Luke 13:22-30 We are
inundated—and too often influenced-- by the religious voices around us: TV preachers, friends and family members, and
media personalities. Let there be no
doubt, by their words they intend to teach
us--to shape our thinking-- on the eternally important questions of: who is God and how can I know him and have a
life with him.
But
God did not leave us to the opinions of men when it comes to knowing the answers
to these questions. Instead, he sent his
Son to teach us the truth. The
Bible says:
Jesus went on his way
through towns and villages, teaching and journeying toward Jerusalem .
This
is what Jesus came to do: to teach us
the truth about God and our life with him by
leading us to Jerusalem—to the place of the cross and the empty tomb where our
questions about life with God, and forgiveness, and eternal life are answered
in Christ’s death and resurrection.
God does not want
a single person here be confused by the voices of the world that would mislead
us. He doesn’t want us to be deceived by
our own flesh. God wants everyone to
know the answers these questions. That
is why he sent us Son to teach us the truth about how to get to heaven. The bible says that: Someone
said to Jesus, "Lord, will those who are saved be few?"
Jesus
really never does answer this person’s question (about how many will be saved) because
that is Jesus’ business, not ours--and the way that Lord dealt with this
question is a helpful reminder that the Lord teaches us what he wants us to know—not necessarily everything
that we want to know.
Instead, he
answers the question in such a way that WE CAN BE SAVED by knowing the answer
he does give. That is always his priority: not to deal with our speculation --but to provide for our salvation. He answers the
salvation question this way: "Strive to enter through the narrow
door.
The Lord pictures
heaven as a huge house with just one entrance:
a narrow door that is Jesus Christ!
He is not only the teacher sent by God to instruct us concerning salvation—he IS our salvation—he
is the narrow door to heaven.
In stark contrast
to all of those who would have us believe that there are many paths to God, the
Father’s heaven-sent teacher tells us that there is just one way: Jesus.
He alone has atoned for the sins of the
world by his death on the cross. He alone has risen from the dead
destroying the power of the grave. He alone has fulfilled all righteousness
by his holy life—he alone is the one
mediator between God and man-- and no one—no one—will come to the Father and enter
into heaven except by him.
Jesus is the
narrow door to heaven—but we are the ones who have to enter in. How do we enter through that narrow
door? It is by faith. Jesus said:
“this is the will of my Father,
that everyone who looks on the Son and believes in him should have
eternal life.”
Jesus says that we
are to STRIVE to do this. We strive for
all kinds of things in life—money and success and recognition and good marks--but
those things will not save us-- and to have them all and not have Christ is to
have less than nothing. STRIVE to enter
through the narrow door because many will fail.
Jesus says:
For many, I tell you,
will seek to enter and will not be able.
When once the master of the house has risen and shut the door, and
you begin to stand outside and to knock at the door, saying, 'Lord, open to
us,' then he will answer you, 'I do not know where you come from.'
Why
will so many fail to enter by the narrow door and be saved? It is not because they do not know it is
there (they do!). It is not because they
have not heard how they are to enter it (they have!). It is because they will have waited too
long.
For all who are
living and breathing on the earth at this moment—there is a remarkable day of
grace that God has given to us today—a day when the door to heaven stands wide
open to all who will enter in by faith in Jesus. But Jesus also warns us that there will come
a day when the door will be closed—never to be opened again.
The Lord’s words call
to mind the days of Noah when there was ample opportunity for everyone who
heard the preaching of Noah to take it to heart—repent of their sins—trust in
God’s promised deliverance-- and enter in through door of the ark of
salvation. Plenty of time right up until
there was no more time-- and door to the ark was closed and the judgment of
Almighty God began to fall.
In the same way
today, Jesus points the world to the open, narrow door of eternal life and
invites all people to come inside-- but he also warns us that the door will one
day close—after which no one will be able to enter. Jesus warns us:
Then you will begin to say, 'We ate and
drank in your presence, and you taught in our streets.'
The
people who saw Jesus’ miracles—the people who heard his teaching—the people who
were fed by him-- numbered in the tens of thousands. But not all of them believed in him and not
all would be saved simply because they were familiar with him. Then and now:
Familiarity is not enough—FAITH
is what’s needed.
There are all
kinds of people who are familiar with
the story of Jesus—but that is not enough.
There are all kinds of people who are familiar with the things of the church--but that is not enough.
There are all kinds of people who have family
members who are Christians-- but that is not enough. YOU must believe in Jesus Christ to be saved.
It is necessary to
know Christ as your Lord and Savior to be
known by him on the Last Day. It is
necessary to confess his saving name if he is to confess your name before his
Father in heaven. On that day, Jesus will
say to those who have not believed in him:
“…I tell you, I do
not know where you come from. Depart from me, all you workers of
evil!'
Jesus
is not saying that on the Last Day that he will somehow lack the omniscience to
know those who have rejected him. Just
the opposite is true—he knows them better than they could ever know
themselves—every ugly, sinful detail.
The kind of
knowledge that Jesus is talking about is the intimate knowledge that exists
between a husband and wife in a love relationship. In effect Jesus says to all those who have
not entered by the narrow door: “we’ve never had a relationship and now it
is too late to have a life with me because you are evil and will remain so
forever”.
We tend to think
of people being evil on the basis of what they do or don’t do—and certainly
there is some truth in that. But the
measure of Jesus’ judgment on the last day is whether or not we have entered
through the narrow door by faith in him-- or rejected him and remained
outside. That is the evil that
damns!
It’s important for
us to remember—that no matter who “good’ we think we are—no matter how “good”
we think someone else might be—the judgment of Christ is that apart from faith in him-- individuals are evil and
can never live with him in heaven and instead are sent by him to hell. Jesus says that:
In that place
there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth, when you see Abraham and Isaac
and Jacob and all the prophets in the kingdom of God
but you yourselves cast out.
Jesus
plainly taught that hell is real- and it is terrible- and it is eternal—and utterly unnecessary because there is a
way of salvation. The prophets and
patriarchs all knew that there was one way of salvation which is the narrow door
of faith in God’s Messiah—a door that is open wide to all people. Jesus says:
People will come
from east and west, and from north and south, and recline at table in the
kingdom of God And behold, some are last who will be first, and some are first
who will be last."
God
wants everyone to have a place at his table.
For the Jews this was a shock. They
thought that simply by being Jews they would be saved—but they were wrong. Yes—they had every advantage: they had the temple
and the Torah and circumcision and sacrifice—but apart from faith in Christ
these advantages would not save them.
Others of that day
had none of these things—no natural advantage owing to their birth among
Jews—they were Gentiles from all over the world-- but they believed in Jesus
when he promised that through faith in him they would be saved—and they took
their place in the kingdom of God. The
first, last—and some of the last, first.
The same thing is
still true today. There are people born
into Christian families and raised in the Church—people who have every
advantage—and yet they reject Christ.
Others have no such advantage—they were born to unbelievers and were
brought up that way—and yet by God’s grace they heard Christ preached and
believed in him and entered through the narrow door to eternal life. The first, last—and some of the last, first.
To those who have
the advantage of having grown up in the church, Jesus says: use it! Put your faith in me and be saved. To those who had no such advantage Jesus says
the same: today is the day of grace that
God has provided for you to enter through the narrow door and take your place
in the Lamb’s great eternal feast. May
God grant us all the faith to enter into eternal life by the narrow door of
Christ! Amen.
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