Luke 13:22-30
Jesus went on teaching from town to village, village
to town, but keeping on a steady course toward Jerusalem. 23 A bystander said,
"Master, will only a few be saved?" He said, 24 "Whether few or
many is none of your business. Put your mind on your life with God. The way to
life--to God!--is vigorous and requires your total attention. A lot of you are
going to assume that you'll sit down to God's salvation banquet just because
you've been hanging around the neighbourhood all your lives. 25 Well, one day
you're going to be banging on the door, wanting to get in, but you'll find the
door locked and the Master saying, 'Sorry, you're not on my guest list.' 26
"You'll protest, 'But we've known you all our lives!' 27 only to be
interrupted with his abrupt, 'Your kind of knowing can hardly be called
knowing. You don't know the first thing about me.' 28 "That's when you'll
find yourselves out in the cold, strangers to grace. You'll watch Abraham,
Isaac, Jacob, and all the prophets march into God's kingdom. 29 You'll watch
outsiders stream in from east, west, north, and south and sit down at the table
of God's kingdom. And all the time you'll be outside looking in--and wondering what
happened. 30 This is the Great Reversal: the last in line put at the head of
the line, and the so-called first ending up last.
Food for thought
Jesus' answer to the man's question must have come as
a shock. With it Jesus declared that entry to the kingdom cannot be taken for
granted; it is the result and the reward of a struggle. "Keep on striving
to enter," he said, the way to life, to God, to success, to victory, is a
struggle. A bystander had said, "Master, will only a few be saved?"
Jesus told this man to mind his own business: “Do your best to go in through
the narrow door; because many people will surely try to go in but will not be
able.
It is easy to look at some people as hell bound and
ourselves as heaven bound. Sometimes we think that, once we have made a
commitment of ourselves to Jesus Christ, we have reached the end of the road
and can, as it were, sit back as if we had achieved our goal. There is no such
finality in the Christian life. We must ever be going forward or else we go backward.
Please note the defense of these people was, "We
ate and drank in your presence, and you taught in our streets." There are
those who think that just because they are members of a Church all is well.
They differentiate between themselves and the rest. But belonging to some
church is not all; going to mass is not all; that is no reason for sitting back
content that all is well. Rather, belonging to a church, going to mass should
inspire us to be and do more; to struggle to improve what is good to being
great.
As Jim Collins says, “Good is the enemy of great. And
that is one of the key reasons why we have so little that becomes great. We
don't have great schools, principally because we have good schools. We don't
have great government, principally because we have good government. Few people
attain great lives, in large part because it is just so easy to settle for a
good life.”
Jesus is urging and cautioning us not to take
salvation for granted; not to settle for the good, but for the great. He is urging
us to keep on struggling; keep on going; keep on walking, and working, and
loving, and forgiving, and hoping, and believing. Let us all do like Jesus did:
"He went on teaching from town to village, village to town, but keeping on
a steady course toward Jerusalem."
Matthew 9:35
And Jesus went throughout all the cities and villages,
teaching in their synagogues and proclaiming the gospel of the kingdom and
healing every disease and every affliction.
Acts 10:38
Jesus went about doing good and healing all who were
oppressed by the devil, for God was with him.
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