This passage in Matt 25:31-46 provides a good example of interpretation based on stuff like confirmation bias, tradition, and basic neglect. The first thing to note is this passage has been a challenge. I recall J. Vernon McGee saying he did not understand it. Part of the difficulty might be of the timing found in v 31 "When the Son of Man comes in his glory, and all the angels with him, then he will sit on his glorious throne." I don't quite have a sequence of events in mind right now, but it may seem this happens after other things have been judged.
This passage speaks of a judgment of nations where "nations" is used instead of "gentiles" in the translations of v32. If this were all people instead, then we would have a different message conveyed -- but the NRSV and ESV inappropriately inserts "people" in the verse. That insertion then biases the reading -- but is just something that happens when trying to make a translation readable.
Another problem that happens is that verse 46 is used to interpret the passage in view of people: "these will go away into eternal punishment, but the righteous into eternal life." The topic has remained about the nations. But nations (people groups) normally do not seem to be eternally punished. Two things can be considered here. One is that cities (people groups) are judged (Matt 11:23 of Capernaum). Cities also have been said to suffer eternal punishment, especially Sodom and Gomorrah (Jude 7). The punishment of the cities or people groups is for their treatment of the King's brothers. That is where interpretations get messier.
One out that people have taken here is to say that every injured or hungry person is a brother/sister here. That point neglects the distinction that these are Christians, not some general aid to the poor. The best reading then is that the sheep are specific cities or nations who have encountered Christians and treated them well. The goats are the "people groups" that persecuted the Christians or otherwise treated them harshly. The key then is that the places had specific contact with Christians and the judgment is based on that. Excluded from this are places where Christians were not in these places within prisons or sick or unclothed (while probably including other lacking).
I think any interpretation that misses these details has been affected by confirmation bias (toward other theories), tradition, and insufficient exegesis. Hopefully this quick analysis provides something to think about when fitting Matt 25:31-46 within one's eschatological concepts.
This passage speaks of a judgment of nations where "nations" is used instead of "gentiles" in the translations of v32. If this were all people instead, then we would have a different message conveyed -- but the NRSV and ESV inappropriately inserts "people" in the verse. That insertion then biases the reading -- but is just something that happens when trying to make a translation readable.
Another problem that happens is that verse 46 is used to interpret the passage in view of people: "these will go away into eternal punishment, but the righteous into eternal life." The topic has remained about the nations. But nations (people groups) normally do not seem to be eternally punished. Two things can be considered here. One is that cities (people groups) are judged (Matt 11:23 of Capernaum). Cities also have been said to suffer eternal punishment, especially Sodom and Gomorrah (Jude 7). The punishment of the cities or people groups is for their treatment of the King's brothers. That is where interpretations get messier.
One out that people have taken here is to say that every injured or hungry person is a brother/sister here. That point neglects the distinction that these are Christians, not some general aid to the poor. The best reading then is that the sheep are specific cities or nations who have encountered Christians and treated them well. The goats are the "people groups" that persecuted the Christians or otherwise treated them harshly. The key then is that the places had specific contact with Christians and the judgment is based on that. Excluded from this are places where Christians were not in these places within prisons or sick or unclothed (while probably including other lacking).
I think any interpretation that misses these details has been affected by confirmation bias (toward other theories), tradition, and insufficient exegesis. Hopefully this quick analysis provides something to think about when fitting Matt 25:31-46 within one's eschatological concepts.
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