Sheep and Goats
Matthew 25:31-46
In these parabolic illustrations
of the sheep and the goats we shall principally be concerned with all that our
Lord was intending to illustrate by those figures. They occur in this third and
last section of the Olivet prophecy. In order to correct interpretation we must
first remember the relationships between the sections, and to the whole message
of the Gospel in which it is found. Second we must be careful not to read into
this part of our Lord's prophecy, and especially into His parabolic
illustration, any of the things which are not truly found in it. We are in
danger of doing this, especially with regard to this account and illustration.
When those safeguards are observed, we shall be free to catch the true meaning
of the remarkable passage, and to examine the process which it so vividly
describes.
The parabolic figure of sheep and
goats here is used in application to finality. Finality of what? That question
will be answered as we look carefully. Consider the relation of this section (25:31-46),
to the whole of this Olivet prophecy. In answering His questioning disciples He
had first looked down the coming age and uttered a prophecy specially dealing
with the Hebrew people, which found its culmination in the destruction of
Jerusalem, fulfilled within a little more than a generation after He had
uttered the words. Then in the second section (24:45-25:30) our Lord was
specially dealing with the responsibilities of His Church between the First
and Second Advents. We have seen these responsibilities, communal, personal,
and imperial. Now in the last part of the prophecy He deals with the nations.
It is not the Hebrew people as a nation. That nation He had excommunicated from
its place in the economy of God temporarily. It is not now the spiritual
nation, the Church, with which He had been dealing as to responsibility. It is now
the nations of the world. In this last section He is looking on to the consummation,
and the things that will happen then with regard to the kingdoms of the world.
In each of these sections of the
prophecy His Second Advent was evidently in His mind. It is always there,
recurring. The first section ended with the charge, "Be ye also ready, for in an hour that ye think not the Son of man
cometh." The second, in three pictures, deals with the return of the
absent Lord. The Lord of the household comes to query into communal
responsibility; the bridegroom arrives to meet those who have expected him; and
the owner of the goods comes for a reckoning with those who have received
talents.
Now this section commences with the
reference with which the others close. "But
when the Son of man shall come in His glory." He is dealing now with
the Second Advent as the starting point, and giving the happenings immediately
connected with that advent. He describes the effect of His Second Advent on
national affairs in this world.
Notice how Matthew, this remarkable
chronicler of the King, has proceeded, and here reaches a great climax. This is
the Gospel of the Kingdom, and of the Kingdom of heaven. The opening movement
presents the King. From that there follows the description of the King's
propaganda. His enunciation of an ethic, the sermon on the mount; the
exhibition of the benefits of the Kingdom, as He moved amid derelict humanity,
healing need, whether physical, moral, or mental; and then enforcing His claims
in opposition to those of His foes. The hour was coming when He was moving
towards rejection, but He was moving towards an ultimate victory. It is that
ultimate victory that is here revealed in this final section of the Olivet
prophecy. In Matthew, the ultimate victory is not seen in heaven, but on earth.
That does not mean the ultimate things are not the heavenly things, and things
in the ages to come. They certainly are, but that is not the theme here, and it
is not the theme in this particular discourse.
The laws of the Kingdom, in the Sermon
on the Mount are for earthly conditions, not for heavenly. They do not apply to
a heavenly state and condition of a life after this. They all apply to the
present life. As we watch the King moving in Kingly power and compassion and
majesty amid derelict humanity, that does not mean an exhibition of the powers
of the Kingship of Jehovah in the heavenly realms that lie beyond. It is an
exhibition of His power on this earthly level. So as He enforced His claims all
the way, they consisted of His claims upon the earth. That prayer which we
designate the Lord's Prayer moved on two realms. The first had to do with man's
relationship to God, and the second, man's necessities on the earth level, and
man's interrelationship on the earth. He taught His disciples to pray, "Our Father, which art in the heaven,
Thy name be hallowed, Thy Kingdom come, Thy will be done on earth as in
heaven." The passion of that prayer does not ask that men may find
their way to heaven one day, but that God may win the earth, and that the earth
may find itself in the Kingdom of God. The earth is in view.
In this gospel of Matthew 26-28 we
have the final mission and commission, and again I take a slightly altered
translation, which is more accurate. Mark the voice of the King. "All authority is given unto Me in
heaven and on earth; go ye therefore and disciple the nations."
Disciple whom? All the nations. As they come under the influence, and obey it,
then "baptizing them into the name
of the Father and the Son and of the Holy Spirit." The triune Godhead
symbolized in their assignment and it is to "all
the nations." It is on the earth level. Do not imagine that takes any
dignity and glory from this. It does not interfere with the larger meaning of
the work of Christ, as it includes the ages to come, to use Paul's poetic
language, "unto the generation of
the age of the ages." Have you ever sat down in front of that, and
tried to measure it? The first concern of our King is the establishment in this
world of the order harmonizing with the heavenly order which is Triune.
All this is of ultimate importance
to our understanding of the events to which this prophecy refers. Certain
events must be excluded from our thinking. This is not a picture of the Great
Assize, not of the great white Throne. That account is given in Revelation. "I saw a great white Throne, and Him
that sat upon it, from Whose face the earth and the heaven fled away."
Then the dead are raised, and stand before Him. There is nothing here about a
great white Throne. The Son of man is here, not so much as the final Judge, but
as the King in authority. Earth and heaven are not fled away here. The earth
level is in our view. There is no resurrection of the dead. The nations
referred to are living nations. Our Lord was looking on, as He had done all
through His Olivet prophecy, to the consummation of the age, showing what it
will mean in the case of the nations and their treatment of the two witnesses
and the 144,000 gospel preachers.
What then are the facts revealed?
First of all we see the Son of man on the Throne of His glory, and it is a
regal throne. He is the King. "The
King shall say"; He is speaking of Himself as King, when He comes with
His angels, at the consummation of the age. He is coming. When He comes, He
will sit on the throne of His glory. Watch the movement with sanctified
imagination, and draw the picture. He is seen assuming the reins of earthly
government, and doing it openly. By doing this He is eliminating all other
rulers. No other ruler is in sight. There is no king, president, or dictator in
sight; but He is gathering all the nations. It is not a question of multitudes
of men and women. It is a great gathering of nations, and He is seen
administering the affairs of an earthly kingdom. This is the picture of the
initial process of the new administration of earth's affairs. Not the great
white Throne, not even the Judgment Seat of Christ, before which all believers
must appear. As Paul says, we must all appear before the judgment seat of
Christ. When we appear under that glance of fire, then all that is unworthy
will be destroyed, and the fire will burnish to beauty everything holy. This is
a picture of the King enthroned, laying His pierced hand upon the world
affairs, and bringing them to finality, as He moves toward the establishment of
the Kingdom of God in this world.
What do we see at the center of
everything? The Son of man on His throne. Here our minds necessarily go back
over all the ground. The title "Son
of man" was His own familiar designation of Himself in the days of His
flesh. That is the first thing we see; the Son of man enthroned, exercising His
authority. Then all the nations are gathered around that Throne, which again
means, not necessarily that all the people of all the world are so gathered
into one spot, although that would not be difficult. When we think about the
League of Nations, that does not mean all the nations are gathered together at
Geneva. The King’s order calling together every nation. All the nations are
there, and are gathered. There is the cancellation of differences. Old national
lines which have characterized us are obliterated. Whatever the forms of
government may have been, and however they may be changed, when the Son of man
sits on the Throne of His glory, they will all be arraigned before Him. The
very gathering suggests His authority.
Take this parabolic illustration.
If the gathering cancels the old lines of division, there immediately follows a
new division, a new separation. The nations are not treated on the basis of
race, or of political position, or occupation, or achievement, or failure, and
disaster. They are divided into sheep and goats, a division of the nations, a
new separation. The old national lines are obliterated before the King; to His
right and left hand, sheep and goats. All determined by their words and actions
in the last 7 years.
Look next particularly at the
sentences and the verdicts. To those on the right he says, Come, enter the
Kingdom. That is not heaven; that is the new order on earth; when the prayer
that we pray that the Kingdom of God may come on earth as in heaven, is
answered on the earth level. Enter the Kingdom, not heaven, but the earthly
order.
But on what basis? He now comes to
that word so full of infinite meaning. "I
was an hungered . . . I was thirsty . . . I was a stranger . . I was sick . . .
I was in prison." The astonished people on the right say to Him, When
were these things so? Now mark His answer with great care. It is the same
answer, by contrast, to those on the right and on the left. They say, "When? . . . When?" "Verily I
say unto you, Inasmuch as ye did it," or "did it not," "unto one of these My brethren, even these
least, ye did it unto Me," or "ye
did it not unto Me." What a marvelously revealing thing to say. As
Israel was going through great tribulation to come at last to their Messiah and
King the nations are judged on their treatment of His brethren, those 144,000
along with the 2 witnesses.
He found in Israel those who would do
the will of His Father. He was including all Jews, all Hebrews who did the will
of His Father, but He was including all Gentiles also. He is looking down this
whole age from the standpoint of our responsibility; and He sees them going
out, His spiritual brethren, His Kin, mother, brother, sister; multitudes of
them bringing His strength and comfort and help in every way; and He says at
last to the nations, I came when they came, and I came through suffering. I
have passed down the age in these My brethren, and if you have failed to
receive them, you have failed to receive Me; and in failing to receive them and
to receive Me you have proved your unfitness for the newly established Kingdom
of God. Thus to those on the left hand He has said exactly the same thing, only
from the other side. Thus He was showing that nations will be admitted to the
inheritance of the Kingdom of God, established upon the earth, upon the basis
of their attitude to Christ Himself, as He has been represented to them
through His people during the tribulation period.
Look at this more particularly.
That is how the nations are to be judged. It is Pilate's question asked over
again from the national standpoint. Pilate said, What shall I do with Jesus? It
is the question for the nations. What are they doing with Jesus? What are they
doing with His message? What are they doing with His messengers? What are they
doing with all the spiritual forces and moral powers that He has set at liberty,
and which are at work through His people in the age? Upon the basis of that,
His judgment will be found for, or against them. The tremendous thing in that
great division is that the righteous shall enter upon age-abiding life, and the
wicked upon age-abiding fire. It is a national division.
We must stop there, because there
He stopped. We can go beyond it, and try and find out what it means. It is the
initiation of that Kingdom in human history. It is not finality. Finality is
never reached until this has first taken place. He will be the Dictator, the
Despot as Peter and Jude titled Him. If I am asked today, Do you really think
this is coming? I answer, Certainly it is coming. If I did not believe it I
would lose all heart and hope. I am sure it is coming. When? No, my friend, you
must not ask that, because He has told us distinctly—He told these disciples
in this prophecy,—we are not to know the When.
This section of the prophecy then
describes in broad outline, and as an underlying principle, how the King will
personally—to quote words He used in the earlier parables,—"gather out of His Kingdom all things that cause stumbling, and
them that do iniquity"; and thus prepare for that new era, in which,
again to quote His words, "the
righteous shall shine forth as the sun in the Kingdom of His Father."
This picture flashes its light back
upon the previous section, and reveals part of our responsibility with new
force and power. Within the household we are to be obedient to the absent Lord,
and love one another. As individuals we are ever to have lamps trimmed and
burning, waiting for the Advent. As His representatives in the world we are to
prosecute His commerce with the talents He has committed to us. Or in brief,
witnessing for Him, and so creating the opportunity of the nations, in the work
of the Christian Church, and thus preparing the way for that final
discrimination when the Son of man shall come in His glory and judge the
nations of this world.
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