2015-12-06 Luke 14:1-6 Good Works or Ghastly Works?
Notes
Transcript
GOOD WORKS OR GHASTLY WORKS?
(Luke 14:1-6)
December 6, 2015
Read Lu 14:1-6 – “What one thing will keep more people out of heaven
than any other?” What one thing? I can tell you without reservation what I
think it is. It is people’s good works. Most people are counting on their
goodness to get them there. And the Bible is unequivocal. That simply won’t
do. Paul specifically says in Titus 3:5, “he saved us, NOT because of works
done by us in righteousness, but according to his own mercy.” He says “not of
works, lest any person should boast” (Eph 2:9). Good works are ghastly
works when someone is counting on them to earn favor with God.
A deeply religious woman was had many trials. A friend consoled her that her
place in heaven was assured. Thinking endurance thru trial was her ticket she
replied, “I’m not so sure. I’m thinking I might be overqualified.” She was
closer to the truth than she realized. There is a whole world full of people who
– listen now – who will not be in heaven. They are overqualified – depending
on their works, not Christ’s work. Good works come after salvation to
demonstrate saving faith, but when depended on to get there, ghastly.
People trying to earn God’s favor are legalists, or moralists. To them, life is
an accounting system. My goodness puts God in my debt. I lose a few points
when I slip off the wagon, but I earn it back with some extra credit later. That
is moralism – the belief I put God under obligation by my goodness. That is
the problem Jesus addresses here. The Sabbath issue is background. He’s
attacking moralists – showing they all come up short. Their books say one
thing; God’s books say another. The solution to sin is not moralism, but
repentance. Jesus here gives 3 ways moralism calls short of God’s glory.
I.
Moralists Lack Comprehension
Their authority is human wisdom. They rely on their own intellect rather than
on God’s revelation – a common issue in our own world. Note the
background. V. 1: “One Sabbath, when he went to dine at the house of a ruler
of the Pharisees, they were watching him carefully.” Friendly start, right?
Jesus is invited to lunch at the home of a leading Pharisee and He accepts as
He is approaching Jerusalem. It all seems quite warm and cozy.
But an ominous note is sounded at the end of the verse – “they were watching
him carefully.” Who is they? We’re not told. Logically “they” are friends of
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this big wig, other Pharisees or like-minded individuals who make up the
dinner party. And they are watching Him carefully. Because they revere Him?
Quite the opposite. Luke has just told of Jesus’ mourning over Jerusalem for
its lack of repentance. Then he moves directly into this account. What is he
doing? He is showing us a real life example of Israel’s failure. This is
rejection leading to destruction. So when he says, “they were watching him
carefully (lurkingly, suspiciously),” it’s not for a good purpose. It’s a trap.
In fact, the very next verse show the means by which they hope to get Him to
break the Sabbath so they can accuse Him. “2 And behold, there was a man
before him who had dropsy.” Dropsy is a buildup of excess fluid in body
tissues caused by something else. It could be cancer or liver or kidney or even
heart problems. Whatever it is, this man has a serious physical condition.
Commentators debate whether this man is an uninvited courtyard guest or
whether he was invited. I think he’s invited, but either way, it’s a setup. They
have a physically needy person and their expectation is that Jesus will do
what He always does – heal the man – and then they can bring charges that
He has broken the Sabbath regulations against work. It is a setup all the way.
Jesus sees right thru the ruse. It’s not hard. This man, whose condition the
Pharisees believed is brought on by sin, would not normally have been invited.
They have placed him where Jesus cannot miss him, so while Jesus views him
with compassionate eyes, they view Jesus with something else in their eyes.
Jesus sees human need; they see rules. That’s how you know you’re a
moralist. Rules mean more to you than people. So the trap is set. Even as they
pass the potatoes, they are waiting for Jesus to act so they can accuse Him.
So, v. 3: “And Jesus responded to the lawyers and Pharisees.” Jesus
responded? To what? No one has said anything. No, but this shows Jesus sees
thru the setup. He responds to the situation knowing exactly what they intend.
As they wait with eager anticipation, he dashes their plans with 1 question. “Is
it lawful to heal on the Sabbath, or not?” Not “Wouldn’t it be compassionate
to heal on the Sabbath?” That would have led to fruitless debate. Jesus goes
to the core of the issue, “Is it lawful to heal on the Sabbath, or not?”
Their reaction is telling. “But they remained silent.” Commentators almost
unanimously insist this is because Jesus had put them on the horns of a
dilemma. If they said, “Yes it’s lawful”, they could not object to a healing. But
if they said, “No, it’s not lawful,” then they would have been the heartless bad
guys and Jesus the good guy. And it’s true, Jesus had them in a bind!
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But Jesus has caught them out on an even deeper issue. When Jesus said, “Is it
lawful?” everyone would have known He was asking, “Does God’s law
revealed thru Moses prohibit healing on the Sabbath? Would healing violate
God’s law?” And they all knew the answer. Nothing in the Mosaic Law to
prohibited healing on the Sabbath. Nothing! The only thing healing would
violate was their own additions to God’s law to define it according to their
own liking. Healing would violate them – not God!
By this one question Jesus has pointed out a major issue of all moralists. They
lack comprehension. They misinterpret and abuse God’s revelation by their
own additions that they keep and that others don’t to make themselves look
good. For them, it’s about a religion they’ve defined, not a relationship that
God defines. They turn God’s Word into a list of do’s and don’t’s rather than
the living invitation to a relationship it’s intended to be.
You say, “Well, wait a minute. Aren’t the Ten Commandments found in the
Bible? Seems like a list to me!” And that’s true. But they were never intended
to save anyone by keeping them. They were intended to illustrate we can’t
keep them; therefore, a sacrifice for sin is needed leading to a relationship
based on grace, not law. The Bible never says, “Be saved by keeping this list.”
Never! What it says in Gal 3:10 is, “For all who rely on works of the law are
under a curse; for it is written, “Cursed be everyone who does not abide by all
things written in the Book of the Law, and do them.” You don’t get saved by
keeping the list; you get cursed. Because you can’t do it. But the moralist
never delves deeply enough into the Word to find that out. He never realizes
that he is most cursed, not by his sin, but by his goodness. [Repeat]
God says in Rom 3:24 we “are justified by his grace as a gift, through the
redemption that is in Christ Jesus.” “Freely, by His grace” the KJV has it.
Someone says, “Surely I must do something, be holy for many years and
then get it!” No – “freely by His grace”. “But I have been praying and I do
not believe God will forgive me unless I do something.” So you would make
God a liar. He says it is “freely by His grace.” Spurgeon says, “If you bring in
any of your deservings, you shall not have it. God gives away his
justification freely; and if you bring anything to pay for it, He will throw it
in your face.” Your deservings ruin everything. It is “freely by His grace.”
If I could preach justification for $10, who would go out without being
justified? If I could preach justification by walking 100 miles, would we not
all become pilgrims tomorrow, every one of us? If I were to preach
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justification by torture, we would all line up. But when it is freely, freely,
freely, people turn away. And thus moralism kills for lack of comprehension.
II.
Moralists Lack Compassion
The Pharisees have no response to Jesus’ question, so Jesus heals the man and
sends him away. He has been used enough. Jesus graciously removes him
from further humiliation. But now, knowing full well that His action offends
the Pharisees despite their cowardliness in not answering, He asks another
question – this one clearly showing them for the hypocrites they are. 5 And he
said to them, “Which of you, having a son or an ox that has fallen into a well
on a Sabbath day, will not immediately pull him out?” 6 And they could not
reply to these things.” No reply. Why? Because they know He is right.
Jesus point is despite their long list of do’s and don’t’s, they give themselves
waivers. So, while their Sabbath rules inconvenience others – with regulations
against such things as a tailor “carrying” a pin in his toga, or a housewife
cooking any kind of meal, yet they allow for their own benefit that if a son or
an ox falls into a well and life is endangered, they can pull him out.
Open wells were a constant danger in Palestine. A child or even an animal
seeking water might easily fall into one. Would it be work to get them out?
Absolutely. It might take intense labor. But for their own benefit, the small
print on their list gave them the go-ahead. They knew that Jesus had it
exactly right. But his question pinpoints their own hard heart. They would go
rescue their own child, or even one of their animals – yet they were incensed
that Jesus had expended no discernible labor to heal a man who had a lifethreatening condition. Their hypocrisy knew no bounds and compassion was a
foreign concept to them. Jesus question is intended to get them to face up to
this; it is an invitation to repent and get right with God.
They knew that the law could be summed up in two commands – to love the
Lord your God with all your heart, and to love others as yourself. They failed
on both counts. They did not love God as shown by their amending His
revelation to suit their purposes. And Jesus has just shown that they care more
about their own animals than they do a fellow human being. Sure, they may do
something nice for someone once in awhile, but only to pad their own list of
virtues. They use others, not love them.
They just want to think themselves better than others. This is why moralists
always compare. They may do right things, but always for the wrong reasons,
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so that they can look good. But who can blame them. Their salvation depends
on it! Ask them, “Why do you think you are going to heaven?” Answer:
“Because I am just as good as anyone else and better than most.” Moralists
have to be condescending toward others. To humbly admit that they are sinful
would destroy the very thing they are depending on to save them. This is why
the Pharisees despised the common people. Their salvation depended on being
better. Modern moralists are just the same only they are more subtle about it.
Deep down they only use others to convince themselves that they are okay.
A teacher wanted to encourage students to avoid colds. So she told a heartwrenching story about her little brother -- a wonderful, fun-loving little boy
who went out with his sled, got cold and wet, got pneumonia and died. When
she finished the story there was dead silence; she thought she had really gotten
thru. That is until a voice in back asked, “Where’s the sled?” That boy was a
Pharisee to the core. No compassion, just a burning desire to use someone
else for his own gain. So moralists use others to bolster their self-image and
convince themselves they are good enough for God on their own. And so their
good works take them straight to hell because no one can be good enough.
III.
Moralists Lack Christ
Rather than accepting Christ and believing in Him, these men were watching
Him to catch Him out, right? As we’ve seen before, they were judging Him,
not believing Him. And so, in the end, by far their greatest lack was they
lacked Christ. They didn’t feel they needed Him.
Moralists today are not so blatant in that regard. They will talk about Christ,
and maybe even believe the facts about His life. But for their salvation, they
trust in their goodness. If Jesus had never been born, it would make no
difference to them! That is the most telling feature of their religion. It doesn’t
need Jesus. He was a great example, but, if He hadn’t been there, they would
copy someone else. Their salvation is their list of do’s and don’t’s. Their
salvation is their morality and their judgment that they are good enough.
Want to see a moralist. Lu 18:10 “Two men went up into the temple to pray,
one a Pharisee and the other a tax collector. 11 The Pharisee, standing by
himself, prayed thus: ‘God, I thank you that I am not like other men,
extortioners, unjust, adulterers, or even like this tax collector. 12 I fast twice a
week; I give tithes of all that I get.’ We think we’re not Pharisees, but how
often have you heard someone give testimony or pray like that. “Praise God,
we came to Christ, raised our kids right, and now they are missionaries in
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Africa, and we are grateful for what we could give to the Building Fund. It’s
great to have Jesus!” Be very careful, Beloved. Some of our prayers sound
just like that guy because we are moralists just like he was – thanking God
that we did all the right things. But read on: “13 But the tax collector, standing
far off, would not even lift up his eyes to heaven, but beat his breast, saying,
‘God, be merciful to me, a sinner!’” And Jesus’ verdict? “14 I tell you, this man
went down to his house justified, rather than the other.” Who got saved? Not
the guy who did everything right, but the guy who admitted he got nothing
right and threw himself on God’s mercy. He got Christ; the other went away
empty-handed.
Conc – What’s going to keep more people out of heaven than anything? Good
works made ghastly because we trust them for salvation. Christian Smith
quotes a 15-year-old MS boy whose belief parallels that of most people: "If
you do the right thing and don't do anything bad, I mean nothing really
bad, you know, you go to heaven. If you don't, then you're screwed [laughs],
that's about it." So – just be good. Unfortunately, the Bible teaches differently.
It teaches “none righteous, no, not one. . . . no one does good, not even one.”
If we get heaven by being good, God’s verdict is, “Everybody out.” But
thankfully, Jesus He came to fix what we think we can fix but can’t! A sign at
a plumbing shop read, “We repair what your husband fixed.” Jesus came to
repair what you and I fixed – because it’s not really fixed until He moves in.
He turns ghastly good works (those intended to earn favor with God) into
good, good works (those demonstrating saving faith). So, are you a moralist or
a believer – trusting in your goodness or in His goodness? We can never be
good enough, Beloved, but He already was. Let’s pray.
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