18), mais les scribes et les pharisiens avaient supposé que si Dieu leur avait demandé d’aimer leurs prochains, Il voulait certainement dire qu’ils devaient haïr leurs ennemis. Selon Jésus, ce n’est pas ce que Dieu voulait dire, ce n’est pas ce que Dieu avait dit.

Jésus enseignera plus tard dans l’histoire du bon Samaritain que nous devions considérer toute personne comme prochain. Dieu veut que nous aimions tout le monde, y compris nos ennemis. C’est le modèle de Dieu pour ses enfants et le modèle selon lequel il vit lui-même. Il envoie le soleil et la pluie pour faire pousser les plantes, non seulement sur les bons, mais aussi sur les mauvais. Nous devons suivre son exemple, montrant de la bonté à ceux qui ne la méritent même pas. Lorsque nous le faisons, nous prouvons que nous sommes des fils de notre père qui est dans les cieux. Les gens sincèrement nés de nouveau sont comme leur père (Mat. 5: 45)

L’amour que Dieu veut que nous montrions à nos ennemis n’est pas émotionnel. Il n’est pas non plus l’approbation de la méchanceté. Dieu n’attend pas que nous ayons des sentiments chaleureux envers ceux qui s’opposent à nous. Il ne nous demande pas de dire ce qui n’est pas vrai: que nos ennemis sont des gens merveilleux! Mais, il veut que nous les aimions et nous posions des actes conséquents, au moins en les saluant et en priant pour eux.

Qu’en est-il de vous?

A ce niveau, vous avez certainement compris que les pharisiens et les scribes n’étaient pas des gens bons. Ils ont un certain degré de justice extérieur et comme beaucoup de chrétiens professant aujourd’hui, ils vivaient dans la haine, l’égoïsme, la convoitise, la vengeance, l’intolérance, la cupidité et dans la mauvaise interprétation des écritures. Jésus dit cependant que les vrais chrétiens sont caractérisés par la gentille, la faim pour la justice, la miséricorde, la pureté des cœurs, la recherche de la paix et la persécution. Donc cette partie du Sermon sur la montagne, soit vous remplira d’assurance que vous êtes réellement nés de nouveau, soit de terreurs car vous n’êtes pas différents de ceux qu’elle condamne. Si vous êtes dans la première catégorie, comme tout le monde d’ailleurs dans cette catégorie, sachez que vous avez encore de quoi améliorer. Mais la perfection est votre but car c’est le but de Dieu dans votre vie, comme Jésus l’avait dit (Mat. 5:58, Phil 3:12-14).

Si vous êtes dans la dernière catégorie,, vous pouvez vous repentir et devenir l’esclave de Jésus en croyant en Lui. Vous allez avoir l’expérience d’être instantanément déplacé et amené dans la première catégorie, par Sa grâce!


[1] Le verset suivant dans le vivre de Jacques est «A quoi sert-il, mes bien-aimés, que quelqu’un dise qu’il a la foi, mais sans les œuvres? Cette foi peut-elle le sauver?» (Jac.2:14).

[2] Ceci serait la vérité de ce que l’on présente souvent comme «la loi cérémoniale» aussi bien que «la loi morale», bien que l’explication la plus complète concernant la loi cérémoniale soit donnée aux apôtres après la résurrection. Nous comprenons maintenant qu’aucun sacrifice d’animaux n’est nécessaire sous le Nouveau Testament, parce que Jésus était l’Agneau de Dieu. Nous ne suivons pas non plus la loi sur l’alimentation de l’Ancien Testament parce que Christ avait déclaré que toute nourriture était pure (Marc 7:19). Nous n’avons pas besoin de l’intercession d’un sacrificateur terrestre parce que Jésus est actuellement notre Souverain Sacrificateur, ainsi de suite. Contrairement à la loi cérémoniale, aucune partie de la loi morale n’avait été annulée ni altérée par quoi que ce soit que Jésus avait dit, avant ou après sa mort et sa résurrection. Au contraire, Jésus avait explicité et entériné la loi morale de Dieu, comme l’avaient fait les apôtres sous l’inspiration du Saint-Esprit après Sa résurrection.

35 Bien que les paroles de Jésus soient ici une forte motivation à ne pas annuler ou enseigner aux autres à déshonorer un simple commandement de Dieu, fut-ce le plus petit, Ses paroles offrent aussi l’espoir qu’au ciel seront aussi admis les gens coupables de ce même péché.

[4] Il est possible que Jésus suggérait que les scribes et les pharisiens, si à l’aise dans la cour, devaient comprendre qu’ils allaient vers le tribunal de Dieu et qu’ils avaient le désavantage de l’avoir comme «adversaire devant la loi». Il leur avait donc conseillé de tout régler en dehors de la cour, de peur qu’ils ne fissent face aux conséquences éternelles.

[5] Ceci n’est p as un exemple imaginé. Selon le Rabin Hillel, qui était l’enseignant le plus connu sur le divorce à l’époque de Jésus, un homme pouvait légalement divorce d’avec sa femme s’il trouvait quelqu’un de plus attirant physiquement car cela rendait sa femme «indécente» à ses yeux. Le Rabin Hillel enseignait aussi qu’un homme pouvait divorcer de sa femme s’il mettait beaucoup trop de sel dans sa nourriture, ou si elle parlait avec un autre homme, ou si elle ne lui avait pas donné un fils.

[6] Sous l’ancien testament, ceux qui commettaient l’adultère devaient être lapidés.

[7] Evidemment, Dieu ne la tenait plus coupable dès qu’elle se mariait; elle n’était que la victime du péché» de son mari. Les paroles de Jésus n’ont aucune valeur tant qu’elle n’est pas mariée. Autrement, il n’aurait aucune raison pour qu’elle soit considérée adultère.

[8] De même, Dieu ne tiendrait pas le nouveau mari pour coupable d’adultère. Il fait une bonne chose en mariant et en pourvoyant pour une femme divorcée. Cependant, si un homme encourage une femme à divorcer de son mari afin de l’épouser, il sera coupable d’adultère; et c’est certainement ce péché que Jésus avait en tête.

[9] Il y a bien sûr d’autres situations qui pouvaient être réglées. Par exemple, une femme chrétienne qu’un mari païen divorce n’est pas coupable d’adultère si elle épouse un mari chrétien.

Day 82 – Jesus Tells His Followers to be Ready for His Return

Luke 12:35-48

Daily Devotionals for Families

The old Boy Scout motto, “Be Prepared,” should also be a motto for every follower of Christ. Boy Scouts are supposed to be prepared for whatever might happen, but Christians should be prepared, above everything else, for the return of Jesus. He said He will come when “least expected” (Luke 12:40). Thus, there exists the potential for people to be caught off guard. Some will be very surprised and completely unprepared.

What is it that will determine who is prepared and who is unprepared for Jesus’ return? Those who are obeying Jesus will be prepared, and those who are not obeying Him will be unprepared. Jesus said we should wait for Him as a servant waits for his master to return from a wedding feast. This once again teaches us that, although we are saved through our faith in Jesus, real faith manifests itself in obedience. If Jesus is truly our Savior then He is also our Master, and we are His servants.

Unfortunately, there are many people who think they are Christ’s servants but who prove they aren’t by what they do. Specifically, Jesus mentioned people who oppress His other servants (see Luke 12:45). At another time, Jesus said that love for one another is the mark of His true disciples (see John 13:34-35). Those who oppress and hate Christians definitely aren’t Christians. Jesus also specifically mentioned in today’s reading that some of the unprepared will be partying and getting drunk. The Bible plainly teaches that drunkards will not get into heaven (see 1 Corinthians 6:10).

According to Jesus, at His return the unprepared will be treated just like unbelievers (see Luke 12:46), with one exception. They will be punished even more severely because they knew their duty, but refused to do it. Those people who are found to be disobedient at Christ’s return but who didn’t know much about what He expected of them will be punished less severely. This indicates that the “unprepared” of whom Christ was speaking are probably professing Christians, supposed servants of Christ who have some knowledge of the Bible, but who are not really saved. Both the knowledgeable unprepared and the ignorant unprepared will be banished to hell, although their punishments will vary there. This means that it would be much worse to be the child of Christian parents and only a “church kid” who has no real relationship with Jesus than an ignorant pagan who knows little about Jesus. Both will spend eternity in hell, but the “church kid” will be punished even more severely there.

Jesus said that the servants whom He finds doing His will when He returns will receive a special favor and reward. Amazingly, Jesus said that He would reward His obedient servants by serving them a meal! God foretold through the prophet Isaiah of a fabulous meal that He would prepare for His people: “The Lord Almighty will spread a wonderful feast for everyone around the world. It will be a delicious feast of good food, with clear, well-aged wine and choice beef” (Isaiah 25:6). We can also read in the book of Revelation about something called “the wedding feast of the Lamb” and how blessed are those who are invited to it. If you are a true follower of Jesus who is prepared for His return, you’re one of those blessed ones!

Q. Kids of Christian parents often outwardly conform to their parents’ standard of behavior while they’re growing up, but once they grow old enough to leave home, their lifestyles change dramatically for the worse. What does this tell us about those kids?

A. They were perhaps never really saved in the first place. That is why parents should not only teach their children about what is right and what is wrong, they should teach them why certain things are right and certain things are wrong. And even more importantly, they should teach their children about Jesus and who He is, so that their children’s good behavior results from their personal relationship with Him and their desire to obey Him—not just a temporary outward conformity.

Q. Jesus compared Himself to a burglar in today’s reading. At other times He compared Himself to a “thief in the night.” Why would Jesus ever use evil people to describe Himself?

A. Both comparisons teach us the limitations of comparisons and the foolishness of trying to find too much meaning in Jesus’ parables and metaphors. Remember that a metaphor is a comparison of things that are basically not the same, but which have some striking similarities. The only similarity between Jesus and a burglar is that people are not expecting either, and are caught by surprise when they come. That is where the similarities end.

Application: If Jesus returned at this instant, are you ready this instant?

Day 51 – Jesus Tells a Story About Different Soils

Matthew 13:1-23

Daily Devotionals for Families

The best way to teach is to take what a person already understands and relate it to what he needs to understand. For example, if a person didn’t know what a donut was, you could explain it by saying that donuts are round with holes in the middle, like car tires, but small enough to hold with one hand. They taste something like bread, and often have sweet-tasting icing on top, and so on.

Jesus wanted His followers to understand certain spiritual principles, and He explained those principles using parables, stories that compared natural things with spiritual things. Jesus’ parables were not only meant to help His followers understand spiritual concepts, they were also designed to hide those same truths from those who were not His followers. Jesus, of course, wants everyone to be His follower, but only those who decide to become His followers receive certain privileges, such as going to heaven in the future and understanding spiritual truths right now. Jesus said, “To those who are open to my teaching, more understanding will be given, and they will have an abundance of knowledge” (Matthew 13:12). But those people who weren’t open to His teaching would be cursed to remain ignorant of wonderful spiritual truths.

This particular parable we just read explains why so many people who hear God’s truth are not changed by it. Speaking to people who understood about planting seeds, growing plants and harvesting a crop, Jesus compared God’s Word to seeds and people to four different types of soil. Just as a seed planted in good soil sprouts, grows and bears fruit, so God’s Word planted in a receptive heart will produce a changed life. But the same seed planted in poor soil will never produce fruit. It’s important to realize that in Jesus’ story, the seed and the sower, unlike the soils, didn’t change. The reason that some people are never saved has nothing to do with God and everything to do with people’s receptivity.

Jesus first spoke of seeds falling on a footpath. The soil there was packed hard from people always walking on it, so the seeds couldn’t penetrate. Jesus said that this soil represents people who don’t understand the good news. The reason they don’t understand it is not because they can’t understand it, but because they don’t want to understand it. Anyone, even a child, can understand that Jesus is the Son of God who died on the cross for his sins. And God certainly wouldn’t hold someone responsible to understand something that is impossible for him to understand.

God’s Word can’t penetrate hardened hearts, and like the exposed seed that is quickly eaten by birds, so God’s Word is snatched from hardened hearts by the devil. When that happens, a person who could have been born again remains unchanged.

The second type of soil Jesus spoke of was a shallow, thin layer over rocks. If you’ve ever planted anything in shallow soil, you can understand exactly what Jesus was talking about. The seed sprouts and the plant begins to grow, but when the sun shines, the shallow soil quickly dries, and the young plant withers and dies. This soil represents the person who enthusiastically receives the gospel at first, but when he faces trouble or persecution because of his new belief, his faith quickly dies. Most pastors and evangelists have seen a lot of people like that. Saving faith is a faith that perseveres no matter what. Every Christian will have his faith tested in difficulties and persecution, so hold fast to your faith.

In Jesus’ third example, the seed fell on ground where thorn seeds had also been sown. The thorns ultimately dominated, and the little shoots from the good seeds were choked by the thorns and died. This represents a person who receives God’s Word but doesn’t make it his highest priority. Other things become more important, like making money. The good news about Jesus demands our utmost attention, because through it, Jesus calls us to be His devoted followers. You can’t have a casual relationship with the Lord.

Finally, Jesus talked about the good soil where the seed sprouts, grows and produces fruit. Of the four types of soil, only this kind represents a person who is saved in the end. Only this kind produces fruit. Those fruits would include the fruit of the Spirit listed in the book of Galatians: love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control (see Galatians 5:22). It would also include the fruit of obedience.

If you’ve become a true follower of Jesus, you can rejoice that you are good soil! Aren’t you glad you are?

Q. According to this parable, will every Christian produce the same amount of fruit?

A. No, some produce thirty, some sixty, and some one hundred fold. Additionally, fruit is something that gradually ripens, and every Christian can grow in the fruit of the Spirit. Some of us still have some green apples, but at least they’re apples!

It is also important to understand that if a person has no fruit at all, he is not really saved. Every true Christian will bear some fruit.

Q. Even though all true Christians could be classified as good soil, do you think there’s any possibility of our soil becoming like any of the other three kinds?

A. Yes, there is that possibility, and we should guard ourselves from allowing it to happen. The writer of the book of Hebrews said, “Take care, brethren, lest there should be in any one of you an evil, unbelieving heart, in falling away from the living God” (Hebrews 3:12, NASB). This warns us that good soil can become bad soil.

Application: The most wonderful thing is when we meet an unsaved person who is receptive, like the good soil of this parable. Let’s pray today for God to direct us to encounter people like that, so we can share the good news with them.

Day 132 – We are Branches in Jesus’ Vine

John 15:1-17

Daily Devotionals for Families

Using the analogy of a vine, Jesus explained what a true Christian is: he is a person who, as a result of being joined to Jesus, produces fruit. Fruit, of course, represents the good things that we do. It includes our actions, attitudes, words and answers to our prayers. We can only produce that fruit if we are connected with Jesus.

Notice how Jesus emphasized fruitfulness, stressing its great importance. Whether a person produces fruit is what determines his eternal destination. Those who don’t produce fruit are like worthless branches on the grapevine—and they are destined to be burnt by fire, spending eternity in hell. God prunes those who do produce fruit so they may become more fruitful.

If you’ve believed in Jesus, then you are already producing some fruit. But God will not be satisfied until you are just like Jesus. So, like a gardener who prunes his grapevine so it might produce more fruit, God will work with us, cutting off what is displeasing to Him. He is dedicated to our spiritual growth.

Our job, according to Christ’s command, is to remain in Him (see John 15:4). To “remain in Jesus” means to continue to believe that He is the Son of God and thus continue to follow and obey Him. If we will remain in Him, He’ll remain in us and we’ll produce much fruit.

Jesus also instructed His followers to remain in His love (see John 15:9). That’s the same thing as remaining in Him, because the proof of a person’s remaining in Jesus’ love is the same proof as that of a person’s remaining in Jesus: his obedience. In today’s reading, Jesus stressed the importance of our obeying His commandment to love one another. He expects us to love one another just as He loves us. He literally laid down His life for us, and wants us to give sacrificially of ourselves to one another. John wrote, “Let us stop just saying we love each other; let us really show it by our actions” (1 John 3:18). Have you demonstrated your love for a fellow Christian recently?

Q. Jesus talked about the branch that was cut off from the vine because it wasn’t bearing fruit. Does this prove that a person can be joined to Christ but produce no fruit?

A. As with every parable and comparison, we must be careful about searching for significance in every detail, because at some point, the similarities in the comparison end. We shouldn’t necessarily conclude, just because the fruitless branch was connected to the vine, that it’s possible for a person who doesn’t produce fruit to be connected to Christ. That might be reading more into His analogy than Jesus intended. The way a person becomes connected to Jesus is by faith, and the Bible tells us that “faith without works is dead” (see James 2:26, NASB). For that reason, it seems unlikely that Jesus was trying to teach that a person can be joined to Him yet remain fruitless. In fact, Jesus said that fruitlessness is what results in being cut off from the vine.

Q. For those who do remain in Him, Jesus has given tremendous promises regarding their prayers. He said, “But if you stay joined to me and my words remain in you, you may ask any request you like, and it will be granted!” (John 15:7). Does that mean we could ask for all our enemies to be killed in car crashes on the same day?

A. People who remain in Jesus and who allow Jesus’ words to remain in them would never make such a prayer request, because Jesus said in another place that we should bless our enemies and pray for them, not against them! We can pray with assurance for anything that God has promised us in His word, and we should only want to pray for what is His will.

Application: Jesus is our Lord and Master, but He’s not a distant master who only cares about our obedience and doesn’t care about us. He’s our Friend. But don’t forget that He’s only our Friend if He’s first our Master and Lord. Jesus plainly said that those who obey Him are His Friends (see John 15:14). Too many people want Jesus as their friend but not their Lord. But Jesus does not offer such a relationship to anyone.