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Rescue the Perishing
-- Fanny Crosby
(Please
listen to the vocal)
Rescue the perishing, care for the dying,
Snatch them in pity from sin and the grave;
Weep o’er the erring one, lift up the fallen,
Tell them of Jesus, the mighty to save.
Refrain
Rescue the perishing, care for the dying,
Jesus is merciful, Jesus will save.
Though they are slighting Him, still He is waiting,
Waiting the penitent child to receive;
Plead with them earnestly, plead with them gently;
He will forgive if they only believe.
Refrain
Down in the human heart, crushed by the tempter,
Feelings lie buried that grace can restore;
Touched by a loving heart, wakened by kindness,
Chords that were broken will vibrate once more.
Refrain
Rescue the perishing, duty demands it;
Strength for thy labor the Lord will provide;
Back to the narrow way patiently win them;
Tell the poor wand’rer a Savior has died.
Refrain
Fanny Crosby tells the story
of how she came to write Rescue the Perishing...
It was written in the year 1869, when
I was forty-nine years old. Many of my hymns were written after
experiences in New York mission work. This one was thus written. I was
addressing a large company of working men one hot summer evening, when
the thought kept forcing itself on my mind that some mother's boy must
be rescued that night or not at all. So I made a pressing plea that if
there was a boy present who had wandered from his mother's home and
teaching, he would come to me at the close of the service. A young man
of eighteen came forward and said, 'Did you mean me? I promised my
mother to meet her in heaven, but as I am now living that will be
impossible.' We prayed for him and he finally arose with a new light in
his eyes and exclaimed in triumph, 'Now I can meet my mother in heaven,
for I have found God!' (Ed: He had entered through the strait
gate that leads to heaven. Hallelujah! May his tribe increase. Amen)
A few days before, Mr. Doane had sent
me the subject “Rescue the Perishing,” and while I sat there that evening
the line came to me, “Rescue the perishing, care for the dying.” I could
think of nothing else that night. When I arrived it my home I went to
work on it at once; and before I retired the entire hymn was ready for a
melody. The next day my words were written and forwarded to Mr. Doane,
who wrote the beautiful and touching music as it now stands.
In November, 1903 (Ed: year hymn written = 1869), I went to Lynn, Massachusetts, to speak before the
Young Men’s Christian Association. I told them the incident that led me
to write “Rescue the Perishing," as I have just related it. After the
meeting a large number of men shook hands with me, and among them was a
man, who seemed to be deeply moved. You may imagine my surprise when he
said, “Miss Crosby, I was the boy, who told you more than thirty-five
years ago that I had wandered from my mother’s God. The evening that you
spoke at the mission I sought and found peace, and I have tried to live
a consistent Christian life ever since. If we never meet again on earth,
we will meet up yonder.” As he said this, he raised my hand to his lips
(Ed: as you doubtless know Fanny was blind);
and before I had recovered from my surprise he had gone; and remains to
this day a nameless friend, who touched a deep chord of sympathy in my
heart. It is these notes of sympathy that vibrate when a voice calls
them forth from the dim memories of the past, and the music is
celestial. (Fanny Crosby's personal testimony)
Comment:
Please
take a moment to watch and listen to the vocal rendition of
Rescue The Perishing based
largely
on Fanny Crosby's famous hymn (Hint: Select Full Screen view for
maximum impact). Beloved I
will be amazed if you can watch and listen to this youtube video of
Fanny Crosby's classic hymn without weeping.
May our hearts break for what
breaks our Father's heart and may His Spirit so fill us that His Good
News "becomes like a burning fire" (Jer 20:9 23:29) in our bosom
and we cannot hold it in for the sake of Jesus Who
is
Mighty To Save. (Hillsong
version)
Amen
Luke
13:22 AND
HE WAS PASSING THROUGH FROM ONE CITY AND VILLAGE TO ANOTHER, TEACHING
AND PROCEEDING ON HIS WAY TO JERUSALEM: Kai dieporeueto (3SIAI) kata poleis kai komas
didaskon (PAPMSN) kai poreian poioumenos (PMPMSN) eis Ierosoluma: (Through: Lk 4:43,44 Mt 9:35 Mk 6:6 Ac
10:38) (Proceeding: Lk 9:51 Mk 10:32 33 34)
Bob Utley notes that in this
verse we again see
Luke’s emphasis on Jesus traveling on
His way to Jerusalem to His divine appointment (cf. Lk 9:51; 13:22;
17:11; 18:31; 19:11, 28; Acts 2:23; 3:18; 4:28; 13:29). (Luke
Commentary)
Warren Wiersbe comments that
...
The events recorded in John 9–10 fit
between Luke 13:21 and Luke 13:22. Note in John 10:40–42 that Jesus then
left Judea and went beyond the Jordan into Perea. The events of
Luke13:22 thru Luke 17:10 took place in
Perea as the Lord gradually moved
toward Jerusalem.
(Wiersbe,
W: Bible Exposition Commentary - Old Testament. Victor
or
Wordsearch)
And He was passing through -
Was He just passing through or was He passing through
with a purpose? What was He doing as He passed through? (Teaching) Jesus
did not waste one precious moment! And neither should we as we are
"passing through" this world blinded to His life giving Gospel (2Co 4:4-note,
2Co 4:5,6-note
Jn 3:18 19 20 21 Acts 26:17 18)! Like Jesus we are aliens and
strangers (1Pe 1:1-note,
1Pe 2:11-note)
who are on mission to accomplish the good works for our Master
(e.g., see Ep 2:10-note,
Php 2:13-note
Ep 5:18-note
Gal 5:16-note).
Plumptre writes that...
this is apparently the continuation
of the same journey as that which Lk 9:51 recorded the beginning. (A
New Testament Commentary for English Readers)
Passing (1279)
(diaporeuomai from diá = through + poreúomai = to
go) means to go or pass through. Used 5x in 5v in NAS = Lk 6:1;
13:22; 18:36; Ac 16:4; Ro 15:24-note.
The
present tense
speaks of continuous action - Jesus was "on the move"!
A T Robertson...
Making his way to Jerusalem. Note
tenses here of continued action, and distributive use of kata
with cities and villages. This is the second of the journeys to
Jerusalem in this later ministry corresponding to that in John 11.
Teaching
(1321)
(didasko
[word study] from
dáo= know or teach; English = didactic; see also studies
of noun
didaskalia and adjective
didaktikos)
means to provide instruction or information in a formal or informal
setting. In the 97 NT uses of didasko the meaning is virtually
always to teach or instruct, although the purpose and content of the
teaching must be determined from the context.
Luke uses the
present tense
to vividly picture the focus and passion of our Lord Jesus Christ to
redeem every precious moment (Ep 5:16KJV-note)
as He walked along those dusty roads with His disciples knowing that the
end of the road was His death on a Roman Cross, but fully cognizant that
this would accomplish His triumph over sin,
death and Satan!
Can you imagine being one of the disciples constantly
hearing the Truth Himself teaching accurately the Word of Truth.
Only His glorious
countenance in heaven could be better!
(Ps 16:11, Rev 21:3-note
Rev 21:4-note
Rev 21:5-note
Rev 21:6-note
Rev 21:7-note
Rev 22:3-note
Rev 22:4-note
Rev 22:5-note)
Beloved, we are called to walk in His steps (1Pe 2:21-note,
cp Jn 13:15 1Co 11:1 Ep 5:2-note
Php 2:3 4-note
Php 2:5-note
1Jn 2:6 3:16 Re 12:11-note),
and yes that will bring persecution (Jn 15:19 20 Lk 6:22; 21:17
Jn 17:14 15 Mt 10:34, 35, 36 take comfort in Jn 16:33,14:27), but it
also conveys a responsibility (and accountability one day future
2Ti 2:15-note)
to continually teach the Word of Life (Php 2:16-note,
1Jn 1:1) to faithful men and women who will be able to
teach others also (2Ti 2:2-note,
cp Jesus commission in Mt 28:18 19 20 especially Mt 28:20!)
In Scripture to teach means to
pass on the truth about the Word of God, the God of the Word and the
faith of the saints, with the goal of influencing the understanding and
stimulating obedience to the truth taught and resultant Spirit energized
transformation and Christ-likeness. The essence of a disciple in fact is
that he or she is a learner. The teacher teaches and the disciple hears
and processes what is heard so that this truth affects his or her
innermost being. Ultimately the purpose of didasko is to shape the will
of the one taught. Finally, teaching of sound doctrine is vital to the
growth and stabilization of one's faith (cp Ro 10:17).
It is notable that
in the Gospels Jesus is addressed as Rabbi or Teacher more
than any other name, which clearly attests to the importance He placed
on this activity. In fact some 45 of the 58 NT uses of the Greek word
for teacher (didaskalos) are used of Jesus (most of these
referring to His public teaching). In addition 47 of 97 occurrences of
didasko are used in the Gospels to describe the teaching activity
of Jesus. Teaching was also a primary activity of the leaders of
the early church (see Acts 4:2, 18, 5:21, 25, 28, 42, etc). How tragic
that we are seeing a drift away from the teaching of
sound
doctrine
(1Ti 4:6 2Ti 4:3-note
Titus 1:9-note)
from the pulpits, even in churches that refer to themselves as "Bible
churches"!
John MacArthur
adds that the Greek verb didasko
refers to the passing on of
information, often, but not necessarily, in a formal setting. It focused
on content, with the purpose of discovering the truth-contrary to the
forums so popular among Greeks, where discussion and the bantering about
of various ideas and opinions was the primary concern (see Acts
17:21). Synagogue teaching, as illustrated by that of Jesus, was
basically expository. Scripture was read and explained section by
section, often verse by verse. (MacArthur,
J: Matthew 1-7 Chicago: Moody Press
or
Logos)
Proceeding on His way to Jerusalem
- When you walk with Jesus, you walk in the light (Jn 8:12 1:4 9:5
12:46) for He tells you where is going as in the following passages...
Luke 9:51 When the days were
approaching for His ascension (Lk 24:51, Acts 1:2 9 Ep 4:10), He was
determined to go to Jerusalem (I love the King James Version which is
more literal here than the NAS = He steadfastly set His face
to go to Jerusalem)
Mark 10:32 They were on the
road going up to Jerusalem, and Jesus was walking on ahead of them; and
they were amazed, and those who followed were fearful. And again He took
the twelve aside and began to tell them what was going to happen to Him,
33 saying, “Behold, we are going up to Jerusalem, and the Son of Man
will be delivered to the chief priests and the scribes; and they will
condemn Him to death and will hand Him over to the Gentiles. 34 “They
will mock Him and spit on Him, and scourge Him and kill Him, and three
days later He will rise again.”
Proceeding (present
tense to =
continually) (4160)(poieo)
usually means to make, to do or accomplish, this latter in the sense of
undertaking some action and here in Lk 13:22 speaking of making
His way (His purpose - see discussion of "way" below) to
Jerusalem.
Way
(4197)
(poreia) means a journey which Thayer says in the Hebrew
mind spoke of "a going", i.e., a purpose, a pursuit or an undertaking,
which is the sense in the only other NT use (Rendered "pursuits"
in Jas 1:11-note).
Luke
13:23 AND SOMEONE SAID TO HIM, "LORD, ARE
THERE JUST A FEW WHO ARE BEING SAVED?" AND HE SAID TO THEM: eipen (3SAAI) de tis auto, Kurie, ei oligoi hoi sozomenoi (PPPMPN)? o de
eipen (3SAAI) pros autous (3MPA):
(Are: Mt 7:14 19:25 20:16 22:14 ) (And: Lk 12:13 14 15 21:7,8 Mt
24:3 4 5 Mk 13:4,5 Jn 21:21,22 Ac 1:7,8 )
And someone said to Him - Some
have said this may have even been one of His 12 disciples but Lk 13:28
suggest that such would be unlikely (unless of course it was Judas
Iscariot!)
Are there just a few - He is
asking the wrong question. The question for every man and woman to ask
is "Am I saved?" And Jesus turns the question of the solitary
man into an answer to the masses ("to them") that were
around Him.
Kent Hughes writes that this
was a smug, self-complacent question
because the general understanding among the Jews was that all Jews
except the very worst would be saved. The Mishnah (See
discussion of Talmud) was explicit about this:
All Israelites have a share in the
world to come, for it is written, Thy people also shall be all
righteous, they shall inherit the land for ever; the branch of my
planting, the work of my hands that I may be glorified. And these are
they that have no share in the world to come: he that says that there is
no resurrection of the dead prescribed in the Law, and [he that says]
that the Law is not from Heaven, and an Epicurean. (Sanhedrin 10.1) (Luke
That You May Know the Truth Volume 2 or
Hardback Version)
Warren Wiersbe comments on the
question noting that ...
As with the question about Pilate,
Jesus immediately made the matter personal. “The question is not how
many will be saved, but whether or not you will be saved! Get that
settled first, and then we can discuss what you can do to help get
others saved.”
I sometimes receive “theological
letters” from radio listeners who want to argue about predestination,
election, and other difficult doctrines. When I reply, I usually ask
them about their prayer life, their witnessing, and their work in the
local church. That often ends the correspondence. Too many professed
Christians want to discuss these profound doctrines, but they do not
want to put them into practice by seeking to win people to Jesus Christ!
D. L. Moody prayed, “Lord, save the elect, and then elect some more!” (Wiersbe,
W: Bible Exposition Commentary - Old Testament. Victor
or
Wordsearch)
C H Spurgeon...
A question which has been asked many
times since. If a book could be published by authority detailing the
number of the saved, many would hasten to read it. It would be far more
wise to ask, “Shall I be saved?” We may get a clear answer to that
personal inquiry, but upon the larger question we are not yet in
possession of more than clouded light. “If but three persons are to be
saved, why should not I be one of them?” was a sensible remark we once
heard from an earnest seeker. (Spurgeon, C. H. The Interpreter:
Spurgeon's Devotional Bible)
Henry Cowles adds that...
Jesus answered, not to that question
of curiosity, comparatively unimportant, but to a kindred one infinitely
more vital—How can ye yourselves be saved!—Noticeably he directed this
answer, not to that one person who put the question, but "to them"—to
the masses who were about Him—the whole audience. (Henry
Cowles - Luke - at top of page enter 168)
John Stevenson observes
that...
This is one of those types of
questions that you hear from unbelievers: "What about the man in
Africa?" Jesus doesn’t immediately answer it. He says, "Instead of
worrying about the man in Africa, you should be worrying about the man
who is standing in your sandals." Do you see it? The man asks, "Lord,
are there just a few who are being saved?" And Jesus answered, "Make
certain that you are one of those few."
There are several points made
throughout this passage.
The door is narrow and not everyone enters (Lk 13:24).
The door is only open for a short time and then it will be shut (Lk
13:25).
The door will only be open to those who know Jesus and who are known by
Him (Lk 13:26).
There is time for you to know Him today, but tomorrow may be too late.
The door will be opened to many rather than just a few (Lk 13:29 30).
This was the original question. Now it is finally answered. But it is
not answered in the way that the question anticipated. (Kingdom
Controversies)
Cyril of Alexandria explains
that Jesus was not evading the question but that it was His practice ...
to meet His questioners, not of
course according to what might seem good to them, but as having regard
to what was useful and necessary for His hearers. And this He especially
did when any one wanted to learn what was superfluous and un-edifying.
For what good was there in wishing to learn, whether there be many or
few that be saved? What benefit resulted from it to the hearers? On
the contrary it was a necessary and valuable thing to know in what way a
man may attain to salvation. He is purposely silent therefore with
respect to the useless question which had been asked Him, but proceeds
to speak of what was essential, namely, of the knowledge necessary for
the performance of those duties by which men can enter in at the strait
and narrow door. (Sermon
Luke 13:22ff)
Holman Christian Study Bible
comments that...
The question "are there few being
saved?" may reflect two important realities about Jesus' ministry:
(1) Many of His teachings insisted that true discipleship comes with
many difficult challenges (Ed: cp Mk 8:35, Lk 14:33, et al), and
(2) though large crowds came to hear Jesus in every town and village,
there were relatively few who authentically followed Him as disciples (Ed:
cp response of the disciples in Jn 6:66 [following because of the
"benefits" Jesus offered such as "free bread" Jn 6:10 11 12 13)] and
Jesus' test of discipleship Jn 8:31 directed at those who had "believed"
Jn 8:30 but who proved to be only professors who manifested intellectual
assent and not genuine belief when in this same section sought to stone
Him for declaring Himself to be "I Am" - Jn 8:58, 59, cp similar pattern
Titus 1:16-note).
(HCSB)
Utley notes that this question
about the number saved...
was a highly discussed issue among
the rabbis (cf. Mt 7:13 [note]
= "destruction...many", Mt 7:14 [note]
"life...few"). They argued whether all the Jews would be saved from
God’s wrath on Judgment Day or just certain sects within Judaism (their
own). This question may also relate to the OT concept of “remnant”
(cf. Isa. 10:20 21 22 23; 16:14; Micah 2:17; 4:6 7 8; 5:7 8 9; 7:18 19
20). The tragedy of ancient Israel was that although they were the
special chosen nation of YHWH, most never had a personal faith
relationship with Him. Israel’s history is one of judgment, restoration,
and judgment again. The prophets only saw a faithful remnant (she'ar -
07605) returning from Assyrian and Babylonian exile. (Luke
Commentary)
David Guzik adds that
We often wonder about the salvation
of others. But in His reply (Strive to enter through the narrow gate),
Jesus points back to the only person’s salvation we can really know and
asks, "are you yourself saved?" The rabbis of that day used to love to
debate the question of whether many or few would be saved. But Jesus
won’t be drawn into this debate. His only question is, "are you saved?"
(Luke 13 Commentary)
Brian Bell observes that
The real question
is not “are there few who are saved”, but “will you be among the saved?”
Instead of entering the kingdom, some people only ask questions about
it. But…
Salvation is not a theory to discuss
It is a miracle to
experience.
In our soft age we are more concerned with statistics than
about spiritual power. (Luke
13)
Being saved
(4982)(sozo)
has the basic meaning of delivering or rescuing one from great
peril, in this context the terrifying wrath to come (cp 1Th 1:10-note,
2Th 1:6, 7, 8, 9, 10). Additional nuances of sozo include to
protect, keep alive, preserve life, heal, be made whole. Sozo is
in the
present tense
(continually) and the
passive voice
(power coming from outside Source, the Spirit).
The phrase being saved is
found 5 times in the NT - Luke 13:23 Acts 2:47 Acts 27:20 1 Cor 1:18 2
Cor 2:15
And He said to them - Notice
that "them" is plural (in the Greek), so Jesus addresses the
following remark to all the audience not just the one who asked the
question. Jesus answers the The Lord answered a speculative question
with a direct command.
Godet writes that
The question of Lk 13:23 was to a
certain extent a matter of curiosity. In such cases Jesus immediately
gives a practical turn to His answer. Cp. Lk 12:41, 42, John 3:2 3; and
hence Luke says (Lk 13:23): “He said to them.” Jesus gives no direct
answer to the man; He addresses a warning to the people on the occasion
of his question. (Luke 13:22 Commentary)
Matthew Henry writes that...
Our Saviour came to guide men's
consciences, not to gratify their curiosity. Ask not, How many shall be
saved? But, Shall I be one of them? Not, What shall become of such and
such? But, What shall I do, and what will become of me? Strive to enter
in at the strait gate. This is directed to each of us; it is, Strive ye.
All that will be saved, must enter in at the strait gate, must undergo a
change of the whole man (cp 2Co 5:17-note). Those that would enter in, must
strive to enter. Here are awakening considerations, to enforce this
exhortation. Oh that we may be all awakened by them! They answer the
question, Are there few that shall be saved? But let none despond either
as to themselves or others, for there are last who shall be first, and
first who shall be last. If we reach heaven, we shall meet many there
whom we little thought to meet, and miss many whom we expected to find.
Pastor Steven Cole
(recommended resource - sermons flow almost like verse by verse
commentaries!
Click here to access his sermons) in his sermon on Luke
13:22-30 entitled
The Narrow Door comments...
Somewhere in some village some unnamed
person in the crowd asked Jesus an interesting theological question:
“Lord, are there just a few who are being saved?” I don’t know the
man’s motives for asking the question. Perhaps he saw the increasing
opposition from the religious leaders and he could sense
that the crowds, although superficially interested in Jesus’ message,
tended to side with their leaders. But he asked this question, “Are
there just a few who are being saved?”
Most of us have wondered about that question as we look at
the billions of pagans compared with the few committed Christians.
It would have made for an interesting theological discussion.
But Jesus did not answer the question directly. Instead, He directed
the question away from abstract theological speculation and
toward specific application for each person in the crowd. The man
had asked, “Will the saved be few?” Jesus turned it around to ask,
“Will the saved be you?”
Remember, Jesus was speaking to a crowd made up mostly of
religious Jews. Almost to a person they believed in the one true
God. They were not agnostics or polytheists. They believed in the
Hebrew Scriptures and lived in basic accordance with them. In
giving His answer, Jesus was not addressing a pagan audience. He
was talking to the “church” crowd, most of whom assumed that
they would go to heaven because they were good Jews. And He
gives us church folks some important and practical lessons on the
subject of salvation: Salvation requires our earnest effort, our urgent attention,
and our careful self-examination (Ed: e.g., 2Cor 13:5-note).
It requires our earnest effort because the door is narrow. It
requires our urgent attention because the door is soon to be closed.
It requires our careful self-examination because once it is closed,
the door will be eternally-closed. (The
Narrow Door - Luke 13:22-30 -
recommended
resource - sermons flow almost like verse by verse commentaries!
Click here to access his sermons)
Luke 13:24
STRIVE TO ENTER BY THE NARROW DOOR, FOR
MANY, I TELL YOU, WILL SEEK TO ENTER AND WILL NOT BE ABLE:
Agonizesthe
(2PPMM) eiselthein (AAN) dia tes stenes thuras, hoti polloi, lego
(1SPAI) humin, zetesousin (3PFAI) eiselthein (AAN) kai ouk ischusousin
(3PFAI).
(Strive: Lk 21:36 Ge 32:25,26 Mt 11:12 Jn 6:27 1Co 9:24
25 27 Php
2:12, Php 2:13 Col 1:29 Heb 4:11 2Pe 1:10) (Narrow: Mt
7:13,14-note)
ENERGETIC EFFORT ENTERS
THE NARROW GATE
Keep the context in mind in
interpreting this passage - Jesus is on His way to Jerusalem to die. His
words of warning in answer to this question are some of the last words
He will speak. There is an urgency about His mission and His message
speaks of that urgency. O
how we all need to seek by the enablement of His Spirit to imitate His
passion for people's souls.
Strive
to enter - If this verse is
taken out of context, it might
suggest that sinners would be able to do something (some work) that would merit
entrance by the narrow door and thus one could "work" his or her
way to heaven. Nothing could be further from the truth that Jesus
intended to convey! Jesus is not teaching works based righteousness
(which is nothing but filthy rags at best - Isa 64:6), but that
following Him has a cost. Jesus and not Jewish legalism (keeping of the
laws which no one can do perfectly - Jas 2:10) is the door (Jn 10:9)
that enters the house (salvation) in this passage and in Mt 7:13-note
He is the narrow gate that leads to the narrow way.
The Bible
repeatedly states that salvation is ONLY by grace
through personal faith in the Gospel of Jesus Christ and that this
transaction is independent of human works or merit (Ep 2:8,
9). What Jesus is describing in the issuance of the command to strive is the
unpopular truth that that the way of salvation
is narrow and "difficult", truths which are unpacked in
more detail in the following comments.
Kent Hughes...
This is the kind of moral effort
necessary to enter the kingdom. (Alexander Maclaren said) “We are not
saved by effort, but we shall not believe without effort.”
Cyril of Alexandria exhorts us
to listen to Jesus' words in this "hard saying" for even as...
A ship is guided to the right port by
means of the helm...the word of God pilots the soul of man, and leads
him without risk of error to every thing that is necessary for
salvation. (Sermon
Luke 13:22ff)
Norval Geldenhuys notes that
As very often happened, the Saviour does not give a direct
reply to the speculative question, but points out to those present the
practical side of the matter: they are not to waste their time and
strength in arguments as to how many will be saved, but everyone must
strive hard and make sure that he himself is saved, for whether the
saved are to be many or few one thing is certain—the gate leading to
life is strait, and only those who strive with might and main, and
whole-heartedly to enter, will be saved. (Commentary on the Gospel of Luke: The New International Commentary on
the Old and New Testament. Eerdmans Publishing Co)
The NET Bible notes add
that...
The idea is to "strain every nerve to
enter" because of the supreme importance of attaining entry into the
kingdom of God. (NET Notes)
J B Phillips is right when he
says that
The Kingdom is not entered by
drifting but by decision.
Strive
(75)
(agonizomai
[word study]
from
agon
= conflict or the place
of assembly for the athletic contests and then a reference to the
contests which were held there, gives us English "agony" - cp the
picture portrayed in Lk 22:44 = "agonia") means to exert oneself, to fight, to
labor fervently, to strive (devote serious effort or energy =
implies great exertion against great difficulty and suggests persistent
effort), to struggle, to contend with an adversary - all of these
actions picturing an intense struggle for victory. When you read that
the gloves of the Greek boxer were fur lined on the inside, but ox-hide
with lead and iron sewed on the outside and that the loser in a
wrestling match had his eyes gouged out, you get some sense of
appreciation of the intensity of the Greek athletic contests and you can
imagine how much effort such a contest might motivate! That is a picture
of agonizomai which encompassed the concentration, discipline,
conviction, and effort needed to win in athletic competition. It
pictures a runner straining every nerve to the uttermost ("agonizing")
to cross the goal in first place.
Jesus uses the
present imperative
which is a
command calling for continual striving, striving that is evidenced as
one's lifestyle, one's habitual practice. The picture is one of a
continual contention, a lifelong war (manifest by many "battles").
But with whom are we to be
continually contending and/or warring?
Until we see Jesus face to face, our
intractable, unyielding, inveterate, unyielding, entrenched,
incorrigible, obstinate, powerful and wily enemies are
the
world,
the
flesh
and the
devil.
In other words we must never, ever let down
our guard (cp Mt 26:41-note),
for our mortal enemies never lay down their arms and call a truce! Notice that the verb
strive
is in the plural which addresses this
command not just to the questioner but to the entire audience present
(and by way of application to every person ever born).
How would my day to day life be
different (seek to be specific) if I really understood what Jesus was
commanding and if I really surrendered to His sweet will (word)?
Consider praying "Search me, O God, and know my heart. Try me and know
my anxious thoughts and see if there be any hurtful way in me, and lead
me in the everlasting way." (Ps 139:23, 24-note).
Puritan Thomas Watson wrote...
Sometimes the work we are
to do for heaven is set out by striving. Luke 13:24, "Strive to
enter in at the strait gate." Strive as in an agony—strive
as for a matter of life and death. Though we must be men of peace—yet,
in matters of religion, we must be men of strife. It is a holy strife—a
blessed contention. Indeed, the Apostle said, "Let nothing be done
through strife"; but, though strife does not do well among
Christians—yet it does well in a Christian. He must
strive with his own heart—or he will never get to heaven. ( The
Heavenly Race)
SOME THOUGHTS ON
WHAT IT MEANS TO
STRIVE...
Note first that
strive is a command
calling for continual obedience and remember that God never commands
something of us that He does not enable or empower. It follows that if
someone is able to continually strive (whatever that looks like - which
will be elaborated on below), they show themselves to be genuine
believers with a new heart and an indwelling supernatural power to
strive. Stated another way, striving does not save us but it proves we
are saved. Faith alone saves, but faith that saves is never alone. We
are not saved by works but by a faith that works. One "fruit" of genuine
faith is a God given power to strive and fight and keep on doing so to
the very end.
The English dictionary definition
also helps
us to understand what it means to strive = to means to devote serious energy or effort, to
endeavor, to struggle in opposition, to make an effort to accomplish an
end, implying great exertion against great difficulty and specifically
calling for persistent effort. To make great efforts. To use intense
exertions. To endeavor with earnestness. To labor hard. The various
senses of strive are applicable to exertions of body or mind. A workman
strives to perform his task before another. A student strives to excel
his fellows in improvement. To contend. To contest. To strain. To
struggle in opposition to another. To be in contention or dispute and
often followed by against or with before the person or
thing opposed; e.g., strive against temptation; strive for
the truth. To fight vigorously against. Make every effort. To do one's
utmost. To "give it one's all." "To knock oneself out." "To make an
all-out effort." "To bend over backwards." "To go for broke." "To leave
no stone unturned."
Hendriksen writes that the
verb agonizomai places us...
in the (athletic) arena or in the wrestling-ring. The struggle is
fierce. Our opponents are Satan, sin, self (the old, sinful nature). To
strive means to exert oneself to the full, to strain every nerve in our
struggle with these opponents....these words were not meant to scare
God’s children. They do not mean that entrance into the palace of
salvation is only for those who are without sin. All those who
struggle—in obedience to the command, “Strive to enter”—will enter.
Another misconception must be removed. The command, “Strive to enter,”
does not imply that salvation is, after all, the product of human
exertion and not of grace. It is all of grace, enabling grace.
The true situation is described in Php 2:12-note,
Php 2:13-note.
(Ed: Where "work out" is
present imperative =
command calling for continual effort [cp idea of "striving"] to bring
our salvation to completion! Is this not one picture of how believers
are to strive to enter the narrow gate?) (New Testament
Commentary : Exposition of the Gospel According to Luke. Baker)
Note that elsewhere in the Gospels, Jesus uses agonizomai
to picture a description of a fight. Paul uses agonizomai with a similar
meaning...
Fight
(agonizomai in the
present imperative) the
good fight of faith; take hold of the eternal life to which you were
called, and you made the good confession in the presence of many
witnesses. (1Ti 6:12)
Comment: Henry Alford renders it "strive the strife".
I have fought
(agonizomai) the good fight, I have finished the course, I have kept the
faith (2Ti 4:7-note)
The point is that the life of a believer is "war" and calls for us to
struggle, wrestle and exert ourselves. As John Piper says here in Luke
13:27 "the phrase 'strive to enter' means that entering is a battle."
And so Jesus' command is to enter through the narrow door which is
equivalent to entering the kingdom of God (Lk 13:28, 29) which in
turn equates to salvation. As Jesus said "unless one is born again
(from above, from God), he cannot see the kingdom of God" (Jn
3:3). So the door through which we are to strive to enter is the door to
the kingdom of God or Heaven. To not enter this narrow door will result
in confinement to the place of weeping and gnashing of teeth,
which is Jesus' way of describing hell. In summary, what is at stake in
the striving Jesus is calling for is entrance into either heaven
(through the narrow door) or hell (the narrow door shut).
TRUE CHRISTIANITY
IS A FIGHT
J C Ryle writes...
True Christianity! Let us
mind that word "true." There is a vast quantity of religion current in
the world which is not true, genuine Christianity. It passes muster, it
satisfies sleepy consciences; but it is not good money. It is not the
authentic reality that called itself Christianity in the beginning.
There are thousands of men and women who go to churches and chapels
every Sunday and call themselves Christians. They make a "profession" of
faith in Christ. Their names are in the baptismal register. They are
reckoned Christians while they live. They are married with a Christian
marriage service. They mean to be buried as Christians when they die.
But you never see any "fight" about their religion! Of spiritual strife
and exertion and conflict and self–denial and watching and warring they
know literally nothing at all. Such Christianity may satisfy man, and
those who say anything against it may be thought very hard and
uncharitable; but it certainly is not the Christianity of the Bible. It
is not the religion which the Lord Jesus founded and His apostles
preached. It is not the religion which produces real holiness. True
Christianity is "a fight."...The principal fight of the Christian is
with the world, the flesh and the devil. These are his never–dying foes.
These are the three chief enemies against whom he must wage war. Unless
he gets the victory over these three, all other victories are useless
and vain. If he had a nature like an angel, and were not a fallen
creature, the warfare would not be so essential. But with a corrupt
heart, a busy devil and an ensnaring world, he must either "fight" or be
lost. ( See the entire
article
-
Are You Fighting The Fight?)
John Bunyan (author of Pilgrim's Progress) has an entire book on
the Strait Gate.
Strive
supposes that great idleness is natural to professors; they think to get
to heaven by lying, as it were, on their elbows. It also suggests that
many will be the difficulties that professors will meet with, before
they get to heaven. It also concludes that only the laboring Christian,
man or woman, will get here...
What does strive import?
When Jesus says
Strive,
it is as much as to say, Bend yourselves to the work with all your
might. "Whatever your hand finds to do, verily, do it with all your
might; for there is no activity or planning or knowledge or wisdom in
Sheol where you are going." (Eccl 9:10) Thus Samson did when he set
himself to destroy the Philistines ‘He bent with all his might.’ (Jdg
16:30) Thus David did also declaring "Now with all my ability I have
provided for the house of my God." (1Chr 29:2) And thus you must do, if
you would enter into heaven.
When Jesus says
Strive,
he calls for the mind and will, that they should be on his side, and on
the side of the things of His kingdom; for no one strives indeed, except
those who have given the Son of God their heart, of which the mind and
will are a principal part; for saving conversion lies more in the
turning of the mind and will to Christ, and to the love of his heavenly
things, than in all knowledge and judgment. And this the apostle
confirms when he says stand "firm in one spirit, with one mind striving
(sunathleo)
together for the faith of the gospel." (Phil 1:27-note)
(Luke 13:24 The Strait Gate)
It is notable that other NT writers
present a similar picture of "striving" in the context of salvation.
Peter charges his
readers...
Therefore, brethren,
be all the more diligent
(aorist
imperative =
command to do this now! Don't delay!) to make certain about His calling
and choosing you; for as long as you practice these things (2Pe 1:5-note
2Pe 1:6 7-note),
you will never stumble; for in this way the entrance
into the eternal kingdom of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ will be
abundantly supplied to you. (cp 2Pe 1:10, 11-note)
In Hebrews in the context of
reminders that many in Israel failed to enter God's rest by faith the writer exhorts his readers...
Therefore (Because of the danger of
"false faith"
Heb 3:18, 19-note),
let us fear if, while a promise remains of entering His rest, any one of
you may seem to have come short of it. 2 For indeed we have had good
news preached to us, just as they also; but the word they heard did not
profit them, because it was not united by faith in those who heard.
(Hebrews 4:1-note)
Therefore (because of the risk of not
entering and the rewards of entering God's rest) let us be diligent
(same verb used in Peter's exhortation above =
spoudazo) to enter that rest, so that
no one will fall, through following the same example of disobedience.
(Hebrews 4:11-note)
Comment: The picture of
spoudazo is that of
giving careful attention to some goal or objective. The idea is give
maximum effort, do your best, spare no effort, hurry on, be eager!
Hasten to do a thing, exert yourself, endeavour to do it. In short it is
a call to give your utmost for His highest!
In the context of Hebrews 3 and Hebrews 4 the exhortation is to be
diligent to concentrate your energy on achieving the goal of entering
God's promised Rest in Christ. Diligence in this sense is similar to the
idea of strive in Lk 13:24 in that it speaks of an intensity of
purpose followed by intensity of effort toward the realization of that
purpose, of entrance through the narrow Door of Jesus by grace
through faith.
Jesus
warned His disciples
And you will be hated by all on
account of My name, but it is the one who has endured to the end
who
will be saved (sozo).
(Mt 10:22, cp Mt 24:13)
Comment: Does this admonition
not speak of "striving" (Lk 13:24) to enter the narrow gate. Note
however that Jesus is not saying that it is by one's endurance (self
effort or works) that they will be saved. His point is that one is
enabled to endure because of the fact that they are saved. In other
words their endurance in spite of persecutions, ridicule, rejection,
etc, is sure proof that they have entered the narrow door of genuine
salvation.
Jesus also
alluded to the "striving" (Lk 13:24) necessary to enter the
narrow door of genuine salvation when He declared 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
God." (See
My Personal Testimony)
And when the disciples heard this, they were very astonished and said,
"Then who can be saved (sozo)?
(Mt 19:24, 25,
Comment: Be sure to check
the
context
Mt 19:16-17 18 19-20 21 22 23.
[See parallel in Mk 10:17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24-25 26-28 29 30 31
Luke 18:18-25, 26-28 29-30, see also Lk 12:33 34 Mt 6:19 20 21-note]
What did Jesus tell the rich young ruler that would require "striving"
["agonizing"]? Remember that Jesus was not teaching that giving up his
possessions [which equates with a self work] would earn or merit
salvation.
John MacArthur explains it
this way "He [rich young ruler] sincerely wanted eternal life,
but he wanted his riches and his self-righteousness even more. Whoever
wants anything more than Christ will forfeit Christ." (cp Mk 8:35)
Walter Kaiser comments: This
teaching was not given to one special individual; it was intended for
Jesus’ followers in general. He urged them to have the right priorities,
to seek God’s kingdom and righteousness above all else (Mt 6:33). But it
is very difficult to do this, he maintained, if one’s attention is
preoccupied by material wealth. (Kaiser, W. C. Hard Sayings of the
Bible. Downers Grove, Il: InterVarsity)
Jesus equated entrance into the kingdom of God with being saved as
indicated by the disciples' question. These are "hard sayings" from the
mouth of our Lord, but they are the truth about genuine salvation, truth
which the world desperately needs to hear and heed in these last days
during which the Gospel is being "diluted" (cp Paul's warning in Gal 1:6
7 8 9 10)!
In another place
Jesus helps us understand what it means to continually (present
tense) strive when He says...
For
this reason you
be
(present imperative
= command to continually be prepared, in a state of readiness) ready
too; for the Son of Man is coming at an hour when you do not think He
will. (Mt 24:44)
In explaining to
His disciples and the multitudes what it meant to come after Him,
denying self, taking up one's cross and following Him, Jesus declared
that
whoever wishes to save (sozo)
(referring to one's physical life) his life shall lose it
(eternally); but whoever loses his life for My sake and the gospel's
shall save (sozo)
(spiritually) it (eternally). (Mk 8:34, Be sure to check the
context
Mk 8:34, 35, 36)
John Piper asks...
But what does Jesus want
us to strive against so that we can enter through the narrow door? What
are the obstacles? If life is war, who is the enemy? In our
striving, the aim is not to hurt anyone. Jesus is clear that we are to
love our enemies and do good to those who hate us (Luke 6:27). Saying
that life is war does not mean that we make war on people, but on sin,
especially our own. In fact, it is only our own sin that can keep us
from entering the kingdom, not anyone else’s. The sin of others can hurt
us, even kill us. But that does not keep us from entering the kingdom of
God. Our own sin is the greatest threat to entering the kingdom of God.
But temptation to sin comes from an amazing variety of sources. Jesus is
demanding serious personal vigilance. The command to “watch” is one of
his most frequent commands. The idea is that we must be awake and alert
and ready, lest the temptations of life take us off guard and we be
overcome and ruined. Jesus said to his disciples in the Garden of
Gethsemane, “Watch and pray that you may not enter into temptation. The
spirit indeed is willing, but the flesh is weak” (Mark 14:38). This
command is relevant to all of life. Temptations abound, and Jesus does
not take them lightly. The watchword of all of life is, watch,
be alert....we must be vigilant all the time, not just when
the times feel perilous. They are always perilous. Soul-destroying
temptations to unbelief and sin are present in everyday, normal life.
Striving to enter through the narrow door is a lifelong, all-day,
every-day calling.
Surprising to us perhaps,
Jesus’ demand for vigilance is directed more often at the pleasures of
life than the pain. Some people are driven away from God by their pain,
but more are lured away by their pleasures. Pleasures seldom awaken
people to their need for God; pain often does. So Jesus is more
concerned to warn us about the dangers of prosperity than the dangers of
poverty. (Piper,
John: What Jesus Demands from the World - go to page 164ff)
In the parable of the soils, Jesus gives us examples of those who
do not keep on striving and will not be allowed to enter the narrow
door...
The one on whom seed (Mt
13:19 = the word of the kingdom = equivalent to the Gospel) was sown on
the rocky places, this is the man who hears the word and immediately
receives it with joy; yet he has no firm root in himself, but is only
temporary, and when
affliction or
persecution arises (Note:
Not just any affliction and persecution but specifically that which
comes) because of the word, immediately he falls away (skandalizo
= see related noun
skandalon). (Mt 13:20 21)
The seed which fell among
the thorns, these are the ones who have heard, and as they go on their
way they are choked (suffocated, caused to die, figuratively causing the
Word of God to be ineffective in a person's life) with
worries (anxieties) and riches
and pleasures of this life, and bring no fruit to maturity (No fruit =
no Root = no Salvation). (Lk 8:14, cp Mk 4:19 amplifies Luke's
description adding "deceitfulness"
and "desires")
John Piper comments
on the previous two passages that neither of these "enter through the
narrow door. One person falls away because of pain (tribulation or
persecution); the other person falls away because of pleasure (riches
and pleasures of life). The call for vigilance is all-embracing. There
is no unembattled place in this life." (Piper,
John: What Jesus Demands from the World - go to page 164ff)
Piper goes on to emphasis that another powerful lure away from
the Kingdom of God is the praise of men...
Beware
(prosecho
in
present imperative
= we must continually pay close attention and be
vigilant lest we fall into the trap of men's praises) of the scribes,
who like to walk around in long robes, and love respectful greetings
in the market places, and chief seats in the synagogues and places of
honor at banquets (Lk 20:46, cp Pr 27:21)
Piper: This is a call
for vigilance against the lure of following those who live for the
praises of man.
Beware
of (prosecho
in
present imperative
= we must continually be vigilant against)
practicing your righteousness before men to be noticed by them;
otherwise you have no reward with your Father who is in heaven.
(Mt 6:1-note)
Piper: We feel good when
people speak well of us. It may not be wrong. But it is dangerous. It is
a time for vigilance.
Another striving that must be to avoid self-indulgence
Be on guard,
so that your hearts will not be weighted down with dissipation and
drunkenness and the worries of life, and that day will not come on you
suddenly like a trap 35 for it will come upon all those who dwell on the
face of all the earth. (Lk 21:34-35).
Piper: We will not “strive
to enter through the narrow door” if we are self-indulgent and use
drugs or food or drink in a way that dulls our spiritual alertness and
vigilance....
The danger Jesus warns against most
often is the danger of money. It is a mortal danger. Heaven and hell
hang in the balance in our vigilance against the lure of money. Jesus
made this as clear as possible with the words,
It is easier for a camel to go
through the eye of a needle than for a rich person to enter the kingdom
of God (Mk 10:25, compare Jesus' frequent warnings related to money and
possessions - Mt 6:19, Mt 6:21, Mt 6:24, Mk 4:19, Lk 6:24 12:15 33
14:33).
The issue is entering the kingdom.
Striving for wealth is not the striving that leads to the
narrow door. (Ibid)
Arthur Pink comments
That Jesus should employ such an
expression (strive)
clearly implies the slothfulness and carelessness which characterize
mere nominal (Christians in name only!) professors, as it also denotes that there are real
difficulties and formidable obstacles to be overcome. The Greek word
there used for “strive” (agonizomai) is a very expressive and emphatic
one, meaning “agonize.”...Ah, my reader, becoming a Christian is not
done simply by holding up your hand in a religious meeting or signing
some “decision” card. Alas, that such multitudes have been deceived by
these satanic catch-pennies....Sermons on repentance and faith in Christ
avail us nothing unless they move our hearts to comply therewith. The
Greek word here rendered “strait” (Lk 13:24KJV) signifies restrained,
cramped, or better “narrow” as it is rendered in the revised version.
And what is meant by this strait or narrow door? A “door” serves two
purposes: it lets in and shuts out. This door (Jn 10:9) is the only
avenue of admittance to that “way” which leads unto life, and all who
enter not by it are eternally barred from the presence of God
and the realm of ineffable bliss. The second use of this “door” is
solemnly illustrated at the close of the parable of the virgins. The
foolish ones lacked the necessary “oil” (the work of the Spirit in the
heart), and when they sought to obtain it the Bridegroom came and “the
door was shut” (Mt 25:10), and though they besought Him to open it unto
them, He answered “I know you not.” (Mt 25:12)
As Henry Cowles explains
strive to enter this way...
What did he say? This:—Agonize
[strive] to enter in at the narrow gate; for many, I solemnly assure
you, will seek to enter in and shall not be able"— will find it
impossible to gain admission. The idea is not that they fail for want of
sufficient earnestness and endeavor, there being no stress upon agony
as successful while ordinary seeking fails; but the distinctive emphasis
is upon striving now while yet the door stands open, as
opposed to seeking in vain after the door is shut. The issue
turns on the line of making the effort, and not upon the earnestness or
the energy of the endeavor. Thus Jesus Himself explains His meaning.
When once, in the exercise of his rightful authority, the master of the
house has risen up and has officially, solemnly, shut the door, it can
be opened no more. From and after that closing of the door...there can
be no admittance. (Henry
Cowles - Luke - at top of page enter 168)
John Butler makes an excellent
point that strive...
does not suggest works for salvation
but the emphasis one should put on salvation. Our salvation must be the
most important matter in our life...Many are not saved because they want
to enter on their own terms instead of God’s terms, or they want to
enter on the basis of good works, or they think they will enter because
God is love and will not cast out anyone. Some think they can buy their
way into heaven. Many who think they are going to heaven will not
go to heaven when they die. (Butler, J. G. Analytical Bible Expositor:
Luke. Clinton, IA: LBC Publications)
Brian Bell observes that
strive although meaning to agonize like an athlete or fight like a
soldier in war does not signify that we are
saved by our hard work. Rather it warns us to avoid an easy, complacent, and theoretical
attitude toward the eternal destiny of the soul. We are to fight, or be
at war with...Who? - Not who, but what?
Be at war with sin
(especially your own
sin!)
Strive to enter the narrow gate – because God’s way is
narrow. (Luke
13)
J C Ryle comments...
Whatever others may do in religion the Lord Jesus would have us know
that our duty is clear. The gate is strait. The work is great. The
enemies of our souls are many. We must be up and doing. We are to wait
for nobody. We are not to inquire what other people are doing, and
whether many of our neighbors, and relatives, and friends are serving
Christ. The unbelief and indecision of others will be no excuse at the
last day. We must never follow a multitude to do evil. If we go to
heaven alone, we must resolve that by God's grace we will go. Whether we
have many with us or a few, the command before us is plain--"Strive
to enter in." ( Luke
chapter 13)
(Ryle commenting on John 10:9
adds) Let us take heed that we use this door, and do not merely stand
outside looking at it. It is a door free and open to the chief of
sinners--"If any man enter in by it, he shall be saved." (Jn 10:9) It is
a door within which we shall find a full and constant supply for every
need of our souls. We shall find that we can "go in and out," and enjoy
liberty and peace. The day comes when this door will be shut forever,
and men shall strive to enter in, but not be able. Then let us make sure
work of our own salvation (cp 2Pe 1:10 11-note).
Let us not stand tarrying outside, and halting between two opinions. Let
us enter in and be saved. (John
10)
Frederic Godet writes that
agonizomai
refers...to the difficulty of passing
through the narrow opening (and) in the application, to the humiliations
of penitence, the struggles of conversion. (Luke 13:22 Commentary)
Matthew Henry (Luke 13 Commentary)
comments on strive
to enter...
(1.) All that will be saved
must enter in at the strait gate, must undergo a change of the whole
man, such as amounts to no less than being born again, and must submit
to a strict discipline.
(2.) Those that would enter in
at the strait gate must strive to enter. It is a hard matter to get to
heaven, and a point that will not be gained without a great deal of care
and pains, of difficulty and diligence. (Ed:
How does this compare with the
"invitation" presented in many churches today? Just a thought to ponder
in light of Jesus' words.)
We must
strive
with God in prayer, wrestle as Jacob,
strive
against
Sin
and
Satan.
We must strive
in every duty of religion;
strive with our own
hearts, agonizesthe—
"Be in an agony.
Strive as those that run for a prize.
Excite and exert ourselves to the utmost."
Matthew Henry points out that
Jesus' following discussion contains a number of points that should
serve to strongly motivate us to submit and obey His command to strive
to enter the narrow door...
(1) Think how many take some
pains for salvation and yet perish because they do not take enough, and
you will say that there are few that will be saved and that it highly
concerns us to strive. Many will seek to enter in, and shall not be
able; they seek, but they do not strive. Note, The reason why many come
short of grace and glory is because they rest in a lazy seeking of that
which will not be attained without a laborious striving. They have a
good mind to happiness, and a good opinion of holiness, and take some
good steps towards both. But their convictions are weak; they do not
consider what they know and believe, and, consequently, their desires
are cold, and their endeavours feeble, and there is no strength or
steadiness in their resolutions; and thus they come short, and lose the
prize, because they do not press forward. Christ avers this upon his own
word: I say unto you; and we may take it upon his word, for he knows
both the counsels of God and the hearts of the children of men.
(2) Think of the
distinguishing day that is coming and the decisions of that day, and you
will say there are a few that shall be saved and that we are concerned
to strive
(3) Think how many who were
very confident that they should be saved will be rejected in the day of
trial, and their confidences will deceive them, and you will say that
there are few that shall be saved and that we are all concerned to
strive....Many are ruined by an ill-grounded hope of heaven, which they
never distrusted or called in question, and therefore conclude their
state is good because they never doubted it. They call Christ, Lord, as
if they were his servants; nay, in token of their importunity, they
double it, Lord, Lord.
DON'T PUT OFF UNTIL TOMORROW
WHAT YOU MUST DO TODAY!
TOMORROW MAY BE TOO LATE!
Puritan writer John Owen notes
that agonizomai...
embraces in its general sense, not only great and
continued effort, but such timely action, as to avoid being excluded in
the way referred to in the following verse. The contrast lies
principally in the idea of prompt and energetic effort on the one hand
and a fatal procrastination (put off from day to day; delay; defer to a
future time) on the other. This brings out with emphasis
the NOW, with which all the offers of salvation are made to men
in the Word of God. See Isa 1:18; Jer. 25:5; 35:15; Zech. 1:4; Lk 14:17;
Ro. 13:11; 2Co. 6:2; Heb 4:7. It is most unquestionably true, that men
are often beguiled to ruin, by mistaking a few vain and feeble efforts
for the energetic action requisite to obtain salvation; but that is not
here the prominent idea (Ed: Do not misunderstand - Owen is not
saying our efforts merit entry through the narrow door, for by works
shall no man be saved). Our Lord intends to warn men against delaying
to enter the strait gate, until it is shut, and they are forever
excluded. This will appear more clear from the following verse (Lk
13:25). (Owen, J. J. Commentary on Luke)
Enter (1525)
(eiserchomai from eis = into + erchomai = come)
means to go or come into and so to enter into.
The narrow door - KJV has the "strait gate".
Frederic
Godet writes that
The strait gate represents
attachment to the lowly Messiah; the magnificent gateway by which the
Jews would have wished to enter, would represent, if it were mentioned,
the appearance of the glorious Messiah whom they expected. (Luke 13:22 Commentary)
Arthur Pink notes that ...
It is not enough to listen to
preaching about this “gate,” nor to study its structure or admire
the wisdom of its appointment: it must be entered. Sermons on repentance
and faith in Christ avail us nothing unless they move our hearts to
comply therewith....
And what is meant by this strait
or narrow gate? A “gate” serves two purposes: it lets in and shuts
out. This gate is the only avenue of admittance to that “way” which
leads to life, and all who enter not by it are eternally barred from the
presence of God and the realm of ineffable bliss. The second use of this
“gate” is solemnly illustrated at the close of the parable of the
virgins. The foolish ones lacked the necessary “oil” (the work of the
Spirit in the heart), and when they sought to obtain it the Bridegroom
came and “the door was shut” ( Mt 25:10), and though they sought Him to
open it unto them, He answered “I know you not.”
John MacArthur:
Entering the
narrow gate is difficult because of its cost in terms of
human pride, because of the sinner’s natural love for sin, and because
of the world’s and Satan’s opposition to the truth.
(MacArthur,
J.: The MacArthur Study Bible Nashville: Word
or
Logos)
F B Meyer adds that the
door was
so narrow that there is no room to
carry through it the love of self, the greed of gain, the thirst for the
applause and rewards of the world.
Alexander Maclaren
We note,
first, the all-important exhortation (Strive) with which Christ seeks to sober a
frivolous curiosity. In its primary application, the ‘strait gate’ may
be taken to be the lowliness of the Messiah, and the consequent sharp
contrast of His kingdom with Jewish high-flown and fleshly hopes. The
passage to the promised royalty was not through a great portal worthy of
a palace, but by a narrow, low-browed wicket (small gate), through which it took a
man trouble to squeeze.
For us, the narrow door is the self-abandonment
and self-accusation which are indispensable for entrance into salvation.
‘The door of faith’ is a narrow one; for it lets no self-righteousness,
no worldly glories, no dignities, through. Like the Emperor at Canossa,
we are kept outside till we strip ourselves of crowns and royal robes,
and stand clothed only in the hair-shirt of penitence (repentance, grief
of heart for sins). Like Milton’s
rebel angels entering their council chamber, we must make ourselves
small to get in. We must creep on our knees, so low is the vault; we
must leave everything outside, so narrow is it. We must go in one by
one, as in the turnstiles at a place of entertainment. The door opens
into a palace, but it is too strait for any one who trusts to himself.
There must be effort in order to enter by it. For everything in our old
self-confident, self-centered nature is up in arms against the conditions
of entrance. We are not saved by effort, but we shall not believe
without effort.
The main struggle of our whole lives should be to
cultivate self-humbling trust in Jesus Christ, and to ‘fight the good
fight of faith.’ (Read the entire sermon -
The Strait Gate)
STRIVING...
COUNTING THE COST!
J C Ryle has some pithy
comments in his article entitled "The Cost"...
THE COST OF BEING A TRUE CHRISTIAN
- Let there be no mistake about my meaning. I am not examining what it
costs to save a Christian’s soul. I know well that it costs nothing less
than the blood of the Son of God to provide an atonement and to redeem
man from hell. The price paid for our redemption was nothing less than
the death of Jesus Christ on Calvary. We "are bought with a price."
"Christ gave Himself a ransom for all" (1Co 6:20; 1Ti 2:6).
But all this is wide of the question.
The point I want to consider is another one altogether. It is what a man
must be ready to give up if he wishes to be saved. It is the amount of
sacrifice a man must submit to if he intends to serve Christ. It is in
this sense that I raise the question: "What does it cost?" And I believe
firmly that it is a most important one.
I grant freely that it costs little to be a mere outward Christian.
A man has only got to attend a place of worship twice on Sunday and to
be tolerably moral during the week, and he has gone as far as thousands
around him ever go in religion. All this is cheap and easy work: it
entails no self–denial or self–sacrifice. If this is saving Christianity
and will take us to heaven when we die, we must alter the description of
the way of life, and write,
"Wide is the gate and broad is the
way
that leads to heaven!"
But it does cost something to be a
real Christian, according to the standard of the Bible. There are
enemies to be overcome, battles to be fought, sacrifices to be made, an
"Egypt" to be forsaken, a "wilderness" to be passed through, a cross to
be carried, a race to be run.
Conversion is not putting a man in
an armchair
and taking him easily to heaven.
It is the beginning of a mighty
conflict, in which it costs much to win the victory. Hence arises the
unspeakable importance of "counting the cost."...
1. True Christianity will cost one
his self–righteousness...
2. True Christianity will cost a
man his sins. He must be willing to give up every habit and practice
which is wrong in God’s sight. He must set his face against it, quarrel
with it, break off from it, fight with it, crucify it and labor to keep
it under, whatever the world around him may say or think. He must do
this honestly and fairly. There must be no separate truce with any
special sin which he loves. He must count all sins as his deadly enemies
and hate every false way. Whether little or great, whether open or
secret, all his sins must be thoroughly renounced. They may struggle
hard with him every day and sometimes almost get the mastery over him.
But he must never give way to them. He must keep up a perpetual war with
his sins. It is written, "Cast away from you all your transgressions."
"Break off your sins . . . and iniquities." "Cease to do evil" (Ezek.
18:31; Dan. 4:27; Isa. 1:16). This sounds hard. I do not wonder. Our
sins are often as dear to us as our children: we love them, hug them,
cleave to them and delight in them. To part with them is as hard as
cutting off a right hand or plucking out a right eye. But it must be
done. The parting must come.
3. Also, Christianity will cost a
man his love of ease. He must take pains and trouble if he means to
run a successful race toward heaven. He must daily watch and stand on
his guard, like a soldier on enemy’s ground. He must take heed to his
behavior every hour of the day, in every company and in every place, in
public as well as in private, among strangers as well as at home. He
must be careful over his time, his tongue, his temper, his thoughts, his
imagination, his motives, his conduct in every relation of life. He must
be diligent about his prayers, his Bible reading, and his use of
Sundays, with all their means of grace. In attending to these things, he
may come far short of perfection; but there is none of those who he can
safely neglect.
4. Lastly, true Christianity will
cost a man the favor of the world. He must be content to be thought
ill of by man if he pleases God. He must count it no strange thing to be
mocked, ridiculed, slandered, persecuted and even hated. He must not be
surprised to find his opinions and practices in religion despised and
held up to scorn. He must submit to be thought by many a fool, an
enthusiast and a fanatic, to have his words perverted and his actions
misrepresented. In fact, he must not marvel if some call him mad. The
Master says, "Remember the word that I said unto you, ‘The servant is
not greater than his Lord.’ If they have persecuted Me, they will also
persecute you; if they have kept My saying, they will keep yours also"
(John 15:20).
I dare say this also sounds hard. We
naturally dislike unjust dealing and false charges and think it very
hard to be accused without cause. We should not be flesh and blood if we
did not wish to have the good opinion of our neighbors. It is always
unpleasant to be spoken against and forsaken and lied about and to stand
alone. But there is no help for it. The cup which our Master drank must
be drunk by His disciples. They must be "despised and rejected of men"
(Isa. 53:3). Let us set down that item last in our account. To be a
Christian, it will cost a man the favor of the world.
Considering the weight of this great cost, bold indeed must that man be
who would dare to say that we may keep our self–righteousness, our sins,
our laziness and our love of the world, and yet be saved! Moreover, I
grant it costs much to be a true Christian. But what sane man or woman
can doubt that it is worth any cost to have the soul saved? When the
ship is in danger of sinking, the crew think nothing of casting
overboard the precious cargo. When a limb is mortified, a man will
submit to any severe operation, and even to amputation, to save life.
Surely a Christian should be willing to give up anything which stands
between him and heaven. A religion that costs nothing is worth nothing!
A cheap Christianity, without a cross, will prove in the end a useless
Christianity, without a crown. (Read
the full article)
Kent Hughes tells the story of
a well known follower of Christ, Alistair Begg, who was in Cambridge,
Mass restaurant putting the final touches on his sermon for a
convocation when...
he looked across the aisle and saw an
Asian girl intently reading what appeared to be a Bible. He watched
further and saw that she was indeed studying the Scriptures. So he
asked, “I see that you are reading the Bible. Are you a Christian?” She
smiled and replied,
“Oh yes. I’ve found the
narrow way.”
Her answer was remarkable. Neither he
nor I in all our years in ministry had ever heard anyone answer like
that. In the ensuing conversation she explained that she had come from
Korea to study at Harvard, and she was the only Christian in her family.
Here was a young Christian woman 10,000 miles away from her Buddhist
home (with its three million gods, the antithesis of “the narrow way”)
in the midst of Harvard’s aggressive pluralism (which tolerates
everything except the narrowness of the gospel) who so profoundly
understood her Christian faith that she expressed it with unabashed
acumen as “the narrow way.” (Luke
That You May Know the Truth Volume 2 or
Hardback Version)
Narrow (4728) (stenos
- derivation uncertain - one source says from histemi = to stand, Vine
says from root sten- as in stenazo = to groan) pictures obstacles
standing close to each other. The meaning is restricted, less than
standard width, limited in size, a small breadth or width in comparison
to length. Limited in
extent, amount or scope as a narrow gorge between high rocks. Stenos
comes from a root that means “to groan,” as from being under pressure,
and is used figuratively to represent a restriction or constriction.
Vine comments that
the gate which provides the entrance
to eternal life (is) narrow because it runs counter to natural
inclinations, and “the way” is similarly characterized;
Jesus by using this figure of
speech is saying that choosing for Him is not the popular nor the easy way!
In Mt 7:14 this adjective stenos
modifies "the way", so that both the gate and the
way are narrow.
There are only 3 NT uses of stenos,
here in Luke and twice in Matthew...
Enter
(aorist
imperative =
Command to do this now! Don't delay! Conveys a sense of urgency.) 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. 14 For the
gate is small, and the way is narrow that leads to life, and few are
those who find it. (Mt 7:13, 14-note)
Stenos - 16x in the
non-apocryphal
Septuagint (LXX)-
Nu 22:26; 1Sa 23:14, 19, 29; 24:22; 2Sa 24:14; 2Ki 6:1; 1Chr 21:13
(Figurative use - "I am in great distress"); Job 18:11; 24:11; Pr 23:27;
Isa 8:22; 30:20; 49:20; Jer 30:7; Zech 10:11. Several of the OT uses are
used to translate "stronghold".
Numbers 22:26 The
Angel of the LORD
went further, and stood in a narrow (Hebrew = tsar =
narrow, tight; Lxx = stenos) place where there was no way to turn
to the right hand or the left. 25 When the donkey saw the
Angel of the LORD,
she pressed herself to the wall and pressed Balaam's foot against the
wall, so he struck her again.
2 Samuel 24:14 Then David said to
Gad, "I am in great distress (Hebrew = tsarar = to suffer
distress; Lxx = stenos). Let us now fall into the hand of the
LORD for His mercies are great, but do not let me fall into the hand of
man."
Jeremiah 30:7 'Alas! for that day is
great, There is none like it; And it is the time of Jacob's distress
(Heb = tsarah = trouble, distress, calamity, anguish, state of very
unfavorable circumstance, with a focus on the emotional pain and
distress of the situation Dt 31:17 Jer 4:31; Lxx = stenos) but he
will be saved from it.
Comment: Jacob's Distress
or Trouble describes a period of time, specifically the
last 3.5 years of
Daniel's Seventieth Week, which
Jesus designated as
Great Tribulation (Mt
24:21, cp Mk 13:19, Re 7:14-note).
During this time the Antichrist ("Beast" of Rev 13, "Little
Horn of Daniel 7") will be allowed by God and empowered by
Satan (Rev 13:4-note,
Rev 13:5-note
where 42 months = 3.5 years) to have essentially "free reign" on the
earth and will attempt to destroy the Jews in the greatest "holocaust"
the world has ever seen. And yet in the midst of this horrible time to
come, God makes the sure promise that He will save Jacob from it or out
of it, which is a prophecy of the Messiah's return to deliver Israel
(see Ro 11:25,26, 27-note
cp Zech 13:8, 9).
H A Ironside cautions us to
remember that Jesus is not saying
that we are to be saved by our own
efforts, for by these we would never be saved at all; but we must be in
earnest (ardent in pursuit, eager to obtain, having a longing
desire) when the door to life stands open, and we are invited to enter
in. We must be sure that we heed (regard with care, give close
and careful attention, attend to) the gracious invitation and do not
pass carelessly by, lest we find at last that we have lost our
opportunity...We may well take these warning words to our hearts today
for they are intended for us as truly as for the people of Israel of
old. The door into the kingdom of God still stands open, but it is a
narrow door. None can pass through that door with their sins upon them.
But as Christ Himself is the Door (Jn 10:9), we may find in Him
deliverance from our sins, and thus enter into the way of life. The
narrow way is that of subjection (state of being under the
authority or control) to Christ; a way that involves denial of self (cp
Mk 8:34, 35) and recognition of our responsibility to live for Him Whose
grace alone can save us.
I plead with you to give heed to the
words of our Lord, “Strive
to enter in at the strait gate.”
Do not let anything keep you
from making sure of your eternal salvation.
(cp 2Pe 1:10, 11-note)
But be like the man in Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress, who, when he heard
of the impending destruction of the city in which he lived and learned
that life was to be found only through entering the wicket (small)
gate,
refused to be turned aside by any of his own townspeople, and putting
his fingers in his ears, ran from them crying, “Life! Life! Eternal
Life!” (Ed: Indeed a picture of a man "striving" to enter the
wicket gate!) and so made his way toward the shining light pointed out to him
by Evangelist (see
Pilgrim's Progress by John Bunyan
-Part 1, Stage 1 - scroll down to subheading entitled
"Evangelist directs him."). (Addresses on the Gospel of Luke. Neptune,
NJ: Loizeaux Brothers)
David Guzik comments that
The way is narrow. We can’t bring our
self-centeredness, pride, lusts, hate or especially our own
righteousness. As the famous hymn
Rock of Ages says:
Nothing in my hand I bring,
Simply to Thy Cross I cling.
Strive to enter: Therefore, we must
strive (the word is literally "agonize") in order to lay these things
aside and come in. The Greek word for strive has "the idea of a struggle
or prize-fight." (Bruce) Strive to enter through the narrow door is
not a
call to save yourself by good works. Good works are not the right door.
You can strive to enter all your life long, but if it isn’t at the right
door, it makes no difference. Jesus Himself is the door (Jn 10:9). He is the
(only) door.
Then why must we strive to enter? Because there are many obstacles in
the way. The
world is an obstacle. The
devil is an obstacle. But
probably the worst obstacle is your own
flesh.
(Luke 13 Commentary)
Kent Hughes writes that the
image of the narrow door...
suggests the moral posture of the
person who would strive to enter the kingdom. I. H. Marshall notes that
“the imagery is akin to that of a camel passing through the needle’s
eye, and suggests the difficulty of facing up to the demands of Jesus in
self-denial.” The passage to Heaven is not through the great portal of
a palace, but a narrow, low door through which one must humbly squeeze.
And after entering, the road remains narrow, as Jesus explained when he
preached at another time: “Enter through the narrow gate. For 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, and only a few find it” (Mt 7:13, 14-note).
Few people are willing to assume the humble posture and to shed what is
necessary to get through the gate, and few are willing to tread the
narrow road. (Ibid)
Darrell Bock writes that...
The verb “make every effort”
(agonizesthe) speaks of laboring to get in. This implies that there is a
specific route by which to enter; that is why Jesus mentions a narrow
door and sets forth what it is. Those who fail to enter by that
door, even though they desire to get in, will not succeed. Once the
door
is shut, it will be too late. For individuals, the door shuts at
death—if not before, because of the
hardness of one’s heart (Ed
Comment: See repeated warning in Hebrews to not harden one's heart =
He 3:8-note,
He 3:15-note,
He 4:7-note,
cp Jn 12:40 quoting Is 6:10-note
which speaks of Divine "judicial" hardening - i.e., you continue to
refuse to listen to God and finally He delivers a "judicial" hardening
so you can no longer hear! Frightening, mysterious thought - God's
sovereign hardening and yet not to be divorced from human responsibility
and culpability! Woe!). (Bock,
D. L. The NIV Application Commentary: Luke: Zondervan) (Logos)
Spurgeon encourages us to...
not be ashamed of being called
Puritanical, precise, and particular (in regard to the fact that the way
of salvation is narrow)....It is a way of self-denial, it is a
way of humility, it is a way which is distasteful to the natural pride
of men; it is a precise way, it is a holy way, a strait way, and
therefore men do not care for it. They are too big, too proud, to go
along a narrow lane to heaven; yet this is the right way. (Commenting on
the related passage in Mt 7:13-note Spurgeon notes that) There are many
broad ways, as Bunyan says, that abut upon it; but you may know them by
their being broad, and you may know them by their being crowded. The
Christian man has to swim against the current; he has to do more than
that, he has to go against himself, so narrow is the road (Ed: And so
narrow is the door!); but if you wish to go down to perdition, you have
only to float with the stream, and you can have any quantity of company
that you like....Do not be ashamed of being called
narrow. (cp 2Ti 1:8-note,
2Ti 1:12-note) Do not be ashamed of being supposed to lead a life of great
precision and exactness. There is nothing very grand about breadth,
after all. And I have noticed one thing: the "broadest" men I have ever
met with in the best sense have always kept to the narrow way, and the "narrowest" people I know are those who are so fond of the broad way.
Steven Cole comments...
Salvation requires our earnest effort
because the door is narrow and exclusive, not wide and all-inclusive.
Strive comes from a Greek word used of athletic contests and of war.
Obviously, it implies a great deal of effort. You don’t win wars or
athletic contests by being passive. You never see an athlete receiving
the gold medal, who says, “I had never worked out or run in a race until
a few weeks ago. I thought it would be fun, so here I am.” Every athlete
who wins strives to win. He invests great energy and effort into
winning. It is not an accident if he wins. It is the result of
deliberate and sustained effort. Not everyone receives the prize. Only a
few are winners. The fact that the door is narrow implies that it takes
some deliberate thought and effort to go through it. There aren’t many
doors into the same place, so that you can take your pick. There is one
and only one door, which is Jesus Christ. He alone is the way, the
truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except by Him (John
14:6). The entrance is narrow and exclusive, not broad and
all-inclusive.
There isn’t one great big door that’s
easy to find and stroll through without thinking about it. There is one
narrow door. You might not like the fact that it is narrow. You may
think that it’s too exclusive. You may say, “I believe that God is
loving and that He will accept everyone who tries to do his best. I
believe that all sincere people will get through the door.” But, the
fact is, according to Jesus it is narrow, not wide. He made it narrow
without checking with us for our ideas about how wide it should be.
Whether you like it or not, Jesus claimed to be the only way to God. You
can either enter through the narrow door, which is Christ alone, or you
can invent a broad door that includes many ways to God, and thus
contradict what Jesus Himself said. Jesus is asking,
“Are you striving to enter the narrow
door? Are you making your salvation a matter of deliberate and sustained
effort? Are you sure that you’re entering the narrow door as defined by
Jesus and not a broad door of your own choosing?”
You say, “Whoa! I thought that
salvation is a free gift, received simply by grace through faith, not a
matter of our effort. How does this harmonize with striving for it?”
Jesus isn’t talking about salvation
by works or human effort. But He is talking about our attitude toward
it. Those who are only mildly interested about salvation will not obtain
it. Those who view salvation as an interesting topic for discussion are
missing the point. Those who say, “I believe that all roads lead to God
and all good people will go to heaven” are engaging in human
speculation, but they are not submitting to Jesus’ divine revelation.
They are putting their thoughts about being open-minded and tolerant
above Jesus’ words that the door is narrow. The salvation of your
eternal soul should not be a casual subject that is good for an
occasional stimulating theological discussion!
It ought to consume your attention. It shouldn’t be a matter
of mild interest that elicits a halfhearted response. You need to
take great pains to make sure that you have entered the narrow
door. Jesus doesn’t say, “Stroll through the big door sometime
when you’re not doing anything else and check it out.” He says,
“Strive to enter by the narrow door.”
Again, picture the Olympic athlete. He makes winning the
gold medal the focus of his life. Everything he does is controlled
by his goal of winning the gold. He won’t eat anything that is not
good for him, because it might hinder his muscles from performing
at their maximum on the day of the race. He doesn’t go to parties
and stay up late the night before, because he wants to be rested and
ready to give everything to the race. He will refrain from engaging
in fun activities that his other friends enjoy, such as skiing or
playing
softball, because he doesn’t want to break his leg or tear his
ligaments. He is disciplined to work out for hours, often when his
body is screaming, “That’s enough!” because he wants to win.
That’s the kind of attitude that we should have toward our
own salvation, according to Jesus. It shouldn’t be a nice thing to
think about every once in a while when you don’t have anything
better to do. It should be on your mind every day. It should govern
everything you do. It should determine how you spend your
time, your money, and your leisure hours. You must strive to enter
because the door is narrow. It’s not a great big wide door that you
can wander into without thinking about it. You must be earnest to
make sure that Christ alone is your hope of salvation. (Luke
13:22-30 The Narrow Door)
Jesus Sinners Doth Receive
Jesus sinners doth receive;
Oh, may all this saying ponder
Who in sin’s delusions live
And from God and Heaven wander!
Here is hope for all who grieve—
Jesus sinners doth receive.
Come, ye sinners, one and all,
Come, accept His invitation;
Come, obey His gracious call,
Come and take His free salvation!
Firmly in these words believe:
Jesus sinners doth receive.
Oh, how blest it is to know:
Were as scarlet my transgression,
It shall be as white as snow
By Thy blood and bitter Passion;
For these words I now believe:
Jesus sinners doth receive.
FOR MANY, I TELL YOU, WILL SEEK TO ENTER AND WILL
NOT BE ABLE:
hoti polloi, lego (1SPAI) humin, zetesousin
(3PFAI) eiselthein (AAN) kai ouk ischusousin (3PFAI) (For:
Pr 1:24 25 26 27 28 14:6 21:25 Ec 10:15 Isa 1:15 58:2 3 4 Eze 33:31 Mk
6:18 19 20 Jn 7:34 8:21 13:33 Ro 9:31 32 33 10:3)
For - Introduces the first
portion of Jesus' explanation for their need to strive to enter.
He explains that
they will not be able to enter.
Many (pollus) means
just that - not a few but a large number of souls. In Mt 7:13-note
Jesus clearly warned that there would be many who would enter through the wide gate and
travel the broad highway which ended in utter, eternal ruin and loss of
all purpose for which they were originally created (see
apoleia)
I tell you - You is in the plural
which indicates that Jesus is addressing this not just to the one who
ask the question in Lk 13:23 but to the entire audience.
Bob Utley comments that
this...
that many of those who thought they
were certain of entrance into the kingdom will be surprised (cf. Lk
13:28; Mt 8:12). This is a shocking verse for legalists of all ages and
cultures. Salvation is not human effort, but a response of personal
faith to God’s gift and provision—Jesus (cf. Jn 10:1-18 14:6).
Will seek (2212)
(zeteo) means to try to learn location of something often by
movement from place to place in process of searching. Try to find by
searching for what is lost. Zeteo describes man's search for God (Acts
17:27). There is a seeking which Jesus commends but it is before the
door is shut...
Matthew 6:33-note
"But (contrast with Mt 6:32)
seek (present
imperative)
first His kingdom (and by "default" the King of that kingdom, Christ
Jesus) and His righteousness (Which He gives as a gift by grace to those
who place their trust in His perfect righteousness and substitutionary
atonement), and all these things will be added to you.
Norval Geldenhuys comments
that
When once the gate is shut and the
time of grace has expired, many will attempt to enter, but then they
will not be able to do so, for it will then be for ever too late.
(Commentary on the Gospel of Luke: The New International Commentary on
the Old and New Testament. Eerdmans Publishing Co)
Not (ou) - This
signifies absolute negation sounding the death knell of finality when
the door is shut!
C H Spurgeon...
Now is the accepted time, but ere
long the day of grace and of this mortal life will end, and then it will
be too late to seek for mercy. (Spurgeon, C. H. The Interpreter:
Spurgeon's Devotional Bible)
Able (2480)
(ischuo
[word study]
from
ischus
= might) means to be strong in
body or in resources. Ischuo can speak of physical power (Mk
2:17, 5:4, 9:12). It can speak of having the required personal resources
to accomplish some objective as in Php 4:13 or conversely with the
negative speaks of that which is good for nothing (Mt 5:13-note).
Jesus says that those who fail to enter the narrow door will have no
power to enter once it is shut.
Ischuo - 28x in 28v in NAS - Mt 5:13; 8:28; 9:12;
26:40; Mark 2:17; 5:4; 9:18; 14:37; Luke 6:48; 8:43; 13:24; 14:6, 29f;
16:3; 20:26; John 21:6; Acts 6:10; 15:10; 19:16, 20; 25:7; 27:16; Gal
5:6; Phil 4:13; Heb 9:17; Jas 5:16; Rev 12:8. NAS = able(5),
am...strong enough(1), been able(1), can(1), can do(1), could(8),
force(1), good(1), healthy(2), means(1), overpowered(1), prevailing(1),
strong enough(3), unable*(2).
David Guzik comments that
The punctuation supplied by translators in Luke 13:24 25 is poor. It
should read will not be able when once the Master of the house has
risen up and shut the door. The point is that there will come a time
when it is too late to enter - that is why one must have an urgency to
enter now. This is true regarding our soul’s salvation.
You can know something
about Jesus and not be saved.
You can be in the presence of Jesus and not be saved.
It is likewise true of so many areas
where God challenges our lives. We must be urgent to do what God tells
us now. For example, many men are terrible husbands, until the day when
their wife just gives up - then they wake up, but it may be too late!
You begin to stand outside and knock at the door, saying, "Lord,
Lord,
open for us": Many will seek to enter (in the sense of wishing to
enter), but they will not be able to. When the door is open, it is open;
when it is shut, it is shut. There is a real difference between a mere
seeking and striving to enter.
A casual wish to be saved isn’t
enough, because there are too many obstacles on the way.
(Luke 13 Commentary)
Steven Cole comments that...
Salvation requires our earnest effort because
many will
seek to enter and will not be able to do so.
The following verse indicates that they will not be able to enter
because they missed the deadline. It is not that many strive to enter,
but only some of those striving succeed. Rather, as the following verses show, some will wake up to the serious issues involved
in their own salvation too late. They had assumed that all
was well with them because they were decent, religious people.
They knew Jesus in a casual way, but they had not taken the Gospel to
heart. They had never repented of their sins. But they didn’t consider
these matters seriously until it was too late...I am making the point that if you follow the crowd you will
not follow the Savior into eternal life. Jesus says that there are
many (and He is talking about the religious crowd) who will not
enter through the narrow door. If you follow them, you will be shut out
when that door slams shut. And, it always takes effort, both mentally
and morally, to go against the majority. You have to think about matters
for yourself and decide,
“I will not follow conventional
wisdom. I will not go along with group pressure. I will follow the Lord
Jesus Christ.”
So Jesus’ first point is that salvation requires our earnest effort.
If you are only half-hearted about it or go with the crowd, you
will miss it! You must strive to enter by the narrow door. (Luke
13:22-30 The Narrow Door)
ARE YOU
STRIVING
OR SEEKING TO ENTER?
Alexander Maclaren notes the
reason for the command to strive to enter....
It is briefly given (here in the last
clause of) Luke 13:24, and both parts of the reason there are expanded
in the following verses. Effort is needed for entrance, because many are
shut out. The questioner would be no better for knowing whether few
would enter, but he and all need to burn in on their minds that many
will not. Very solemnly significant is the difference between
striving and
seeking. It is like the difference between
wishing and willing. There may be a seeking which has no real
earnestness in it, and is not sufficiently determined, to do what is
needful in order to find. Plenty of people would like to possess earthly
good, but cannot brace themselves to needful work and sacrifice. Plenty
would like to ‘go to heaven,’ as they understand the phrase, but cannot
screw themselves to the surrender of self and the world (cp Mk 8:35 36
37).
Vagrant, half-hearted seeking,
such as one sees many examples of,
will never win anything,
either in this world or in the other.
We must
strive, and not only
seek.
(Read Maclaren's entire sermon -
The Strait Gate)
Godet writes
I declare unto you, says Jesus: They
will think it incredible that so great a number of Jews, with the ardent
desire to have part in that kingdom, should not succeed in entering it.
The word polloi, many, proves the connection between this
discourse and the question of Lk 13:23. Only Jesus does not say whether
there will be few or many saved; He confines Himself to saying that
there will be many lost. This is the one important matter for
practical and individual application. (Luke 13:22 Commentary)
Luke
13:25 ONCE THE HEAD OF THE HOUSE GETS UP
AND SHUTS THE DOOR, AND YOU BEGIN TO STAND OUTSIDE AND KNOCK ON THE
DOOR, SAYING "LORD, OPEN UP TO US!" THEN HE WILL ANSWER AND SAY TO YOU
"I DO NOT KNOW WHERE YOU ARE FROM":
aph' ou an egerthe (3SAPS) o oikodespotes kai apokleise (3SAAS) ten
thuran, kai archesthe (2PAMS) exo estanai (RAN) kai krouein (PAN) ten
thuran legontes, (PAPMPN) Kurie, anoichon (2SAAM) hemin; kai apokritheis
(APPMSN) erei (3SFAI) humin, Ouk oida (1SRAI) humas pothen este. (2PPAI): (Once:
Ps 32:6 Isa 55:6 2Co 6:2 Heb 3:7,8 12:17) (Shut: Ge 7:16 Mt
25:10) (Lord: Lk 6:46 Mt 7:21,22 25:11,12) (I know:
Lk 13:27 Mt 7:23 25:41)
The door is strait and the way
narrow and uphill,
but one moment in heaven
will make amends for a lifetime of striving to enter!
Shuts the door - This explains
why they will not be able to enter the door. The great lesson of
this passage is that the call of the Gospel has limitations of time, for
the door named "mercy" will not remain open indefinitely - yes, for a
time but not for ever. Entrance is only possible while the narrow door
stands wide open. Every pitiful or plausible plea will be to no avail.
The door is sealed shut. Those outside are hopelessly and forever
debarred.
Once the head of the house gets up
and shuts the door - This explains Lk 13:24b, why they will not be
able to enter. Conversion and pardon for sin are no longer available, no
longer possible! This day comes to every sinner who dies outside of
the safety of the "Ark" of Christ Jesus, for once the door of
the ark is closed, it cannot be reopened (cp Ge 7:16, 21, 1Pe 3:20). An
unrepentant sinner's last heart beat and last breath is
equivalent to the head of the house shutting the door, shutting out that
person's soul eternally from entrance into the kingdom of heaven and
God's very presence! This is a terrible thought to ponder beloved. It
should drive us to travel the highways and byways proclaiming the good
news while the door of salvation and the day of grace remain open! (Let
the following "modernized" version of an old Fanny Crosby hymn motivate you
to go forth [cp Mt 9:37, 38] -
Rescue The Perishing)
Matthew Henry has some
poignant comments on the "door of distinction"...
Now, within the temple of the church
there are carnal professors who worship in the outer-court, and
spiritual professors who worship within the veil; between these the door
is now open, and they meet promiscuously in the same external
performances. But, when the Master of the house is risen up, the door
will be shut between them, that those who are in the outer-court may be
kept out.... As to those that are filthy, shut the door upon them, and
let them be filthy still (Re 21:8-note,
Re 21:27-note
Re 22:15-note);
that those who are within may be kept within, that those who are holy
may be holy still (Re 22:14-note).
The door is shut to separate between the precious and the vile, that
sinners may no longer stand in the congregation of the righteous. Then
you shall return, and discern betwixt them.
A door of denial and exclusion.
The door of mercy and grace has long stood open to them, but they would
not come in by it, would not be beholden to the favour of that door;
they hoped to climb up some other way, and to get to heaven by their own
merits, and therefore when the Master of the house is risen up he will
justly shut that door; let them not expect to enter by it, but let them
take their own measures. Thus, when Noah was safe in the ark, God shut
the door, to exclude all those that depended upon shelters of their own
in the approaching flood.
The Psalmist warns of the
danger of procrastinating in regard to one's eternal destiny
Therefore, let everyone who is godly
pray to You in a time when You may be found; Surely in a flood of great
waters they will not reach him. (Psalm 32:6-note)
Isaiah issues a warning
calling for an immediate response from the readers...
Seek
(red = this is imperative!) the LORD while He may be found (Ed:
While the "door" is still open!);
Call
upon Him while He is near (Ed: Before He closes the "door"!). (Isaiah 55:6)
Paul issues a warning to the
unrepentant sinner quoting the Lord Who...
says, "AT THE ACCEPTABLE
TIME
I LISTENED TO YOU, AND ON THE
DAY
OF SALVATION I HELPED YOU."
Behold,
(command to draw the hearer's attention to what follows)
now
is "THE ACCEPTABLE
TIME," behold,
now
is "THE DAY
OF SALVATION" (2Corinthians 6:2)
Comment: In the preceding
context (2Co 5:20), Paul as an ambassador of Christ, has just begged the
sinful readers on His behalf to be reconciled to God. Paul echoes Jesus'
warning (Lk 13:22-30) that the acceptable time...the day of salvation
will not last forever. The sinner must strive to enter today! Observe
the repetition of
expressions of time
and two "behold's"
calculated to grab the reader's attention and bring them to a point of
decision (now)!
Murray Harris writes that "To
emphasize the seriousness and urgency of his appeal and to highlight the
privilege of the present and the danger of procrastination, Paul quotes
Isaiah 49:8 and then applies the passage to the age of grace."
(Gaebelein,
F, Editor: Expositor's Bible Commentary 6-Volume New Testament.
Zondervan Publishing or
computer version)
Alexander Maclaren notes
that...
in reference to each stage of life,
specific opportunities are given in it for securing specific results,
and these can never be recovered if the stage is past; so mortal life as
a whole is the time for entrance, and if it is not used for that
purpose, entrance is impossible. If the youth will not learn, the man
will be ignorant. If the sluggard will not plough because the weather is
cold, he will ‘beg in harvest.’ If we do not strive to enter at the
gate, it is vain to seek entrance when the Master’s own hand has barred
it.
Lord (kurios) open up to us - When the
door is shut, the day of grace will have come to an end. Today is the
day to call Jesus "Lord", not when the door is shut! And if we
call Him "Lord" it is not just a mouthing of our lips
but reflected in the living of our lives! To call Jesus
Lord is to surrender to His sweet will, which speaks not of perfection
but of the general direction of our life. Think for a moment -- Here
when it is too late, even these lost souls recognize Him as Lord. How
much more should saved souls not choose to recognize Him as as Lord and
to submit to His will for their life!
Notice how sin
deceives the sinner (He 3:13-note)
so that they think they can address Jesus as "Lord" while
demonstrating absolutely no evidence that they have surrendered their
selfish will to their Master's perfect will during their lifetime! They do things like the
song says "my way", not "my Master's way"! Their sinful behavior points
to their self-centered belief.
And why do you call Me, 'Lord,
Lord,'
and do (present
tense = as
their general lifestyle) not do what I say? (Lk 6:46)
And later the other virgins also
came, saying, 'Lord,
Lord,
open up for us.' But he answered and said, 'Truly I say to you, I do not
know you.' (Mt 25:11, 12)
Not everyone who says to Me, 'Lord,
Lord,'
will enter the kingdom of heaven; but he who does (present
tense = as
their habitual practice - the idea is that this is their general
direction, not perfection!) the will of My Father who is in heaven. (Mt
7:21-note)
Then He will say to them -
Notice that "them" is plural, so Jesus is not addressing this only to
the one who asked a question but to the entire audience (and to all who
read His words).
I do not know where you are from
- The point is that they had no personal relationship with the Lord, as
emphasized by the Lord's two categorical denials of relationship.
Kent Hughes makes some
piercing statements...
We may be preachers and have perhaps
ministered to thousands. We may be Sunday school teachers and point many
little ones to Christ. We may be missionaries and are held up as
paragons of sacrifice, and yet end up as castaways. Why? Because mighty
works do not save us, but only vital union with Christ through real
faith. So the burning question is, does Christ know you? Are you in
authentic relationship with him? The corollary question is, has the
relationship with Christ that you claim to have turned you away from
evil? Are you morally improved from God’s point of view? Or will he say,
“Away from me you evildoer!”? The telling question is not a matter of
ministry or standing in the church but of authentic righteousness.
(Ibid)
Luke
13:26 "THEN YOU WILL BEGIN TO SAY,
"WE ATE AND DRANK IN YOUR PRESENCE, AND YOU TAUGHT IN OUR STREETS": tote
arcesthe (2PFMI) legein, (PAN) Ephagomen (1PAAI) enopion sou kai epiomen
(1PAAI), kai en tais plateiais hemon edidacas (2SAAI); (We:
Isa 58:2 2Ti 3:5 Titus 1:16)
Then you will begin to say -
Always take a moment when you encounter an
expressions of time
(in this case "then") and query the text
with questions like "When is then?" or "What will happen then?",
etc. Jesus is warning that hearing His words of invitation must
be coupled with heeding His words.
We ate and drank in Your presence
- Seeing Jesus or sitting with Jesus at a dinner table never saved anyone.
Sharing a meal normally speaks
of intimacy in the ancient world (e.g., see Jesus' invitation in Rev
3:20-note)
but that would not be sufficient to bring about salvation. The speakers may
perhaps be alluding to the time when Jesus fed the five thousand (Jn
6:10) but when they were faced with His "hard teaching",
refused to become His true followers, even departing from Him in that
moment of crisis (cp strive to enter!) (Jn 6:53 54 55
56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 -- see the crisis point reached in Jn
6:66). Judas Iscariot had an even closer relationship to Jesus,
masquerading as a disciple (one who did not even depart in Jn 6:66) and
yet his subsequent departure ("failure to strive" so to speak) proved
that Judas was not a genuine disciple (Read Jn 13:26 27 28 29 30).
External appearances, no matter how convincing to other men, mean
nothing unless there has been an internal change, a "circumcision" of
one's heart (See
Excursus on Circumcision Of the Heart).
Matthew Henry comments
on what those who find themselves shut out had falsely placed
their confidence...
First, They had been Christ’s guests,
had had an intimate converse with him, and had shared in his favors: We
have eaten and drunk in thy presence, at thy table. Judas ate bread with
Christ, dipped with him in the dish. Hypocrites, under the disguise
of their external profession, receive the Lord’s supper, and in it
partake of the children’s bread, as if they were children.
Secondly, They had been Christ’s
hearers, had received instruction from Him, and were well acquainted
with His doctrine and law: "Thou hast taught in our streets—a
distinguishing favour, which few had, and surely it might be taken as a
pledge of distinguishing favour now; for would Thou teach us, and not
save us?’’
You taught in our streets -
Where? Which streets?
(Always practice interrogating the text with the
5W/H questions)
The answer is everywhere Jesus went in Israel, because wherever He went
He gave primacy (preeminence, supremacy) to teaching of the Word of
Truth, a practice all genuine disciples should diligently seek to
imitate (Mt 28:19 20). As an aside note that false disciples refused to
continue to follow Jesus (Jn 6:66). Continuing to follow Jesus is a
prerequisite which He Himself laid down to define what constitutes a
genuine disciple (see Jn 8:31 - these so called believers proved
themselves to be only professors, those who had only an
intellectual belief as their subsequent behavior proved --
genuine belief should always issue in Spirit enabled, God
honoring behavior! Read the entire discourse between Jesus
and these "believing" Jews in John 8:31-59, but see especially their
behavior in Jn 8:58, 59).
Taught
(1321)
(didasko
[word study] from
dáo= know or teach; English = didactic; see also studies
of noun
didaskalia and adjective
didaktikos)
means to provide instruction or information in a formal or informal
setting. Didasko
means to teach a student in such a way that the will of the student
becomes conformed to the teaching taught. They may have heard Jesus
teach but like the old saying, it went in one ear and out the other! The
ultimate Teacher, with the ultimate Word and yet they failed to hear in
a way that produced any change in their behavior. The problem was not
with the Teacher's words but with the hearer's hearts! And to make
matters worse, their hearts were deceived (Jer 17:9), thinking that
hearing and not heeding Christ would warrant entrance into the kingdom
of heaven.
THE MOST DANGEROUS
PROCRASTINATION IN LIFE!
Steven Cole comments that...
Salvation requires our urgent attention
(because of) the soon-closed
door (Lk 13:25 26 27).
We all tend to procrastinate, but Jesus tells us that salvation is
the most dangerous matter in all of life to procrastinate about. Salvation requires our urgent attention because the time is
coming soon when the door will be shut.
The day is coming when the head of the house (God) will get
up and shut the door. Clearly, at that point there will not be another
chance to get in. Once the door is shut, it is shut. Those
inside are in. Those outside are out.
You ask,
“When will the door be shut?”
That’s for the head of the house to
decide. The final closing of the door will be at the judgment, which
will take place at the
Second Coming of Christ.
John describes the scene:
“And I saw the dead, the great and
the small, standing before the throne, and books were opened; and
another book was opened, which is the book of life; and the dead were
judged from the things which were written in the books, according to
their deeds…. And if anyone’s name was not found written in the book of
life, he was thrown into the lake of fire” (Rev. 20:12-note,
Rev 20:15-note).
(Ed Note: I believe that this Great White Throne judgment follows
a period of 1000 years referred to as the
Millennium,
a period which is inaugurated by the Second Coming of Christ to earth).
Since the Lord is coming soon, you
don’t want to procrastinate about salvation! But each person’s eternal
destiny is fixed before the day of judgment, at the point of death.
Hebrews 9:27-note
states
It is appointed for men to die once
and after this comes judgment.
Since life hangs by a thread, even
for the youngest and healthiest among us, we dare not procrastinate
about the matter of salvation. Maybe you’re thinking,
“I’m young and healthy and the second
coming is probably not going to happen soon. I’ve got some time before I
need to deal with these matters.”
But that’s not wise because the head
of the house might slam shut the day of opportunity for you to respond
to His offer of salvation. This was true for Jesus’ hearers. Messiah was
in their very midst and they were in danger of rejecting Him. They had
the unique opportunity of hearing Jesus Himself teaching the Word of
God, but that window of opportunity was about to close, because Jesus
was heading toward Jerusalem. In a few short years Titus, the Roman
general, would destroy Jerusalem and the temple and the Jews would be
dispersed for 1,900 years.
As with them, so with us: the opportunity to respond to Jesus
is now. Don’t mistakenly think, “I’ve got plenty of time.” You
might not have another opportunity like that which you have right
now as you hear the Word of God proclaimed. You may leave
here and your mind gets caught up with work or duties at home or
other things, and the tug of the Spirit on your heart fades. It is said
of Esau that after he had sold his birthright, later,
when he desired to inherit the
blessing, he was rejected, for he found no place for repentance, though
he sought for it with tears (Heb 12:17-note).
He
missed his day of opportunity with God.
Once that door is shut, there will be no bargaining or working
out a last minute deal. We must enter on God’s terms and in
God’s time, or not at all. At the judgment, everyone will know the
truth and realize what a horrible mistake they have made. But it
will be too late. As J. C. Ryle puts it, “Hell is nothing but truth
known too late” (Expository Thoughts on the Gospels [Baker], 3:134).
Salvation is an urgent matter! (Luke
13:22-30 The Narrow Door)
Luke
13:27 AND HE WILL SAY, "I TELL YOU, I DO
NOT KNOW WHERE YOU ARE FROM;
DEPART FROM ME ALL YOU EVILDOERS": kai erei (3SFAI) legon (PAPMSN) humin, ouk
oida (2SRAI) [humas] pothen este; (2PPAI) apostete (2PAAM) ap' hemou,
pantes ergatai adikias:
(I tell you: Lk 13:25 Ps 1:6 Mt 7:22,23
25:12,41 1Co 8:3 Gal 4:9 2Ti 2:19) (Depart: Ps 5:6 6:8 28:3 101:8 119:115
125:5 Ho 9:12 Mt 25:41)
CHRIST
DISOWNS
& DISCARDS!
Do not (absolute negation)
know where you are from - The master disavows any relation to
these individuals. This passage parallels Jesus' declaration in the
Sermon on the Mount...
Not everyone who says to Me, 'Lord,
Lord,'
will enter the kingdom of heaven (Equates with genuine salvation); but
he who does (present
tense =
their habitual practice, the general direction of their life.
Note:
Direction not perfection!) the will of My Father Who is in heaven (i.e.,
their holy [supernatural not natural!] behavior proves that they have a
holy [supernatural] Source of power, the Holy Spirit - Their works show
their faith to be genuine, saving faith.
Be careful, Do Not Misinterpret!
= their doing of the
will of the Father does not save them, for by works no man can be
saved [justified - declared righteous] Ro 3:20-note,
Ro 3:28-note.
Their supernaturally enabled works simply show they are saved!). 22
Many (This ought to make us weep, beloved! And even more so when we
consider the "many" who will go to
destruction
in Mt 7:13-note)
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?' (Notice Jesus does not dispute or
discount their claims of the "miraculous"!
So what?
Beware of following any "miracle" worker whose lifestyle does not
produce the good fruit of godliness!) 23 "And then I will declare to
them, 'I never (absolute denial that at any time I ever) knew (ginosko -
in context this speaks of utmost intimacy ~ union, oneness, in Christ
and Christ in us) you;
DEPART (present
imperative =
command calling for continuous action!) FROM ME, YOU WHO PRACTICE
(worked at it with active zeal and the
present tense
indicates this was their habitual practice, their general lifestyle)
LAWLESSNESS.'
(Mt 7:21-note,
Mt 7:22, 23-note)
Depart
(868)
(aphistemi
[word study] from
apo = separation of one thing from another + histemi =
stand) literally means to stand off from (English = apostasy) means to
withdraw, forsake, depart from or remove oneself from.
Compare two other occurrences of
Jesus issuing this same command to unbelievers to "Depart"
= Mt 7:23-note
(depart
=
apochoreo)
and Mt 25:41 (depart
- poreuomai = to transport oneself from one place to another = "the
eternal fire", referring not to
Hades [Sheol]
but to
Gehenna!)
Matthew Henry writes that...
It is the hell of hell to depart from
Christ, the principal part of the misery of the damned.
Beloved ambassador of Christ (2Co
5:20), may our Father cause the Spirit of Christ to take this study on
our Lord's command to strive to enter the narrow door and break
our hearts, empowering us to go forth (Acts 1:8) with the message of
justification "as a gift by His grace through the redemption which is in
Christ Jesus." (Ro 3:24-note).
Take a moment and listen to Fanny Crosby's heart piercing words
Rescue The Perishing
and then go forth with the Gospel
seeking to rescue the perishing from the wide gate and broad road that
leads to eternal destruction.
Thayer
summarizes the meaning of aphistemi...
Transitively (denoting a verb
which requires a direct object), in present,
imperfect, future, 1 aorist active -- to make stand off, cause to
withdraw, cause someone to move from a point of reference, to remove;
tropically, to cause or excite to revolt, to mislead, to alienate,
refers to political defection (Ac
5:37, cp use in Lxx of Dt 7:4 "draw...away").
Intransitively (denoting a
verb when it does not require a direct object), in perfect, pluperfect,
2 aorist active -- to stand off, stand aloof, with the genitive of
person to go away, depart, from anyone (Lk 13:27-note)
(from Ps 6:9; cf. Mt. 7:23); Acts 12:10; 19:9; to desert, to leave in a
lurch, to withdraw from one, Acts 15:38; to cease to vex one, Lk. 4:13;
Acts 5:38; 22:29; 2 Co. 12:8; to fall away, become faithless, to
apostatize as in Heb. 3:12-note
which is the antithesis of the call to draw near in Hebrews 4:16-note
and thus it implies a refusal to listen to God’s voice.
All you evildoers - The late
comers are shut out because of the evil deeds (manifesting their
unregenerate hearts) not because the are "late". Their character is
unfit for the mansion of purity.
Matthew Henry minces no words
noting that...
This is their ruin, that, under a
pretence of piety, they kept up secret haunts of sin, and did the
devil’s drudgery in Christ’s livery (Ed: identifying uniform,
distinctive dress, outward appearance - cp 2Ti 3:5-note).
Evildoers - This expression is
two words in Greek and is more literally rendered "workers of
unrighteousness". Evil (adikia
from a = not + dikê = right) means not attaining to God's
standard of what is right. Doers (ergates) describes one
who is engaged in some kind of work. In other words the ones Jesus
addresses work at their sin!
Cyril of Alexandria adds
that...
the light has no communion at all
with the darkness: nor can any one he near unto the perfectly pure God
who is held by the pollutions of sin, and whose stain is not yet washed
away. (Sermon)
Steven Cole comments that...
Salvation requires our urgent attention because there is a
great difference between casual acquaintance with Jesus
and a personal relationship with Him.
Those who are shut out seem surprised. They call out, “Lord,
open up to us!” But He says, “I don’t know where you’re from.”
They reply, “We ate and drank in Your presence, and You taught in
our streets.” They were acquainted with Him. But the problem
was, He was not acquainted with them. He tells them, “I do not
know where you are from. Depart from Me, all you evildoers.” If
you have a genuine personal relationship with Jesus, you will not
continue in your evil deeds. Salvation is God’s free gift, apart from
works, but those who are truly saved will make progress in holiness,
apart from which no man will see the Lord (Heb 12:14-note). Now, not later, is the time to make sure that you have a personal
relationship with Jesus, not just a casual acquaintance with
Him. One major evidence of such a relationship is that you are
growing in holiness, not just outwardly, but in your heart.
Thus salvation requires our earnest effort and our urgent attention. (Luke
13:22-30 The Narrow Door)
Warren Wiersbe addresses the
question of why they waited so long to seek entrance...
(1) Salvation is not easy. The
sinner must enter a narrow gate and walk a narrow way (Lk 13:24; cp Lk
9:23, 24, 25). The world’s crowd is on the easy way, the way that leads
to destruction (Mt 7:13, 14-note),
and it is much easier to walk with them....
(2) Their false sense of security.
Jesus had been among them. They had even eaten with Him and enjoyed His
fellowship, yet they had never trusted Him. God gave the nation many
privileges and opportunities, but they wasted them (see Lk 10:13 14 15
16). God is long-suffering; however there comes a time when even God
shuts the door.
(3) Pride also played a big part:
they would not humble themselves before God. In their own eyes, they
were first, but in God’s eyes, they were last—and the Gentiles would
come and take their place! (see Mt 21:43) Imagine the “unclean Gentile
dogs” sitting at the feast with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, while the
unbelieving Jews were outside!
(4) These people were lost because
they depended on their ancient religion to save them; but Jesus saw
them as “workers of iniquity,” not doers of righteousness (Isa 64:4;
Titus 1:16). It takes more than reverence for tradition to get into
God’s kingdom!
(5) But the major reason was given
by Jesus Himself: “Ye would not” (Lk 13:34). Their minds had been
instructed by the Word (Luke 13:26), and their hearts had been stirred
by His mighty works, but their wills were stubborn and would not submit
to Him. This is the deadly consequence of delay. The longer sinners
wait, the harder their hearts become. “Today, if you will hear His
voice, do not harden your hearts” (Heb 4:7).
The Spanish composer Manuel de
Falla was notorious for not answering his mail. When he heard that a
friend had died, the composer said, “What a pity! He died before I
answered his letter, which he sent me five years ago!”
(Wiersbe,
W: Bible Exposition Commentary - Old Testament. Victor
or
Wordsearch)
Luke
13:28 "IN THAT PLACE THERE WILL
WEEPING AND GNASHING OF TEETH WHEN YOU SEE ABRAHAM AND ISAAC AND JACOB
AND ALL THE PROPHETS N THE KINGDOM OF GOD, BUT YOU YOURSELVES BEING
THROWN OUT: ekei
estai (3SFMI) o klauthmos kai o brugmos ton odonton, hotan opsesthe
(2PAMS) Abraam kai Isaak kai Iakob kai pantas tous prophetas en te
basileia tou theou, humas de ekballomenous (PPPMPA) exo: (weeping:
Ps 112:10 Mt 8:12 13:42,50 22:13 24:51 25:30) (when: Lk 16:23 Mt
8:11) (the kingdom: Lk 14:15 23:42,43 2Th 1:5 2Pe 1:11) (you:
Lk 10:15 Rev 21:8 22:15)
In that place -
What place?
In view of Jesus' use of the phrase weeping and gnashing of teeth
and its definite association with eternal punishment in hell in other NT
passages, this
place must refer to the hell.
There will be - A prophecy of
future judgment on Israel many of who are relegated to hell because of
their unbelief in their own Jewish Messiah!
Weeping and gnashing of teeth
- This phrase is repeated 7 times in the Gospels most often in the book
of Matthew which most commentators feel was directed primarily to a
Jewish audience - Mt 8:12 Mt 13:42 Mt 13:50 Mt 22:13 Mt 24:51 Mt
25:30 Lk 13:28. This phrase is one of the ways Jesus refers to hell.
I do not agree with the NET Bible comment that "weeping
and gnashing is a figure (Ed: Non-literal, a figure of
speech) for remorse and trauma." While one might attempt to interpret this repeated
description of torment in hell in a figurative sense, there is no
justification for interpreting it other than in the plain literal sense
- hell will be a place of endless tears and continual gnashing of teeth,
a manifestation of inconsolable grief and unremitting torment!
We do a grave injustice to our listeners if we attempt to "soften the
blow" regarding Jesus' description of Hell in an attempt to not offend
their conscience. Weeping and gnashing of teeth is an offensive
and awful description because hell is an awful place for an unrepentant
sinner to be confined for eternity! We are to preach the whole counsel
of God's Word, whether it is convenient or not and in so doing we are to
reprove, rebuke, and comfort with great patience and instruction (2Ti
4:2-note).
In short we are to afflict the comfortable (reprove, rebuke sinners
satisfied and "comfortable" in their sin) and comfort the afflicted (comfort those who
desire to repent, speaking to them of the saving Gospel).
John MacArthur comments
that...
Jewish tradition taught that
sinners-a term synonymous with Gentiles in their thinking-would
spend eternity in the outer darkness of
Gehenna. Jesus
concurred with them about the destiny of condemned sinners (see Mt 22:13
24:51), but He declared them totally wrong about the identity of those
condemned sinners....Being a physical descendant of Abraham was a great
privilege and advantage (Ro 3:1 2), but in spite of what most Jews
believed, it did not guarantee salvation. It is the children of
Abraham’s spiritual faith, not the children of his physical body, whom
God adopts as His own children (Ro 8:14 15 16 17; Gal. 3:7 89, 26 27 28
29; cf. Ro 4:11, 16).
(MacArthur,
J: Matthew 1-7 Chicago: Moody Press
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Lawrence Richards writes...
This was why repentance and faith in
Jesus are such urgent matters. Individuals who failed to turn to Him
will be shut out of the future kingdom, where “there will be weeping
. . . and gnashing of teeth.” (Richards, L. The 365 Day Devotional
Commentary. Victor Books)
Weeping (2805)
(klauthmos from klaio = to weep or bewail) is a noun which
describes a strong inner emotion which is evoked in weeping, crying,
lamentation (cries of grief, the act of bewailing as an expression of
sorrow).
Hell is a place of conscious sorrow
for the unconscious would not weep.
Klauthmos - 9x in 9v - Mt
2:18; 8:12; 13:42, 50; 22:13; 24:51; 25:30; Lk 13:28; Acts 20:37
In most of these NT uses the tears
are genuine, but their effect on the wrath of God is nil, as it is too
late for those who shed them. The image is of utter hopelessness and is
intended as a warning to those who read or hear.
Klauthmos - 30x in the
non-apocryphal
Septuagint (LXX)
- Gen 45:2; 46:29; Dt 34:8; Judg 21:2; 2Sa 13:36; 2 Kgs 20:3; Ezra 3:13;
Job 16:16; 30:31; Ps 6:8; 30:5; 102:9; Isa 15:3; 16:9; 22:12; 30:19;
38:3; 65:19; Jer 3:21; 22:10; 31:9, 15 16; 48:5, 32; Lam 5:13; Dan 6:20;
Joel 2:12; Mic 7:4; Mal 2:13
In contrast to the eternal weeping of
the ungodly, the Psalmist describes the temporary weeping of the
godly
Psalm 30:5 For His anger is but for a
moment, His favor is for a lifetime; Weeping (klauthmos) may last
for the night, but a shout of joy comes in the morning.
The Psalmist writes...
Psalm 112:10 The wicked will see it
(Ps 112:9) and be vexed, He will gnash his teeth and melt away.
The desire of the wicked will perish.
Spurgeon comments: The last
verse sets forth very forcibly the contrast between the righteous and
the ungodly, thus making the blessedness of the godly appear all the
more remarkable. Usually we see
Ebal and
Gerizim, the blessing
and the curse, set the one over against the other, to invest both with
the greater solemnity.
The wicked shall see it, and be grieved. The ungodly shall first
see the example of the saints to their own condemnation, and shall at
last behold the happiness of the godly and to the increase of their
eternal misery. The child of wrath shall be obliged to witness the
blessedness of the righteous, though the sight shall make him gnaw his
own heart. He shall fret and fume, lament and wax angry, but he shall
not be able to prevent it, for God's blessing is sure and effectual.
He shall gnash with his teeth. Being very wrathful, and
exceedingly envious, he would fain grind the righteous between his
teeth; but as he cannot do that, he grinds his teeth against each other.
And melt away. The heat of his passion shall melt him like wax,
and the sun of God's providence shall dissolve him like snow, and at the
last the fire of divine vengeance shall consume him as the fat of rams.
How horrible must that life be which like the snail melts as it
proceeds, leaving a slimy trail behind. Those who are grieved at
goodness deserve to be worn away by such an abominable sorrow.
The desire of the wicked shall perish. He shall not achieve his
purpose, he shall die a disappointed man. By wickedness he hoped to
accomplish his purpose -- that very wickedness shall be his defeat.
While the righteous shall endure for ever, and their memory shall be
always green; the ungodly man and his name shall rot from off the face
of the earth. He desired to be the founder of a family, and to be
remembered as some great one: he shall pass away and his name shall die
with him. How wide is the gulf which separates the righteous from the
wicked (Lk 16:26), and how different are the portions which the Lord
deals out to them (Lk 16:23 24). O for grace to be blessed of the Lord!
This will make us praise him with our whole heart.
Gnashing (1030)
(brugmos) describes striking, grinding or biting of teeth
together. In the context of the
NT uses brugmos is a manifestation or picture of the extreme anguish and utter
despair of those consigned to eternal torment in hell.
Webster says
gnash means to strike the teeth together as in anger or pain, both
emotions probably in play in the fires of hell.
The root verb brucho is used
in Acts 7:54 to describe the Jews who were "cut to the quick" by
Stephen's sermon and began "gnashing their teeth at him", clearly a
manifestation of intense anger.
Brugmos - 7x in 7v in the
NAS - Matt 8:12; 13:42, 50; 22:13; 24:51; 25:30; Luke 13:28. The
only OT use is in the Septuagint translation of Pr 19:12.
J S Lang comments that Jesus'
picturesque phrase expresses...
the agony of eternal torment
(and)...perhaps more than any images of fire and brimstone, the
weeping and gnashing of teeth suggests pain, regret, and eternal
sorrow of an earthly life wasted. (Lang, J. S.. 1,001 Things You Always
Wanted to Know About Angels, Demons, and the Afterlife. Nashville:
Thomas Nelson Publishers)
Comment: In one sense Jesus is
commanding those who have ears to hear His warning to "agonize"
(Strive - agonizomai) temporally to enter the door, lest they suffer
agony eternally because they fail to enter the door!
Robert Morey commenting on
Jesus' description writes that
The rabbinic picture used by Christ
of people “weeping and gnashing their teeth” in the excruciating
pain caused by the fires of
Gehenna cannot be
ignored or downplayed (Mt13:42, 50). In Re 14:10-note,
Re 14:11-note,
we are explicitly told that they will be tormented by sulfuric fire…for
all eternity…without rest day or night. The words of the Apostle could
not be clearer or plainer. The text says “tormented,” not
annihilated. (Morey, R. A. Death and the Afterlife. Minneapolis, Minn.:
Bethany House)
Steven Cole says that Jesus'
fearful description of hell should serve to remind all procrastinators
that...
Salvation requires our careful self-examination because of
the horrible consequences of making a mistake.
Weeping and gnashing of teeth doesn’t sound like a fun experience,
especially when it continues through all eternity! Think of it
as an eternal root canal without anesthesia! These men had assumed
that they would be included in the kingdom. They were
Jews, not "filthy" Gentiles. They were related to Abraham, Isaac, and
Jacob. But now they find themselves shut out and, of all things,
those "dirty" Gentiles from east and west and north and south are
inside, dining with the patriarchs and prophets!
Contrary to popular modern views, hell will not be a wild
party for all the wicked. And, contrary to most popular thinking,
hell will not be just for the worst of the worst—the Hitlers of this
world. These men were religious Jews who thought they were deserving
of heaven. But they would not submit to Jesus and so they
faced the horrible eternal consequence of being in that place of
weeping and gnashing of teeth. Because there will be many religious
people in hell, all of us who attend church should examine
ourselves to make sure that we are not cast into that place of
weeping and gnashing of teeth. (Luke
13:22-30 The Narrow Door)
Teeth Provided! - An old-fashioned, hell-and damnation preacher
was scolding his congregation for their terrible misdeeds. “Remember
what it says in the Bible,” he thundered. “Jesus told us that for those
who do evil there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth.” [Matthew
22:13] At this point the preacher saw a very old parishioner grinning up
at him, unconcerned, toothless. He accepted the challenge and pointed at
the grinning gums, “Don’t worry, James Lippincott. Teeth will be
provided!” (Streiker, L. D. - Nelson's Big Book of Laughter)
Hendricksen comments that...
The weeping is that of
inconsolable, never-ending wretchedness, and utter, everlasting
hopelessness. The accompanying grinding or gnashing of teeth
is that of frenzied anger, unmitigated rage. For this weeping and
grinding of teeth there are three causes:
a. They “see” (are made aware
of the presence of) Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and all the prophets in the
kingdom of God; that is, the kingdom in its final consummation.
b. They also take note of the fact that ever so many others, including
(converted) Gentiles, from every region of the earth—east, west, north,
and south—are participating in the Messianic banquet (cf. Mt 8:11, 12).
c. They themselves are “thrown out”; that is, not only was
admission refused, but also they were forcefully expelled.
(Hendriksen,
W., & Kistemaker, S. J. Vol. 11: New Testament Commentary: Exposition of
the Gospel According to Luke. Baker Book
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When you see - Not "if" but
when. This is a prophetic promise that will be fulfilled. We see a
similar description of the rich man in
Hades able to visualize the
patriarch Abraham...
And in
Hades he (the rich
man) lifted up his eyes,
being in torment (basanos), and saw Abraham far away, and Lazarus in his bosom.
(Lk 16:23, cp Lk 16:28)
Comment: Notice the rich man's
desire expressed in Lk 16:28.
What did the reality of literally experiencing the torment of
Hades do
to the rich man's desire to "witness" to his five brothers?
If our passion for lost souls has
grown cold, perhaps we might consider asking the Spirit to burn into our
hearts some sense of the horror of the torment of those forever lost in
Hell so that we might be motivated like the rich man to go to those who
are still physically alive and warn them of the horrible wrath to
come (1Th 1:10-note)
so that they repent and
believe the Gospel (Lk
16:30, Mark 1:15).
Torment (931)
(basanos
- cp "touchstone" - basanite, Latin = lapis Lydius) is
used only 3x in the NT (Mt 4:24 = "pains" [NAS]; Lk 16:23 16:28) and originally referred to a stone used for testing gold
and other metals, and then came to mean applying torture (e.g., the torture-rack) to
question and extort
prisoners’ confessions. Therefore ''basanos'' must refer to a most
extreme form or degree of human suffering - severe pain associated with
torture and torment!
BDAG describes basanos
as "severe pain occasioned by punitive torture" and records an ancient
writing from Herodas describing torture ordered by a court to exhort a
confession.
(Arndt,
W., Danker, F. W., & Bauer, W. A Greek-English Lexicon of the New
Testament and Other Early Christian Literature
or
Wordsearch)
TDNT says
The basanos was originally
used by inspectors of coins, then the word became a commercial term for
checking calculations, later it was used figuratively for testing, and
finally it came to signify putting to the test by torture.
(Kittel,
G., Friedrich, G., & Bromiley, G. W. Theological Dictionary of the New
Testament. Eerdmans
or
Wordsearch)
Specific torments in the Luke passage
(Lk 16:19-31) are
the flame, in agony, the sight of the righteous, thirst, the victims’
memories of their previous lives, and the realization that they are in a
hopeless situation.
The related verb basanizo
means to test by rubbing a touchstone.
There are 11 uses of basanos
in the Septuagint (1Sa 6:3 4, 8, 17 Ezek 3:20; 7:19; 12:18; 16:52, 54;
32:24, 30) and some 45 uses of basanos in the Apocryphal writings - 1
Macc 9:56; 2 Macc 7:8; 9:5; 3 Macc 3:27; 4 Macc 4:26; 5:6; 6:27, 30;
7:2, 10, 16; 8:9, 19; 9:5f, 9, 16, 18; 10:11, 16; 11:1, 6, 23; 12:12;
13:15; 14:5, 8, 11; 15:11, 18ff, 32; 16:1f, 17; 17:3, 7, 10, 23; 18:20f;
Wis 2:19; 3:1; 17:12; 19:4; Sir 33:27
Webster defines a touchstone
as a black siliceous stone related to flint and formerly used to test
the purity of gold - pure gold leaves a yellow streak on the touchstone.
Figuratively touchstone came to mean a test or criterion for
determining the quality or genuineness of a thing.
Kingdom of God - This
phrase is tantamount to salvation for Jesus said "unless one is born
again (from above, from God), he cannot see the kingdom of God"
(Jn 3:3).
Kingdom of God - 66x in 65v in
NAS - Mt 12:28; 19:24; 21:31, 43; Mk 1:15; 4:11, 26, 30; 9:1, 47;
10:14 15, 23 34 25; 12:34; 14:25; 15:43; Lk 4:43; 6:20; 7:28; 8:1, 10;
9:2, 11, 27, 60, 62; 10:9, 11; 11:20; 13:18, 20, 28 29; 14:15; 16:16;
17:20 21; 18:16 17, 24 25, 29; 19:11; 21:31; 22:16, 18; 23:51; Jn 3:3,
5; Acts 1:3; 8:12; 14:22; 19:8; 28:23, 31; Ro 14:17; 1Co 4:20; 6:9 10;
15:50; Gal 5:21; Col 4:11; 2Th 1:5
Kingdom of Heaven - 32x in 31v
in NAS - Mt 3:2; 4:17; 5:3, 10, 19 20; 7:21; 8:11; 10:7; 11:11
12; 13:11, 24, 31, 33, 44 45, 47, 52; 16:19; 18:1, 3 4, 23; 19:12, 14,
23; 20:1; 22:2; 23:13; 25:1.
Abraham and Isaac and Jacob and
all the prophets in the kingdom of God - This description
underscores that the primary group Jesus addresses is the Jews, the
nation of Israel. The broader application clearly would include Gentile
sinners who refuse the Savior's offer of salvation.
The Jews saw themselves as
descendants of the patriarchs and thus felt that they they had a right
to the kingdom of God because of their ancestors. Jesus warned the Jews
declaring...
do not suppose that you can say to
yourselves, 'We have Abraham for our father'; for I say to you,
that God is able from these stones to raise up children to Abraham. (Mt
3:9 10).
In John Jesus gives a solemn, but
indisputably clear warning to Jews who had expressed an "intellectual"
belief in Him but who were still clinging to the fact that they were
Abraham's physical offspring...
Jesus therefore was saying to those
Jews who had believed Him, "If you abide in My word, then you are truly
disciples of Mine; 32 and you shall know the truth, and the truth shall
make you free." 33 They answered Him, "We are Abraham's
offspring, and have never yet been enslaved to anyone; how is it
that You say, 'You shall become free'?"...37 "I know that you are
Abraham's (physical)
offspring; yet you seek to kill Me, because My word has no place
in you. 38 "I speak the things which I have seen with My Father;
therefore you also do the things which you heard from your father." 39
They answered and said to Him, "Abraham is our father." Jesus
said to them, "If you are Abraham's (spiritual)
children, do the deeds of Abraham. 40 "But as it is, you
are seeking to kill Me, a man who has told you the truth, which I heard
from God; this Abraham did not do. 41 "You are doing the deeds of
your (spiritual) father." They said to Him, "We were not born of
fornication; we have one Father, even God." (They were deceived!
Self-delusion is a frightening state!) 42 Jesus said to them, "If God
were your Father, you would love Me; for I proceeded forth and have come
from God, for I have not even come on My own initiative, but He sent Me.
43 "Why do you not understand what I am saying? It is because you cannot
hear My word (They heard His audible words, but did not have spiritual
circumcised ears and circumcised hearts to hear the spiritual truth of
Jesus' audible words!). 44 "You are of your father the devil, (What
proves this to be a true statement?) and you want to do the desires of
your father. He was a murderer from the beginning, and does not stand in
the truth, because there is no truth in him. Whenever he speaks a lie,
he speaks from his own nature; for he is a liar, and the father of lies.
45 "But because I speak the truth, you do not believe Me (And their
subsequent seeking to murder Jesus proved they belonged to the devil and
were not spiritual children of Abraham and did not have genuine, saving
faith - see Jn 8:58, 59). (John 8:31-33, 37-45)
And so here in Luke 13:22-30 Jesus
upset the expectations of the Jewish audience by announcing that many of
the sons of the kingdom would not be allowed to participate in it, and
that many Gentiles would be granted entry! Many “sons of the kingdom”
(Jews) would find themselves outside the banquet.
The upshot of Jesus' statement
directed to the Jews is that being Jewish did not guarantee a place in
the Kingdom of God! Jews as well as Gentiles must all strive to enter by the
narrow door (Jn 10:9)!
Henry Cowles agrees commenting
that...
The obvious sense of these words is
that many Jews will be excluded from God's kingdom and many Gentiles
admitted. The men who said—"We have Abraham to our father," and yet
disowned Jesus of Nazareth, will see Abraham with all the sainted
patriarchs and prophets admitted to this kingdom, but themselves
excluded. (Henry
Cowles - Luke - at top of page enter 168)
John MacArthur adds that...
The Gospel came through Abraham’s
seed, as Matthew...attested through Jesus’ genealogy (Mt 1:1). But the
benefit of the Gospel, which brings salvation, is appropriated by faith,
not by genealogical descent. The Jews played an integral part in God’s
bringing the Messiah and His gospel, and they are yet destined to play
an important role in the end times. It was integral to God’s plan of
salvation that His own Son be born, live, and die as a Jew. But the fact
that Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob-or any other Jew-will be in the kingdom
of heaven will not be because of their Jewishness but because of their
saving faith...Those who reject Christ, even though they are physical
descendants of Abraham, will have no place at the table with Abraham,
and Isaac, and Jacob, in the kingdom of heaven.
(MacArthur,
J: Matthew 1-7 Chicago: Moody Press
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J C Ryle alluded to the
belated "wake up call" to the Jews who would be cast out of the presence
of the King when he said that...
Hell
is nothing but truth known too late!
Steven Cole comments...
Salvation requires our careful self-examination because
there are two and only two final categories. The closed door makes a final separation between those inside
and those outside. There are none sort of in and sort of out.
While there are gradations of rewards for those who are in and
gradations of punishment for those who are out, there is a great
chasm fixed between the two (Luke 16:26), with nothing in the
middle. You won’t be basically in heaven because you’re a basically
good person. Either you’re in because you have entered through
the narrow door, which is Jesus Christ, or you’re out because you
have trusted in your own goodness or in the fact that you’re a
church-going American Christian. You need to examine yourself
and carefully answer the question, “If I were to stand before God
and He said, ‘Why should I let you into My heaven?’ what would I
say?” The only correct answer is, “I am trusting completely in
Your Son Jesus and His shed blood.”
Discussion Questions related to Luke
13:22-30...
Are we too casual about salvation because we have
disregarded the biblical doctrine of hell?
(Ed: My personal response is "Sadly this is too true of me. May
the Spirit break my heart for what breaks my Father's heart and may He
give me a clear understanding of the doctrine of hell that serves to set
my heart aflame for lost souls so that they do not have to be eternally
aflame. In the Vine. Amen") Scripture says that without holiness no one will see the Lord
(Heb. 12:14-note). How can this be harmonized with salvation by
grace through faith apart from works (Ep 2:8, 9-note)? How can a person who is unsure about his salvation gain true
assurance (cp 1Jn 5:10 11 12 13 - Especially from 1Jn 5:13, what is the
practical step one can take to assure their assurance? [Clue: What are
"these things"? See 1Jn 2:29, 3:9, 14, 4:7, 5:4] cp Ro 10:17-note
If that passage is true [which it is], "listen" to the following
Words... Heb 6:11 12-note,
Sin damages assurance = Ps 32:3-note
["The Spanish inquisition with all its tortures was nothing to the
inquest which conscience holds within the heart." - Spurgeon]
Assurance is a lifelong fight = 1Ti 6:12 Assurance is to be prayed for =
Eph 1:18, 19-note;
Assurance is God's will and gift to be received = Ro 8:16-note)? How can we know that we
have entered through the
narrow door (cp Jn 20:31, 2Co 5:17-note)?
(Note: Questions modified including addition of Scripture references
-
Luke
13:22-30 The Narrow Door)
Luke
13:29 "AND THEY WILL COME FROM EAST
AND WEST AND FROM NORTH AND SOUTH, AND WILL RECLINE AT THE TABLE IN THE
KINGDOM OF GOD: kai ecousin (2PFAI) apo anatolon kai dusmon kai apo borra kai
notou kai anaklithesontai (3PFPI) en te basileia tou theou: (Ge 28:14 Isa 43:6 49:6 54:2,3 66:18-20 Mal 1:11 Mk 13:27 Ac
28:28 Eph 3:6 7 3:8 Col 1:6,23 Rev 7:9,10)
GUESS WHO'S COMING
TO DINNER?...
AND WHO'S NOT!
They will come from east and west
and from north and south - The four corners of the world. In context
this refers to Gentiles who have "striven" and entered through the narrow
door by grace through faith in the only way (Jn 14:6) into the Kingdom
of Heaven, through the Door, the Messiah (Jn 10:9).
In the story of the healing of the
Centurion's son (Mt 8:5 6 7 8 9) we read a similar description...
Now when Jesus heard this, He
marveled and said to those who were following, “Truly I say to you, I
have not found such great faith with anyone in Israel. I say to
you that many will come from east and west, and recline at
the table with Abraham, Isaac and Jacob in the kingdom of heaven;
12 but the sons of the kingdom (The Jews) will be cast out into the
outer darkness; in that place there will be weeping and gnashing of
teeth.” (Mt 8:10 11 12)
Will recline at the table -
This is a prophecy to be fulfilled in the
Millennial Kingdom.
This banquet represents the fulfillment of the prophecy in Isaiah 25:6 7
8 9 (cp Isa 65:13 14). In Jesus’ day the Jews viewed themselves as
uniquely privileged because of the patriarchs and felt that the Gentiles
were excluded from the kingdom.
C H Spurgeon...
It will very much aggravate the
sorrows of the lost to see so many saved whose prospects did not appear
to be one half so hopeful as their own. (Spurgeon, C. H. The
Interpreter: Spurgeon's Devotional Bible)
William Barclay writes that...
The idea of the Messianic Banquet was
at once the seal and the symbol of the new era was a common feature in
apocalyptic writings and an extremely popular subject of discussion,
thought, and expectation.
Several Scriptures allude to that
glorious future date on the calendar of every believer -- an invitation
to dine with the King of kings at the blessed Marriage Supper of the
Lamb (cp Mt 22:1-14; Mt 25:1-13; Mt 26:29; Lk 22:16; Rev 19:9-note)
(See several articles on the
Marriage of the Lamb).
Fausset writes that "The consummation of this blessed
intercommunion shall be at the Marriage Supper of the Lamb, of which the
Lord’s Supper is the earnest and foretaste." Jesus prophetically
promised that He would partake of the Passover meal again until He dines
with believers in the
Millennial Kingdom
(Mt 8:11; Mt 26:29; Mk 14:25; Lk 22:18).
As Henry Cowles says...
This feast is for known friends, not
for old enemies. (Henry
Cowles - Luke - at top of page enter 168)
Luke
13:30 "AND
BEHOLD,
SOME ARE LAST WHO WILL BE FIRST AND SOME ARE FIRST WHO WILL BE LAST: kai
idou (2SAMM) eisin
(3PPAI) eschatoi hoi esontai (3PFMI) protoi, kai eisin (3PPAI) protoi hoi
esontai (3PFMI) eschatoi: (Mt 3:9,10 8:11,12 19:30
20:16 21:28 29 30 31 Mk 10:31)
Behold
(idou) - This urgent command (aorist
imperative)
serves as an "attention grabber" and draws the readers attention to
the profundity of Jesus' following statement.
Some who are last who will be
first - Note "some", not all! The last speaks of the Gentiles. Note the quantifier "some"
describes a portion of those in both groups, the first (Jews) and
the last (Gentiles) who will enter the narrow door of salvation
by grace through faith in Christ.
Some are first who will be last
- Again, note "some", not all! The first in context most likely refers to the Jews, who were the first to be privileged with God's
favor and the first to receive His gracious call to come into His
Kingdom, but who failed to enter because of their unbelief, even as many
of the Jews failed to enter His rest after being warned (cp He 3:7, 8,
9-note
Heb 3:10 11-note)...
And to whom did He swear that they
should not enter His rest (katapausis),
but to those who were disobedient (apeitheo)?
And so we see that they were not able to enter because of unbelief (apistia).
(Hebrews 3:18, 19-note)
While the preceding interpretation is
that favored by most evangelical commentaries, one other possibility
that has been raised is that the terms "last...first...first...last"
could possibly relate to degrees of glory in eternity future. In other
words, some who were "first" on earth (in terms of privilege, prestige,
honor) might be "last" in glory. I personally think that the context
favors the interpretation of those who were "first" to receive the
Gospel as the Jews and the "last" being the Gentiles but in fairness one
cannot be dogmatic.
Steven Cole has a most
interesting application of Jesus' closing words on this section...
Salvation requires our careful self-examination because
those who assume they’re in may be out. Jesus says that there will be a great reversal. Many who
thought they were first will be last. Many whom the “first crowd”
thought were last, will be first. The Jews of Jesus’ day despised the
pagan Gentiles. They thought that if they ate with Gentiles they
would be defiled. But Jesus says that many Gentiles will be in the
kingdom, eating with the patriarchs and prophets, while many
self-righteous
Jews would be shut out.
These verses demand our careful attention because we who
are in the church are in the same place as the Jews of Jesus’ day. We are familiar with the things of God. Perhaps like me, you were
raised to know the Gospel. But being in the church is not enough.
Have you personally entered through the narrow door? Have you
come to Jesus as a guilty sinner and laid hold of Him as the only
acceptable sacrifice for your sins? Are you seeking to know Him
and grow in Him as your Lord and Savior?
General acquaintance
with Jesus won’t be enough in that terrible day (cp Mt 7:21-note
Mt 7:22 23-note). Don
not assume that
just because you know about Jesus, you know Him
(Ed: And I would add even more important that "He knows
you!").
Conclusion -
David Brainerd, the great
missionary to American Indians, was once witnessing to a
chief who was very close to trusting in Christ. But he held back.
Brainerd got up, took a stick, drew a circle in the dirt around the
chief, and said,
“Decide before you cross
that line.”
Brainerd knew that if the chief
missed that moment he might never be so close again. My prayer is that the Lord will use this message to draw that
line around you if you have never entered through the narrow
door, which is Christ alone. Salvation is not just an interesting
theological notion to discuss. It is of crucial importance for every
person because the door is narrow and it soon will be shut forever. But right now it is still open. Jesus says to you, “Strive
(present
imperative) to enter by
the narrow door; for many, I tell you, will seek to enter and will not
be able.” (Luke
13:22-30 - The Narrow Door)
Henry Cowles comments that...
Those (referring to Jews) who were
first in privilege and called first to this kingdom, ruled themselves
out by their unbelief; while those whom they (the Jews) accounted as
last will become first in the blessings and glories of this
kingdom. In many various forms Jesus reiterated this momentous truth to
the end that, if possible, this warning might move them to seek
salvation while yet it lay within their reach. (Henry
Cowles - Luke - at top of page enter 168)
John Stevenson asks...
Who is the first and who is the last?
The answer is found in the previous two verses. Those who are cast out
of the Kingdom shall now be last. But they were originally the first.
They were the first to hear the Law of God. They were the first to see
Jesus. They were the first to have the gospel preached to them. They are
the people of the nation of Israel. When Israel rejected her Messiah,
the gospel would go out to the nations. From this point on, the last
shall be first. Those who formerly sat in darkness shall see a great
light (Isaiah 9:2). The people who were not God’s people shall now be
known as the people of God (Hosea 1:10). (Kingdom
Controversies)
It is impossible to take the
wrong road and go to Heaven,
and it is impossible to take the Heavenly road and go to Hell.
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