More Lessons from Jesus
from Matthew 7
Jesus had so many things to tell his followers – not just
his followers back then, but all those yet to be born who be would follow Him. Jesus looked far into the future and spoke
about his beloved followers down through the ages in every generation who would
hear his lessons and try to follow them. He told the disciples: “I have sheep
that are not of this sheep fold. I must
bring them in also. They will listen to
My voice.” (John 10:16)
All of Jesus’ lessons are recorded in Matthew, Mark, Luke
and/or John of the New Testament. So for
the last few weeks we have started going through the book of Matthew and
discussing some of Jesus’ lessons that we find there. Today we will read the 7th chapter of Matthew
and review more of Jesus’ lessons that are recorded there. Sometimes Jesus jumps from one topic to
another. So we will do the same as we
follow His teachings.
Jesus continues his lessons by telling his followers not to
judge others. “Do not judge, or you too
will be judged. For in the same way you
judge others, you will be judged and with the measure you use, it will be
measured to you.” (Matthew 7:1-2) Jesus teaches that the critical judge may be
judging a person who has a speck in his eye when the one doing the judging has
a plank in his eye. I think that Jesus
is intentionally exaggerating to show that since we are all sinners we must stop
short of final condemnation. We humans cannot judge other people’s motives or
see into their hearts like God can.
(James 4:11-12) We all know how
bad it feels when a critical unloving person judges us harshly. Jesus is commanding us not to do that to
other humans.
Scripture says that believers are not to avoid all judging
since Christians need to judge themselves and sometimes offending church
members. (1 Cor. 5:3-5, 12, 13) Scripture says that Christians are to “test
everything.” (2 Thess. 5:21) Scripture repeatedly tells believers to
evaluate carefully and choose between good and evil people and things. (1 Cor.5:9)
We are to test and be careful of those who pretend to be like angels of
light. (2 Cor.11:14) and we are to be on
the alert for false prophets. (John
4:11)
We are commanded to love one another. (John 13:34-35) When we love others we may see their faults
but we are more generous with our understanding of their problems. Love drives out the critical unloving judgmental
spirit. I personally made a New Year’s
resolution this year to react to the people I don’t like with an open loving
spirit instead of my usual judgmental spirit.
To stop being negative of the people I love to hate. It has made a big difference already for me. Try being extra nice to each person you
dislike. Greet them with a smile. Pray for them. Think of them in a positive way and see if it
doesn’t help you be a less judgmental.
Jesus continues his lessons with this: “Do not give dogs what is sacred and do not
throw your pearls to the pigs. If you do
they may trample them under their feet, and then turn and tear you to
pieces.” (Matthew 7:6) What is Jesus trying to teach us here? Bible scholars believe that the pearls here
represent the gospel. The “Pearl of great price” in
another Bible passage referring to our precious faith in Jesus. (Matthew 13:45-46) And the “dogs” and “pigs” Jesus is speaking of
are the heathens - the people who are vicious and laugh at the Christian faith. We must not continue preaching the gospel to
people who continually ridicule it. We
must not allow others to treat the blood of Christ as cheap. (Matt. 13:11, 15)
Jesus continues teaching by inviting us to ask Him for the
things we need in this life. “Ask and it
will be given you, seek and you will find, knock and the door will be opened to
you. For everyone who asks, receives, and
he who seeks finds: and to him who knocks, the door will be opened.” (Matthew 7:7-8)
Jesus reminds us that when children ask their parents for
bread or fish they can usually count on their parents to give them bread or
fish and not a snake or a stone. That if
our earthly parents gave us gifts, how much more will our heavenly Father give
us good gifts? Jesus is teaching us to
ask God trusting Him to answer our prayers and take care of our needs. (Matthew 9-12)
Do we sometimes
forget to ask our heavenly Father to give us what we need? Are we missing out – struggling with less
because we are trying to take care of our problems on our own? Next time you are nervous about a job you
have to get done or fearful that you cannot meet a challenge that is put in
front of you: ask God to give you the ability – to be there with you – and see
what a difference it makes!
Next Jesus tells us to enter through the narrow gate. “Wide is the gate and broad is the road that
leads to destruction, and many enter through it. But small is the gate and narrow the road
that leads to life,…” (Matthew
7:13b-14) At another time Jesus told his
followers, “I am the Way the Truth and the Life, no man comes to the Father but
by Me.” (John 14:6)
Here is Jesus’ next lesson.
“Watch out for false prophets.
They come to you in sheep’s clothing, but inwardly they are ferocious
wolves. By their fruit you will
recognize them. Do people pick grapes
from thorn bushes or figs from thistles?
Like that every good tree bears good fruit, but a bad tree cannot bear
good fruit…by their fruit you will know them.
Not everyone who says ‘Lord, Lord’ will enter the kingdom of heaven, but
only he who does the will of my Father…
(Matthew 7: 15-21)
Have you heard of proud mean-spirited so called Christian
leaders who claim to have special spiritual secrets, while controlling their congregation
with rules and fear and taking large sums of money from their “flock”? In every generation we must contend all over
again for the faith. Satan is constantly
attacking the Church by sending these false prophets - wolves in sheep’s
clothing and we must check out what our churches are teaching as well as how
our leaders are behaving. A false
prophet will most likely not have a humble spirit and he/she will not confess
that Jesus is Son of God and Savior – that He died and raised from the dead and
He came in the flesh. Jesus warned his
followers over and over again to watch out for false prophets. So we better be alert!
And Jesus’ last lesson is the one about the wise and the
foolish builders. (Matthew 7:24-27) The
wise builder builds her house on a rock and the foolish builder builds her
house on the sand. And all seems well
for both builders for awhile until the rains come down and the floods rise up and
the winds beat against the houses! And
the house on the sand blows away in many pieces. But the house on the rock stands firm because
its foundation is built on the rock.
And Jesus is the Rock. (1 Corinthians 3:11) Jesus is teaching us the supreme importance
of building upon the right foundation.
We are to build our lives on Him and when the storms of life come down
and the rivers rise and the winds beat against our little life, it will stand
because it is built on the Rock.
Jesus was persecuted and eventually murdered on the cross
because of the lessons He taught. He especially infuriated people when He held
himself up as the “Narrow Way ”
and as the Son of God and Savior. Huge
crowds followed Jesus but many in the crowds eventually turned away from Him because
of what He taught. They fussed that his lessons were too hard. One day when a group got up and left while He
was teaching, Jesus turned to his disciples and asked if they would leave Him
too. (John 6:66) He was hoping that they
would stay with Him. I have a feeling He
still asks his followers that same question today. Will we stick with Him even when the lessons
are hard? How will we answer that? How will you answer that?
No comments:
Post a Comment