The Watchful Servants
Luke 12:41-48
There are senses in which this
paragraph is not an easy one with which to deal. While not exactly obscure, we
need to give careful attention to certain details, in order not to miss its
chief value.
The parable in its fullness is
peculiar to Luke. Other parables have moved in the same realm. In the 24th and
25th chapters of Matthew we considered three, one communal, having to do with
inter-relationships within His Kingdom; one personal, dealing with the supply
of oil for lamps; and one imperial, concerning the talents entrusted to His
own. When considering the first of these in Matthew, we postponed a full
consideration, because the teaching here in Luke is fuller than that given in
Matthew. Matthew recorded briefly this parable as our Lord uttered it in the
Olivet prophecy. Luke gives it as our Lord had uttered it in an earlier part of
His ministry.
This parable has a value all its
own. What was our Lord intending to illustrate? Notice how the record begins. "And Peter said, Lord, speakest Thou
this parable unto us, or even unto all?" What parable? Certainly not
the one we are now considering, because He had not then uttered it, but the one
prior. Immediately preceding that question is a parable Jesus had been
uttering, and the question of Peter concerned the application of that previous
parable, which dealt with the subject of what’s really important. Matthew Henry
once said, "Thank God for Peter. He
was always asking questions." His questions always brought forth
wonderful answers. This was a perfectly fair question, "Speakest Thou this parable unto us, or even unto all?"
It is one that faces us as we consider the parable. Christ had made known to
His faithful disciples of the necessity of His death in regards to His kingdom.
It was only natural that the new emphasis upon the necessity of His death
should have raised questions in the disciples’ minds about the promised kingdom
and their own part in it. On this point, therefore, Christ hastens to reaasure
them. They are not to be afraid, for it is the Father’s good pleasure to give
them the Kingdom (Luke 12:32). Hence, there is no need for preoccupation about
material possessions as in the last parable. The important and immediate duty
is to lay up treasure in heaven, and to be watching for the Lord’s return from heaven
with their reward. At that time the faithful will participate in the rulership
over the King’s household (Luke 12:33-44).
Notice how our Lord answered it. He
did so by asking a question which, in a sense, He did not answer at all. Peter
said, Who is that teaching for? Is it for us, or all? Jesus said, "Who then is the faithful and wise
steward, whom his lord shall set over his household?" The question is
open. Does what He is now going to say apply to a special company, called to
specific service, or does it apply to all? Our Lord left it quite open. In
effect He said, What I have said applies to every steward in the household who
is faithful and true, whether in a special sense called to ministry, or not. I
think in the last analysis the best value of the parable is for such, but it
applies to others as well.
The picture our Lord here drew was
of a household, which we must interpret by the East. There the household is a
very different thing to what it is here. The household was composed of a lord,
a master, the supreme one over all those who constituted the household, a
despot not in any bad sense, but in a good sense, signifying complete and
unquestioned and unqualified authority. Then in the household there was the
office of stewardship, those under the lord who were the representatives of the
lord. They were stewards of the property of their lord. A steward not only had
charge of these things, he was responsible for their administration in the
household. In the Eastern countries also the position of steward was often held
by slaves, bond-servants. In this account the word used for servant is doulos, bond-slave. Those who were
representatives of the ruler, the lord, were in complete surrender and
subservience. That was the household.
Now in that household the
responsibility that rested upon those who were stewards, being bond-servants,
was that of watching over the life of all in the household, and of feeding all
in that household. In the teaching of Jesus, taking the figure, we see that it
was applicable to all in a household. Every bond-slave was in some measure the
steward of the property of his lord, and every bond-slave was responsible to
the rest in the household for the administration of the will of his lord, and
the feeding of each other. Yet there were those in such households who were in
special positions of government and authority over the affairs. That is the
picture.
What were the possibilities lying
within that fact of stewardship in the household? Simply, fidelity on the one
hand, and failure on the other; those faithful and those unfaithful. Reasons
for infidelity on the part of stewards within the household are suggested. The
lord is absent, he is not there. There may be those who postpone his return, or
declare, "He delayeth his
coming"; and are therefore careless in their watching for him; the
result being that they do wrong to each other. They "begin to beat the men servants and the maid servants,"
ill-treat them, and give themselves to carousing. That is infidelity. The
Lord's teaching is that presently when the lord comes himself, he will deal
with these stewards. He will deal with those who have been faithful, and set
them in authority over all other things; associating himself completely with
them in dominion. With those unfaithful, they will receive condemnation. He "shall cut him asunder." The
Old Version had it, "cut him in
sunder." The Revised Version has changed it. The judgment will be
discriminative. Those who knew and willfully disobeyed their lord's will be
beaten with many stripes; and those who disobeyed, and yet did not know the
lord's will, yet were guilty, and did things worthy of punishment, will be
beaten with few stripes.
If the account is taken in all its
simplicity, we see what this teaching really is. There is a sense in which this
parable is applicable to all in the household. That is a great phrase, "the household of God," which
is the living Church. Every member of the Church is responsible for the other.
The one sentiment which is for evermore denied at the door of the Church is the
sentiment that is never recommended by the lips that first used it, "Am I my brother's keeper?" We
should
remember that. Yet there is the attitude, the peril, the
possibility of an attitude in those words, "Am
I my brother's keeper?" That is not true in the Christian Church. If
it is true, then there are stewards who are failing. We are all responsible for
each other in the great household of God. The faithful steward while the lord
is gone makes determinations concerning what is really important and the lord
had made those things known to those he left in oversight.
Yes it is true according to New
Testament teaching, that God has called by the Holy Spirit and set apart
certain within the Church who are in specific sense in oversight. That is the
meaning of the word bishop. Bishop and presbyter are synonymous terms in the
New Testament. They meant those who have oversight. That is what the writer of
the epistle said, "Remember them
that had the rule over you." Who were they? Those "which spake unto you the word of God." These orders of
Christian ministry emerge clearly in the New Testament. We have mixed them
terribly, and yet their essential values remain, those who are called upon "to watch in behalf of the souls"
of "the household of God."
Whereas the application of this parable of Jesus is unquestionably to all, I
cannot study it without being convinced that its special application is to
those whom we today call ministers. We are mistaken if we think ministers are
servants of men. We are servants of the Lord, and "your servants for His sake," in His interests. There are
great words in the New Testament,—bishop, teacher, pastor; and they all mark
the fact of a position of responsibility in the Church of God concerning that
Church. And there are other gifted ones within the body there for the
perfecting of the saint.
The great underlying thought here
is that of a revelation of an atmosphere in all this teaching of Jesus, that of
fellowship in the household in the absence of our Lord, the fellowship of the
Christian Church. The Lord used that distributive method in order to show that
it applied to all, those who take the position of bond-service, or stewardship;
whether specially or generally, but especially to those who are called. In the
book of the Acts we have that wonderful account in the 20th chapter of Paul
calling together the elders of the Church at Ephesus, and talking to them. Take
a few sentences that fell from his lips. "Take
heed unto yourselves, and to all the flock, in which the Holy Ghost bath made
you bishops," that is, overseers, "to
feed the Church of God, which He purchased with His own blood." So
Paul said to the elders at Ephesus, and it reveals the very thought of
responsibility.
In Peter's letter we find the same
great truth (1 Pet. 5:1), "The
elders among you"—presbyters—"I
exhort, who am a fellow-elder, and a witness of the sufferings of Christ, who
am also a partaker of the glory that shall be revealed." How did he
charge them? "Tend the flock of God
which is among you, exercising the oversight, not of constraint, but willingly,
according unto God; nor yet for filthy lucre, but of a ready mind."
Mark this, "Neither lording it over
the charge allotted to you." It is interesting to note that the word "Charge" is the word cleros, from which we derive our word
clergy. This is the only occurrence of the word in the New Testament. The
clergy therefore according to the New Testament, are not the special ministers
of the Church, but the rank and file of the members. The Church members here
are in the clergy, and the minister is not! The clergy means the laity. It has
to do with the inheritance, and the elders are not to lord it over the clergy,
but to make themselves "ensamples to
the flock." "And when the chief Shepherd shall be manifested, ye
shall receive the crown of glory that fadeth not away."
Those two references show how the
teaching of Jesus has special and first-hand application. To every brother in
the ministry, with whatever gift the Holy Spirit has give, and also those
preparing for this sacred work, it is made known to us as we study these words
of Jesus, that we feed the flock of God.
It may be said, surely the picture
cannot be a true one, that within the household were those beating their
menservants and maidservants, and eating and drinking, and becoming drunken.
It is rather startling. But consider the history of the Christian Church. Again
and again within the Church, on the part of those supposed to be stewards and
fellow-watchers, this very thing has literally taken place; the beating, and
beating to death, in the supposed interest of Christ Himself. And this world
cares less and less for the things of God and His truth He has left us. There
is more and more extreme bitterness manifested to those who are of the
household of God by others, and how men belittle the believer. There is an
awful possibility of being in this fellowship, and so failing that our
treatment of our fellow-men is utterly antagonistic to the spirit and genius of
Christianity. Study the history of the Church to see to what I am referring.
What then are our duties? Paul
said, Watch, and also, Feed the flock of God. Peter emphasized it. There is to
be mutual ministry within the Christian Church, that of helpfulness, a mutual
ministry on behalf of the other douloi.
In the Church it is especially true. It is philosophically true of the whole
race, but in the Church it is especially true, "No man liveth unto himself." Spend time figuring what
really is important, the filling of barns of the gaining of the perfecting work
of the gifted ministers within the true church. It was also written, every man
lives for his Lord, but this applies to his fellow-member too. When the
function is fulfilled, then we find the blessedness; and when it fails, there
must be discipline and punishment.
"Lord,
to whom sayest Thou this? Unto us or to all?" To you?
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