APOLOGIA
By Hendrik
van der Breggen
The Carillon, December 12,
2013
Thinking about the sheep and the goats
In the New
Testament, in Matthew 25:31-46, Jesus sets out the parable of the sheep and the
goats. In the story it’s judgment time, and Jesus divides people into two
groups: those who will inherit God’s kingdom (the sheep) and those who will be
sent into the eternal fire (the goats).
It’s a
sobering story. Over the years I’ve struggled with what the story means when
the larger Gospel message of the New Testament is also taken into account.
Let’s review the story, and then I’ll share what I’ve come to believe.
Jesus gives
the following reason for inviting the sheep into His kingdom: “For I was hungry
and you gave me [1] something to eat, I was thirsty and you gave me [2]
something to drink, I was a [3] stranger and you invited me in, I needed
clothes and you [4] clothed me, I was [5] sick and you looked after me, I was
in [6] prison, and you came to visit me.” (Note: I have added the numbers, and
I will refer to them below.)
Jesus explains
to the sheep, “Whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers of mine,
you did for me.”
Jesus
disinherits the goats (and calls them “cursed”) for the following reason: “I
was hungry and you gave me nothing to eat, I was thirsty and you gave me
nothing to drink, I was a stranger and you did not invite me in, I needed
clothes and you did not clothe me, I was sick and in prison and you did not
look after me.”
Jesus
explains to the goats, “Whatever you did not do for one of the least of these,
you did not do for me.”
Clearly, Jesus
is concerned about the well-being of “the least of these,” human beings made in
the image of God yet who are hungry, thirsty, lonely, unclothed, ill, or
imprisoned—i.e., the poor and needy.
Clearly, too,
Jesus is calling us to care for (and speak up for) the poor and needy. (And to
this calling, which some describe as “social justice,” I say: Amen!)
The poor and
needy include a lot of people: orphans, the disabled, the abused, unborn
children, the struggling single parent, widows, the elderly, the sick, the
hungry, the refugee, the enslaved and trafficked, typhoon and tsunami victims,
victims of totalitarian governments, the persecuted, the homeless, the lonely,
the depressed, the sexually confused—the list is long. There is much work to
do.
But, I have
discovered, if we take the whole counsel of Scripture to bear on the sheep and
the goats story, Jesus is calling us to do even
more.
Jesus is also
calling us to point people to Him. (This is where the numbers I added in the
above verse should help.)
We are to introduce
people to Jesus, i.e., the Holy One, who is (1) the Bread of Life, (2) the
Living Water, (3) the Friend closer than a brother, (4) the Robe of
Righteousness, (5) the Great Physician, and (6) the Bondage Breaker. (Yes, please
check your Bible here to see whether or not what I’m asserting corresponds to
Scripture.)
To be sure,
in introducing people to Jesus we are called to care for the physical and
social needs of others, which is hugely important. But, even more importantly,
we are also called to care for their spiritual
needs: we are to communicate a saving knowledge of Jesus Christ. (This
communication is probably done best after
we’ve met the physical and social needs of the least of these.)
How do we
communicate a saving knowledge of Jesus Christ? By sharing the message of the
Gospel.
The Gospel,
stated succinctly in John 3:16, is this: “For God so loved the world that he
gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish [i.e.,
shall not be a goat] but have eternal life [i.e., be a sheep].”
(Note: Here
“belief” is intellectual assent to and personal trust in a person, coupled with
submission to his will, knowledge of which is informed by the communicated
expectations of him who is the object of the intellectual assent and trust. In
other words, the propositional content of our belief is important because it tells
us how we should appropriately act on our faith plus relate to the person in
whom we claim to trust—and such content should be consistent with the rest of
the revealed will of God in Scripture.)
Jesus is the
Son of God (i.e., God in the flesh) who suffered and died a horrible death on a
Roman cross to forgive us our sins, a forgiveness we are invited to accept by
faith; and Jesus subsequently resurrected physically, which serves as a sign so
we can believe that Jesus is who he claimed to be and that his message of
forgiveness is true—and thus that we have a real hope for eternal, resurrected
life.
Significantly,
the primacy of the Gospel message of reconciliation between God and humans
relative to Jesus’ call to care for the poor and needy makes sense when we
notice that Jesus elsewhere says that the greatest
command is to love God with all of one’s heart and mind, and the second greatest command is to love
others (Matthew 22:37-39).
The primacy
of the Gospel also makes sense when we look at the Apostle Paul’s defence of
his ministry: “We demolish arguments and every pretension that sets itself up
against the knowledge of God [revealed in Christ], and we take captive every
thought to make it obedient to Christ” (2 Corinthians 10:5). Moreover, the
primacy of the Gospel makes sense when we notice that in the early church (in
Acts 6:1-7) looking after the poor and needy is delegated to a ministry of the
church so that the preaching of the Gospel is not hindered.
Significantly,
and seemingly paradoxically, the primacy of the Gospel has positive
consequences for the poor and needy.
On a personal
note, I have found that when I came to believe the Gospel, I began to strive to
love Jesus with all my heart and mind and strength, and as a result I found
myself more motivated to care for others than when I didn’t follow Jesus. Knowing
that Jesus is Lord and that he is concerned for the poor and needy, coupled
with my submission to his will (and coupled with the help of the Holy Spirit), transformed
me to be concerned for the poor and needy, too.
On a public
note, I am not alone in my experience of the Gospel. Two weeks ago in a sermon
at Southland Church, Pastor Kris Duerksen mentioned similar experiences of
Gospel transformation by others in Southland’s Four Winds Ministry (see, for
starters, the video “Four Winds Car Ministry Testimony", December 4, 2013,
available online at mysouthland.com).
Moreover, Canadian
Justice Dallas Miller argues that “the historical and contemporary data show
that culturally effective human rights movements are most often the result of
Judeo-Christian principles” and that “the various secular rationales for human
rights (such as utilitarianism, neo-Kantian principles and Marxism) all fail to
transform the selfish human orientations that fuel abuses.” (These words are
from philosopher Angus Menuge who is editor of the book Legitimizing Human Rights [Ashgate 2013]; Menuge is describing
Justice Miller’s contribution to the book, i.e., Miller’s essay “The Motivation
to Protect and Advance Human Rights.”)
It turns out
that, via the power of the Holy Spirit, the Gospel has a “snowball” effect. Knowledge
of the truth of the Gospel deeply transforms people to care for other people,
so that those who have been cared for and have received the message of the
Gospel are in turn transformed by the Gospel and go on to care for others, and
so on.
In addition,
as a Christian transformed by the Gospel, I’ve found that my love for others
isn’t a mere subjective thing (which changes with my moods); rather, it’s got
an abiding moral structure when aligned with the moral principles revealed in
Scripture by God (who remains the same yesterday, today, and forever).
All this to
say: During the festive, holiday season may we care for the least of these and may we keep our hearts and minds
centered, first and foremost, on the greatest of all.
Merry
Christmas—and don’t be a goat!
(Hendrik van der Breggen, PhD, is associate
professor of philosophy at Providence University College. The views in this column do not always reflect the views of Providence.)
Related reading: "Thinking about Internet memes: belief, behaviour, love"
Related reading: "Thinking about Internet memes: belief, behaviour, love"
2 comments:
For further thought: Johnnie Moore's "The Good of Believing in God".
For further thought: John Stonestreet's "The Truth about Missionaries".
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