Parable of the Wise and Foolish Virgins – ca. 1616 – Hieronymus Francken (II) (1578–1623)
The five foolish virgins (Matthew 25:1-13) and the servant with one talent (Matthew 25:14-30) shared a common end: They were shut out.
The parables also have a common thread within them: The ones who were shut out were presumably members in good standing within their respective households.
If I could only pick one thing from each parable that would have changed everything for the foolish ones, it would be these:
- The foolish virgins should have been prepared – Christians should be living both like Christ is returning today and like he will be waiting until tomorrow.
- The servant with one talent didn’t act on what he knew about the master – Christians know what God expects from us, yet many do not deliver.
The combination of these lessons gives us a basic sketch of proper Christian living:
- We are to prepare ourselves for Christ’s return at any given moment
- We should be prepared to sustain that readiness for a lifetime
- We will need to have prepared a proper settlement of our accounts on that day
What can you do to improve your readiness today?
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Previously, I made a big deal over Matthew 24:4 and Jesus’ warning not us to be led astray.
Matthew 24:36-44 is a great passage to completely make my point. Many are teaching that we will know through some apocalyptic signs that Christ is on his way back. In this passage, Jesus sets a few things straight about the judgment:
- Only God himself knows the day it will happen (Matthew 24:36)
- We will carry on in our lives until the instant it happens (Matthew 24:39)
- We are warned to be ever watchful (or awake) (Matthew 24:42)
- It’s as unreasonable to think we can guess the day as it is to expect a thief in our house tonight (Matthew 24:43)
One of Satan’s best tools to trick Christians out of their salvation is to allow them to think they have plenty of time. People have a tendency to believe this lie of having all the time we need, until suddenly, they don’t.
Each additional day we have is a gift. What is one way you can use today a little better?
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1. Read 2. Study 3. Repeat
A quick attempt to find it through a search on Google has come up empty, so maybe I am the first to notice the irony of Matthew 24:4. Matthew 24 is quite a difficult passage describing the destruction of Jerusalem and Christ’s return. As I do my study on it and consult the commentaries I have at my disposal, Matthew 24:4 keeps jumping out at me:
(Take heed) See that no one (no man) leads you astray. – ESV (ASV)
Take heed that no man (no one) deceive you. – KJV (NKJV)
There are as many varied explanations of Matthew 24 as there are commentaries apparently. Which the one is the one that will not lead me astray?
Put the commentaries down because the key to understanding a passage like Matthew 24 is lots of Bible study. There is no way to properly understand a difficult passage without solid grounding in the easier to understand portions of the Bible. People get away with diverse teaching of the Scriptures because in general, we are not reading and studying our Bibles like we should. We are not catching them in the act!
Reading and studying.
Did you see the emphasis? The word “and” is in bold, italics and underline.
Daily devotional reading is an excellent habit and a required part of developing our Bible knowledge. The “study” part is even more important to the development of a full understanding. When we take the time to answer the who, what, when, where, and why of a passage, we begin the process of building a well-grounded foundation for understanding the Bible.
What works as a complete Bible program for me looks something like this:
- Daily reading schedule – Dedicate a certain amount of time for a straight reading of the text
- Reflection on what was read – I choose to write about what I have read each day in this blog, you might choose to do a word study, or write a journal entry, or discuss with a family member.
- Formal Bible study attendance – as in … go to your congregation’s offerings at every opportunity
- Analyze what was taught in sermons and Bible classes – Don’t take another solely at his word.
It is definitely a challenge to work out the routine and the details. The main thing I tell others to do is to just get started.
What is one thing you can add to your Bible study habits to take yourself to the next level?
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An etching by Jan Luyken illustrating Matthew 22:11-14 in the Bowyer Bible, Bolton, England.
It has become fashionable across Christianity to deemphasize strict obedience to the God’s word. Many emphasize just the aspects that they like and skip over the rest. Those who try to follow and teach what the Bible teaches are often called “legalists.” Ironically, the “gospel of love” they teach omits that part where Jesus said to keep his commandments if you really love him. (John 14:15) Admittedly, it is not hard to understand why this position sells so easily.
First, I respond to that position by saying that being obedient is not the same as being a legalist.
Second, I respond to the position by saying we should look at what Jesus taught. The Parable of the Wedding Feast is a great place to study this. (Matthew 22:1-14)
We’ll pick up the illustration where the invitation has been opened to all who would come and the king arrives. (Matthew 22:11) He takes a look at everyone who has “accepted” the invitation, but finds one who is unprepared to be there. The guest is asked to account for this infraction and he is stunned to silence. (Matthew 22:12)
Why was he silent?
- He knew he had insulted the occasion
- He knew he had no excuse
- He couldn’t say he never had a chance
Sadly, many that have convinced themselves that it is ok to “come as they are” will find themselves in the same situation as this guest. In the same way that the expectation is for the guest to have known better, so it is for us at the judgment. Those not properly attired in obedience will be cast out.
What are some ways we can be better prepared for when the King returns?
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Jesus heals two blind men – 19th century – Julius Schnorr
I have read about an experiment where a bunch of bananas are hung at the top of a pole in a monkey cage. When the monkeys tried to climb up to get the bananas, they would get squirted with a fire hose until they were knocked off the pole. Eventually, the monkeys would quit trying to get the bananas.
The interesting thing happened when a new monkey was put in the cage and knew nothing about the water. The original monkeys would tackle him to keep him from climbing up the pole. Eventually, they trained that monkey to attack other new monkeys – and so on.
The occasion of Jesus healing the two blind men in Matthew 20:29-34 makes me think of that experiment. The experiment was used to illustrate the power of the crowd. If we let the crowd tell us what is possible, rather than go with what we know about ourselves, we will never be anything but what the crowd wants us to be.
I don’t know why the crowd was telling the blind men to be quiet. Maybe they were a crowd of Pharisees that were jealous. Maybe they were just the kind of people that want the unfortunate and homeless to stay out of sight. Either way, those blind men did not allow the crowd to tell them how to act.
How is it that a couple of blind men knew that Jesus was the Son of David? They were so sure about who he was and what he had done that …
- they didn’t let a crowd of people with some other agenda get in their way
- they didn’t make excuses about their disability
- they were very specific in their request from Jesus
The blind men saw more that day than all the Pharisees put together – whose spiritual blindness kept them from the rewards that God promised.
The crowd wants us to remain like them. Stay in the dark. Stay ordinary. Depend on them.
Jesus wants us to be like him. Shine your light. Rise above. Depend on God.
What do you usually choose when faced with the choice of turning to God or going with the crowd?
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February 7, 2014
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