Thursday, December 09, 2010

How To Be Saved, Though American Middle Class


Are you rich?
You may be thinking, “I wish I was, then I could pay off my bills.” But when the Bible talks about people who are rich, it isn’t talking about how much money you have, or how much income you have. Rather, it speaks of the lifestyle you have and the amount of possessions you have. You might have debts and barely squeak by each month with your income, but if you have plenty to entertain yourself with and more than enough food, clothing and warmth, then you would be counted as rich in the Bible. Let me ask the question in a different way: Are you in the American middle class or better? If you say, “Sure, we’re middle class,” then, according to the standards of the Bible, you are rich.

If that is the case, then I just want to be honest with you. You’re in trouble. At least, you are in trouble spiritually. Probably. I’m sure that you are living pretty comfortably, but as far as your place before Jesus, you are in trouble. “Hey, wait! I’m confident in my place in Christ. I’m doing well spiritually.” You probably attend church regularly and read the Bible. Perhaps you even lead a Bible study or pray on a regular basis. All of that is great. But, according to Jesus, you are still in trouble. Jesus’ statements are very clear: “How hard it will be for those who are wealthy to enter the kingdom of God!” (Mark 10:23).

Just how hard? Jesus says well nigh impossible. Below are the stories of three rich men in Scripture and what Jesus says about their eternal destiny.

The Wealthy Entrepreneur (Luke 12:16-21)
A farmer did quite well one year and he was determining what to do with his surplus. “I know!” he said, “I will take my profit and put it into savings. I will build bigger barns, so that I can store more grain and goods for the future and then I will be able to take it easy and spend the rest of my life in pleasure.” However, God spoke to the man and said, “You idiot! You are dead tonight! And now what will be done with your ‘surplus’? Who will enjoy it now?” Jesus’ point in the parable is that the one who does not use his extra possessions, wealth or income in the manner told by God, then they will have nothing at the end of their lives.

The Man with many possessions (Mark 10:17-27)
Jesus was walking along and a man ran up to him, asking him, “Teacher, what should I do to gain eternal life?” Jesus answered, “You know the commandments in the Law—don’t commit adultery, don’t steal, don’t defraud, honor your father and mother.” The man said, “I’ve done all these things. Is that it?” Jesus looked at him and felt a love for him and so he said, “Yes—one last thing. Sell everything you have and give the proceeds to the poor. Then you will have riches in heaven. Then come and follow me.” The man walked away sadly because he had many possessions.

This man was rich not because he had a huge income or because he had an enormous amount of money in the bank. Rather, he had a lot of possessions. That is a lot like most of us, I would say. This man was hoping for eternal life while keeping what he had, but Jesus said that the only way he could gain a future life was to give up the life he had. If he surrendered his possessions and gave it all to those who had nothing, then he would be able to follow Jesus unencumbered. However, when a person has so much to give away, the task seems daunting—even impossible. But even the rich person can be saved with God’s help.

The Man in Comfort (Luke 16:19-31)
There was a man living in wealth and comfort. Every day he had sumptuous meals, and he dressed well and comfortably. He had everything going for him. Outside his door was a poor man named Lazarus who would have loved to eat just a bite of what the rich man was eating, and had such inadequate clothes that there were sores on his skin. The rich man, however, paid him no mind. Both of them were pious, and considered Abraham to be their father. But when they both died, Lazarus was taken to Abraham, while the rich man was taken to agony in dark flames. When the rich man complained to Abraham about this treatment, Abraham replied, “Son, remember that while you were alive you received your comforts and feasts. Lazarus, on the other hand, received only pain and sorrow. Now the roles are justly reversed—you are in agony and Lazarus is being comforted.”

Jesus said that the same would be true of a disciple of his. Those of his disciples who are poor would receive the kingdom of God. On the other hand, those of his disciples who are rich, who took comfort in this life, who lived in pleasure and ran around concerned about the affairs of this world—they would not receive God’s comfort in the end. (Luke 6:20-26; Mark 4:18-19)

Other places of the New Testament make it clear that the place of the rich, who live in luxury and pleasure, is eternal torment:

James says, “Come now, you rich, weep and howl for your miseries which are coming upon you. Your riches have rotted and your garments have become moth-eaten. It is in the last days that you have stored up your treasure! You have lived luxuriously on the earth and led a life of pleasure; you have fattened your hearts in a day of slaughter.” James 5:1-5.

The book of Revelation condemns the church who is rich and commands them to repent or they will be punished. Revelation 3:14-22.

The teaching of Jesus and the apostles are clear: The rich person who does not repent will not be with Jesus on the last day, but will be punished and sent to eternal fire. There’s no way to get around it. It really is impossible to be rich and to enter the kingdom. Jesus wasn’t just joking—he was deadly serious. He wasn’t just talking about the one who is greedy in spirit, like a miser—he was speaking about anyone who had what was extra. Jesus wasn’t just talking to disciples who lived long ago and far away—he is speaking today and he is speaking to us.

This will mean that hundreds of thousands of those who live comfortable lives in American churches today will end up in hell. There will be whole congregations of people who heard from their pastors that a person can live in pleasure and full contentment on earth and still gain salvation on the last day. I am here to tell you that it is a lie. I don’t want to condemn you or anyone else. However, God’s word is clear. Those who live for their entertainment, those who build up possessions for their own pleasure, those who store away for their future comfort—all of these people are condemned to die by Jesus. On the final day, perhaps you who are reading this tract will go before Jesus and he will say, “Go from me, I never knew you.” You will reply to him, “But, Lord, I received you as a child and believed in you my whole life.” And he will reply to you, “Why do you call me ‘Lord’ but you have never done what I told you to? If you really believed you would have acted for the sake of the poor.”

There is a solution. We can be saved. We can gain peace with God. We can gain the salvation of Jesus. But I’ll be honest with you—the path to salvation is hard for us. We will require God’s grace and Spirit and perhaps even a miracle from him to be able to accomplish this salvation. The path Jesus requires of us is to live a lifestyle of helping the poor.

Jesus said to all of his disciples, “Sell your possessions and give to the poor and make yourselves an unfailing treasure in heaven, for where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.” (Luke 12:33-34)

He also said, “Make friends for yourselves by using the wealth of unrighteousness, so that when it is gone, those friends of yours will welcome you into eternal dwellings.” (Luke 16:9)

On the final day, Jesus will welcome those who enter God’s kingdom by saying, “I was hungry and you gave me something to eat. I was naked and you clothed me. I was a stranger and you gave me hospitality. I was in prison and you came to me.” Then the righteous will answer him, “When did we do these things?” And Jesus will reply, “When you did it to one of my poor disciples, then you did it to me.” (Matthew 25:34-40).

In the earliest days of the church, the apostles took in quite a bit of money from the disciples, but didn’t use it for a building program, but instead provided for the poor among them. (Acts 4:34-35)

Paul also firmly supported this way of salvation for the rich: “Timothy, teach those who have wealth not to focus on gaining more wealth, but to be generous and to share their wealth with the needy so that they will have security for eternity and gain true life.” (I Timothy 6:17-19)

Practically, how does one do this? How can we live a lifestyle of serving the poor? Scripturally, there are three models to do this:

The Disciples’ Model—
Renouncing wealth and the gaining of wealth (Mark 1:16-20; Mark 10:28-30)
Peter and James and John were fisherman with their own businesses. They made a living and were content. Then Jesus came along and said, “Come and follow me.” At that point they knew what they needed to do. They dropped what they were doing, quit their work, left their families and followed Jesus to go where he went. While they may have looked back on occasion (John 21:3), they knew that the way to follow Jesus was the way of renouncing what one had and the lifestyle of comfort and pleasure. Instead, they were to dedicate all of their time and energy in giving the gospel to whoever needed it. Peter referred to this, later in the ministry, and Jesus replied, “Everyone who has renounced their family, land and occupation for my sake and for the gospel’s will gain ten times as much in this life through my disciples—along with suffering through persecutions— and in the age to come, eternal life.”

Even so, we can live in this manner. We can renounce all that we have—sell all that we have, give to those who are in greater need than us and then not collect any more. Jesus said, “Do not store up treasures on earth, but store up treasures in heaven.” And he makes it clear that storing up treasures in heaven means continuing to give what you have to those in need (Luke 12:33-34). This seems like the hardest thing to do, but in some ways it is the simplest. Once you have renounced your wealth, you need not worry about it again.

The Zaccheus Model—
Continually giving to the poor from one’s income (Luke 19:1-10)
Zaccheus was a wealthy tax collector and he was hated by the Jews of his community. He was rich, he was powerful and he was clearly in sin, after all, he was the chief of all tax collectors in the region! When Jesus honored him by being willing to stay in his house, all of the righteous of the community complained. Zaccheus then summarized his manner of maintaining righteousness—he would continually give half of his income to the poor and if he cheated anyone, he would repay them four times as much. Jesus declared Zaccheus righteous and a true inheritor of the kingdom of God, even though he was a tax collector, because he was doing what was righteous.

Even so, we can live in this manner. If we receive a continuous income, then we can be generous of that income and give to the poor. Not just give to those who are already wealthy, but give to those in real need. And like Zaccheus, we must not think that a simple ten percent of our giving is enough—not if we can still live in luxury on even fifteen percent of what is left. Instead, let us give generously and continuously. We keep what we know we need to live on and then give away the rest. Also, whatever clothes or food that we receive but do not need, let us give it away to the poor.

The Philemon Model—
Providing hospitality for the poor from all of one’s resources (Philemon 1:1-22)
Philemon was wealthy—very wealthy. He had a large household to run and slaves to run it. But he was a strong believer and determined that what he had would be made available to the poor of the kingdom of God. He was known to show love to all those who followed Christ. He invited the church of his community to meet in his house, and whenever a church worker was passing through, he invited them into his house to stay there as long as they needed. Paul had used his house before and was planning to use it again.

Even so, we can live in this manner. Whatever we have: a house, a car, a spare room, extra clothes, extra food, room in our church, room in our garage, extra time—let us use all these things for the sake of the poor, especially the needy in our church. Let us consider what we have and think how it can be used for the poor.

These models seem difficult—and so they are. Jesus himself said that the way of salvation is difficult. But it is the way of salvation. There is no way out. If we want eternal life, we need to live a life of love, of justice and of mercy. We need to surrender our lives for the sake of God. And God asks us to surrender our possessions to the poor. Let us do so with joy, not with hesitation or complaining. For to do this is to gain more out of life now, and to gain life with Christ eternally.

1 comment:

Steve Rush said...

Thanks Steve, this is most helpful! So much of what the post-modern church in the US teaches seems, to me anyway, to be of a worldly wisdom.

Yet we are not to be 'of this world?' I appreciate your tho'ts, as expressed here, and am looking forward to an impending visit.


Again, your new friend; Steve

http://twitter.com/rush1959