Matthew 25:31-46 Each week we
confess that Jesus will come again in glory to judge the living and the
dead. Our Lord’s return—as an event in
history-- is clearly taught in the Bible.
It is his final work of salvation.
It is an article of faith that we must believe to be saved.
On
that day each of us will stand before the Lord and he will render his verdict
about our life—what we have believed and how we have lived.
Today in our Gospel
lesson, in simple language, we hear just exactly how the final judgment will take
place from the one who will judge the world.
Jesus says:
"When the Son
of Man comes in his glory, and all the angels with him, then he will sit on his
glorious throne. Before him will be
gathered all the nations, and he will separate people one from another
as a shepherd separates the sheep from the goats. And he will place the sheep on his right, but
the goats on the left.
On judgment
day every person who has ever lived will stand before the glorious throne of
Jesus Christ and we will be judged.
Before a word is
spoken—before the evidence is given—Jesus will separate all the world’s people into
two groups—one group on his left and one group on his right.
That separation is
the judgment—and there is no changing sides at that point. The day of grace that we enjoy today- to
repent of our sins and believe in Jesus- to amend our lives--will come to an
end with that division.
Shepherds have no problem
making a distinction between sheep and goats because there is nothing that a
shepherd knows more about than the difference between sheep and goats.
So it will be on Judgment Day
as the Shepherd King separates those who are his (those who have believed in
him and followed him) from those who are not his (those who have rejected him
and went their own way). Every person in
the world (and in this sanctuary) will fall into one of those two groups.
The unbelieving
world around us sees fine moral distinctions, with many shades of gray, when it
comes to their relationship with God—they say that surely it cannot be so
simple, so cut-and-dried as those who believe in Jesus and those who don’t. But it
is just that simple.
When it comes to your relationship
with God—you are either righteous in God’s sight through faith in Jesus—blessed
by God from the foundations of the world with all that is needed for salvation—
OR--you are cursed by God because you have not counted yourself worthy of his salvation
and have rejected the forgiveness and eternal life that comes through faith in
Jesus.
The basic division of all people
into one of these two groups is not always evident because faith in Jesus is,
finally, a matter of the heart.
But that division between
the saved and the lost will be plain
for all to see on the Last Day when the Son of Man comes to judge the nations
and presents the evidence for his perfect, righteous judgment. Jesus will say to the saved on his right hand:
‘Come, you blessed
of My Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the
world: For I was hungry and you gave me food, I was thirsty and you gave me
drink, I was a stranger and you welcomed me,
I was naked and you clothed me, I was sick and you visited me, I was in
prison and you came to me.'
There
is nothing here that is difficult to understand: those who had faith produced the fruits of faith--those
saved by grace were gracious people to others—those who
received the mercy of God in Christ
extended that mercy to others—those
who were forgiven were forgiving. In other words, the life of Jesus was seen in
the lives of those who were his.
The evidence that is given
for a true and living faith is found in the small acts of mercy and kindness
and generosity given to others simply because those who are saved by Jesus want
to live loving, self-sacrificing lives like their Savior’s.
Another
really remarkable thing about those who are saved is that all the things that
we have failed to do-- are not even brought up.
We haven’t fed every
hungry person or clothed every naked person or housed every homeless person—but
these sinful failures to be all that we have been called to be-- have no part
in this judgment because they have been taken away by the blood of Jesus.
But for those who have
rejected Jesus Christ it is a very different story. Every sinful failure, no matter how small, is
remembered and entered as evidence. Jesus
will say to the lost on his left hand:
“'Depart from me,
you cursed, into the eternal fire prepared for the devil and his angels.
The great tragedy is that
it never had to be this way. Hell was not
prepared for people but for the devil and the other angels who rebelled against
God at the beginning of the world. But
when a person rejects Jesus Christ, they choose to align themselves with the
devil and they too will receive hell as their eternal punishment.
And just as there are no
great works of faith that are mentioned for the redeemed, so there are no great
sins that are mentioned for the damned. Jesus
says:
I was hungry and
you gave me no food, I was thirsty and you gave me no drink, I was a stranger and you did not welcome me,
naked and you did not clothe me, sick and in prison and you did not visit
me.'
Those who had no faith--
simply failed to produce the fruits of faith that come from being saved and will
hear the terrible judgment of all who die apart from faith in Christ— “depart from Me, you cursed, into the
everlasting fire.”
It has become fashionable
in these modern times to deny the existence of hell but there are very few
things that Jesus teaches as clearly as the existence of hell because he does
not want us to go there. Hell is real,
it is terrible, it is eternal, and it is deserved.
As a final proof that our
Lord’s judgment is valid, we hear the reaction of each group to the Lord’s
verdict—their own testimony to the truth of the Lord’s verdict.
“The righteous will answer him, saying,
'Lord, when did we see you hungry and feed you, or thirsty and give you
drink? And when did we see you a
stranger and welcome you, or naked and clothe you? And when did we see you sick or in prison and
visit you?' And the King will answer
them, 'Truly, I say to you, as you did it to one of the least of these my
brothers, you did it to me.'
The Good News for the
child of God is that on judgment day, not only will our sins not
be remembered, but all those small acts of mercy and kindness and generosity
that we have forgotten about—that we would never have dreamed to lift up to the
Lord as deserving of eternal life— will be remembered by him-and
counted as if we had done them all for him.
That the Lord’s people are
astonished by his accounting is a sure sign that they simply did good to others
out of love for the Lord—not to earn heaven for themselves.
Acts of love, done in
faith, require no accounting on our part.
They are simply given in the context of our ordinary, daily
vocations.
When we are forgiving with
our family; when we set a good example at work; when we are compassionate and
merciful to those in need; when we are concerned for the needs of others; we
show ourselves to be the Lord’s people. On
the other hand, those on the King’s left will answer, saying:
“'Lord, when did we
see you hungry or thirsty or a stranger or naked or sick or in prison, and did
not minister to you?' Then he will
answer them, saying, 'Truly, I say to you, as you did not do it to one of the
least of these, you did not do it to me.'
The lost, even at that
late hour, exhibit no sorrow or repentance to Jesus. They have no compassion for those who have
gone without food and drink and clothing and shelter through their faithless
neglect. Their only desire is to call
into question the righteous judgment of a perfectly just judge.
We are tempted to believe
that faced with hell, even the most hardened sinner would come to their senses,
repent of their sins, and beg for mercy—but it is not so.
Those who were not
concerned for others will never be concerned.
Those who have rejected the Lord throughout their life will continue to reject
him for eternity.
That is why judgment day is
merely a final demonstration of what was true:
in a person’s life—at the moment of their death—and then forever in
eternity as they “go away into
everlasting punishment, but the righteous into eternal life.”
And so what does this
plain and simple teaching from our Lord about the final judgment and the Last
Day have to do with our lives this week?
What does the Lord want us to do as a result of his words? How then should we live, knowing that we will
stand before the throne of Jesus Christ and be judged?
First and foremost, no one
ought to leave this sanctuary today without knowing for sure that they are one
of those whom the Lord will call righteous and blessed on the Last Day. That confidence comes through faith in Jesus
Christ alone.
None of us, by nature, are
worthy to stand before a perfectly righteous judge. Each of us deserves hell. But God sent his Son to save us from what our
sins deserve. Jesus suffered hell for us
on the cross. He paid for our
selfishness and sins with his shed blood—and he rose up from the dead to give
us eternal life.
We receive the salvation
he accomplished by believing the Gospel as it is preached and given in the
sacraments. As we do so, we can look
forward to Judgment Day with confidence.
Secondly, we should measure
our lives by Christ’s standard of what really counts and not the world’s. On the Last Day there are no questions about
how much money we had, how important we were in the community, what car we
drove, where we went to school, or what we did for a living.
Instead, the only thing
that matters on judgment day is that we showed with our lives that we belonged
to Jesus by caring for those around us.
Nothing miraculous is
required of us, but only that our faith in Jesus would bear the fruit of good
works as we deal with others in the same gracious, generous, merciful,
forgiving way that we have been dealt with by Christ.
And finally, we should
live our lives this week -and always- in expectation of our Lord’s immediate
return.
All of the worries and
trials and temptations that we are faced with daily-- become something
altogether different and altogether smaller when they are seen in the light of
that glad and glorious day when the Lord says to each of us:
‘Come, you who are blessed by My Father,
inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world!
May God graciously grant that
each of us hear those words on Judgment Day for Jesus’ sake! Amen.
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