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What IF?
What if I See as Jesus Sees?
Matthew 9:35-38
Sept 27, 2020
Intro:
New Series: Focusing on our mandate to share the gospel message - What IF?
Next several weeks our focus will be on that mandate.
Read text – Matt 9:35-38
The Barna Research Group has been involved in gathering and analyzing information concerning the church since 1984. Many of their findings are startling and eye-opening. They have found that 43% of Americans are unchurched; they have no church affiliation whatsoever.[1]
While it found that 20% of those who have church membership believe that living a good life will gain them a place in heaven.
Given those two statistics alone, that tells us that 63% of Americans are lost and on their way to hell.
This does not take into account the people who are atheists, or are involved in occult forms of worship.
Over 2/3 (70% in Georgia) of everyone you run into is lost. And it is a growing population.
More and more people each year are added to this category.
And if we were to throw all the false professors that do go to church into the mix it would probably be 75% or possibly much higher, which, by the way, is the percentage Jesus referred to in the parable of the soils.
That is why Jesus said, “The harvest truly is plentiful.”
There are people to reach; there is a work to be done.
And one of the greatest dangers of the modern church is that we don’t see this as important work.
Most everything else comes before the work of reaching the lost with the Word of God.
As Jesus ministered to the needs of the people all around Him, He met their physical needs, but He was able to see beyond just that.
Jesus was able to see the deepest needs of their hearts.
As Jesus looked at the multitudes around Him, He was moved with compassion for them.
This word literally means “to be moved in the heart.”
He saw the reality of the need of the people all around Him. He saw them as they were and He sought to share this insight with His disciples.
He still wants to share this insight with you and me this morning! He wants us to see the plight of humanity as He does.
He wants us to see people as they really are. He wants us to be moved in the heart just as He was.
He wants us to be able to see the harvest through His eyes.
May the Lord help us to see the lost people around us like He sees them!
Notice some things that Jesus saw in the text:
1. He Saw the pity of the Harvest – v. 36
A. When Jesus looked at the lost people around Him, He saw them as they really were.
He was able to look beyond the facades of self-sufficiency, self-righteousness and self-confidence.
He saw the pain, the loneliness and the misery they felt in their hearts!
Jesus saw a people who were “weary” under the load of their sins and the unrealistic expectations forced upon them by their religious leaders.
He saw a people who were “scattered”. Literally, “to be cast down or thrown out.”
People who were wondering aimlessly through life with no direction and planned destination, people who lived life with no shepherd for their souls.
He saw a people who were utterly and hopelessly lost.
B. Oh, how we need to see the multitudes like Jesus saw them!
On this side is a family. They seem happy. They have good jobs, plenty of money, a nice house and all the things this world can offer them.
Plenty of people like that live in this community.
But, if you could look into their hearts, you would see turmoil, fear, loneliness and desperation.
They have no answers to their questions. They need the Lord!
There is another family. They don’t have as much as the first family, but they do work and they have a place to live.
Their lives are driven by alcohol and drugs.
They seem hard to the Gospel and are antagonistic toward those who try to tell them about Jesus.
But, if you could rip aside the layers of their lives and peer into their souls, you would see people who are afraid to die and even afraid to live.
They are people without hope and they need someone to see them as they really are.
Someone who can see them as they are and still love them, that is the person who can reach them for Jesus!
C. Those kinds of comparisons could go on forever, literally, but what Jesus really saw was the end of these people’s existence.
He knew that without a relationship with Him, they were all doomed to perish in Hell.
That is what we need to see today about our friends, neighbors and families.
They may look like they have it all together, but if they are lost, they are headed to Hell and they need to be saved by the grace of God!
Can you see them as they really are this morning?
Can you see them like He sees them?
He knows their condition, yet He loves them still.
May the Lord help us to see the harvest through His eyes! Notice what the text tells us that He saw
2. He saw the potential of the harvest – v. 37
A. Jesus looked at the crowds around Him and He saw a “plentiful” harvest.
I am sure all the disciples saw were people pushing and shoving to get close to their leader.
But, Jesus saw more! He saw men who needed to be saved by grace.
He saw a harvest that was ripe for the picking! He looked beyond their condition and their destination and He saw a people that could be delivered, changed and saved! He did not see the problems, only the potential!
B. What do we see when we look at the people all around us?
· Do we see sinners lost in their filthiness and vileness?
· Do we see people who live like dogs and don’t care?
· Do we see people as they are, or do we see them as the Lord could make them if they came to Him?
That is the view Jesus had of lost men.
He saw them not as they were, but as they could be by grace!
We need that same kind of vision if we are going to reach people in this day and time!
C. One day, Jesus stood with His disciples outside the city of the Samaritans.
Now, the Samaritan were a people despised by the Jews of Jesus’s day.
The Samaritans came about through the intermarriage of Jews with the colonists sent to live in Israel by the Babylonians.
Jesus went to a city of the Samaritans and spoke to a sinful woman. He saw her not just as she was, but as she could be through grace.
He saved her and many Samaritans were also saved because Jesus looked at the harvest as being everywhere and plentiful.
His words to the disciples in John 4:25-41 are very interesting! Read John 4:25-41
John 4:31–39 (KJV 1900)
31 In the mean while his disciples prayed him, saying, Master, eat. 32 But he said unto them, I have meat to eat that ye know not of. 33 Therefore said the disciples one to another, Hath any man brought him ought to eat? 34 Jesus saith unto them, My meat is to do the will of him that sent me, and to finish his work. 35 Say not ye, There are yet four months, and then cometh harvest? behold, I say unto you, Lift up your eyes, and look on the fields; for they are white already to harvest. 36 And he that reapeth receiveth wages, and gathereth fruit unto life eternal: that both he that soweth and he that reapeth may rejoice together. 37 And herein is that saying true, One soweth, and another reapeth. 38 I sent you to reap that whereon ye bestowed no labour: other men laboured, and ye are entered into their labours. 39 And many of the Samaritans of that city believed on him for the saying of the woman, which testified, He told me all that ever I did.”
D. What I am trying to get us to understand is this truth: There are people all around who need Jesus!
The harvest truly in plentiful. Many are ripe for the picking, we merely need to see it and do something about it!
May the Lord help us to see the harvest through His loving eyes.
3. He saw the problem of the harvest – v. 37b
A. As Jesus looked at the harvest, He acknowledged that fact that it was plentiful and that it was pitiful.
But as He saw lost men all around, He also recognized a problem: there were few laborers working in the Father’s field! Haggai 2:19 (KJV 1900)
B. You know, that same problem still exists today!
Reaping the soul harvest is hard work and few, it seems, are willing to roll up their sleeves and get involved in the work.
Jesus called His men to follow Him, promising to make the “fishers of men”, Matt. 4:18-22.
Of course, to fish, requires the fisherman to go where the fish are: to the water!
Those of you who farm know that the harvest doesn’t just gather itself. You’ve got to get out there, get down where it is and do the dirty work of harvesting it.
Wouldn’t it be nice if the cotton and soy beans picked themselves and carried themselves to the gin?
What if the okra, the squash and the corn plucked themselves and came to where you were?
Well, it doesn’t work like that! To harvest your crops, you have to go to where the harvest is.
The same is true in bringing men to Jesus. We can sit in the church, but we won’t see a harvest until we go were the lost men are living.
It is dirty work, but it must be done, or the harvest will never be reaped!
C. Surely we can see that people are in sad shape today, spiritually speaking.
Surely we care about them and want to see them saved by grace.
May we come to the place where we are not content just to see it, but may we come to the place where we become willing to go into the harvest and reap is for Jesus sake!
If we can ever come to see the harvest through His eyes, we will not be content to merely see it, we will have to enter in and work to see men/women/boys/girls saved. May God grant it!
4. He saw the power of the harvest – v. 38
A. As Jesus spoke about the harvest and the needs associated with it, He told His men what to do first: Pray!
Why pray? Because seeing the harvest brought into the barn is God’s work!
He must till the soil of the heart.
He must water the seed of the Word that is planted and He must cast the sunshine of grace upon the lost heart, or there will never be a harvest!
You see, the new birth is a miracle! It is the awesome work of God in a human heart!
Only He can do it and we must pray over the harvest.
B. Notice that Jesus told them to pray that the Lord of the harvest (God) would send forth laborers into the harvest.
As we develop a burden for the lost and begin to pray for them as we should, the Lord will develop a compassion for them within our own heart.
If we pray as we should, the Lord will work within us so that a desire will be born within us to go into the field and work for the harvest.
(We will be like Isaiah - Isa. 6:1-9!)
Isaiah 6:1–9 (KJV 1900)
In the year that king Uzziah died I saw also the Lord sitting upon a throne, high and lifted up, and his train filled the temple. 2 Above it stood the seraphims: each one had six wings; with twain he covered his face, and with twain he covered his feet, and with twain he did fly. 3 And one cried unto another, and said,
Holy, holy, holy, is the Lord of hosts:
The whole earth is full of his glory.
4 And the posts of the door moved at the voice of him that cried, and the house was filled with smoke. 5 Then said I, Woe is me! for I am undone; because I am a man of unclean lips, and I dwell in the midst of a people of unclean lips: for mine eyes have seen the King, the Lord of hosts. 6 Then flew one of the seraphims unto me, having a live coal in his hand, which he had taken with the tongs from off the altar: 7 And he laid it upon my mouth, and said, Lo, this hath touched thy lips; and thine iniquity is taken away, and thy sin purged. 8 Also I heard the voice of the Lord, saying, Whom shall I send, and who will go for us? Then said I, Here am I; send me. 9 And he said, Go, and tell this people,
Hear ye indeed, but understand not;
And see ye indeed, but perceive not.
C. Can you see the need this morning? If you can, the starting place is to get before God in prayer, trusting Him to do His work in the harvest!
If we pray, He will send forth the laborers. Of course, they might just be us!
Conc:
We must be serious about this mandate
I want to encourage you to come seek God in prayer that He would send laborers into the harvest –
Be so bold to pray that He would send YOU.
Don’t let fear persuade you to sit still and do nothing
Ask God to show you who HE would have you pray for, and share the gospel message with.
[1] https://www.barna.com/research/five-trends-among-the-unchurched/- accessed 11/2/17