Daily Devotion by Ray Stedman

A DAILY DEVOTION FOR MAY 17TH​

The Mysterious Harvest​


READ THE SCRIPTURE: MATTHEW 13:24-30
Jesus told them another parable: The kingdom of heaven is like a man who sowed good seed in his field. But while everyone was sleeping, his enemy came and sowed weeds among the wheat, and went away. When the wheat sprouted and formed heads, then the weeds also appeared.
Matthew 13:24-26

This too is a parable of sowing. But the sowing is different from that in the parable of the sower. There, the seed was the Word of God. But in this parable the seed is not the Word of God; it is what Jesus calls down in verse 37, people of the kingdom. These folks are put where God wants them — in the world. Wherever you are, as a child of God, you have been put there by the Lord Jesus. It is so important to understand that he has sown you and put you where you are. The field is the world. In that world of humanity the Lord Jesus has scattered his own.

Now into that same field there came an enemy. He came while men were sleeping, while unaware of what was happening. Out of sheer malice and hatred he sowed a crop of his own which some translations call weeds. Literally it is the plant which today is called darnel, a poisonous weed which looks very much like wheat. In fact, when it first begins to grow even an expert cannot distinguish it from wheat. But as it grows it begins to change, and by the harvest, even a child can tell it is not wheat. This is the figure that our Lord employs. These weeds too are persons that are sown. Jesus calls them people of the evil one
(verse 38).

Jesus implies that his servants will become troubled by the sight of these weeds in the field, because they will be growing among the wheat. The servants asked him, Do you want us to go and pull them up? (verse 28) Our Lord said that these weeds would be sown not just in the world in general, but among the wheat, in the church. So the wheat are true believers, and the tares are those who appear to be true believers but are false, who grow up right within the church.

Let both grow together until the harvest (verse 29). That is our Lord's word. It is amazing how many Christians ignore those words of Jesus and are constantly trying to purify the church. We see people go off and start their own church, and it is going to be a pure church. There will be no heresy in it. Groups splinter off and call themselves the True Church, the One Way. They say they have the truth and no one else does. But you cannot separate evil from the church. It is going to be there in some form.

This does not mean that we are not to expose it and meet it positively with the teaching of the truth. We are. Nor do we allow those who exhibit clear forms of error to take leadership within the church. But what our Lord wants us to understand is that no human effort is going to eliminate error from the church. Let them both grow together until the harvest. That is, I've got my own plan for handling this and nothing you can do is going to eliminate the problem. Keep your message positive, preach the word, teach the truth, deal with it in your own hearts, exclude it from leadership, yes, but don't try to eliminate them. Don't launch a crusade only for the purpose of wiping out evil or error, particularly religious error, because you won't succeed.

Lord, I pray that I may be person of the kingdom today, a teacher of truth, helping people out of darkness. For the glory of the gospel is that even those who are people of the evil one can be changed into people of the kingdom.

Life Application​

Am I too eager to weed out the tares sown among the wheat?

Daily Devotion © 2024 by Ray Stedman Ministries.
 

A DAILY DEVOTION FOR MAY 17TH​

The Mysterious Harvest​


READ THE SCRIPTURE: MATTHEW 13:24-30


This too is a parable of sowing. But the sowing is different from that in the parable of the sower. There, the seed was the Word of God. But in this parable the seed is not the Word of God; it is what Jesus calls down in verse 37, people of the kingdom. These folks are put where God wants them — in the world. Wherever you are, as a child of God, you have been put there by the Lord Jesus. It is so important to understand that he has sown you and put you where you are. The field is the world. In that world of humanity the Lord Jesus has scattered his own.

Now into that same field there came an enemy. He came while men were sleeping, while unaware of what was happening. Out of sheer malice and hatred he sowed a crop of his own which some translations call weeds. Literally it is the plant which today is called darnel, a poisonous weed which looks very much like wheat. In fact, when it first begins to grow even an expert cannot distinguish it from wheat. But as it grows it begins to change, and by the harvest, even a child can tell it is not wheat. This is the figure that our Lord employs. These weeds too are persons that are sown. Jesus calls them people of the evil one
(verse 38).

Jesus implies that his servants will become troubled by the sight of these weeds in the field, because they will be growing among the wheat. The servants asked him, Do you want us to go and pull them up? (verse 28) Our Lord said that these weeds would be sown not just in the world in general, but among the wheat, in the church. So the wheat are true believers, and the tares are those who appear to be true believers but are false, who grow up right within the church.

Let both grow together until the harvest (verse 29). That is our Lord's word. It is amazing how many Christians ignore those words of Jesus and are constantly trying to purify the church. We see people go off and start their own church, and it is going to be a pure church. There will be no heresy in it. Groups splinter off and call themselves the True Church, the One Way. They say they have the truth and no one else does. But you cannot separate evil from the church. It is going to be there in some form.

This does not mean that we are not to expose it and meet it positively with the teaching of the truth. We are. Nor do we allow those who exhibit clear forms of error to take leadership within the church. But what our Lord wants us to understand is that no human effort is going to eliminate error from the church. Let them both grow together until the harvest. That is, I've got my own plan for handling this and nothing you can do is going to eliminate the problem. Keep your message positive, preach the word, teach the truth, deal with it in your own hearts, exclude it from leadership, yes, but don't try to eliminate them. Don't launch a crusade only for the purpose of wiping out evil or error, particularly religious error, because you won't succeed.


Life Application​

Am I too eager to weed out the tares sown among the wheat?

Daily Devotion © 2024 by Ray Stedman Ministries.
Powerful-full of dunamis. Does he have anything on the parable of the ten virgins? Five wise-five foolish?
 

A DAILY DEVOTION FOR MAY 18TH​

The Mustard Seed​


READ THE SCRIPTURE: MATTHEW 13:31-35
He told them another parable: The kingdom of heaven is like a mustard seed, which a man took and planted in his field. Though it is the smallest of all seeds, yet when it grows, it is the largest of garden plants and becomes a tree, so that the birds come and perch in its branches.
Matthew 13:31-32

Our Lord employed here a symbol which he expected these people to understand. Mustard is a peculiar kind of seed, with a pungency. It is biting, irritating, disturbing. So our Lord is using a very apt symbol by which he indicates that the message of the kingdom of God is intended to be arousing, irritating, disturbing, among men. Turned loose, it will excite and stir up a whole community, either negatively or positively.

Our Lord calls particular attention to another property of mustard. It is the smallest of all seeds. If you have seen a mustard seed you know that it is small, but not the smallest of seeds. Many have been disturbed by this, as though our Lord was mistaken. But a common proverb used the mustard seed as a symbol of smallness or insignificance — small as a mustard seed, it said. Our Lord employs the mustard seed in this way, proverbially. He is stressing the apparent insignificance of the gospel. It does not look or sound like much. You proclaim, Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and you will be saved. That does not sound very impressive to many people. It is so simple that you can teach it to children. So the world is not very impressed with it. But let someone actually believe it, and see what happens. Let them really trust Christ and invite him into their life and it is revolutionary.

Notice also that this tree has many great branches, in which birds make their nests. Here in the parables in Matthew 13 our Lord tells us what the birds mean. In the first parable he said that when the seed of the word falls on a hardened heart, the birds, representing the evil one, come and snatch it away. If the Lord had not said that, we might not have read this in that way.

This parable is sometimes seen as a picture of the gospel going out to all the world, growing into an impressive church, filled with song birds. But that is opposite to how our Lord uses them. These are not song birds; they are vultures and buzzards, apt symbols of evil persons and evil ideas which make their home in God's church. This is demonstrated in our day by leaders of the church who bring a flood of evil concepts which have ruined the hearts and minds of people.

Father, Thank you for the pungent, fiery nature of the Gospel and the Kingdom. Help me trust your powerful, transforming gospel to work in this dark and broken world.

Life Application​

Is my faith like a mustard seed, growing in power and impact until it stirs and arouses a community?

Daily Devotion © 2024 by Ray Stedman Ministries.
 
Powerful-full of dunamis. Does he have anything on the parable of the ten virgins? Five wise-five foolish?

TREASURES OF THE PARABLES

Here Comes the Bridegroom​

Author: Ray C. Stedman
READ THE SCRIPTURE: MATTHEW 25:1-13
We began last Sunday a look at the parables of our Lord, and especially those which reveal the attitudes and activities of those who are waiting for his coming again. We shall look today at the well-known parable of the ten virgins or maidens. This parable is very appropriate to this May season because it concerns a wedding. May is "apple blossom time," as the old song reminds us,
Some day in May
I'll come to say
Happy the bride that
The sun shines on today.
But at the wedding referred to in this parable the bride is not much in evidence, in fact she does not appear at all. The parable concerns an absent bridegroom, and it is only incidentally about him for our Lord focuses primarily upon those who are waiting for the bridegroom. This is because the wedding in this parable is an Eastern wedding, and in the East customs are different than they are in the West. In the Eastern wedding the bridegroom is the important figure. He pays all the expenses of the wedding.
Having experienced a wedding in our family this last fall, I strongly believe we ought to get back to the Bible in these matters!
Our Lord is spotlighting the experience of ten young maidens who were waiting for the coming of the bridegroom. There may be young ladies here this morning who say, "I've been waiting for a bridegroom for a long time, but no one has appeared yet." But these young maidens were waiting in a quite different sense than some of you may have in mind. Their experience is described for us in the first six verses:
"Then the kingdom of heaven shall be compared to ten maidens who took their lamps and went to meet the bridegroom. Five of them were foolish, and five were wise. For when the foolish took their lamps, they took no oil with them; but the wise took flasks of oil with their lamps. As the bridegroom was delayed, they all slumbered and slept. But at midnight there was a cry, 'Behold, the bridegroom! Come out to meet him.'" (Matthew 25:1-6 RSV)
Weddings were always held at night in the East, and, as far as I know, it is still the custom in these areas. Often the festivities lasted for an entire week and at any time during that week the bridal party was expected to appear. The bridegroom would come to get his bride and they would walk together to the site of the wedding, taking the longest possible route through the town. There would be various groups of people waiting at different corners to join the wedding party as they went toward the wedding. That is the background of the picture our Lord draws here.
Here are ten young girls waiting to join the wedding party. They are expecting the bridegroom (some accounts read, "and the bride") and therefore they are waiting expectantly.
Now, as in the previous parable of the household which was waiting for its absent lord, this parable obviously is intended to describe us. Our Lord knew at this time that he was soon going away. He knew there would be an intervening period of time before his return again and he is describing by means of these three parables what he means by his command, watch: "Watch therefore for you know neither the day nor the hour when your lord comes," (Matthew 25:13). What he means by "watch" is brought out in these parables:
Last week we saw that the first parable indicates that watching involves understanding and obeying the Word of God. We are to feed upon the word. This is important because it is what God has put us here for. We so easily lose our perspective on life. We think we have been put here to demonstrate our talents, or to make a living, or to live as comfortable a life as possible. All these things are part of God's blessing but the real reason we are here is to learn how to live, and we learn to live by the word of God -- not merely understanding it but actually working it out into life. Unless we learn to feed upon the Word we will never learn to live. That is why Jesus underscores this with tremendous emphasis, "Man does not live by bread alone but by every word that proceeds out of the mouth of God," (Matthew 4:4).
In this parable of the ten maidens we learn another phase of what "watching" means. Here is another challenge to find hidden truth. One of the exciting things about parables is to learn to discover such hidden truths and to dig them out by means of the clues that are given. Here is this story about ten girls, waiting for the bridegroom's coming and certain clues are given to us to reveal the meaning our Lord is after.
Notice, first of all, that there is a division among these ten. They fall into two groups: five were wise, and five were foolish. The first question therefore that immediately confronts us is, "What makes the difference?" In what way are five wise, and the other five foolish? You can see immediately that there were certain very similar things about all ten of them. They all had lamps, so that is not the ground of division. Also, they all had oil when they started; so it is not that. Further, they all were expecting the bridegroom's coming; they all had a sense of expectation. Also, when he was delayed, they all went to sleep. Though that does not mark the ground of division yet it is a very significant thing. In each of these parables the Lord clearly indicates that his second coming is going to be long delayed. Surely that is most important.
There are some who teach that Jesus was mistaken about the time of his return. They say that the Scriptures indicate that he was to come back immediately, and that all the early Christians expected him to return promptly because that is what he himself said. These teachers tell us that Jesus was wrong. He was obviously mistaken about the time of his return, so they reject completely his whole teaching concerning his return on the basis that he was mistaken about its timing. But Jesus did not teach a soon return at all. He clearly indicated, not only by implication and indirect statement, as in this parable, but also very specifically that it would be a long time before his return. The bridegroom would be delayed.
In the previous parable of the household there is the same thing. The servant says to himself, "My lord delays his coming," (Matthew 24:48). Also in the following parable we find it even clearer. "After a long time" (Matthew 25:19) the master comes to demand an accounting from his servants. Jesus clearly taught that it would be a long time before his return to earth again.
So, while they were waiting for the bridegroom, the ten maidens fell asleep. Here again some who read this parable misinterpret it and say that this is wrong; these girls should never have slept. They liken it to Christians who forget about the coming of the Lord, lose all interest in his appearing, and get involved in life's matters. But there is nothing in this story to indicate that it was wrong for these girls to sleep. It was a perfectly natural thing for them to do. After all, it was night, and since it was a festive occasion and they could not do any work there is no reason why they should not sleep. They were simply waiting for the bridegroom to appear, and, when he was delayed, it was only natural for them to catch a few winks while waiting. Doubtless they placed some kind of a watch to arouse them when the bridegroom does appear, for this is what happened. Our Lord never indicates any blame toward these maidens because they slept. The foolish slept, and the wise as well. We must be careful, in interpreting these stories, not to read into them things that are not implied.
It is, perhaps, suggestive that our Lord records that they all slept. This indicates that when he said "watch" he clearly did not mean that we are to be constantly thinking about his return. He underscores the fact that watching involves doing perfectly normal things while waiting. Work needs to be done. Babies must be changed. Buses must operate. Banks have to be run. Schools must be operated, and studies engaged in. Hospitals have to be open; all types of activities must go on. There is nothing wrong with this. To be involved in the natural normal affairs of life does not mean that you stopped waiting for the Lord's return; it is all part of the process, a perfectly normal part.
But now, according to the story, at midnight came a cry, "Behold, the bridegroom! Come out to meet him." That immediately plunges us into the rest of the story,
"Then all those maidens rose and trimmed their lamps. And the foolish said to the wise, 'Give us some of your oil, for our lamps are going out.' But the wise replied, 'Perhaps there will not be enough for us and for you; go rather to the dealers and buy for yourselves.' And while they went to buy, the bridegroom came, and those who were ready went in with him to the marriage feast; and the door was shut. Afterward the other maidens came also, saying, 'Lord, lord, open to us.' But he replied, 'Truly, I say to you, I do not know you.' Watch therefore for you know neither the day nor the hour." (Matthew 25:7-13 RSV)
It is immediately evident from this that the crucial difference between the wise and the foolish lay in the fact that the wise had extra oil. They all had oil to begin with, but the wise took along an extra supply. That is what made it possible for them to endure the unexpected delay of the bridegroom.
Surely that is the crucial point is it not? The whole parable hangs on this one thing: There was with the wise an extra hidden supply of oil. There are two things that are made clear by this part of the story: One is that without a light these maidens could not get into the marriage feast. Our Lord does not say why, but it is obviously clear that without a light they would not be admitted. The lamp -- or light -- is used throughout Scripture as a symbol of knowledge or understanding. We use it the same way today. We say, "I'd like a little more light on this subject," meaning "I need more knowledge of it." So it is in this story. All ten had some light, some knowledge or understanding, but five had a deeper, hidden, resource of light.
If we apply this to ourselves this morning, we can see how truly it fits. Every one here has a certain degree of light about our Lord's return and its relation to the course of history. In that respect we all have light amid the darkness of the age in which we live. We know more than those who do not understand this truth. We know there is a purpose to history, and that it is all going to end according to schedule. Symbolically, these maidens all had to have at least this much knowledge. Light was supplied by the oil, and therefore it was absolutely essential that they have an adequate supply of oil, otherwise their light would go out.
It is also clear from this account that they could not borrow another's supply. When the bridegroom came and their lights began to flicker from lack of oil, the foolish said to the wise, "Give us of your oil, for our lights are going out." But the wise said, "No, we cannot do that, otherwise we will not have enough for ourselves. You'll have to go yourself and get more." But it was too late. By the time the foolish returned, the door was shut, and they were met by this word of the Lord's, "I never knew you," and, of course, weddings are no place for strangers.
There are some who feel the Lord is very unfair here, that he should have let these maidens in. After all, they too were earnestly, sincerely waiting for his return, and the fact that they did not have enough oil was hardly their fault for they did not realize that he was going to be delayed. Therefore he ought to have let them in. But we must be careful, when we read these parables, not to read them from our limited point of view. The Lord is right about what he says; he always is. We therefore must not challenge his appraisal of a situation. He knows what he is talking about. When he excludes these five foolish ones he is revealing to us that we must seek seriously his reason for doing so. He says he never knew them, they were strangers to him. They never were a part of the true family, waiting for the bridegroom. We must understand what it is, then, which rendered them strangers. As we have already seen, it centers on this matter of the oil.
Oil, throughout the Scriptures, is commonly used as a type or picture of the Holy Spirit. Some of you remember that in the book of Zechariah the prophet was given a vision of two olive trees standing, one on either side of a lampstand, and the oil from the olive trees dripped into a bowl on top of the lampstand. It was the oil, constantly flowing down, which caused the lamps in the lampstand to burn. Zechariah was told that the oil symbolized the Spirit of God. It is here we have that great quotation which is frequently heard, although very few people realize where it is from. Zechariah is told, "Not by might, nor by power, but by my Spirit, says the Lord of hosts," (Zechariah 4:6b KJV). The oil is a picture of the power of the Holy Spirit which keeps the light of knowledge and truth burning brightly.
This is also what we have here in this parable. It is the ministry of the Holy Spirit, revealing truth, revealing knowledge. The overall picture is that of a group of people very much like this congregation this morning. If we would take this parable as our Lord intended it to be taken, as a picture of those who are living in the time between his first coming and his second, who are waiting for his appearing and who have some understanding of the fact that he is coming again, then this congregation becomes very much the same kind of group as is described in the parable. There are certain wise among us who have an extra supply of oil, a supply adequate to meet the test of whatever may come. But there are also some among us, without question, who are foolish, who have been coming week after week agreeing with and understanding much of the doctrine of our Lord's return, but who lack an adequate supply of oil, who have never really discovered the full ministry of the Spirit. There is a ministry of the Holy Spirit to the minds and hearts of those who are not yet born again. He enlightens them to a degree, as they read the Bible, and they understand such truth as the Lord's return, but they have never yet come to the place where the truth has really gripped them. They have understood it, but it has not yet gripped and held them. They have not yet come into a personal knowledge of the One whom the truth is to reveal, the Lord Jesus Christ.
That is the whole purpose of Bible study. It is not to learn merely what God is going to do with the world, or to understand your own psychological make-up; it is rather that you might come to understand and to know personally, in a day-by-day living relationship, the Lord Jesus Christ who has come to live within you. That is the basis for true life. That, of course, is the extra flask of oil hidden away inside. Those who have it do not look any different than anyone else. No one sees it there. But when the hour of testing comes, when the pressures come, their light does not go out. They will hold to the truth and maintain it.
That is the picture here in this parable. As life moves on, and cares press upon us, our early zeal as Christians fades and the excitement of knowing God dims. That is when the test comes. Then our knowledge of Christ must go deeper than the head; it must reach the heart. We must become basically changed by the truth. That is what our Lord is bringing out. There is a kind of Christian veneer which can be put on. You can learn in Sunday school how to act like a Christian. You can learn what Christian truth is, learn the doctrines of Christianity, learn the truth it teaches. You can fill your head with this kind of thing and display it on Sundays, but it will not make any essential difference in your life during the week, at home. These are the foolish. They have no extra oil. They have truth for the surface of life, but none for the depths, the crises. They know the doctrine of the Scripture, but they do not know the power of it. It is in their head but it has never reached the heart. They believe in Jesus as Savior, but they have never known him as a living Lord. That is what makes the difference. That is what our Lord is saying. Without that you cannot properly watch for his appearing.
As the days get more critical, as error becomes more believable and is more widespread, it becomes harder and harder to believe the truth. Only if the truth has actually gripped you, and you are held by the Son of God himself, will you be able to stand in the hour of testing. The wise have oil for the crisis hour. When the hard test comes and the pressures are on, their light does not flicker or gutter and go out in darkness. They do not give up -- or give in! The truth is not forsaken, but they cling to it even more closely. When the final summons comes they are ready to enter in. That is clearly, unmistakably, the picture our Lord draws, is it not?
It is quite possible for us to know many things about Christianity, but never really let it make any changes in our hearts or lives. I know many like this. They can quote Scripture by the yard. They know the doctrines, they are well acquainted with the Bible, but their homes are no different than others around. They live on the same basis, they judge by the same values. There is no real difference in their lives. Their reasons for doing things are exactly the reasons others have who are not Christians. It is these our Lord is describing. They will never stand the test.
I believe we are living in this kind of an hour. It has been most striking to me to note in the last few years that many whom I and others have thought were stable, solid Christians, have left the Christian faith, have denied the Lord who bought them, and have turned away from the truth. Just this last week Mr. Roper was telling me about some of the students at Stanford who once were with us here; earnest, vibrant, young Christians, obviously excited about what they were learning. But one of them is now a professed Communist. Another one is drifting away and denying the reality of Christianity. What happened? How could this happen? It is because they did not have extra oil. The truth had never gone deep, never challenged the will. They had never bowed to the Lordship of Jesus or submitted themselves to him, committing themselves to follow him wherever he goes, so that even in the hour when Christianity does not look like it makes sense, they can say, with Peter, "Lord, to whom can we go? You alone have words of eternal life," (John 6:68). That is the ultimate test.
There comes a time when all the things we learn in Scripture -- its philosophy and its pattern of life -- can appear to us to be nonsense, to be untrustworthy, unreliable, and like the rest of knowledge around, to be uncertain, unsure. We can easily be afflicted this way, it can happen to us all. In that hour, what will hold you steady? If you have not yet come to a place of deep commitment to the Person of the Lord Jesus, you will not be held steady in that hour. All your knowledge will disappear. Something else will prove as attractive and as compelling in its logic as Christianity, and you will be ready to for that. It is only when, in the final analysis, you cannot forsake him, there is no place else to go, and though perhaps you are not sure that what he says will turn out to be right, nevertheless it is the best possible chance, that you will stand. That is the ultimate test. Jesus says those are the wise who are kept in times of pressure. When darkness settles upon the earth their lights do not go out because they are fed by a reserve supply of the Holy Spirit who dwells within them, to keep them in the time of pressure.
Are you ready for that? That is what this parable is all about. If you do not have that quality of relationship of Jesus Christ, you will not stand the test. You have never really been a Christian; that is what Jesus is saying. You have been a surface Christian, committed only to certain truths, but never to a Person; related only to certain doctrinal matters, but never gripped by a Lord who compels you, controls you, and runs your life. That will be the final test for the wise and the foolish.
What does our Lord mean by watching? It means to know his Word, that is the first step. But now he adds a second element to that. That knowledge of the Word must go deeper than the surface. It must be an obedience of the heart, a trusting, a giving over completely of the central control of your life, your will, to the Lord Jesus Christ. This results in the indwelling of the Holy Spirit who is the One who will hold you steady in the hour of crisis.
Are you wise? Or foolish?

Prayer​

Our Father, you who know our hearts know who are the wise and who are foolish among us. Here we all are, waiting for the coming of the Lord, committed to the truth of Christianity, here because we believe Jesus is coming back again and that history will end as he says. Yet Lord, among us, as you have made so clear in this parable, there are some who do not have the extra supply of oil. They have light, but not enough; knowledge, but not an adequate supply. They still do not know you, Lord Jesus. We pray that here, in this place, and at this moment, any who by the Holy Spirit, realize that this is their condition, may right now correct it. May they commit themselves to the One who alone can sustain them in the approaching hour of darkness. We ask in his name, Amen.
Here Comes the Bridegroom
SERIES: TREASURES OF THE PARABLES
MAY 11, 1969
AUTHOR: RAY C. STEDMAN
Message transcript and recording © 1969 by Ray Stedman Ministries
 

TREASURES OF THE PARABLES

Here Comes the Bridegroom​

Author: Ray C. Stedman
READ THE SCRIPTURE: MATTHEW 25:1-13
We began last Sunday a look at the parables of our Lord, and especially those which reveal the attitudes and activities of those who are waiting for his coming again. We shall look today at the well-known parable of the ten virgins or maidens. This parable is very appropriate to this May season because it concerns a wedding. May is "apple blossom time," as the old song reminds us,

But at the wedding referred to in this parable the bride is not much in evidence, in fact she does not appear at all. The parable concerns an absent bridegroom, and it is only incidentally about him for our Lord focuses primarily upon those who are waiting for the bridegroom. This is because the wedding in this parable is an Eastern wedding, and in the East customs are different than they are in the West. In the Eastern wedding the bridegroom is the important figure. He pays all the expenses of the wedding.
Having experienced a wedding in our family this last fall, I strongly believe we ought to get back to the Bible in these matters!
Our Lord is spotlighting the experience of ten young maidens who were waiting for the coming of the bridegroom. There may be young ladies here this morning who say, "I've been waiting for a bridegroom for a long time, but no one has appeared yet." But these young maidens were waiting in a quite different sense than some of you may have in mind. Their experience is described for us in the first six verses:

Weddings were always held at night in the East, and, as far as I know, it is still the custom in these areas. Often the festivities lasted for an entire week and at any time during that week the bridal party was expected to appear. The bridegroom would come to get his bride and they would walk together to the site of the wedding, taking the longest possible route through the town. There would be various groups of people waiting at different corners to join the wedding party as they went toward the wedding. That is the background of the picture our Lord draws here.
Here are ten young girls waiting to join the wedding party. They are expecting the bridegroom (some accounts read, "and the bride") and therefore they are waiting expectantly.
Now, as in the previous parable of the household which was waiting for its absent lord, this parable obviously is intended to describe us. Our Lord knew at this time that he was soon going away. He knew there would be an intervening period of time before his return again and he is describing by means of these three parables what he means by his command, watch: "Watch therefore for you know neither the day nor the hour when your lord comes," (Matthew 25:13). What he means by "watch" is brought out in these parables:
Last week we saw that the first parable indicates that watching involves understanding and obeying the Word of God. We are to feed upon the word. This is important because it is what God has put us here for. We so easily lose our perspective on life. We think we have been put here to demonstrate our talents, or to make a living, or to live as comfortable a life as possible. All these things are part of God's blessing but the real reason we are here is to learn how to live, and we learn to live by the word of God -- not merely understanding it but actually working it out into life. Unless we learn to feed upon the Word we will never learn to live. That is why Jesus underscores this with tremendous emphasis, "Man does not live by bread alone but by every word that proceeds out of the mouth of God," (Matthew 4:4).
In this parable of the ten maidens we learn another phase of what "watching" means. Here is another challenge to find hidden truth. One of the exciting things about parables is to learn to discover such hidden truths and to dig them out by means of the clues that are given. Here is this story about ten girls, waiting for the bridegroom's coming and certain clues are given to us to reveal the meaning our Lord is after.
Notice, first of all, that there is a division among these ten. They fall into two groups: five were wise, and five were foolish. The first question therefore that immediately confronts us is, "What makes the difference?" In what way are five wise, and the other five foolish? You can see immediately that there were certain very similar things about all ten of them. They all had lamps, so that is not the ground of division. Also, they all had oil when they started; so it is not that. Further, they all were expecting the bridegroom's coming; they all had a sense of expectation. Also, when he was delayed, they all went to sleep. Though that does not mark the ground of division yet it is a very significant thing. In each of these parables the Lord clearly indicates that his second coming is going to be long delayed. Surely that is most important.
There are some who teach that Jesus was mistaken about the time of his return. They say that the Scriptures indicate that he was to come back immediately, and that all the early Christians expected him to return promptly because that is what he himself said. These teachers tell us that Jesus was wrong. He was obviously mistaken about the time of his return, so they reject completely his whole teaching concerning his return on the basis that he was mistaken about its timing. But Jesus did not teach a soon return at all. He clearly indicated, not only by implication and indirect statement, as in this parable, but also very specifically that it would be a long time before his return. The bridegroom would be delayed.
In the previous parable of the household there is the same thing. The servant says to himself, "My lord delays his coming," (Matthew 24:48). Also in the following parable we find it even clearer. "After a long time" (Matthew 25:19) the master comes to demand an accounting from his servants. Jesus clearly taught that it would be a long time before his return to earth again.
So, while they were waiting for the bridegroom, the ten maidens fell asleep. Here again some who read this parable misinterpret it and say that this is wrong; these girls should never have slept. They liken it to Christians who forget about the coming of the Lord, lose all interest in his appearing, and get involved in life's matters. But there is nothing in this story to indicate that it was wrong for these girls to sleep. It was a perfectly natural thing for them to do. After all, it was night, and since it was a festive occasion and they could not do any work there is no reason why they should not sleep. They were simply waiting for the bridegroom to appear, and, when he was delayed, it was only natural for them to catch a few winks while waiting. Doubtless they placed some kind of a watch to arouse them when the bridegroom does appear, for this is what happened. Our Lord never indicates any blame toward these maidens because they slept. The foolish slept, and the wise as well. We must be careful, in interpreting these stories, not to read into them things that are not implied.
It is, perhaps, suggestive that our Lord records that they all slept. This indicates that when he said "watch" he clearly did not mean that we are to be constantly thinking about his return. He underscores the fact that watching involves doing perfectly normal things while waiting. Work needs to be done. Babies must be changed. Buses must operate. Banks have to be run. Schools must be operated, and studies engaged in. Hospitals have to be open; all types of activities must go on. There is nothing wrong with this. To be involved in the natural normal affairs of life does not mean that you stopped waiting for the Lord's return; it is all part of the process, a perfectly normal part.
But now, according to the story, at midnight came a cry, "Behold, the bridegroom! Come out to meet him." That immediately plunges us into the rest of the story,

It is immediately evident from this that the crucial difference between the wise and the foolish lay in the fact that the wise had extra oil. They all had oil to begin with, but the wise took along an extra supply. That is what made it possible for them to endure the unexpected delay of the bridegroom.
Surely that is the crucial point is it not? The whole parable hangs on this one thing: There was with the wise an extra hidden supply of oil. There are two things that are made clear by this part of the story: One is that without a light these maidens could not get into the marriage feast. Our Lord does not say why, but it is obviously clear that without a light they would not be admitted. The lamp -- or light -- is used throughout Scripture as a symbol of knowledge or understanding. We use it the same way today. We say, "I'd like a little more light on this subject," meaning "I need more knowledge of it." So it is in this story. All ten had some light, some knowledge or understanding, but five had a deeper, hidden, resource of light.
If we apply this to ourselves this morning, we can see how truly it fits. Every one here has a certain degree of light about our Lord's return and its relation to the course of history. In that respect we all have light amid the darkness of the age in which we live. We know more than those who do not understand this truth. We know there is a purpose to history, and that it is all going to end according to schedule. Symbolically, these maidens all had to have at least this much knowledge. Light was supplied by the oil, and therefore it was absolutely essential that they have an adequate supply of oil, otherwise their light would go out.
It is also clear from this account that they could not borrow another's supply. When the bridegroom came and their lights began to flicker from lack of oil, the foolish said to the wise, "Give us of your oil, for our lights are going out." But the wise said, "No, we cannot do that, otherwise we will not have enough for ourselves. You'll have to go yourself and get more." But it was too late. By the time the foolish returned, the door was shut, and they were met by this word of the Lord's, "I never knew you," and, of course, weddings are no place for strangers.
There are some who feel the Lord is very unfair here, that he should have let these maidens in. After all, they too were earnestly, sincerely waiting for his return, and the fact that they did not have enough oil was hardly their fault for they did not realize that he was going to be delayed. Therefore he ought to have let them in. But we must be careful, when we read these parables, not to read them from our limited point of view. The Lord is right about what he says; he always is. We therefore must not challenge his appraisal of a situation. He knows what he is talking about. When he excludes these five foolish ones he is revealing to us that we must seek seriously his reason for doing so. He says he never knew them, they were strangers to him. They never were a part of the true family, waiting for the bridegroom. We must understand what it is, then, which rendered them strangers. As we have already seen, it centers on this matter of the oil.
Oil, throughout the Scriptures, is commonly used as a type or picture of the Holy Spirit. Some of you remember that in the book of Zechariah the prophet was given a vision of two olive trees standing, one on either side of a lampstand, and the oil from the olive trees dripped into a bowl on top of the lampstand. It was the oil, constantly flowing down, which caused the lamps in the lampstand to burn. Zechariah was told that the oil symbolized the Spirit of God. It is here we have that great quotation which is frequently heard, although very few people realize where it is from. Zechariah is told, "Not by might, nor by power, but by my Spirit, says the Lord of hosts," (Zechariah 4:6b KJV). The oil is a picture of the power of the Holy Spirit which keeps the light of knowledge and truth burning brightly.
This is also what we have here in this parable. It is the ministry of the Holy Spirit, revealing truth, revealing knowledge. The overall picture is that of a group of people very much like this congregation this morning. If we would take this parable as our Lord intended it to be taken, as a picture of those who are living in the time between his first coming and his second, who are waiting for his appearing and who have some understanding of the fact that he is coming again, then this congregation becomes very much the same kind of group as is described in the parable. There are certain wise among us who have an extra supply of oil, a supply adequate to meet the test of whatever may come. But there are also some among us, without question, who are foolish, who have been coming week after week agreeing with and understanding much of the doctrine of our Lord's return, but who lack an adequate supply of oil, who have never really discovered the full ministry of the Spirit. There is a ministry of the Holy Spirit to the minds and hearts of those who are not yet born again. He enlightens them to a degree, as they read the Bible, and they understand such truth as the Lord's return, but they have never yet come to the place where the truth has really gripped them. They have understood it, but it has not yet gripped and held them. They have not yet come into a personal knowledge of the One whom the truth is to reveal, the Lord Jesus Christ.
That is the whole purpose of Bible study. It is not to learn merely what God is going to do with the world, or to understand your own psychological make-up; it is rather that you might come to understand and to know personally, in a day-by-day living relationship, the Lord Jesus Christ who has come to live within you. That is the basis for true life. That, of course, is the extra flask of oil hidden away inside. Those who have it do not look any different than anyone else. No one sees it there. But when the hour of testing comes, when the pressures come, their light does not go out. They will hold to the truth and maintain it.
That is the picture here in this parable. As life moves on, and cares press upon us, our early zeal as Christians fades and the excitement of knowing God dims. That is when the test comes. Then our knowledge of Christ must go deeper than the head; it must reach the heart. We must become basically changed by the truth. That is what our Lord is bringing out. There is a kind of Christian veneer which can be put on. You can learn in Sunday school how to act like a Christian. You can learn what Christian truth is, learn the doctrines of Christianity, learn the truth it teaches. You can fill your head with this kind of thing and display it on Sundays, but it will not make any essential difference in your life during the week, at home. These are the foolish. They have no extra oil. They have truth for the surface of life, but none for the depths, the crises. They know the doctrine of the Scripture, but they do not know the power of it. It is in their head but it has never reached the heart. They believe in Jesus as Savior, but they have never known him as a living Lord. That is what makes the difference. That is what our Lord is saying. Without that you cannot properly watch for his appearing.
As the days get more critical, as error becomes more believable and is more widespread, it becomes harder and harder to believe the truth. Only if the truth has actually gripped you, and you are held by the Son of God himself, will you be able to stand in the hour of testing. The wise have oil for the crisis hour. When the hard test comes and the pressures are on, their light does not flicker or gutter and go out in darkness. They do not give up -- or give in! The truth is not forsaken, but they cling to it even more closely. When the final summons comes they are ready to enter in. That is clearly, unmistakably, the picture our Lord draws, is it not?
It is quite possible for us to know many things about Christianity, but never really let it make any changes in our hearts or lives. I know many like this. They can quote Scripture by the yard. They know the doctrines, they are well acquainted with the Bible, but their homes are no different than others around. They live on the same basis, they judge by the same values. There is no real difference in their lives. Their reasons for doing things are exactly the reasons others have who are not Christians. It is these our Lord is describing. They will never stand the test.
I believe we are living in this kind of an hour. It has been most striking to me to note in the last few years that many whom I and others have thought were stable, solid Christians, have left the Christian faith, have denied the Lord who bought them, and have turned away from the truth. Just this last week Mr. Roper was telling me about some of the students at Stanford who once were with us here; earnest, vibrant, young Christians, obviously excited about what they were learning. But one of them is now a professed Communist. Another one is drifting away and denying the reality of Christianity. What happened? How could this happen? It is because they did not have extra oil. The truth had never gone deep, never challenged the will. They had never bowed to the Lordship of Jesus or submitted themselves to him, committing themselves to follow him wherever he goes, so that even in the hour when Christianity does not look like it makes sense, they can say, with Peter, "Lord, to whom can we go? You alone have words of eternal life," (John 6:68). That is the ultimate test.
There comes a time when all the things we learn in Scripture -- its philosophy and its pattern of life -- can appear to us to be nonsense, to be untrustworthy, unreliable, and like the rest of knowledge around, to be uncertain, unsure. We can easily be afflicted this way, it can happen to us all. In that hour, what will hold you steady? If you have not yet come to a place of deep commitment to the Person of the Lord Jesus, you will not be held steady in that hour. All your knowledge will disappear. Something else will prove as attractive and as compelling in its logic as Christianity, and you will be ready to for that. It is only when, in the final analysis, you cannot forsake him, there is no place else to go, and though perhaps you are not sure that what he says will turn out to be right, nevertheless it is the best possible chance, that you will stand. That is the ultimate test. Jesus says those are the wise who are kept in times of pressure. When darkness settles upon the earth their lights do not go out because they are fed by a reserve supply of the Holy Spirit who dwells within them, to keep them in the time of pressure.
Are you ready for that? That is what this parable is all about. If you do not have that quality of relationship of Jesus Christ, you will not stand the test. You have never really been a Christian; that is what Jesus is saying. You have been a surface Christian, committed only to certain truths, but never to a Person; related only to certain doctrinal matters, but never gripped by a Lord who compels you, controls you, and runs your life. That will be the final test for the wise and the foolish.
What does our Lord mean by watching? It means to know his Word, that is the first step. But now he adds a second element to that. That knowledge of the Word must go deeper than the surface. It must be an obedience of the heart, a trusting, a giving over completely of the central control of your life, your will, to the Lord Jesus Christ. This results in the indwelling of the Holy Spirit who is the One who will hold you steady in the hour of crisis.
Are you wise? Or foolish?

Prayer​


Here Comes the Bridegroom
SERIES: TREASURES OF THE PARABLES
MAY 11, 1969
AUTHOR: RAY C. STEDMAN
Message transcript and recording © 1969 by Ray Stedman Ministries
Much, much appreciated brother @Obadiah!
 

A DAILY DEVOTION FOR MAY 19TH​

The Sneaky Housewife​


READ THE SCRIPTURE: MATTHEW 13:31-35
He told them still another parable: The kingdom of heaven is like yeast that a woman took and mixed into about sixty pounds of flour until it worked all through the dough.
Matthew 13:33
This is a parable which has been greatly misinterpreted — that the leaven is the gospel and the woman is the church. The church puts the gospel into the world of humanity — the three measures [sixty pounds] of meal. The gospel will work like yeast in bread, until all humanity is reached by the gospel and the whole world is changed. Then the kingdom of heaven will come in.
Though that's the most popular interpretation, it is absolutely wrong!

From that interpretation people have thought that the church would introduce the millennium to the world and bring in the kingdom, that the gospel would so permeate the affairs and thinking of men that Christian moral standards would be accepted worldwide.

But listening to this story as that crowd did, we see that interpretation is wrong. Jesus is using a common picture from any Hebrew household. Everyone present knew that this woman did an evil, sneaky thing, hiding this leaven in the meal. The meal is a symbol of the fellowship of God with his people, and of their fellowship with one another, a beautiful picture of commonality of life.

These Jews knew instantly that this meal offering was to be unleavened. Leaven is used all through the Old Testament, but never as a symbol of anything good. Everyone knew this woman had no business putting leaven into this meal. It would destroy the very meaning of this offering, for Scripture had taught them that the meal was to be unleavened.

For the centuries to come, the Lord sees what is most precious to God about the work he himself has begun among humanity — the fellowship of God with his people; the sharing of life with each other and with God. Into that wonderful fellowship false, evil principles are introduced by those responsible for preserving this fellowship — the leaders of the church! It is they who introduce this leaven, permitting it, not excluding it as they should.

Those charged with responsibility for developing the fellowship of God's people nevertheless allow hypocrisy, formalism, ritualism, rationalism, materialism, legalism, and immorality to come in. When these things get into a church, they destroy the fellowship of God's people. This is why churches often become cold and unfriendly — there's no genuine fellowship. Too often on the most superficial basis people sit in the congregation, not as members together of one family, but as individuals, listening to a service but not relating to each other.

That isn't Christianity as it is intended to be manifested. That isn't sharing each other's concerns, bearing one another's burdens, confessing our faults one to another, or praying for one another that we may be healed. This isn't the great fellowship that our Lord is seeking.

Thank you, Father, for the beautiful symbol of the fellowship of your people given in the three measures of meal. Grant me, Lord, a putting away of the leaven in order that the sweetness and beauty of your life may be evident in my fellowship with others.

Life Application​

Do I look at my church as a family? Do I share other's concerns, bear other's burdens, confess my faults and pray for others?

Daily Devotion © 2024 by Ray Stedman Ministries.
 

A DAILY DEVOTION FOR MAY 19TH​

The Sneaky Housewife​


READ THE SCRIPTURE: MATTHEW 13:31-35

This is a parable which has been greatly misinterpreted — that the leaven is the gospel and the woman is the church. The church puts the gospel into the world of humanity — the three measures [sixty pounds] of meal. The gospel will work like yeast in bread, until all humanity is reached by the gospel and the whole world is changed. Then the kingdom of heaven will come in.
Though that's the most popular interpretation, it is absolutely wrong!

From that interpretation people have thought that the church would introduce the millennium to the world and bring in the kingdom, that the gospel would so permeate the affairs and thinking of men that Christian moral standards would be accepted worldwide.

But listening to this story as that crowd did, we see that interpretation is wrong. Jesus is using a common picture from any Hebrew household. Everyone present knew that this woman did an evil, sneaky thing, hiding this leaven in the meal. The meal is a symbol of the fellowship of God with his people, and of their fellowship with one another, a beautiful picture of commonality of life.

These Jews knew instantly that this meal offering was to be unleavened. Leaven is used all through the Old Testament, but never as a symbol of anything good. Everyone knew this woman had no business putting leaven into this meal. It would destroy the very meaning of this offering, for Scripture had taught them that the meal was to be unleavened.

For the centuries to come, the Lord sees what is most precious to God about the work he himself has begun among humanity — the fellowship of God with his people; the sharing of life with each other and with God. Into that wonderful fellowship false, evil principles are introduced by those responsible for preserving this fellowship — the leaders of the church! It is they who introduce this leaven, permitting it, not excluding it as they should.

Those charged with responsibility for developing the fellowship of God's people nevertheless allow hypocrisy, formalism, ritualism, rationalism, materialism, legalism, and immorality to come in. When these things get into a church, they destroy the fellowship of God's people. This is why churches often become cold and unfriendly — there's no genuine fellowship. Too often on the most superficial basis people sit in the congregation, not as members together of one family, but as individuals, listening to a service but not relating to each other.

That isn't Christianity as it is intended to be manifested. That isn't sharing each other's concerns, bearing one another's burdens, confessing our faults one to another, or praying for one another that we may be healed. This isn't the great fellowship that our Lord is seeking.


Life Application​

Do I look at my church as a family? Do I share other's concerns, bear other's burdens, confess my faults and pray for others?

Daily Devotion © 2024 by Ray Stedman Ministries.
I think I really should find this minister-putting Matt 25 in action!
Well done @Obadiah!
 
Such a rich history

Early in 1948, God impressed upon the heart of Ed Stirm, a Christian businessman, the need for a biblical ministry to the people of the Palo Alto area, and especially to the students at Stanford University. So Ed approached four other Christian men: Harry Smith, Cecil Kettle, Gus Gustafson, and Bob Smith. They all agreed to begin meeting together to pray, plan, and study in order to start a ministry through which people could begin to hear and understand what God has to say in his Word. Peninsula Bible Fellowship was born.


It began with a simple Sunday evening Bible study, taught by visiting pastors, in the Palo Alto Community Center, and a number of evangelistic Bible studies on the Peninsula. There were perhaps thirty people at the first meeting, but attendance steadily increased through the attractive and effective teaching of men like Lewis Speery Chafer, Vernon McGee, John Mitchell, Francis Russell, S. Lewis Johnson, John Walvoord, and many other notable and not-so-notable Bible teachers. Throughout two years of ministry, these men opened the Scriptures to God’s people, faithfully fulfilling our Lord’s word, “Feed my sheep.”


Somewhere in the sequence of events we added a Sunday morning service and Sunday School for the children to meet the needs of the increasing numbers. All this without a pastor (in the official sense).


In 1950, three of our visiting speakers contacted John Walvoord, President of Dallas Theological Seminary, suggesting that we could use a pastor. John wrote the leaders to recommend we talk to Ray Stedman, a student about to graduate. We did, and Ray proved to be just the man God had in mind for us. So we joined forces, with Ray as Executive Director without a guaranteed salary. And after we had called him, we suddenly realized that we had never heard him preach! Ray came in September 1950, and what a blessing he brought through the years.
 
Ray's Bio


Ray's primary teaching method was expository preaching, systematically teaching through entire books of the Bible. This style enabled the Christian to build up a broad base of biblical knowledge from which the Holy Spirit could draw upon in daily life. It was very important to Ray that Christians become personally well grounded in the whole breadth of the Bible.Ray was very conscious of the need for individual Christians to grow and flourish and some of his chief themes (the new covenant, body life and the ministry of the saints) reflect practical aspects of vibrant Christian life. He was also a strong proponent of a plurality of pastors and anon-hierarchical style of church government since all believers have spiritual gifts.From 1948 to 1990, Ray was one of the key leaders at Peninsula Bible Church and the explosive growth of that church during that time was largely due to the power of Ray's teaching.Although Ray went home to the Lord in 1992, his messages continue to have world wide impact as thousands of people use the resources of this web site daily. At this site, you can find a large collection of Ray's messages (http://www.pbc.org/authors/ray-stedman) in both audio and written format.Many of Ray Stedman's books and all of his messages are available athttp://www.raystedman.org .
 

A DAILY DEVOTION FOR MAY 20TH​

The Case of the Buried Treasure​


READ THE SCRIPTURE: MATTHEW 13:44-46
The kingdom of heaven is like treasure hidden in a field. When a man found it, he hid it again, and then in his joy went and sold all he had and bought that field.
Matthew 13:44

The usual interpretation of this parable is that Christ is the hidden treasure, and through life we are the people who discover him. Then we must sell all we have and buy him at any cost. But that is obviously false. Never, anywhere in Scripture is salvation offered to us as something we have to buy. We have nothing to offer him, nothing that we can give in return. Salvation is offered to us as a free gift, entirely by the grace of God.

Two things in this story are recognizable from other parables — a man and a field. The man is Jesus himself. And the field is all humanity. Jesus came and found a treasure — hidden, lost in the human race, but he uncovered it. And then he did an amazing thing. He buried it again, then went and gave all that he had and bought that field of humanity.

Immediately we ask, What is this treasure hidden in the world? When our Lord came, he uncovered it but buried it again. Now it is hidden once more, to remain until our Lord's return. That treasure is Israel, the nation of Israel. He chose them to be a representation, a working model of God's people, to share their knowledge with other nations. When our Lord came into the world and came to Israel, he found this treasure had been lost to the world. For more than four hundred years Israel had been an obscure little nation, with no voice or glory of God in their midst. They were now subject to Rome. But when he found it, he uncovered it again. That is the story of the gospels. He revealed for a brief time the glory that was Israel. He declared it in great messages like the Sermon on the Mount. He demonstrated it by healing the multitudes, driving out the moneychangers, feeding the thousands, and rebuking evil everywhere he went. In just the three and a half years of our Lord's ministry he uncovered the treasure of Israel, the secret of this nation's life.

But you know what happened. The nation would not have him, and they rejected him. So according to the parable he hid the treasure again, and came into the city and pronounced solemn words of judgment.

But the Lord tells us here that he has not given up his purpose or forgotten Israel. The parable says, Then in his joy went and sold all he had and bought that field. Here is the mystery of the cross. Philippians 2:8 says, And being found in appearance as a man, he humbled himself by becoming obedient to death — even death on a cross! In dying Jesus purchased the right to set Israel again among the nations, as a model to the world of how to live in peace. This reveals the heart of God who looks at this broken world, with all its injustice, heartache, sorrow, and violence, and yet does not forget his purposes. He has preserved the secret of peace in a treasure hidden among the nations which he shall one day bring forth again.

Father, thank you for the truth that you have bought the world, and that you shall one day rule and reign in power and glory in its midst. Help me to understand that you desire to bring your people right now into an experience of joy. Amen.

Life Application​

Do I long for that time when Jesus will return and unveil the secret of world peace?

Daily Devotion © 2024 by Ray Stedman Ministries.
 

A DAILY DEVOTION FOR MAY 20TH​

The Case of the Buried Treasure​


READ THE SCRIPTURE: MATTHEW 13:44-46


The usual interpretation of this parable is that Christ is the hidden treasure, and through life we are the people who discover him. Then we must sell all we have and buy him at any cost. But that is obviously false. Never, anywhere in Scripture is salvation offered to us as something we have to buy. We have nothing to offer him, nothing that we can give in return. Salvation is offered to us as a free gift, entirely by the grace of God.

Two things in this story are recognizable from other parables — a man and a field. The man is Jesus himself. And the field is all humanity. Jesus came and found a treasure — hidden, lost in the human race, but he uncovered it. And then he did an amazing thing. He buried it again, then went and gave all that he had and bought that field of humanity.

Immediately we ask, What is this treasure hidden in the world? When our Lord came, he uncovered it but buried it again. Now it is hidden once more, to remain until our Lord's return. That treasure is Israel, the nation of Israel. He chose them to be a representation, a working model of God's people, to share their knowledge with other nations. When our Lord came into the world and came to Israel, he found this treasure had been lost to the world. For more than four hundred years Israel had been an obscure little nation, with no voice or glory of God in their midst. They were now subject to Rome. But when he found it, he uncovered it again. That is the story of the gospels. He revealed for a brief time the glory that was Israel. He declared it in great messages like the Sermon on the Mount. He demonstrated it by healing the multitudes, driving out the moneychangers, feeding the thousands, and rebuking evil everywhere he went. In just the three and a half years of our Lord's ministry he uncovered the treasure of Israel, the secret of this nation's life.

But you know what happened. The nation would not have him, and they rejected him. So according to the parable he hid the treasure again, and came into the city and pronounced solemn words of judgment.

But the Lord tells us here that he has not given up his purpose or forgotten Israel. The parable says, Then in his joy went and sold all he had and bought that field. Here is the mystery of the cross. Philippians 2:8 says, And being found in appearance as a man, he humbled himself by becoming obedient to death — even death on a cross! In dying Jesus purchased the right to set Israel again among the nations, as a model to the world of how to live in peace. This reveals the heart of God who looks at this broken world, with all its injustice, heartache, sorrow, and violence, and yet does not forget his purposes. He has preserved the secret of peace in a treasure hidden among the nations which he shall one day bring forth again.


Life Application​

Do I long for that time when Jesus will return and unveil the secret of world peace?

Daily Devotion © 2024 by Ray Stedman Ministries.
Powerful man, powerful!
Johann.
 

A DAILY DEVOTION FOR MAY 21ST​

The Case of the Valuable Pearl​


READ THE SCRIPTURE: MATTHEW 13:44-46
Again, the kingdom of heaven is like a merchant looking for fine pearls. When he found one of great value, he went away and sold everything he had and bought it.
Matthew 13:45-46

The previous parable showed how Jesus gave his all to uncover the treasure that is Israel. Now we come to another aspect of the work of the cross. What other great treasure does God value in this world? For what else has Jesus given all that he has in order to obtain it? The obvious answer is: the church. Our Lord came to this world and gave all that he had so that he might obtain it.

It is difficult to exhaust the implications of that vast phrase: he sold everything he had and bought it. In trying to think through the sacrifice of Jesus, some think of it as a kind of commercial enterprise — the Lord paid the price — as though merely making a purchase in a marketplace. Or we dwell upon the physical agony of the cross. But this physical level doesn't touch the deepest significance of the cross. We only begin to understand it when we see the emotional experience of the Lord Jesus, entering into the human family, and on the cross identifying himself with our hurt and shame. It is even easy to sing about the wounds and the blood, but miss the depth of what this phrase means. It is difficult to grasp the hurt in the heart of God as he fully identifies with us in all our agony and extends his forgiveness to us.

Healing human hurt is God's business. The cross is God's answer to the hurt humanity has caused. This is a hurting race we belong to. All of us hurt ourselves and we hurt each other. We do not mean to, but we do. Our very efforts to satisfy ourselves and meet our needs damages us in many ways. Yet in ignorance we go right on doing the things that hurt and destroy ourselves and others.

So how could Jesus reach us? In order to have the pearl he so loves, he gave all that he had. He came where we are, into the place of hurt, heartache, loneliness, sorrow, shame and darkness, and became what we are. Paul says, He who knew no sin was made sin for us (2 Cor. 5:21). Sin is merely a label for all the wrongdoing and the misery of mankind. On the cross, Jesus took on all our aching loneliness, heartache, misery, rejection, and despair, and the awful hostility that our sin engendered. He felt the condemnation of a righteous God. He gave all that he had, and now when he comes to us in our hurt, he can say, I know just how you feel. I've been right there. I understand. He can put his hand upon us and begin to lead us out.

That is what Jesus is telling us in this parable. He came and give all that he had so that he might know the aching agony of all we go through, and thus be able to heal us, to minister to us, to clothe us with his own beauty, to wash away with his own blood our wounds, our sins, our guilt, to cleanse us, and to impart his life to us so that we might become more and more like him.

Thank you, Father, for your healing hand of love and grace which transforms the very thing that injures me and makes it into a thing of beauty.

Life Application​

Am I hiding, or am I giving my Lord intimate access to my heart that he might heal the hurts there?

Daily Devotion © 2024 by Ray Stedman Ministries.
 

A DAILY DEVOTION FOR MAY 22ND​

The Case of the Great Net​


READ THE SCRIPTURE: MATTHEW 13:47-50
Once again, the kingdom of heaven is like a net that was let down into the lake and caught all kinds of fish. When it was full, the fishermen pulled it up on the shore. Then they sat down and collected the good fish in baskets, but threw the bad away.
Matthew 13:47-48

This is a description of what is going on in our present day. This lost secret of the kingdom of heaven is the characteristic of the gospel which forces individuals out into the open, where they manifest what they really are. There is an element of the gospel, this radical message of Christianity, which exposes people when they come into contact with it. It makes known what they are, just as a great dragnet sweeping through the seas gathering fish of every kind ultimately exposes whether they are good or bad. This has been happening throughout our age. The radical truth of the gospel is like a net seining through the tides of restless, surging humanity. Whoever is caught in it is forced to declare himself, forced out into the open to reveal whether he is bad or good.

Now do not misunderstand. Obviously, people are not simply born bad or good. We are all part of a fallen race, born into lost humanity. We all have evil at work within us, and that evil will create in our character a resistance to truth until God intervenes. The bad or good in this parable refers to how we respond to truth, to what happens when we come into contact with reality. The gospel of Jesus Christ is the basic truth, the ultimate reality, the fundamental secret of life. The good are those who deal honestly with this reality, who when they learn something real and genuine about it respond to it, act on it, do something about it. The bad are those who turn their backs to it and say, No, I don't like that and I don't want to believe it; I reject it, or worse, play the hypocrite and say, Yes, I'll accept that, but yet allow it to make no changes in their life, remaining evil within although outwardly putting on a pious garb of sanctimonious self-righteousness.

The truth is that man was created to be indwelt by God. The only way we can fulfill our humanity is to be filled with God and understand that we are to live by faith in him. The gospel message — this good news that Christ is in you and able to restore to you all that God ever intended for you — is like a great net sweeping through the tides of humanity. All who are caught in it are made to reveal what kind of people they are, to reveal whether they will deal honestly with the truth or whether they will reject it and turn from it. You can see this process in your own experience. You can see it in the record of church history. You can see it working itself out in human events today. The gospel has this radical character about it.

Lord, there are areas of my lives where I am still resisting you, still trying to pretend that I am something I am not. So I ask you to change and redeem those areas. Help me to acknowledge them and claim your healing grace.

Life Application​

What will this present age reveal about me? Am I one who will deal honestly with the reality of the gospel, respond to it, and act on it?

Daily Devotion © 2024 by Ray Stedman Ministries.
 
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