Monday, October 28, 2024

We Don't Do Fear!

 Read Matthew 25:14-30

Let’s talk about fear.

Proverbs 1:7

The fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge,

    but fools despise wisdom and instruction.

Isaiah 41:10 - Fear not, for I am with you; be not dismayed, for I am your God; I will strengthen you, I will help you, I will uphold you with my righteous right hand.

2 Timothy 1:7 - For God gave us a spirit not of fear but of power and love and self-control.

1 John 4:18 - There is no fear in love, but perfect love casts out fear. For fear has to do with punishment, and whoever fears has not been perfected in love.

Psalm 34:4 - I sought the Lord, and he answered me and delivered me from all my fears.

Joshua 1:9 - Have I not commanded you? Be strong and courageous. Do not be frightened, and do not be dismayed, for the Lord your God is with you wherever you go.

Proverbs 29:25 - The fear of man lays a snare, but whoever trusts in the Lord is safe.

Here is a familiar verse from a very familiar Psalm. It’s verse 4 of Psalm 23.

Even though I walk through the darkest valley,I will fear no evil, for you are with me; your rod and your staff, they comfort me.

So, what’s the message? Fear God. That’s a good start to knowing him more.

Don’t fear God’s punishment. It’s not for you. Disciple, yes, but punishment, no.

Don’t fear evil. God is with you.

Don’t fear others or the situations of the world. God is with us.

If fear has to be a part of your life, then fear God more than whatever else you might be afraid of. If fear must control part of your life, then make sure it is the fear of the Lord and it motivates you to please him.

You will still have trouble in the world. You will still be tested by the trials this world throws at us, some of which are substantial. The world might even persecute you for following Jesus, but you don’t need to be afraid.

Now to the third servant in the parable. Fear debilitated him. He was not functional. He acted with cowardice and void of wisdom.

Well, the master shouldn’t have been so hard on him. Fear was just in his nature.

He couldn’t help it. It was his nature to be afraid.

What if being an alcoholic was in your nature? Would a continued state of drunkenness be acceptable?

What if stealing was in your nature? Would we appoint such a person as our treasurer?

What if you had murder in your heart? How high would we let the body count go before we did something?

It doesn’t matter if fear is part of your nature. We are called to take on a new nature. We are a new creation and the fear of anyone other than the Lord is repulsive to God and those who seek and follow him.

If fear seems too hard to overcome, ask yourself this question as if it was from the Lord. Let’s put it in the first person from the Lord.

Did I go to the cross so you could live in fear?

You are saved by grace through faith. That’s a done deal, but you will stand before God and give an account, and the words I was afraid don’t earn you any points.

Fear is never rooted in trusting God. It always falls within the realm of our own understanding.

The grace of God is unbelievable. It goes beyond our worst sin, but know with certainty that fear of anyone or anything other than God does not please and, I would venture to say, angers the Lord. And if anyone is slow to anger, it is the Lord.  

But there is no doubt that he is not happy with this third servant, who was governed by fear. Do not expect to please God if we live in fear, are controlled by fear, or make fear-based decisions. Consider these final words in this parable.

“His master replied, ‘You wicked, lazy servant! So you knew that I harvest where I have not sown and gather where I have not scattered seed? Well then, you should have put my money on deposit with the bankers, so that when I returned I would have received it back with interest.

“‘So take the bag of gold from him and give it to the one who has ten bags. For whoever has will be given more, and they will have an abundance. Whoever does not have, even what they have will be taken from them.  And throw that worthless servant outside, into the darkness, where there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth.’

I want to be in the well-done, good, and faithful servant line. We don’t fear. We have faith and trust and know with a blessed assurance that we belong to God, and he will be with us wherever we go.

We don’t do fear.

Amen.

Is my desire to please God greater than my fear?

 Read Matthew 25:14-30

It was February or March 1980. I was in a CH-46 helicopter hovering at 120 feet. We were rappelling, that is, jumping out of an aircraft and getting to the ground using a rope and a small device called a carabiner.

I had rappelled before but this was my first time from a helo. The guy in front of me was a big kid. By kid, I mean another butter bar in his early 20s. This guy was huge. He was at least 6’4” with wide shoulders and all the muscle you would expect from a warrior.

He was also afraid.

Just to say something in his defense, jumping out of an aircraft that isn’t on fire or about to crash anyway isn’t a natural act. At 120 feet, it might even seem more natural to stay aboard and put out a fire than to jump.

Some of you have jumped out of aircraft at a much higher altitude, for which a parachute was highly recommended. Some jump out of aircraft at altitudes where you need not only a parachute but oxygen as well.

But, there we were at 120 feet, and Second Lieutenant Connolly was frozen at the back of the helo and did not want to move. Major Bo Dishman was our leader and had undoubtedly seen this before.

He talked Connolly into relaxing his grip on the rope and told him that he would count to three and then he would jump. Connolly agreed.

One. Two—and Major Dishman pushed Connolly out the back. He grabbed the rope half a second later but was already 40 feet closer to the ground. The rest was a piece of cake.

Jumping out of a perfectly good aircraft doesn’t make sense. Your whole being says, don’t do that! This sort of fear is natural and healthy.

I was at a seminar once on the 40th floor of a building. During a break, some of us found a balcony. I’m sure someone needed a place to smoke.

In any case, I looked over the balcony and down at the street below. My very being said, that’s far enough!

Sometimes, fear keeps us alive. Sometimes, fear keeps us from living.

The third servant in this parable was afraid. Why? We don’t read that his master had beaten him, so there should have been no physical fear.

We don’t see that his master had threatened him. He had not been on probation. There was nothing in the makeup of the relationship between master and servant that should have prompted fear in the servant.

So why was he afraid?

The master was a hard man. He received a return even when the servant didn’t think he deserved it.

The master had great expectations for his servants. He did not give them more than they could handle; he gave to them according to their ability.

Each servant should have produced a return of some sort, even if it was just a little interest from the bank. But the third servant was afraid.

Afraid of what?

Of things that existed only in his mind. He was ruled by negative fantasies or living out the worst-case scenarios in his mind.

Fear is natural if you are about to jump out of an aircraft. Training can help, but fear is natural.

If someone is shooting at you, your instincts—probably fear based—will tell you that lead and flesh don’t mix well and you should get behind something like a rock or a steel wall. If you watch too many movies, you need to know that cardboard boxes don’t work.

This sort of fear helps keep you among the living.

If your mind is making you afraid, you are dealing with things that may or may not happen, and as it turns out, most of the time, don’t.

Fear can motivate and help you achieve your goals. I am not going through that again!

Fear can initiate. I had better figure this out. It’s time to get it in gear.

Fear can debilitate. I’m not even going to try. I know I will fail.

We have all sorts of irrational fears.  Such as the fear of:

·       Failure. That’s a no-brainer.

·       Success. Yes, sometimes people are afraid they will succeed.  What comes next if I do well at this?

·       Learning something new. You might be surprised how many people this impacts. Such fear seems to increase with age.

·       People expecting more of you. If I do a good job, people will expect more from me next time. This one ties in with the fear of success.

·       Getting too involved. There’s only so much of me to go around. Sometimes, this is a legitimate concern. Sometimes it is an irrational fear. Wait! That one sounds rational to me. For the average person, it might be a legitimate concern. For the Christian, if God has called you to it, he will give you the resources you need so you are not spread too thinly.

Fear is sometimes related to knowledge and our level of risk acceptance.

What does that mean?  There are three main areas of information or knowledge that we deal with in every situation. In just about every decision we make—including and especially those involving an element of fear—these three areas come into play.

There are the Known Knowns. These are things that we know, and we know that we know them. Well, duh!

There are the known unknowns. These are things that we don’t know, but we know that we don’t know this information. For some, this creates an implied task of finding out. We know what to look for—we just need to find the answer.

And then we come to the granddaddy of them all, the Unknown Unknowns, or the UnkUnks, as it is affectionately referred to by those who frequently assess risk.  This is information that we don’t know and we don’t even know—at least yet—that we don’t know it.

You might think that this would be the most debilitating of the three, but typically, only those with a higher risk tolerance than most reach this point.

Most people give in to fear with the known knows or the known unknowns. Few are pioneers who learn as they go, adapt, improvise, and overcome. They navigate the unknown.

These people know that information arrives over time. If you have all of the information, the time for decision-making has come and gone. What you are dealing with has been overcome by events.

That means that people who venture into the unknown unknowns are either crazy or they trust God. Without all of the information at our disposal at one time, we must either act blindly or trust in God.

Without faith, it is impossible to please God. Try it this way: If we had all of the information at our disposal, it would be impossible to please God. Our decisions and choices might be easier, but they would be void of trusting God.

People not debilitated by fear know that we will have to work with imperfect knowledge as long as we walk the earth in these bodies.  They accept that reality and navigate their way forward.

The third servant never got past the known knowns. He knew his master was a hard man with high expectations, so he didn’t even try. He didn’t even assess his own skills. What could he do with this bag of money?

He didn’t even give it a shot. He buried his money in the ground.

He buried it in the ground!

For the student of efficacy, the lifelong learner desiring growth, and the Christian maturing some each day, this statement should be absolutely repulsive.

He buried it in the ground!

To take what God has entrusted to us—money, time, talents, salvation and grace, our children, the gospel, our minds and bodies, position, status, or the things the world calls KSAs (knowledge, skills, and abilities) and bury them in the ground should leave a very bad taste in our mouths.

I can’t think of anyone who has ever tried to label me a financial expert or banking whiz, but I know this: Money buried in the ground does not increase. It accrues no interest. It is invested in nothing, and there will be no return on investment.

The best that you can hope for is that it’s still there when you dig it up.

A one-hour trip to the bank to put the money in a CD would have saved this third servant a lot of worry.

He wouldn’t have to worry about someone finding the buried money.

He wouldn’t have to worry about investing it and managing it. Apparently he didn’t have those skills.

He would know exactly where it was.

Putting this money in the bank should have been a no-brainer. It required little effort and would produce a modest return, but the servant was afraid.

Spencer Johnson and Ken Blanchard wrote a book titled Who Moved My Cheese? It’s about dealing with change. The setting is mice in a maze with cheese, and as you might have guessed, things change.

Change is defined as moving the cheese.  It is a simple but not simplistic approach to dealing with change and used by many in the corporate world, but the heart of the message is very simple. How to deal with change is very, very straightforward.  Here it is.

What would I do if I were not afraid?

The answer to this question is often our best course of action. Let’s stand in the place of the third servant.  Maybe, he doesn’t have any real investing skills. But he can open a bank account. He could do that. It was within his ability.

If he weren’t afraid, the third servant would have at least opened a bank account.

I’m going out on a limb here and put a provocation before you. You haven’t lived until you have recognized, dealt with, and overcome fear. Addressing our fears is a part of our abundant life.

The following quote is from William Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar. It is from Caesar to his wife, who is concerned that her husband is about to be killed. She had a dream or a vision that he would be killed.

A coward dies a thousand times before his death, but the valiant taste of death but once.

If you read Julius Caesar at some point in your life, you might recall that Caesar did get killed. Yes, sometimes, the bad stuff happens.

Sometimes, the worst-case scenario becomes the current situation. Sometimes.

But would fear have prevented his death? I guess he could have never gone out in public again.

If fear governs, don’t expect to ever achieve any great thing. Do not expect a well done good and faithful servant. Expect to live a mediocre life.  Go with the flow. Chill. Don’t stick your neck out.

We have been saved by grace through fear, right?

Your salvation is secure in the grace you received by faith. Fear and faith don’t mix.  

If you live by fear, how will you answer the question I always associate with this parable?

What did you do with what God gave you?

Understand that the answer, I was afraid does not help the situation. Our fear does not exempt us from answering this question.

What did you do with what God gave you?

I am sure that the first two servants dealt with fear as well, but their desire to please their master was so much greater than their fear.

Their desire to please their master was greater than their fear.

So today, I close with this thought. Is my desire to please my Master greater than the fears—rational or irrational—with which I am contending?

Is my desire to please God greater than my fear?

I pray that our desires to please God overwhelm our fears and that we all yield a good return for our Master.

Amen.

 

Wednesday, October 23, 2024

You do not know the day or the hour

 Read Matthew 25:1-13

Let’s go to the end of the parable.

Therefore keep watch, because you do not know the day or the hour.

Much of professional sports involves clock management: knowing when to stay in bounds and run the clock down and when to go for the last shot of the half or the game.

Some sports don’t have a clock. Baseball is an example. It’s not over ‘til it’s over.

I took Heather to an Iowa Cubs game in the late 1980s. The visiting team was putting a whooping on the Cubs. About the seventh inning, Heather asked, can we go now?

Dad, being Dad, said, “It’s not over, ‘til it’s over.” The actual Yogi Berra quote was, “It ain’t over, ‘til it’s over.”

I remember that game. The Cubs came back and tied the game. That took awhile. Then there were the extra innings, probably five or six of them. Just before midnight, the Cubs came back and won it. The two Spences and seven other people celebrated the win.

Dad was tired, but it ain’t over ‘til it’s over.

Other sports, like soccer, have a clock, but you don’t always know when the game ends. I didn’t grow up with soccer, so the concept seems strange, but it is probably the most comparable to our lives of the sports examples that I can muster.

We have calendars and clocks, but we do not know the day or the hour of the Lord's return. We can see the season but not the divine appointment.

So, we can reasonably say we are in the season, so how do we keep watch? What is it that we should be watching for?

Deception, that’s what. As the end grows near, deception will reach new levels.

Only by being vigilant can we endure what is to come. The casual Christianity of this time won’t cut it. We are vulnerable. Life is so easy that our nature will be to trade the truth for the illusion of security.

We have all become accustomed to an easy life. Even with our trials, life is too easy for our own good. Will deception leverage our comfort? Absolutely!

Our desire for comfort makes us vulnerable to deception.

Yes, we deal with situations at work, situations at school, loss of jobs, illness, cancer, death of friends and family, but as far as living for Christ, we have not yet been tested.

We have been pampered. Life is easy in our time. That ease is a luxury that can make us vulnerable to temptation and deceit. Be ready, keep watch, and stay awake.

Do not be deceived.

We don’t know when our Master will return so we must always be ready. In our daily readiness, we increase our resistance and reduce our vulnerability to deceit and deception.

In our daily readiness, we increase our resistance and reduce our vulnerability to deceit and deception.

Keep watch! We don’t know the day or the hour.

What if we did? Would we change something?

We did the One Month to Live challenge several years ago. It asked us what would we do if we knew we only had one month to live.  What would we do? More accurately, what would we do differently?

I hope that we can say we wouldn’t do anything differently. It seems unlikely, but that is how we should live.

The day and the hour of the Lord’s return should not impact how we live this day. We must always live for him.

The day and the hour of the Lord’s return should not impact how we live this day.

That’s through joy and sorrow, for richer or poorer, in sickness and in health… I hope somebody brought the rings and booked the fellowship hall for a reception.

We are the body of Christ and the bride of Christ. Take those as metaphors, not allegories. Some try to separate Christians as the body of Christ from Jews as the bride of Christ. Allegory is a stretch here.

The biblical witness we know tells us we will be one in Christ. The question before us is, would we do anything differently if we knew we would die tomorrow or in two weeks?

I hope not!

But we probably would do something or some things differently. Why? Maybe, we are not ready for the Lord’s return. We cry out Maranatha but are we sure that we are ready?

Is there someone we need to forgive? Why wait for a deadline?

Is there someone with whom we should have shared the gospel? What are we waiting for?

Does that kid across the street need a coat for this winter? Who among us would say that that kid can wait another year unless Jesus is coming before Christmas?

We should live daily as if we only have one or two days left.  That is the nature and disposition of the believer. We do what we know to do, and we do it today.

We are always ready and always vigilant. How do we get and stay that way?

Do we need a checklist? No, but having one can’t hurt.  Every day, we should:

·       Pray..

·       Read our Bibles.

·       Find at least one person to share the love of God that we know in Christ and share the story of salvation that is waiting for them.

·       Help someone less fortunate than ourselves—the least of these our brothers and sisters.

·       Bring up our children in the way they should go.

·       Give thanks to God.

·       Put what God has given us to work now.

·       Be known as a follower of Jesus by our love.

·       Be teachable and seek the judgment of God’s word in our lives.

·       Have ears to hear the Spirit of God that lives within us

Therefore, keep watch, because you do not know the day or the hour.

We need a readiness program. Be ready by putting the words of our Master into practice every day. Putting his words into practice is readiness.

Therefore, keep watch, because you do not know the day or the hour.

Be ready today and every day. Jesus is coming…soon.

Amen.

Got Oil?

 Read Matthew 25:1-13

We know that there is a sorting at the end of the age. We want to be in the group that is told to come and get their inheritance.

We know there is an accounting at the end of the age. We want to hear well done, good and faithful servant.

We know there is a banquet in heaven as the Bridegroom and the Bride are joined in eternal union. We want to be there.

We don’t want to hear you wicked, lazy servant.

We don’t want to hear depart from me you who are cursed into the eternal fire.

We don’t want to hear the words I don’t know you.

I don’t know you!

The disciples wanted to know what life would be like at the end of the age. What was coming?

Jesus responded with a parable about a huge celebration that is to come. He compared it to a wedding banquet. People know weddings. There was feasting and celebration, and it often went on for days. People usually drank a little too much.

It was a big deal. You didn’t want to miss it.

You don’t want to miss it!

The parable uses the wedding as the part of the parable known to people of that time. It was a big deal, not just for the bride and groom, but for the community. It was a big deal.

But sometimes, there was waiting. After the groom had prepared a place for the bride and groom to begin their new lives, he would go and claim his bride. People knew when he went to claim her and the anticipation began. There was waiting.

How long that waiting period was might vary and was not published weeks or months in advance.

It didn’t pop up on your Google Calendar. There was no app to remind you. You waited.

There was waiting. Ten young maidens came and waited along the expected path of the groom and his bride. All brought lamps.

Only five of these young ladies brought a container of oil, and only five were ready if this waiting took a while.

It did.

Everyone fell asleep. When the clamor of the arrival woke them, five found that they were out of oil. Five trimmed their lamps, added oil, and were ready for the wedding party's arrival.

Five were ready. They entered the banquet and joined the celebration.

The first five sent the second five to get their own oil. It might sound harsh, but some things you have to get on your own.

So, is the oil our discipleship or our salvation? I think we see it mainly framed as our salvation here.  We are ready for Christ’s return because we have received the gift of salvation. Is that it?

We repented and professed. We trusted, and we continue to trust, that the promises of our Lord are true. We wait faithfully upon the Lord.

We are prepared to wait faithfully upon the Lord.

The other two parables in this chapter are more about living out our salvation. This one is about repentance, belief, and faith that our Master will come and claim us.

Do we have oil?

If we have repented, professed with our mouth that Jesus is Lord, and believe that God raised him from the dead, then we have oil. Our lamps are full. Our oil can is full. We are ready.

Our place in this celebration of the ages has been reserved.

If we take this parable as stand-alone instruction, we might never learn discipleship. We would know the gift that came in Jesus's blood, but we would have no response to it.

But as you have been reminded so many times, we are to take the full biblical witness and apply it to our lives as we respond to this gift of grace received in faith. There is no cherry-picking.

If we live by this parable alone, we cry out Maranatha daily. Come, Lord Jesus, come. Get me out of this place!

We who are not content just to be saved, but must somehow respond to this incredible gift, move on to discipleship.

We know that discipleship is a necessary response from anyone who has repented and received the gift of salvation. It is reflexive. It is our first nature. It is our fruit and the evidence of our salvation.

Because our oil won’t run out, we are ready to respond to our Master's call to put his words into practice.

Your salvation is assured. You have oil enough.

Your response calls you to be known as a disciple of Jesus by your love.

We can sing Blessed Assurance. We are saved. We have oil.

We can anticipate the Lord's coming and the celebration that will follow, but for now, our oil should be evident in our lives.

Our oil should be evidenced in our lives.

Let us live as people who know that tomorrow is not promised but eternity is.

Let us live as people who know they will never hear these words from the Lord.

I don’t know you!

Live as people who know that tomorrow is not promised but eternity is.

Amen.

Wednesday, October 16, 2024

The Sheep and the Goats: Simple Sorting

 Read Matthew 25:31-46

The disciples have been with Jesus for a while. They are convinced that he is the long-awaited Messiah.  They even buy into some of his cut-through-the-red tape, straight-to-the-heart, turn-the-world right-side-up teachings.

Some of the teachings and courses of action chosen by the Lord still did not make sense, but the Spirit of God had not come upon them yet.

But there was this sense of wondering what was to come. The Messiah is right here, but how does all of this wrap up? What is it going to be like at the end of the age?

Matthew 25 contains three parables. One is about being ready for his return. One is about giving an account of what we did with what God gave us. And one deals with the administration of love and justice at the end of the age.

The first parable begins with at that time. What time? The end of the age.

The next parable begins with the word again. What does that mean? Here is another parable about the end of the age.

This third parable, however, begins with the King coming in glory—the Son of Man coming in his glory. He will be on his throne and surrounded by angels, the crescendo of the end of the age.

It’s not going to be like a man or like ten virgins. It’s when the Son of Man comes in his glory. This is first-person stuff.

What happens?

There is sorting. Jesus compares it to sorting sheep and goats. The people understood sorting animals. This was very much an agrarian society. Hence, there are other shepherd references in the gospels, as well as some of our favorite Psalms.

But there is a sorting here. Understand that sheep are not inherently good, and goats are evil by nature. But there will be a sorting. Mind you, the sheep get the better role here, but nobody left from this teaching and liquidated their holdings in goats.

Consider the sorting in this context: At the end of the age, God will sort the righteous from the wicked as easily as a shepherd separates sheep from goats.

Don’t be allegorical and turn the goat into an evil creature. There will be a separation—a matter requiring no deliberation by the Lord—by the King.

So, salvation is by our deeds, then, right?

No.

But look at the next part about helping the least of these.

Those are about our fruit.  Righteous or wicked? How we got to righteousness remains the same. It is the blood of the unblemished Lamb who we know as Jesus and, in this parable, now stands in judgment of the world.

What we see in the last half of the parable is why this is a simple sorting—as easy as a shepherd sorting sheep and goats.

Our belief in Jesus will be so evident to God by our fruit.

We are supposed to discern the false teachers from the genuine ones by their fruit. We are practicing that. God doesn’t need practice.

It will be a simple righteous or wicked separation, and there will be no appeal. The evidence will be self-evident.

Do you need a litmus test for your belief, your faith? Do we live what we say we believe?

Do we put our Master’s words into practice? We don’t do them for show. God knows our hearts.

We do them because God’s nature has become our nature in this New Creature we have become.

There will be a sorting. Regardless of what we wrestle with, God will have no dissonance during Judgment time. For all the speculation of saints and sinners, God will be certain who goes where.

I trust that everyone here is on their way to claiming an inheritance. If you have never really surrendered your life to the Lord Jesus Christ, don’t end this day in that condition.

When Jesus is our Lord, there will be evidence. That evidence is clear and convincing in how we treat those who might be regarded as the least of these our brothers and sisters.

If you were accused of being a Christian, would there be enough evidence to convict you?

Know that the evidence will be self-evident in how we treat the least of these our brothers and sisters.

Amen.

 

The Least of These

 Read Matthew 25:31-46

Read Isaiah 58

The disciples have been with Jesus for a while. They are convinced that he is the long-awaited Messiah.  They even buy into some of his cut-through-the-red tape, straight-to-the-heart, turn-the-world right-side-up teachings.

Some still were not making sense, but the Spirit of God had not come upon them yet.

But there was this sense of wondering. What is to come? The Messiah is right here, but how does all of this wrap up?  What is it going to be like at the end of the age?

Matthew 25 contains three parables. One is about being ready for his return. One is about giving an account of what we did with what God gave us. And one deals with the administration of love and justice at the end of the age.

The first parable begins with at that time. What time? The end of the age.

The next parable begins with the word again. What does that mean? Here is another parable about the end of the age.

This third parable, however, begins with Jesus's coming in glory. He will be on his throne and surrounded by angels, the crescendo of the end of the age.

It’s not going to be like a certain man or like ten virgins. It’s when the Son of Man comes in his glory. This is first-person stuff.

What happens?

There is a sorting. Jesus compares it to sorting sheep and goats. The people understood sorting animals. This was very much an agrarian society. Hence, other shepherd references in the gospels as well as some of our favorite Psalms.

But there is a sorting here. Understand that sheep are not inherently good, and goats are evil by nature. But there will be a sorting. Mind you, the sheep get the better role here, but nobody left from this teaching and liquidated their holdings in goats.

Remember, a parable lays in parallel the things of this world that people know firsthand with things or concepts or practices in the Kingdom of God. The people understood sorting of animals.

Let’s not try to make the parable allegorical; instead, let’s examine how this sorting is applied to people.

To some—those on his right—Jesus said, come and get your blessings. They have been waiting for you for a long time.

Those on his right ask what did they do to deserve this? Jesus said:

For I was hungry and you gave me something to eat, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink, I was a stranger and you invited me in, I needed clothes and you clothed me, I was sick and you looked after me, I was in prison and you came to visit me.

Those labeled righteous were thinking, "When did we do any of that?" I might be in the wrong line.

Jesus told them:

The King will reply, ‘Truly I tell you, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did for me.’

There is a song by Everlast called What It’s Like. We will not play it on Sunday morning or even during evening Bible study. Its language is too raw.

Its message cuts to the quick about our human nature but leaves out God as the ultimate remedy. When we see a person in difficult situations, our nature is to condemn them. Sometimes, we scorn them. Sometimes, we just ignore them. We think that we let them off easy by not hearing what I had to say about them and what they are doing.

It hits home for our human nature.

The song's message is basically until we walk a mile in their shoes, we don’t know what it’s like.

It’s not the Joe South version from 50 years ago.

Walk a mile in my shoes

Walk a mile in my shoes

Hey, before you abuse

Criticize and accuse

Walk a mile in my shoes

But some have eyes to see Jesus in people with little in the world. These people help, knowing, “They definitely cannot pay me back.”

But some see, some help, and some deliver compassion and mercy to the least of these, our brothers and sisters.  This is our fruit.

Jesus sees them as those who have lived in his right standing. These acts of compassion do not make us right with God, but they are what God expects of us for being made right with him. These acts are our fruit.

The righteous did this without even thinking about it. Their acts of mercy, compassion, and generosity were no longer second nature. They were first nature, and they did them reflexively.

How can you tell if compassion, generosity, and mercy are your first nature? Do you remember every time that you helped someone?  If you do, it’s still your second nature.

Some who proclaim Jesus is Lord still live with their first nature—human nature. They don’t have eyes to see the least of these brothers and sisters with mercy and compassion. Often, we are judgmental and condemning.

Why? If your human nature governs, condemning is much easier than understanding. To speak the truth in love as Paul directs, we who believe in Jesus Christ and follow him as disciples—must be able to have real conversations even with people we would rather not talk with at all.

We who seek to put the words of our Master into practice share the truth, but we also seek to understand the plight of those with whom we speak.  We have real conversations with people that many don’t even see.

The god of this age—that’s Satan—has blinded unbelievers to the truth. We are believers, and we are not blind.  We must not live as if we are blind. We should have eyes to see Jesus in the person while we truthfully work with the situation.

Those chastised here for not even seeing those whom they should have helped are not delivered to the lost but to us. It is to believers. You have heard this message before. Wake Up! Pay Attention!

The blind cannot see what believers can. We expect to have eyes to see as we live out our salvation. We go into the world with eyes to see the least of these.

But, sometimes, I feel like I should be in line with the goats. That is your old nature wrestling with the new creature that you are in Christ. If you stop seeing Jesus in the least of these around you, your old self is winning in your battle of discipleship.

When you see the least of these brothers and sisters, help them, and then forget about it as easily as you forgot the last time you brushed your teeth or changed the filter on your heater, you might just be winning the battle with the old self.

This parable cautions both the lifetime believer and the new believer never to become callous when we can help another person. That doesn’t mean we open the vault of never-ending money that every church keeps in the secretary’s office.

Throwing money at people is relatively easy and often transactional. Helping people when you can’t just throw money at them is tough.

Getting to know people who don’t fit in the comfort zone of your people—whatever that looks like—is tough. It’s messy.

But those factors do not excuse us from having eyes to see and putting the words of our Master into practice.

Good general concepts there, Tom. How about something specific?

Let’s talk about illegal immigrants. I want everyone entering this country to use the door and abide by the laws that govern those procedures. I would like them to come to America and want to be Americans. That’s me and my thinking.

But that’s not our situation in 2024.  So Christian, what do you do if you encounter a person who is not here legally but is hungry?

Feed him or her or them. Share the good news of life in Jesus Christ with them. It’s that simple.

If they don’t have any clothing, then find them some. It’s not that hard. One of the things that I love about this congregation and the community of believers here in western Oklahoma is that our church building does not have room to store many clothes.

That said, if someone has a need for clothing, I can generally post ages and sizes online, and people respond. We understand a lot about the counsel here.

If we had a room set aside for clothing, people would most likely drop off what they didn’t want any more. Not having a room lets us be purposeful in meeting a specific need, plus we have thrift stores in three surrounding cities.

We try to help them if they are sick. If they need to use the shower in our church building, who among you would say no?

We are not endorsing one immigration policy over another. We are helping the least of these our brothers and sisters.

I have helped families with food and sometimes fuel or a small bill when the father was present but did not have a full-time job. When I mentioned going to use the computers at the state employment office, they said they couldn’t. I realized the situation.

I helped some but also counseled the family that they wouldn’t really have peace until the legality of Dad’s presence in this country was resolved. Immigration is messy and getting messier, but compassion doesn’t care how messy the situation is.

But some grow cold and callous. Working with the least of these brothers and sisters is a messy business. Unless we can enter into the messiness of those who need to see and feel God’s love, we can never truly speak the truth in a spirit of love to them.

Remember, speaking the truth in love is more a measure of our maturity as believers than an essential element of conversational Christianity. We have to have real conversations with people that our human nature doesn’t even want to talk with.

If we only help those who might be able to help us back, we are no different from the godless people of the world.

Will we have eyes to see, and will we be the hands that deliver God's love? Or are our comfort zones just too comfortable?

Know with certainty that there will be a sorting at the end of the age. I want to be in the line where I get a well-done, good, and faithful servant and the one where I am told to receive the inheritance that’s been waiting on me longer than I can imagine.

There is nothing we can do to earn our salvation, but what we do in response to this fantastic gift is mostly in our ballpark. That includes compassion and love for people who don’t fit well into our circles, those on society's fringes, for the least of these.

God is always with us, including in our discipleship work, but we have things we have been given to do. Among those things are to be loving, kind, merciful, and generous with the least of these, our brothers and sisters.

Christians, believers, disciples, and children of God—know with certainty that we must have eyes to see and the actions that help the least of these among us if we want to yield to the Potter who is shaping our hearts like his.

Helping the least of these our brothers and sisters and not remembering each instance is a sign of our Christian maturity.  There are good things in store for us when we live in the right standing that Jesus gave us.

Helping the least of these is a win-win. It benefits them and is a litmus test for our growth in God’s grace.

Have eyes to see and the will to act when we come upon the least of these brothers and sisters.

Amen.