Dear
Pastor, Will You Repent With Me? by David
Servant
The greatest crisis
that I faced in two decades of pastoring was not due to a disagreeable deacon,
a financial shortfall, an egocentric worship leader, or a church gossip.
Rather, my greatest crisis was due to an encounter with the Holy Spirit and
God's Word.
It all began when I
read the second and third chapters of the book of Revelation, which contain
Jesus' opinion of seven churches in Asia Minor. I noticed that His opinion of
some of those churches was considerably different than their opinion of
themselves. The congregation at Laodicea, for example, considered themselves
"rich" and in "need of nothing," while He considered them
to be "wretched and poor and blind and naked" (Rev. 3:17). Quite a
contrast.
I began to wonder what
Jesus thought of my church and ministry. I knew He must have an opinion. To
think otherwise would be absurd. He has an opinion about everything,
and His opinion is always right. And it occurred to me that He would one
day tell me His opinion. When I stood before Him, there would be no doubt in my
mind what He thought of my church and ministry.
At the time, I
believed my church was one of the best, and that the numerical growth we had
experienced was sure evidence of God's approbation. All the indicators were
positive. But, I thought to myself, What
if my perspective is slightly skewered? If it was, it would be much better to know it right then rather
than discover it when I stood before the Lord. When I stood before Him it would
be too late to change anything. Now there was still opportunity to make
adjustments.
I also reasoned that
surely Jesus would be happy to reveal it to me if in some way my ministry
wasn't pleasing to Him. Thus I decided to ask Him what He thought, fully
convinced that if I was sincere, He'd reveal to me anything He might want me to
do differently.
He soon answered my
prayer in a way I never imagined. He impressed me to look at Matthew 25:36-41.
There I read Jesus' foretelling of the judgment of the sheep and the goats. I
had read it many times before, but this time it was different. I noticed that
Jesus was not speaking to the multitudes, but to His closest disciples (see
Matt. 24:3). According to Mark's Gospel, they were Peter, James, John and
Andrew (see Mark 13:3). What Jesus said had direct application to them. He
wanted them to be prepared for the judgment of the sheep and
goats. It was plain as day. Jesus did
not want any of them to find themselves among the goats.
Jesus told Peter,
James, John and Andrew that, one day, people from all the nations (literally
"ethnic groups," of which there are thousands) will be gathered
before Him. They will be separated into two categories. Each group will hear
Him say one of two things. They will either hear Him say, "I was hungry
and you fed Me" or, "I was hungry and you did not feed Me." They will either hear Him say, "I was thirsty
and you gave Me a drink" or, "I was thirsty and you did not give Me a drink." They will either hear Him say, "I was
naked and you clothed Me" or, "I was naked and you did not clothe Me." And there are three other similar contrasting
statements about which Jesus solemnly forewarned His closest disciples. On the
basis of those six criteria, those before Him will either be cast into the
eternal fire or will inherit His eternal kingdom.
Jesus also made clear that
those who serve Him in those six ways actually do so by serving
"the least of these" among His family. So His point was
inescapable: Those
who truly love Him express their love for Him by sacrificial service to the
poor and suffering members of His body.
The Holy Spirit then
asked me this question: "If everyone in your congregation died today and
stood at the judgment of the sheep and goats, how many would be sheep and how
many would be goats? More specifically, in the last twelve months, how many people
in your congregation have provided food for a hungry believer in Christ? How
many have provided water for a thirsty Christian? How many have provided
clothing for a naked follower of Jesus? How many have opened their home, or
provided shelter, for a homeless believer? How many have visited a believer who
is sick or incarcerated?"
I suddenly realized
that my ministry needed monumental adjustments. It was like a sword was
being driven through my heart. I knew that the majority of those in my
congregation were in the goat category and that I was much to blame. I had
never told them of the importance of the things Jesus listed in Matthew
25:31-46. We were American Christians but not biblical Christians. Our Jesus
existed to serve us rather than to make us servants. My gospel was deficient.
It had perverted God's grace. I realized that I had been missing the mark by a
million miles, straining out gnats and swallowing camels, building a church but
not making disciples. We were way off course. If most of us had died at that
point in time, we would have died as goats, destined to be condemned forever.
I was ashamed. I went
from believing that I was a successful pastor to realizing that I was a failure
in God's eyes. I wept. I confessed. I repented, not just in word, but in deeds.
I asked my congregation's forgiveness. I promised that I was going to be a man
of God from then on. I declared that I would begin making disciples, as Jesus
commanded, from that day forward, teaching them to obey all of Christ's commandments.
I put my hand to the plow and by the grace of God, I have not looked back.
Perhaps you think I
overreacted. But I don't. Not in the least. That was just the beginning of what
I can only describe as waking up from the dead. Since then, my entire life and
ministry have been radically changed. And there have been so many on-going
awakenings since then---as I have simply believed more of what Jesus plainly
said---that I would hesitate to tell many professing Christians the entire
story, knowing they would reject it outright.
To this day I am
completely dumbfounded as to how those solemn words of Jesus found in Matthew
25:31-46 escaped my attention during the first two decades of my ministry. And
since that day, I've remained astonished that so many professing Christians and
Christian leaders live as if those words did not exist. But they do exist. And anyone who ignores them is surely among the
most foolish people who have ever lived. Jesus
has told us in advance the correct answers to a test that will determine our
eternal destiny.
Take note, first of
all, that Jesus is not going to ask the sheep or goats if they prayed the
sinner's prayer, accepted Jesus as their Savior, read their Bibles, paid their
tithes, attended church, or voted for pro-life candidates.
Also take
note that many, if not most, professing Christians are goats according to the
unmistakable testimony of the Lord Jesus Christ. Why isn't this being shouted from every pulpit
in the world?
And there is more to
face up to. Those who skim over the surface of Matthew 25:31-46 may suppose
that the goats represent the Muslims, Buddhists, atheists, and so on, while the
sheep represent all the Christians. The truth is, however, that the sheep and
the goats together represent all
professing Christians. The sheep
are true believers whose faith is alive with love for fellow believers. The
goats think they are believers, and they are shocked to be
eternally condemned. Jesus'
foretelling of the judgment of the sheep and the goats serves as a warning that
there will be multitudes of professing Christians who possess the assurance of
their salvation but who will be stunned when they stand before Him as He
condemns them to hell forever.
What is the proof of
this? First, consider the context. Remember that Jesus was speaking in Matthew
25:31-46 to four of His closest disciples (see Mark 13:3). He was not giving an
evangelistic sermon to a mixed multitude. And He first told those four devoted
disciples the parable of the unfaithful servant, which is a warning to
hypocrites, that is, those who profess to be what they are not (see Matt.
24:42-51). The highlighted servant in that parable was indeed a servant in the
house of his master. He did not start off as being unfaithful. Rather, he became unfaithful when he believed that his master would not return soon. When his master returned
unexpectedly, he was caught in his sin, and he was cut in pieces and assigned a
place with the hypocrites where there was "weeping and gnashing of
teeth."
The moral of the
story? "Peter, James, John and Andrew, don't become like the unfaithful
servant who backslid. Serve faithfully no matter how long My return is delayed.
Otherwise even you, currently My most devoted disciples, will find yourselves
with hypocrites weeping and gnashing your teeth." Jesus made it clear from
the outset of the parable that He was telling it to them for their personal
benefit: "Therefore be on the alert, for you do not know which day your
Lord is coming" (Matt. 24:42).
Jesus next told His
four devoted disciples the parable of the ten virgins (Matt. 25:1-13). Again,
this was not a parable to motivate unbelievers to repent and get ready for
Christ's return. It was a parable to encourage Jesus' true disciples to remain ready for His return. All ten were virgins (they
don't represent unbelievers). All ten were waiting for the bridegroom (they
don't represent unbelievers). All ten were initially ready (they don't
represent unbelievers). But five became unready, and they were ultimately
refused entry into the wedding feast.
The moral of the
story? "Peter, James, John and Andrew, don't become like the five foolish
virgins. Stay alert for My return. Otherwise even you, currently My most
devoted disciples, will be refused entry into My wedding feast." Jesus
warned them in the one-sentence conclusion of the
parable, "Be alert then, for you do not know the day nor the hour" (Matt.
25:13, emphasis added). What He said was for their benefit. There is no escape
from this. It is so obvious that only a theologian could miss it.
Then Jesus told His
four devoted disciples the parable of the talents (Matt. 25:14-30). A man who
was about to go on a journey called "his own slaves" to entrust each of them with some
talents. All three servants were servants of their master. All three were
entrusted with talents. The one-talent slave was no less a slave of the master
than the other two slaves. He does not represent an unbeliever any more than
the other two represent unbelievers. All three represent believers.
When the master
returned he rewarded the two slaves who were fruitful. But the one-talent slave
had nothing to show. He had been unfaithful, having buried his talent in the
ground. His master was very angry, wondering why the one-talent slave hadn't at
least deposited his talent in the bank to earn a little interest. Then he
ordered that "worthless slave" to be cast "into the outer
darkness" where there is "weeping and gnashing of teeth."
The moral of the
story? "Peter, James, John and Andrew, don't become like the unfaithful
one-talent slave. When I return, you will stand before Me, and I expect to
receive a return on what I have entrusted to you, even if what I have entrusted
you with seems small in comparison to what I have entrusted to others.
Otherwise you will be cast into outer darkness where there will be weeping and
gnashing of teeth."
The fact that Jesus
was warning believers, as opposed to unbelievers, in these three parables is so
unmistakable that some modern commentators amazingly try to convince us that
"the outer darkness" of which Jesus spoke in the first and third parables
is actually a place located in the outer fringes of heaven where unfaithful
believers will temporarily mourn their loss of rewards! Then, however, He will
wipe away their tears and welcome them into His kingdom!
Finally, after warning
four of His devoted followers by means of three parables, Jesus culminated His
private sermon to them by telling them something that was not a parable, but
rather a certain future event for which they must be prepared---the very
judgment He had been repeatedly warning them about in the previous parables. It
was His foretelling of the judgment of the sheep and the goats. And the reason
He told them of that future sobering event was very clear---He didn't want them
(or any of His professing followers) to be among the goats on that day.
All of the preceding
context, as well as the internal evidence, makes it abundantly clear that the
judgment of the sheep and goats is not a separating of Christians from Muslims,
Buddhists, atheists and so on. It is a judgment of all professing Christians
from every nation. Jesus' words in Matthew 25:31-46 had direct application to
Peter, James, John and Andrew. Obviously the possibility existed that they could one
day tragically find themselves among the goats, just as the possibility
existed that they could find themselves like the unfaithful servant in the
first parable, the five foolish virgins in the second parable, or the
one-talent slave in the third parable. If this were not true then He would have
had no need to warn them. But He did warn them repeatedly. And if it was
possible for Peter, James, John and Andrew, it is possible for anyone else who
professes to be a follower of Christ.
Notice also that the
goats will be surprised at their condemnation. They will call Jesus
"Lord," and ask Him, "When did we see You hungry, or thirsty, or
a stranger, or naked, or sick, or in prison, and did not take care of
You?" (Matt. 25:44). The implication is that they will believe that
if they had seen Him in those pitiful conditions they would have certainly
assisted Him. (That is what every professing Christian would think.) They will
think that they love Him. But Jesus will declare to them that, if they had
loved Him, they would have loved His suffering family. Again, the implication
is that they had knowledge of His suffering family, which would hardly be true
of most non-professing Christians. These
goats had the opportunity to know about and assist suffering believers. But they aren't "those kinds of
Christians." No, they are unfaithful servants, foolish virgins, and slaves
who buried their talents. Goats.
The Question
Pastor, there is no
difference between me and you. You have been entrusted with a ministry to a
congregation. Jesus has an opinion of your church and ministry. Sooner or
later, you will know exactly what Jesus thinks about your church and ministry.
If everyone in your
congregation died today and stood at the judgment of the sheep and the goats,
how many would be sheep and how many would be goats? How many of them, because
of their love for Jesus, are doing anything to feed hungry believers, clothe
naked believers, provide shelter for homeless believers, or visit sick and
incarcerated believers? Have you told them of how vitally important these
things are? If you died at this very moment and stood at the
judgment of the sheep and the goats, would you be a sheep or a goat? If your
answer is "goat," then you are a goat.
"But
I've studied the Bible in its original languages! I teach from the Bible every
week! I pray. I tithe! I'm a spiritual leader! People respect me as such!"
This was also the
testimony of the scribes and Pharisees. They all possessed "the assurance
of salvation." But they're in hell now.
"But I
prayed the sinner's prayer! I speak in tongues! I've cast out demons!"
In the strongest terms
possible, Jesus warned against trusting in such things as proof that one will
inherit eternal life. He warned, "Many will say to Me on that day, 'Lord,
Lord, did we not prophesy in Your name, and in Your name cast out demons, and
in Your name perform many miracles?'" But He will solemnly reply, "I
never knew you; depart from Me, you who practice lawlessness" (Matt.
7:22-23).
"You
are robbing people of their assurance!"
Yes, just as John the
Baptist, Jesus, all the apostles (see, for example, Luke 3:8, Matt.
7:22-23, 1 Cor. 6:9; Eph. 5:5-6, Jas. 2:14-17; 2 Pet. 2:1-22, 1 John 2:4-9;
Jude 1:3-4), and any other preacher who loves God and people, I am robbing
people of their false assurance. Like John the Baptist, Jesus, and the
apostles, my hope is to wake up those in darkness to the plain and solemn
truth, so that they will repent and be born again in actuality rather than just
in doctrinal theory. Pastors and preachers who are not warning those who
think they are sheep but who act like goats are pastors who are filling the
hearts of demons with jubilation. They are pastors of Satan.
The Decision
When a pastor has been
tickling ears and telling people what they want to hear, it is indeed a fearful
thing for him to think of actually telling people the truth for the first time.
It could cost him his "ministry," at least temporarily. Droves of
goats might run for the doors, taking their money with them. He could lose his
job and his paycheck. But dear pastor, do you think that the price you will pay
for telling the truth will be less than the price you will ultimately pay for
continuing to play your present church game? Do you truly believe that you will
escape hell when you have helped populate hell?
When you walk up the
stairs to your sanctuary platform and pulpit to deliver a message that once
again soothes the hardened and deceived hearts of people who are goats
according to Christ's revelation in Matt. 25:31-46, you might as well be
leaning a ladder onto the cross of Jesus, climbing to the top, and spitting in
His tortured face!
He suffered and died
to make people holy! His sacred blood was shed to transform sinners into
saints! There he hangs, gasping for breath, held by nails, covered with blood,
His back ripped to shreds, spat upon and mocked by those who hated Him. All to
deliver to His preachers the keys to the kingdom of heaven, a glorious gospel
that can deliver sinners from their selfishness through His atoning sacrifice.
All to create a community of new creations in Christ who love each other!
Yet those preachers
alter the message that He has entrusted to them to take to the entire world.
They strip it of all its real power, and use it to deceive those living in
darkness, promising them heaven when Jesus has promised them hell! Worse yet,
after they have deceived their congregations into believing that they possess
what they actually do not possess, they then doubly-deceive them into believing
that they can never forfeit what they do not possess! How can such preachers
and pastors escape the sentence to hell? How appropriate to this are Christ's
words, "Whoever does not have, even what he thinks he has shall be taken
away from him" (Luke 8:18).
"But
where can we find followers of Christ who are hungry, thirsty, naked, homeless,
sick or in prison?"
Living in our
bubble-world with the rest of the world's elite does indeed blind us. Yet when
one-half of the world lives on less than two dollars a day, is it possible that
there are any followers of Christ among that group of three billion people? Is
it possible that some are hungry, thirsty, in need of clothing or shelter?
Might some be ill from drinking undrinkable water? Are there not thousands
rotting in prisons for their faith in countries where Christians regularly face
brutal persecution?
Tragically, most
professing Christians living in wealthy western nations live as if they are
unaware of the sufferings of the persecuted church around the world. How the
angels must weep! Imagine this for a moment: Imagine western Christians hanging
lights on Christmas trees to celebrate the birth of the Savior whom they
love. Then imagine Chinese Christians working as slaves in prison camps because
of their faith in Jesus, forced to labor twelve hours a day. Imagine those
prisoners being given no tools, being fed two small bowls of rice each day,
and being beaten if they don't meet impossible quotas...to produce
thousands of Christmas lights to be sold in the U.S. and Canada.
This is
happening. (www.thelightsofchristmas.org/christmas/story.html, www.worldnetdaily.com/index.php?fa=PAGE.view&pageId=61272, www.crossroad.to/News/Persecution/alert/China.htm).
Why is there no
uproar? Why hasn't this at least been mentioned from every pulpit of every
evangelical church in the Western world? JESUS IS ROTTING IN A CHINESE
PRISON, FORCED AS A SLAVE TO MAKE US CHRISTMAS TREE LIGHTS!
Oh no time
to worry about that...the Christmas rush is upon us! Gifts to buy, food to eat,
church services to attend---where we can hear another message about God's love
for us. Tonight we'll hang the lights on the tree!
There should be tens
of thousands of Christian ministries that focus on serving the poor and the
persecuted among Christ's family around the world. Billions of dollars
should be pouring in from the pockets of western Christians and churches to
show their love for Jesus by loving His body. Every church should be
immersed in involvement, top to bottom. Western Christians should be
spanning the globe to find such needs and meet them.
But no. We're goats.
Who think we're sheep. Surely
Jesus didn't mean what He said in Matthew 25:31-46, right?
While Jesus is hungry,
thirsty, naked, sick, homeless and incarcerated, tens of thousands of pastors
who profess to love Him ignore His pitiful plight, collecting hundreds of
millions of dollars each Sunday from people who also profess to love Him, and
those dollars are primarily used to
serve the people who gave those dollars, and mostly for things for which you can't find a shred of scriptural
support. What money does escape from the goat pen is often just a token
fraction, tossed towards Jesus, who sits like Lazarus on the street, longing
for a crumb from the rich man's table.
Dear pastor,
will you repent with me?
Why do you
call me, Lord, Lord, and do not do what I say? (Luke 6:46).
©2008 David Servant and ShepherdServe.org.
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