Matthew 18
It is not easy for us to think about the kingdom of
heaven. Every breath that we have ever taken has been on an earth
where there is much sin and misery. What might it be like to breathe
the air of a place that is fully captivated by the holiness and glory
of God? What would it mean to be great in such a place, even the
greatest?
This was the question that the disciples brought to
Jesus. His answer to them had to be surprising. He called over a
child, someone whom no one would have thought of as great in any
sense. Did the disciples want to even enter the kingdom of heaven?
Then they would have to be like this child.
Of course there would be many things about a child that
would have nothing to do with heaven and might not be worthy of
imitation in any way. His specific point was that they needed to
humble themselves before God.
This is closely connected to true faith. They needed to
hear God’s Word and believe. The posture of humility is so
different than that of pride, pride that will not hear, pride that
knows better than the Lord God Almighty and refuses to obey.
Those who humble themselves before God will receive
their brothers and sisters in Christ as beloved children of God.
People who would take advantage of the weak and the ignorant and lead
them astray are of a very different spirit, and are acting as if the
Lord does not see what they are doing, or does not care for His own.
This way of life is diametrically opposed to the life of
faith. It is unbelief working itself out in actions of great
ugliness. Arrogant impulses rising up within us must be severely
dealt with, since we know that they are inconsistent with the kingdom
of heaven.
God, who reigns in heaven over men and angels, will use
all His power for the ultimate vindication of those who belong to
Him. He is like a shepherd who knows every one of His sheep well, and
will rescue the one who goes astray.
It is not His will that any of those who belong to Him
shall perish. This is the value system of heaven, and it informs the
way that we are to care for one another within the church on earth.
Our Lord is more aware than anyone in the church that
His body is comprised, not of those who are already perfectly
righteous, but of those who easily go astray. He faced the wrath that
was due against us in His death on the cross. He has felt the eternal
consequence of our sins in ways that we never will.
He is the one who tells us what to do when one of His
beloved children sins against us. We are to address these matters
personally, working toward the most blessed resolution possible in
this world of misery and trouble here below, seeking both the peace
and purity of the Lord’s house.
As God will not quickly abandon those who are weak and
broken, we are to be those who keep on forgiving, knowing that we
have been forgiven by one who had a very good case against us but was
unwilling to give us over to hell.
He has released us from such an overwhelming debt. Will
we then be quick to condemn one another for smaller offenses, whether
real or imagined? This is the attitude of ungrateful servants, not of
the sons of God.
Our willingness to forgive is a testimony to our
understanding of what Christ has done for us. This is the only way
for forgiveness to be a delightful privilege for sinful people.
We must see it as our testimony to the greatness of the
cross. Our Savior has loved us, and He loves us still. It is not
pleasant for Him to hear of small-minded and petty grudges that we
hold against others. We must increasingly resolve in our hearts and
minds to wish to live on earth even now as those who believe in
heaven.
If we truly believe in heaven, then we can show that
faith by honoring the God of heaven through the pursuit of the ethic
that He commands. Then we will seek the humility of faith as the
wonderful gift granted to all of heaven’s children, a humility that
hears and believes; a humility that believes and follows.
If we believe in heaven, then we will love the weakest
ones who have the songs of heaven in their hearts and on their lips,
and we will care for the child of even one believing parent, for we
look to see each of those little ones claimed by the same Father who
has captivated our hearts.
If we believe in heaven, then we will seek peace and
purity in the Lord’s house on earth, and we will thank God for
every opportunity that we have to forgive. To live this way now is to
believe now. The one who pursues this life with humility and mercy
will not always be considered to be great by some on earth.
Nonetheless, such a person need not regret a life lived in grateful
imitation of Christ, the greatest Son of the Father in the kingdom of
heaven.
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