Friday, December 29, 2017

the talents

6. The Parable of the Talents, 25:14–30
14 “For it is like a man going abroad, who called his own servants and handed over his property to them. 15 And to one he gave five talents, to another two, to another one, to each according to his own ability; and he went on his journey. 16 At once he who had received the five talents went and worked with them, and he gained another five. 17 Likewise he who had the two gained another two. 18 But he who received the one went away and dug in the ground, and hid his master’s money. 19 Now after a long time the master of those servants comes and settles accounts with them. 20 And he who had received the five talents came and brought another five talents, saying, ‘Sir, you handed over to me five talents; look, I have gained five talents more.’ 21 His master said to him, ‘Well done, good and faithful servant; you were faithful over a few things, I will appoint you over many things; enter the joy of your master.’ 22 And he also who had the two talents said, ‘Sir, you handed over to me two talents; look, I have gained two talents more.’ 23 His master said to him, ‘Well done, good and faithful servant; you were faithful over a few things, I will appoint you over many things; enter the joy of your master.’ 24 But he also who had received the one talent came and said, ‘Sir, I knew that you are a hard man, reaping where you did not sow and gathering where you did not scatter. 25 And being afraid I went off and hid your talent in the ground; look, you have your own.’ 26 But his master answered him, saying, ‘You wicked and lazy servant, you knew that I reap where I did not sow, and gather where I did not scatter. 27 You ought therefore to have put my money with the bankers, and when I came I would have received my own with interest. 28 Take therefore the talent from him, and give it to him who has the ten talents; 29 for to everyone who has will more be given, and he will have abundance; but from him who has not, even what he has will be taken from him. 30 And throw the unprofitable servant into the outer darkness; there will be wailing and gnashing of teeth.’ ”
There are resemblances between this parable and that narrated in Luke 19:11–27; indeed, some scholars see the two as differing forms of the same parable. But the differences in the two accounts are formidable; therefore it is better to see them as two distinct parables, though with the same basic theme of servants trading with their master’s money. But in Matthew the amounts are large, while in Luke they are quite small; in this Gospel the amounts vary from servant to servant, in that one they all receive the same amount. Luke’s story brings in a reference to a man receiving a kingdom and to the attitude of his subjects, whereas that in Matthew concentrates on trading. The story in Luke teaches that all the servants of God have one basic task, that of living out our faith; this one starts with the fact of the different gifts to be found in God’s servants and brings out the way they use (or do not use) those gifts.
14. The story starts rather abruptly with “For it is like” without any explanation of what it signifies. But since the story follows on a parable explicitly said to refer to “the kingdom of heaven” (v. 1), there is no reason for doubting that it carries on the teaching about the kingdom (GNB makes this explicit with “At that time the Kingdom of heaven will be like—”). The preceding parable has taught the importance of being ready; this one carries on that theme by showing what readiness means.21 The kingdom, then, is likened to a man going abroad. This man was obviously a man of means, and he wanted to have his money used profitably while he was away. He summoned his own servants23 and passed over to them the money he wanted them to invest while he was away.
15. That the money was calculated in talents presents us with a problem, for a talent was a measure of weight, not a specific unity of currency. It was the largest weight in normal use (see on 18:24), and when used for money it might refer to either gold or silver or copper. Attempts to render the equivalent in modern monetary terms run up against difficulties: we do not know exactly what weight the talent was in Palestine in New Testament times, nor do we know whether gold or silver or copper is in mind here, and, of course, with inflation and the like modern currencies vary in worth. All that we can say is that five talents26 represents a considerable sum of money, two was not a small amount, and one was a sum not to be disregarded. The fact that different amounts were allotted to different servants seems to mean that the master thought one of them distinctly more able than the others, the second one to be a man of some ability, and the third to be distinctly less capable than the first two. No instructions are recorded, and we are left to understand that the master wanted the servants to use their own initiative. He wanted them to trade as best they could with the money he had left with them, but he did not want to tie them down with binding instructions when he could not tell what conditions would be like throughout his absence. Having allotted his money as he saw best, he went off.
16. There is a little problem related to the way we should take at once. Since there is no punctuation in our oldest MSS, it is possible to take it as the last word in verse 15 (as KJV, “and straightway took his journey”) or as the first word in verse 16 (as most modern translations). The sense seems to require this latter view; if we accept it, Jesus is saying that the first servant immediately set to work. He does not say what that servant did, and it is of no great importance. What matters is that he worked28 with them. This signifies that he put them to good use in some way. In time diligence was rewarded, for the five talents entrusted to him became ten. His activity resulted in the doubling of his original capital.
17. There is little to be said about the second servant. He was also a diligent worker, and he likewise doubled his original capital. He gained but two talents, but then his base was narrower than that of his colleague who had gained five. Both had done well; both had doubled the amount entrusted to them.
18. The third servant was a very different kind of person (“a mouse-minded man,” Meier). The word But, which introduces this section of the story, has adversative force; this man forms a contrast to those mentioned earlier. Jesus says nothing about his reasoning at this point, but simply that he hid the money. Not for him the labor of buying and selling, working and making a profit. He simply dug a hole and hid his master’s money. This was a not uncommon way of hiding objects for safekeeping in antiquity (cf. 13:44). If it was carefully done, nobody other than the person who dug the hole would know where it was and what was in it. Jesus does not indicate at this point why the man did this (laziness? fear?). The important thing for this man was that the money was secure and that he could produce it when the time came. Keeping it in this way meant that there was no possibility of loss, but it also meant that there was no possibility of gain.
19. The period of the master’s absence is not specified, but it was a long time; it was this that enabled the first two servants to increase their capital by 100 percent. The master then comes and settles accounts with them (the present tenses introduce a note of vividness). The day of reckoning had come.
20. The first to give account of himself was the first to have received the money. After the one sentence with the vivid present tenses the past tenses are resumed. The man who had been entrusted with five talents brought his original sum plus the money he had gained and explained to his master that he had made a gain of five talents. In both clauses he puts emphasis on the amount: “Five talents you gave me; look, another five talents I have gained.”
21. His master commended this servant. First he says simply, “Well,” which we normally put into English with “Well done,” but which could be taken in some such sense as “It is well.” Or we could understand it as an interjection, “Bravo!” (BDF 102[3]). However we take it, it is a mark of approval. This is something the master understands and approves. He goes on to salute the servant as good and faithful, an expression that approves both his character and his diligence; he had been all that the master expected (Cassirer translates, “excellent and trustworthy servant”). The master goes on to develop the thought of faithfulness. The servant, he says, has been faithful over a few things. Clearly Jesus wants his hearers to understand that the master was a very rich man. While we do not know exactly how much five talents were worth in our money, it seems clear that it was a considerable sum. But the master can speak of it as no more than a few things. Now that the servant has proved himself in what the master regards as a comparatively lowly piece of service, further doors of opportunity will be opened to him. “I will appoint you over many things” indicates that the faithful servant will be rewarded with a position that will give him more scope for the use of the abilities that he has shown he possesses. Once again Jesus is teaching that the reward for good work is the opportunity of doing further work. “Enter the joy of your master” may be understood in the sense of REB, “share your master’s joy.” Whether that is the way to take it or not, it clearly means that the servant has received the warm approval of his master and that his future is one in which joy will be prominent.
22–23. The process is repeated with almost identical wording in the case of the servant who had been given two talents. The man reports as his predecessor had reported with the one change of two talents for “five talents,” and he receives his commendation in exactly the same terms. It is noteworthy that though he had gained but two talents, his praise is in words identical with that given the man with five. They had both doubled the sum entrusted to them, and they were both congratulated for doing so. The actual size of their gain was not as important as the fact that each had doubled the amount entrusted to him.
24. Finally there came also the man who had received the one talent. He used the same polite address as the other two, “Sir,” but diverges by going into a description of his owner. He says, “I knew that you are a hard man”; he puts this forward to excuse his failure to do anything with his talent, but in doing so he takes away some of his defense. If he knew that his master was a hard man, he knew also that he had been expected to do something profitable with the money entrusted to him. He explains something of what hardness means in this case. “Reaping where you did not sow” means that the master had the habit of enjoying a crop on which he had expended no labor. “Gathering where you did not scatter” probably has much the same meaning; it refers to the winnowing process at the end of harvest (as it does in 3:12), plying the winnowing shovel to scatter the mingled chaff and grain and thus separate the two. The sowing and the scattering refer to the processes that began and completed the getting of a crop. The master, this man says, profited from sowing and winnowing where he had not gone through the hard work of using the plough and plying the winnowing shovel. The picture this servant draws is of a man with an eye to business; he picked up profits in all sorts of places and not only those that resulted from his own hard work.
25. All this is said to explain his reaction to being left to look after a talent. He says that he was afraid, evidently afraid that if he used the money in business undertakings as his fellow servants were doing he would lose it and thus make himself liable to punishment. So, he says, “I hid your talent in the ground.” This made him certain of losing nothing, but it also meant that when he was face to face with his master he could say nothing better than “look, you have your own.”
26. But is adversative; far from accepting the explanation, the master was about to rebuke his servant. He did this, calling him both wicked and lazy. It was a wicked thing to receive money from his master and fail to use it to the best advantage, whatever his motive. But in any case, his motive was something for which he could be blamed, and the master says that he is lazy. He let a natural disinclination for work cooperate with a dislike for getting some gain for his master, with the result that he did nothing. He felt that his preservation of the talent was something for which he should receive credit. He did not realize that anyone with a talent must use it. The master accepts the description of himself as reaping what he did not sow and gathering what he did not winnow,40 but interestingly he drops the word “hard” that the defaulter had applied to him. It may well be that he is not saying that he really is the kind of man he has been said to be, but saying that if the third servant really thought that he was like that he would have acted in a different manner. What the servant had done was not in accordance with a genuine belief that his master reaped where he did not sow, gathered where he did not winnow.
27. The master points out how easily the servant could have made some gain, even if he mistrusted his own ability to trade profitably. “You ought” is a strong term; the master is thinking of the easiest possible way of getting a profit, and at the very least this is something that the man was under an obligation to do. So he says that the servant should have put his money with the bankers, a procedure that he could have undertaken with safety and no great personal exertion. The result would have been that his master44 would have profited from the interest earned. As it was, he got his money back, but nothing more.
28. Having rebuked his servant and made it clear why he was being blamed, the master proceeds to the action required in that situation. “Take therefore the talent from him,” he says. Therefore is important. The master is not acting in an arbitrary fashion. The man has had the money for quite some time and has shown that he has no intention of making any use of it. Left with him it would stay buried in the ground. But money should be used, and therefore it was necessary to take the money away. “Give it to him who has the ten talents,” he goes on. That man has shown that he knows how to use money profitably. He will make the best use of it, and therefore it should be left with him.
29. This verse largely repeats the words of 13:12 (where see the comments), and the small alterations make no difference to the sense. Jesus is not countenancing business practices that enable the wealthy to become wealthier at the expense of the deserving poor. He is laying down a principle of the spiritual life, a principle of great importance. Anyone who has a talent (using the word in the modern sense) of any kind and fails to use it, by that very fact forfeits it. By contrast, anyone who has a talent and uses it to the full finds that that talent develops and grows. This is a law of the spiritual life, and we neglect it at our peril. The parable illustrates both possibilities. The servants who used what they had saw it grow; the one who refused to use what he had lost it. Jesus’ followers are warned.
    1. The servant who failed to use the talent entrusted to him is now characterized as unprofitable. He has had control of a full talent and has buried it. He has failed completely when he had the opportunity to do something useful.47 So he is consigned to the outer darkness, where there will be wailing and gnashing of teeth. With one exception, this expression combining the thoughts of punishment and of deep grief is found in Matthew only (see the note on 8:12). It stands for complete and final rejection and for unceasing sorrow and regret. We should bear in mind that this is not here pronounced over someone who has done some particularly heinous crime. It is the final result for the man who had only one talent and who steadfastly refused to use it.1

This parable focuses primarily upon the useless servant. Gifts that are not used are lost. The title “talents” is unfortunate, in that in our language we use the word “talent” to refer to natural aptitudes or abilities that people have. The talent in this story was a weight, and its value depended on whether the object weighed was copper, silver, or gold. In the story, talents were given to the several men according to their “abilities” (v. 15). It would be best to interpret the talents as opportunities. And in the parable each of the men is given opportunity according to ability and is expected to serve faithfully. This is a parable on responsibility.
There is a story that Archelaus went to Rome (4 b.c.) to get his kingship over Judea confirmed. A party of fifty Jews went as an embassy to Rome to resist the appointment, but did not succeed. The revenge he inflicted upon the Jews after his return was not soon forgotten. Such a story supplies emotional background for the weight of this illustration. But in Jesus’ story, the issue is not revenge but accountability. The gift and the responsibility were commensurate. The men who had received five and two talents respectively took risks; they applied themselves actively in their responsibility. But the unfaithful servant thought only of himself and his security, risked nothing, and achieved nothing.
On the Master’s return there is an accounting from each. The two servants, representing faithful disciples, had transformed privilege into action. The response of the Master carries the note of eschatological joy; the “good and faithful” servants enter the joy of their Master. But as soon as the unfaithful servant opens his mouth, it is evident that he was not interested in his Lord’s cause or advantage but rather in saving his own skin. One who cannot venture his own person cannot take risks for the sake of his Lord! He was judged according to his conduct. What was given was taken away, “For whosoever shall save his life shall lose it… .” The story closes with the language of destruction in outer darkness—the symbol of the anguish of ultimate separation.
As one of the Parousia parables, this is a striking lesson on our responsibility. A possible but simple outline follows: The Master (1) entrusted responsibility to his servants; (2) increased responsibility for faithfulness; (3) judged inexcusable irresponsibility. (See Rom. 2 on God’s judgment.)2

The Signs of Christ’s Coming—Part 9: The Tragedy of Wasted Opportunity (Working Until Christ’s Return)
(25:14–30)
9


For it is just like a man about to go on a journey, who called his own slaves, and entrusted his possessions to them. And to one he gave five talents, to another, two, and to another, one, each according to his own ability; and he went on his journey. Immediately the one who had received the five talents went and traded with them, and gained five more talents. In the same manner the one who had received the two talents gained two more. But he who received the one talent went away and dug in the ground, and hid his master’s money. Now after a long time the master of those slaves came and settled accounts with them. And the one who had received the five talents came up and brought five more talents, saying, “Master, you entrusted five talents to me; see, I have gained five more talents.” His master said to him, “Well done, good and faithful slave; you were faithful with a few things, I will put you in charge of many things, enter into the joy of your master.” The one also who had received the two talents came up and said, “Master, you entrusted to me two talents; see, I have gained two more talents.” His master said to him, “Well done, good and faithful slave; you were faithful with a few things, I will put you in charge of many things; enter into the joy of your master.” And the one also who had received the one talent came up and said, “Master, I knew you to be a hard man, reaping where you did not sow, and gathering where you scattered no seed. And I was afraid, and went away and hid your talent in the ground; see, you have what is yours.” But his master answered and said to him, “You wicked, lazy slave, you knew that I reap where I did not sow, and gather where I scattered no seed. Then you ought to have put my money in the bank, and on my arrival I would have received my money back with interest. Therefore take away the talent from him, and give it to the one who has the ten talents.” For to everyone who has shall more be given, and he shall have an abundance; but from the one who does not have, even what he does have shall be taken away. And cast out the worthless slave into the outer darkness; in that place there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth. (25:14–30)
In his poem Maud Muller, John Greenleaf Whittier wrote the well-known lines, “For all sad words of tongue or pen, the saddest are these: ‘It might have been!’ ”
Scripture is replete with admonitions to take advantage of opportunity while it is available. Solomon wrote, “Cast your bread on the surface of the waters, for you will find it after many days,” and, “Sow your seed in the morning and do not be idle in the evening, for you do not know whether morning or evening sowing will succeed, or whether both of them alike will be good” (Eccles. 11:1, 6). That same man of wisdom wrote, “He who gathers in summer is a son who acts wisely, but he who sleeps in harvest is a son who acts shamefully” (Prov. 10:5). His father, David, had written, “As for me, my prayer is to Thee, O Lord, at an acceptable time” (Ps. 69:13). Another psalmist wrote, “Come, let us worship and bow down; let us kneel before the Lord our Maker. For He is our God, and we are the people of His pasture, and the sheep of His hand. Today, if you would hear His voice, do not harden your hearts” (Ps. 95:6–8).
Isaiah exhorted, “Seek the Lord while He may be found; call upon Him while He is near” (Isa. 55:6). Jeremiah reminded his readers that “even the stork in the sky knows her seasons; and the turtledove and the swift and the thrush observe the time of their migration; but My people do not know the ordinance of the Lord” (Jer. 8:7; cf. Heb. 3:7–8). Paraphrasing his preceding quotation from Isaiah, Paul admonished the Corinthian believers, “Behold, now is ‘the acceptable time,’ behold, now is ‘the day of salvation’ ” (2 Cor. 6:2; cf. Isa. 49:8).
Jesus repeatedly called on men to make the most of spiritual opportunities. “For a little while longer the light is among you. Walk while you have the light, that darkness may not overtake you; he who walks in the darkness does not know where he goes. While you have the light, believe in the light, in order that you may become sons of light” (John 12:35–36).
The tragedy of wasted opportunity is the theme of Jesus’ parable of the talents, the second of two parables relating to the kingdom of heaven and, in particular, to men’s readiness for Jesus’ coming to establish the kingdom at His second coming (see Matt. 25:1). The parable of the virgins (vv. 1–13) focuses on readiness manifested in waiting, whereas the parable of the talents focuses on readiness manifested in working. The five virgins who had oil for their lamps represent believers who possess saving grace; the two faithful servants who invested their talents represent believers who exhibit the serving life. Together the two parables depict the balance of believers’ looking forward to His coming with anticipation while living in preparedness for His coming through faithful service.
Frequently, one or the other of those precepts either is lost or overemphasized. Although believers are to rejoice continually in the prospect of their Lord’s coming again, they are not to sit back in idleness and do nothing. Saving faith is serving faith. On the other hand, they are not to become so caught up in serving the Lord that they forget to contemplate and rejoice in His return. It was perhaps because they thought the Lord was coming momentarily that some of the believers at Thessalonica fell into undisciplined, careless living and decided to do no work at all. Consequently they became busybodies who did nothing productive and even disrupted the church. Paul rebuked them severely and commanded them “to work in quiet fashion and eat their own bread.” He then admonished the whole church not to “grow weary of doing good” (2 Thess. 3:10–13).
Peter challenged mockers who had the opposite problem. They were so convinced that the Lord would not come soon that they abandoned all moral restraint and lived in selfish profligacy (2 Pet. 3:3–4). Peter reminded them that the people of Noah’s day responded in the same way to Noah’s prediction of the Flood, which came upon them suddenly and at a time they did not expect. In the same way, the apostle declared, Christ will appear suddenly in the end time, bringing the “judgment and destruction of ungodly men” (vv. 5–7).
It should be noted that, despite some resemblances, the parable of the talents and the parable of the minas (Luke 19:11–27) are not variations of the same story. The mina parable was given several days earlier, and the two accounts have as many differences as similarities.
Though the parable of the talents has relevance to every generation, the Lord was still speaking directly about the generation that will be living just before His return in glory (24:34), the exact time of which will not be known in advance but the imminence of which will be manifested by spectacular and unmistakable signs (24:3–29).
The parable of the talents illustrates four basic aspects of spiritual opportunity: the responsibility we receive, the reaction we have, the reckoning we face, and the reward we gain.
The Responsibility We Receive
For it is just like a man about to go on a journey, who called his own slaves, and entrusted his possessions to them. And to one he gave five talents, to another, two, and to another, one, each according to his own ability; and he went on his journey. (25:14–15)
The antecedent of it is the kingdom of heaven (see v. 1), of which this parable is another illustration. Some translations add “the kingdom of heaven” to verse 14 in italics to make the connection clear. Even the phrase it is appears in italics in the nasb , being added because there is no main subject or verb in the Greek text of this verse. Both subject and verb are understood to continue over from verse 1, namely, “the kingdom of heaven will be comparable to,” making it obvious that Jesus is continuing to teach about the kingdom.
As frequently mentioned in this commentary series, it is important to understand that in the New Testament the kingdom of heaven and its synonymous phrase, the kingdom of God, refer to the sphere of God’s dominion in Christ. But while maintaining that basic meaning, the expression is used in two distinct ways. Sometimes it designates the invisible body of all redeemed people. The Lord used it in that sense when He declared, “Truly I say to you, unless you are converted and become like children, you shall not enter the kingdom of heaven” (Matt. 18:3; cf. 25:34). That is the kingdom in its pure, exclusive sense.
But sometimes the kingdom of heaven refers to the visible, outward body of those who profess to know and serve Christ. Jesus made clear that in that outward manifestation of the kingdom both the true and the false will be found, the genuine Christian and the imitation (see section on Matt. 13).
It is in this visible, outward sense that Jesus refers to the kingdom both in the parable of the virgins and in the parable of the talents. The foolish virgins and the faithless slave do not represent professed pagans, atheists, agnostics, or reprobates but those who profess to belong to Christ. In each account, both genuine and counterfeit believers are depicted.
The man who was about to go on a journey obviously was planning to be gone for a long time, perhaps for many months or even a year or more. In order for his estate to be well managed in his absence, he called his own slaves, and entrusted his possessions to them.
The fact that these were his own slaves reinforces the idea that Jesus was illustrating the outward, organizational church, composed of those who allege to belong to Him, and not to mankind in general. Many people in the gospels are referred to as Christ’s disciples although some of them proved to be false. Such were the disciples who were offended at His teaching about eating His flesh and drinking His blood (see John 6:52–66). The traitor Judas not only is called a disciple but an apostle (Luke 6:13–16). Even those false followers, by virtue of being attached outwardly to the church, have been entrusted with certain of the Lord’s possessions.
Doulos, the singular of slaves, was a general term that referred to any kind and level of bondservant. It was used of common laborers and menial household servants as well as of skilled craftsmen and artists and highly-trained professionals. Their commonness was in being the personal property of their owners, who often had the power of life and death over them.
A wealthy person would often have special slaves who functioned as overseers of his household and managers of his business. In many cases some of a man’s slaves were much better educated and skilled than he was. Highly trusted slaves sometimes had a virtual free hand within proscribed areas of responsibility even when the owner was at home. When he left town for any length of time, they acted almost in his full authority, having the equivalent of what we now refer to as power of attorney They were responsible for handling all the assets and business operations of their owner for his benefit and profit.
The man in Jesus’ parable had three such trusted slaves to whom he entrusted certain of his possessions while he was away. To one he gave five talents, to another, two, and to another, one, each according to his own ability. Satisfied that his money was in capable hands, he then went on his journey.
The numbers of talents given to the slaves have no significance in themselves but simply illustrate a wide range of responsibilities, from the very high and demanding to the relatively low and easy It is significant, however, that the responsibilities were given to each according to his own ability. The owner knew his slaves intimately, and he entrusted each one only with the responsibility he reasonably could be expected to handle.
Used in a context such as this, talents always referred to money, but the word itself simply represented a measure of weight. The value of a specific coin depended on its weight and its composition. A talent of gold, for example, was extremely valuable, a talent of silver less valuable, and a talent of copper or bronze much less valuable still. But as with the number of talents given to each man, the metal content of the coins, and therefore their actual worth, is irrelevant to Jesus’ point. He was emphasizing common accountability for differing levels of responsibility based on individual ability.
Because the parable illustrates the kingdom of heaven, the man in the story obviously represents Christ Himself, and the going on a journey represents the time He is away from earth between His first and His second advents. The slaves depict professed believers, members of the Lord’s visible church whom He has entrusted with various resources to use in His behalf until He returns.
Jesus mentions only three levels of responsibility, but those are suggestive of the extremely wide range of individual abilities among people, who vary greatly in natural talent, intellect, and other capabilities. They also vary greatly in opportunity and privilege. Some church members have heard the gospel and studied Scripture since early childhood, whereas others know only the rudiments of the faith and have had little opportunity to learn more. Those who are true believers are also given spiritual gifts that vary widely from person to person (see Rom. 12:4–8; 1 Cor. 12:4–11). Some Christians are privileged to live and work closely with others of like faith and are continually encouraged and corrected by fellow believers. Other Christians, however, are the only believers in their families or even in their community or town. God knows intimately the abilities, gifts, opportunities, and circumstances of every person, and He graciously assigns responsibilities accordingly.
Even among the Twelve there were different levels of responsibility. Peter, James, and John were clearly the inner circle, and of that group Peter was the most prominent. From among the many devoted believers in the church at Jerusalem, James soon became the acknowledged leader, with commensurate responsibilities and obligations. The implication of the parable of the talents is that, even in the millennial kingdom and throughout eternity the redeemed will continue to have different levels of responsibility.
The issue of the parable pertains to what each slave does with the fairly assessed responsibility he has been given. The noblest motive in the heart of a faithful servant would be to accomplish as much as possible for the sake of his master during the master’s absence. That was also the master’s desire: not equal return from each of his slaves but relatively equal effort according to ability.
It is significant that, although the slaves with the five and the two talents did not produce equal profits, they produced equal percentages of profit, doubling what they had been given. In the same way, Christians with different capabilities and opportunities may produce differing results while working with equal faithfulness and devotion. The Lord therefore assures His servants that “each will receive his own reward according to his own labor” (1 Cor. 3:8).
The Reaction We Have
Immediately the one who had received the five talents went and traded with them, and gained five more talents. In the same manner the one who had received the two talents gained two more. But he who received the one talent went away and dug in the ground, and hid his master’s money. (25:16–18)
The slave who had received the five talents was eager to serve his master, and he therefore immediately … went and traded with them, and gained five more talents. This man represents the genuine believer whose supreme desire is to serve God, fulfilling what Jesus declared to be the first and greatest commandment, to “love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your might” (Deut. 6:5; cf. Matt. 22:37).
In this context, traded carries the broad connotation of doing business over a period of time. The slave did not simply make one good investment and then sit back, but rather traded and retraded as long as his master was away. He may have been involved in a number of commercial ventures, some of them simultaneously. The point, however, is not in the particular type of work he did but in the fact that he used to full advantage all the resources his master had given him. His industry gained five more talents for his master, doubling the amount with which he had started.
In the same manner the one who had received the two talents gained two more. Although the second slave was given less than half as much to work with, he performed just as faithfully and industriously as the first. Like his fellow slave, he doubled his master’s money. Both men demonstrated supreme commitment to their master by making the most of what they had, by maximizing their opportunities.
The behavior of the third slave, however, was radically different. He who received the one talent went away and dug in the ground, and hid his master’s money. Hiding valuables in the ground was a common practice in the ancient world, where there were no bank vaults or safe deposit boxes. It was a simple and sensible way to protect such things as jewels and coins (see Matt. 13:44).
But hiding working resources in the ground was hardly a sensible way to carry on a business and earn a profit. The slave had not received the one talent to protect it but to use it wisely for his master’s profit. Although he had been given fewer resources than the other two slaves, he had the same obligation to use what he had to his maximum ability.
The Reckoning We Face
Now after a long time the master of those slaves came and settled accounts with them. And the one who had received the five talents came up and brought five more talents, saying, “Master, you entrusted five talents to me; see, I have gained five more talents.” His master said to him, “Well done, good and faithful slave; you were faithful with a few things, I will put you in charge of many things, enter into the joy of your master.” The one also who had received the two talents came up and said, “Master, you entrusted to me two talents; see, I have gained two more talents.” His master said to him, “Well done, good and faithful slave; you were faithful with a few things, I will put you in charge of many things; enter into the joy of your master.” And the one also who had received the one talent came up and said, “Master, I knew you to be a hard man, reaping where you did not sow, and gathering where you scattered no seed. And I was afraid, and went away and hid your talent in the ground; see, you have what is yours.” But his master answered and said to him, “You wicked, lazy slave, you knew that I reap where I did not sow, and gather where I scattered no seed. Then you ought to have put my money in the bank, and on my arrival I would have received my money back with interest. (25:19–27)
The exact length of time the owner was gone is not mentioned and is irrelevant, except that it was a long time. In the context of the Olivet discourse, in which Jesus repeatedly states that His second coming will be at a time when He is not expected (see 24:36, 42, 44, 50; 25:13), the implication is that the master of those slaves came back unexpectedly.
The first order of business upon his return was to determine what the slaves had done with his assets, and he therefore sat down and settled accounts with them.
In this discourse Jesus was addressing those who would be alive at the time of His return (24:34), and the statement in the parable that the master was gone a long time (cf. 25:5) suggests that He was indirectly telling the Twelve that His coming back would not be as soon as they anticipated (see Luke 19:11). He did not tell them that it would not be in their lifetimes, because that would have tended to decrease their motivation for diligence. The idea was that, whether He would be gone for a seemingly long or seemingly short time by their human reckoning, they would have opportunity to serve Him and were obligated to be about His work.
Some years ago, certain segments of evangelicalism became preoccupied with Christ’s return, and some church members quit their jobs or sold their businesses and began watching for His appearance. One man I knew sold everything he had for about half a million dollars, some of which he used to buy thousands of New Testaments and distribute them around the world. He also bought and distributed various religious ornaments and trinkets he thought would arouse people’s interest in Christ. But soon he was bankrupt as well as frustrated and disheartened that his confidence in the Lord’s immediate return proved unfounded.
When the master called his servants together to settle the accounts, the first one reported, Master, you entrusted five talents to me; see, I have gained five more talents. The man was not boasting but simply relating the truth of the matter. There is no hint of pride or self-congratulation. He knew that everything he started with had been entrusted to him by his master, and that he had only done what he should have done. He exhibited the attitude Jesus said every obedient disciple should have: “When you do all the things which are commanded you, say, ‘We are unworthy slaves; we have done only that which we ought to have done’ ” (Luke 17:10).
Near the end of his life, Paul wrote Timothy, “I am already poured out as a drink offering, and the time of my departure has come. I have fought the good fight, I have finished the course, I have kept the faith; in the future there is laid up for me the crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous Judge, will award to me on that day” (2 Tim. 4:6–8). He was not boasting but simply expressing a deep sense of fulfillment and rejoicing. He was confident the Lord knew the integrity of his heart and would be faithful to reward Him according to His gracious promises.
When the master said to him, “Well done, good and faithful slave,” he was commending the slave’s attitude more than just his accomplishment. He first of all commended the man’s excellent character, which expressed itself in excellent service.
Because the master represents the Lord Himself when He returns in glory and power to establish His kingdom, it is remarkable to contemplate that the holy, just, perfect Lord of the universe will deign to praise His true disciples for their faithfulness, imperfect as it will have been. Yet that is the glorious prospect of every child of God who, like Paul, loves Christ’s appearing (2 Tim. 4:8).
The master not only highly praised his servant but highly rewarded him, declaring, “You were faithful with a few things, I will put you in charge of many things.”
Not only will the Lord entrust greater earthly tasks to those who prove themselves faithful, but their heavenly reward will be opportunity for greater service to Him throughout eternity. Christ’s faithful servants living on earth when He returns will enter into the millennial kingdom in their same earthly bodies and will be given responsibilities commensurate with their previous faithfulness. Believers who have died or been raptured will come to earth with the Lord in their glorified bodies, and they, too, will be given rulership in proportion to their faithfulness to God while they lived on earth. Both in the millennial and the eternal manifestations of the kingdom, those who have been faithful on earth will be put … in charge of many things much greater in significance than the few things over which they previously were faithful stewards.
Of the many things heaven will be, it will not be boring. Our heavenly perfection, for example, will not be a matter simply of never making a mistake. Nor will it be always making a hole in one or a home run, as it were. Rather it will be a time of ever-expanding and increasingly joyous service, and the saints who then will serve the most and rejoice the most will be those who have served the Lord most steadfastly while on earth. Every soul in heaven will equally possess eternal life and will be equally righteous, equally Christlike, and equally glorious. Everyone will be equally perfect, because perfection has no degrees. The difference will be in opportunities and levels of service. Just as the angels serve God in ranks, so will redeemed men and women, and the degree of their heavenly service will have been determined by the devotedness of their earthly service.
Heaven will not involve differing qualities of service, because everything heavenly is perfect. Everything done for the Lord will be perfectly right and perfectly satisfying. There will be no distinctions of superiority or inferiority, and there will be no envy, jealousy, or any other remnant of sinful human nature. Whatever one’s rank or responsibility or opportunity, those will be God’s perfect will for that individual and therefore will be perfectly enjoyed. In a way that is beyond our present comprehension, believers will be both equal and unequal in the Millennium and in the eternal state.
In the parable of the pounds, the nobleman who was going into a far country to receive a kingdom gave ten of his servants one mina each to do business with until he returned. When the nobleman came back, the servant who had multiplied his mina tenfold was rewarded with authority over ten cities and the one who had multiplied his mina fivefold was given authority over five cities (Luke 19:12–19). In that parable it is even more explicit that Jesus was speaking of millennial and eternal rewards, because they are specifically bestowed after the nobleman’s kingdom was established. And as in the parable of the talents, the kingdom rewards are given in proportion to earthly faithfulness.
Jesus also mentions a second reward the master gives to the faithful slave: enter into the joy of your master. Not only will believers be rewarded in heaven with still greater opportunity for service, but they will even share the divine joy of their master. In addition to sharing the Lord’s divine sinlessness and holiness they will also share His divine joy.
Imagine the consummate ecstasy believers will have when they fully comprehend the significance of having their sins forever abolished and their righteousness forever established! It was the joyful prospect of providing that gracious redemption that motivated Christ to endure the cross and despise its shame (Heb. 12:2).
The second slave made the same report as the first, the only difference being that he had doubled two talents instead of five, and therefore gained two talents more. The master’s response to the second slave was also identical: “Well done, good and faithful slave; you were faithful with a few things, I will put you in charge of many things; enter into the joy of your master.”
The third slave, however, did not present the master with earnings but with an accusatory and self-serving excuse. Having done nothing with what he had been given, he said, “Master, I knew you to be a hard man, reaping where you did not sow, and gathering where you scattered no seed. And I was afraid, and went away and hid your talent in the ground; see, you have what is yours.”
Like the other two, that slave was identified as belonging to the master (see v. 14), representative of his belonging to Christ’s church before the second coming. But in two distinct ways he proved that his identification with Christ was superficial and did not involve genuine faith or regeneration.
First of all, he produced absolutely nothing with the talent he had been given and did not even make an attempt to use it for his master’s benefit and profit.
As already mentioned, this slave does not represent an atheist or even an agnostic, because he recognized the master as his legitimate owner and no doubt made a pretense of honoring the master while he was away. He did not misuse his talent on immoral and selfish pursuits like the prodigal son or embezzle it like the unmerciful servant of Matthew 18. He simply disregarded the stewardship he had been given.
In much the same way, unbelieving church members live in the environment of God’s redeemed community and enjoy exposure to the teaching of His word and the fellowship of His people. But in spite of their spiritual privilege, they make no positive response to the gospel and therefore can render no fruitful service.
Second, this slave demonstrated his counterfeit allegiance by deprecating his master’s character, accusing him of a hard man, reaping where he did not sow, and gathering where he had scattered no seed. He charged his owner with unmerciful and dishonest.
That slave represents the professing Christian whose limited knowledge of God leads him to conclude that He is distant, uncaring, unjust, and undependable. Instead of judging themselves in light of God’s inerrant Word, such people judge God in the light of their own perverted perceptions. They not only justify themselves but do so at God’s expense.
His erroneous estimation of his master’s character was sufficient proof that this slave had no intimate or reliable knowledge of him. That slave portrays the unregenerate church member who has no spiritual fruit in his life and no spiritual worship in his heart. He is blind to the Lord’s kindness, grace, compassion, mercy, honor, majesty, and glory because he has never surrendered himself to the Lord’s sovereignty and grace.
Everything about that man contradicted his professed commitment to his master. In a certain way he was afraid of his master, but it was not the fear of reverential awe but of irreverent contempt. As his own words testified, he resented and despised the master and had no love or respect for him at all. His relationship to the master was one of enmity rather than peace, of hatred rather than love, of rejection rather than faith.
This slave represents a professed Christian whose view of God is corrupt because his unredeemed heart is still corrupt. He views God through the lens of his own depraved convictions.
In response to the unfaithful slave’s rationalization, the master said, “You wicked, lazy slave, you knew that I reap where I did not sow, and gather where I scattered no seed. Then you ought to have put my money in the bank, and on my arrival I would have received my money back with interest.”
The slave was wicked in that he unjustly besmirched the character of his master, and he was lazy in that he did nothing with the talent entrusted to him. By repeating the slave’s charge against him, the master did not acknowledge its truthfulness. He rather said, in effect: “You think I am a hard man, do you, harvesting crops that do not belong to me? If you really thought that, why did you not take the talent and put it in the bank, where it could at least draw interest?”
The ancient Roman Empire had a banking system that was in many respects like those of modern times. The maximum loan rate was 12 percent simple interest, and the interest earned on deposits was probably about half that rate. The slave with the one talent therefore could have reaped at least a 6 percent return by making virtually no effort at all. The fact that he did not attempt even to earn simple interest on the money confirmed his total irresponsibility and his indifference to the master.
Even if the slave’s accusation against his owner had been valid, it would not have excused his indolence. If anything, it would have made it more foolhardy. “If you thought I demand a return even on that which does not belong to me,” the master countered, in effect, “did you think I would not require a return on that which does belong to me?” The slave was verbally hanged with his own rope.
The truth of the matter was that the slave had no real concern for his master one way or the other, and his excuse seems to have been more spur of the moment than planned. He did not expect the master’s return and did not expect to be held accountable, and when he was caught by surprise he simply threw out an outrageous charge that made no sense.
The distinguishing mark of the first two servants was that they used their opportunity to serve the Lord before His return, which they eagerly awaited, and thereby proved the genuineness of their salvation. They were willing to invest everything they had in the service of their Master. The third servant, on the other hand, put aside what God had given him and went about his own selfish business. He called himself a servant of God but demonstrated conclusively he was not.
The master was angry with the third slave not simply because he lost a profit but because the slave wasted his opportunity. Jesus’ point was that having little to work with is no excuse for not using it at all. Even a person with limited exposure to Scripture and who possesses few talents and has few opportunities for service is fully obligated to use those blessings in God’s service.
In T. S. Eliot’s play Murder in the Cathedral, the chorus chants, “Yet we have gone on living, living and partly living” Those words are reminiscent of the three slaves in this parable. Two of them were truly alive, whereas the other had only the appearance of life. Two of them built their houses on a foundation of rock, the other built his on sand. Two of them were wheat, the other was a tare.
The profit earned by the first two servants represents the accomplishment and satisfaction of a life that belongs to the Lord and is faithfully dedicated to His service. The failure of the third servant to use that with which he had been entrusted by his master represents the emptiness, uselessness, and worthlessness of a life in which profession of faith in Christ is proved false and meaningless by the careless waste of privilege and opportunity.
The Reward We Gain
Therefore take away the talent from him, and give it to the one who has the ten talents. “For to everyone who has shall more be given, and he shall have an abundance; but from the one who does not have, even what he does have shall be taken away. And cast out the worthless slave into the outer darkness; in that place there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth. (25:28–30)
Jesus made clear that the visible church will always include both genuine and spurious Christians. Every church has tares that, except to God, are indistinguishable from the wheat. Their true character cannot be determined by what they do outwardly, because unbelievers can be quite active in the church and seemingly interested in its work. As far as the Lord is concerned, however, the work they do is not in His service or for the benefit of His kingdom. Whatever such a person may do with the abilities he has from the Lord, they are spiritually unproductive and might as well be hidden away. In the kingdom of God, the realm of His sovereign rule-whether in the visible earthly church or in the millennial kingdom-there will be no acceptable service offered to Him except that offered by true believers.
Therefore when Christ returns, He will figuratively take away the talent from him, and give it to the one who has the ten talents. As He had declared on at least one previous occasion (see Matt. 13:12), Jesus now said again: “To everyone who has shall more be given, and he shall have an abundance; but the one who does not have, even what he does have shall be taken away.”
Those who demonstrate by their spiritual fruitfulness that they belong to God will be given even greater opportunity to bear fruit for Him. But those who demonstrate by their unproductiveness that they do not belong to God will lose even the benefits the once had. Such a person does not have any true blessings from God because he has made them worthless through disuse. But the reality of what those blessings could have been will be given to someone who has proved his genuineness. The divine principle is that those who trust in Christ will gain everything, and those who do not trust in Him will lose everything.
The third slave was not simply unfaithful but faithless. A true Christian who wastes his abilities, spiritual gifts, and opportunities will have his work “burned up, [and] he shall suffer loss; but he himself shall be saved, yet so as through fire” (1 Cor. 3:15). The person represented by this slave, however, has no faith at all and therefore no saving relationship to God. No matter how much he may appear to have been blessed by God and to have served Him, one day he will hear from the Lord’s own lips the devastating words, “l never knew you; depart from Me, you who practice lawlessness” (Matt. 7:23).
The third slave was utterly worthless, and his fate was to be cast out … into the outer darkness; in that place there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth. Just like the man who tried to crash the king’s wedding feast without the proper garment (Matt. 22:11–13), this unproductive, counterfeit servant was destined for destruction.
Outer darkness is a common New Testament description of hell. “God is light,” John declared, “and in Him there is no darkness at all” (1 John 1:5). Light signifies God’s presence, and darkness signifies his absence. Hell not only is eternal darkness but eternal torment. In that place there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth, signifying the unrelieved agony of separated from God’s presence and goodness.

Profitable and unprofitable servants (vv. 14–30). This parable must not be confused with the Parable of the Pounds (Luke 19:11–27) though the two parables do have similarities. Please note that each servant in this parable was given money (a talent was worth about twenty years’ wages) according to his ability. The man with much ability was given five talents; the man with average ability received two talents; the man with minimal ability received one talent.
The talents represent opportunities to use our abilities. If five talents were given to a person with minimal ability, he would be destroyed by the heavy responsibility. But if only one talent were given to a man of great ability, he would be disgraced and degraded. God assigns work and opportunity according to ability. We are living in the period of time between Matthew 25:18 and 19. We have been assigned our ministries according to the abilities and gifts God has given us. It is our privilege to serve the Lord and multiply His goods.
The three servants fell into two categories: faithful and unfaithful. The faithful servants took their talents and put them to work for their Lord. The unfaithful servant hid his talent in the earth. Instead of using his opportunities, he buried them! He did not purposely do evil. But by doing nothing, he was committing sin and robbing his Lord of service and increase.
The two men who put their money to work each received the same commendation (Matt. 25:21, 23). It was not the portion but the proportion that made the difference. They started as servants, but their Lord promoted them to rulers. They were faithful with a few things, so the Lord trusted them with many things. They had worked and toiled, and now they entered into joy. Their faithfulness gave each of them a capacity for greater service and responsibility.
The third servant was unfaithful and therefore was unrewarded. Because this man was afraid he might fail, he never tried to succeed. He feared life and his responsibilities. This paralyzed him with anxiety, so he buried the talent to protect it. The least he could have done was put the money in a bank and collect some interest. There was no real risk in that.
What we do not use for the Lord, we are in danger of losing. The master reprimanded the unfaithful, unprofitable servant, and then took his talent from him. The man with the most talents received the extra talent.
Some feel that this unprofitable servant was not a true believer. But it seems that he was a true servant, even though he proved to be unprofitable. The “outer darkness” of Matthew 25:30 need not refer to hell, even though that is often the case in the Gospels (Matt. 8:12; 22:13). It is dangerous to build theology on parables, for parables illustrate truth in vivid ways. The man was dealt with by the Lord, he lost his opportunity for service, and he gained no praise or reward. To me, that is outer darkness.
It is possible that the one-talent man thought that his one talent was not really very important. He did not have five talents, or even two. Why worry about one? Because he was appointed as a steward by the Lord. Were it not for the one-talent people in our world, very little would get accomplished. His one talent could have increased to two and brought glory to his master.
These three parables encourage us to love His appearing, look for His appearing, and labor faithfully until He comes. We should be watching, witnessing, and working. We may not be successful in the eyes of men, or even popular with others. But if we are faithful and profitable, we shall receive our reward.3

(6). The Parable of the Talents. 25:14–30
14–23. The Parable of the Talents further emphasizes the need for personal preparation and faithful service to the Master (see also Lk 19:11–28). The talents represent monetary values and are distributed according to ability (vs. 15). Far country indicating the time between Jesus’ first coming and His final return during which He is in heaven. The three servants are typical of three types who are entrusted various tasks in accordance with their own ability. Not all are expected to produce the same results, but all are to be faithful with what they have had entrusted to them. Thus, the first two double their money, while the last one hides the one … in the earth. The phrase After a long time gives a veiled indication of the length of Christ’s departure to heaven during the present age. Each of those producing results is commended by the Master: Well done … good and faithful servant and is promised to be a ruler over many things, with a view to continued service in the millennial kingdom.
24–25. The great mistake of the unfaithful servant was in misjudging the character of his Master: thou art a hard man. He could not have known the Master well to assume him to be severe and merciless. Atkinson (p. 801) observes, “The slave seems to have thought that whatever he did his master would be unjust to him.” He failed to understand the real generosity of his Master who wanted him to experience the joys of service. Whereas the Parable of the Ten Virgins emphasized personal preparation for the coming of Christ, the Parable of the Talents stresses the importance of faithful service during His present absence.
26–30. The fact that the latter man is called wicked and slothful and an unprofitable servant (vs. 30) who is cast out into outer darkness, certainly indicates that he was not a true disciple of the Master. The idea of this illustrative parable is that all true believers will produce results (elsewhere, “fruits”) in varying degrees. Those who produce no results are not truly converted. Those who deny soul-winning, personal evangelism, and church growth will find no comfort in this story. Those who hide their treasure (probably, the life-changing message of the gospel), because of a harsh view of the Master’s sovereignty over them, reveal that they do not really love people and, therefore, their own salvation is questionable!4

115
THE PARABLE OF THE TALENTS
Matthew 25:14–30

Right after the parable of the wise and foolish virgins, by which Jesus instructed His disciples to be prepared for His coming, He told them the parable of the talents to teach them to be diligent as they waited for Him. As we have seen time and time again in the Olivet Discourse, this same lesson applies to us, Jesus’ disciples in the twenty-first century. Sadly, the basic principles found in this parable fly in the face of everything we hear in contemporary culture. If ever Jesus told a parable that is politically incorrect in contemporary America, it is this one. We need to close our ears to the siren voices of the pagan culture in which we live, and listen carefully to the teaching of our Lord and Savior.
According to Matthew, Jesus told His disciples: “For the kingdom of heaven is like a man traveling to a far country, who called his own servants and delivered his goods to them. And to one he gave five talents, to another two, and to another one, to each according to his own ability; and immediately he went on a journey. Then he who had received the five talents went and traded with them, and made another five talents. And likewise he who had received two gained two more also. But he who had received one went and dug in the ground, and hid his lord’s money” (vv. 14–18).
Jesus told a story about a wealthy man who went away for a long journey, and before he went he entrusted some of his riches to three of his servants, giving each of them “talents.” These talents were not abilities but units of weight. In the ancient world, a talent could be a unit of gold, silver, or bronze. Jesus did not say which kind of precious metal the master entrusted to his servants, but a talent of gold or silver was quite valuable.
The master gave five talents to one servant, two talents to another, and one to a third. He distributed these talents according to his estimation of the ability of each servant to handle them. This is why he did not distribute them equally. Then, after the master’s departure, the man to whom the master gave five talents doubled that number. Likewise, the man to whom the master gave two talents also produced a hundred percent increase. The third servant, however, was concerned that he might lose the one talent he had been given and land in serious trouble with his master, so he played it safe and buried his master’s gold or silver in the ground.
Stewardship Capitalism
On the surface, the interpretation of this parable is about as simple as it gets. It focuses on the productivity of the Lord’s people, on fruitfulness. That is, Jesus was telling the disciples to engage in productive activity until His return.
What we find initially in this rather simple parable is a lesson about stewardship. A steward was a servant in the ancient world who was given authority to make sure everything functioned properly in the master’s household. The Greek word that is translated as “stewardship” in the New Testament is oikonomia; we get the English word economy from it. The word oikonomia is a combination of two other words: oikos, which means “house,” and nomos, which means “law.” So, stewardship has to do with the law of the house or the rule of the house—how matters in the house are handled.
However, I think this parable points beyond stewardship to something else. It will be politically incorrect for me to write this, but I believe Jesus was speaking here not just about stewardship but about a particular kind of stewardship, which I call “stewardship capitalism.” The term capitalism has become a dirty word in Western culture. Of course, capitalism can take all kinds of shapes and faces, and at times it can be ruthless and greedy. But the Bible presents a picture of stewardship capitalism and gives basic principles that are extremely important.
The first of these principles is that we possess nothing. Everything we think we own is really God’s, for He owns everything, and all that we have we hold as stewards for Him. Second, God gives us capital not to waste, to horde, or to bury in the ground, but to be productive. If we put our capital to work, it can earn while we sleep. Third, stewardship capitalism includes the principle of delayed gratification. When we receive our paychecks, we do not spend everything we have earned to gratify every desire we have. Instead, we put the brakes on our consumption and invest a portion of what we take home for the future.
I saw the benefits of delayed gratification as I was growing up in Pittsburgh, the largest steel manufacturing city in the world. Pittsburgh and all the towns around it were marked by the billowing smoke from the steel mills of Western Pennsylvania. Sadly, on Friday afternoons, when the whistles would blow at the mills, the men would go to the paymaster’s office and get their money, and then most of them would head to the nearest bars. Only about one out of ten would go home and give his wife his pay so she could deposit it in the bank. Guess which of those workers sent their sons to college? The sons of those men who delayed their gratification and invested in the futures of their children became doctors, lawyers, and engineers.
The Bible is also very concerned about the material well-being of human beings. It is not a Gnostic book that is concerned only with our souls. Our Lord Jesus was profoundly concerned that people should have enough to eat, that they should not be naked, that they should have homes. All of these things cost money. My father-in-law used to say he would rather clothe me than feed me. He said I was eating him out of house and home when I came around to date his daughter. But God is concerned about all human needs.
So, what is the single most important factor for the material well-being of people? The answer to that question is simple—production. Unless food is produced, people starve. Unless clothing is produced, people freeze. Unless houses are built, people are without shelter. So, the most important factor in improving the welfare of human beings is to increase productivity. On an individual basis, it is extremely important that we be productive.
What is the most important factor for increasing productivity? The answer is very simple: tools. Let me give you a simple example. You probably have a lawn outside your home. Having that lawn requires you to balance three factors—labor, time, and money. Your grass needs to be cut. What is the cheapest way to cut it? You could go out, kneel down, and start chewing off each blade of grass one at a time. You probably would never get it done. It would be extremely labor-intensive. However, it would be cheap—so long as you did not need to spend time doing something else to earn money. You can increase your productivity by using a pair of scissors instead of our teeth. It would be a little more expensive to use scissors rather than your teeth, and it still would be labor-intensive, but it would be a little bit more efficient. You can increase your productivity even more by buying a push mower. That would save time, but it would cost more money. If you want to save more time and labor, you can buy a power mower. It will cost you more money, but it will certainly save you time and labor because you will have a better tool. The better the tools, the more productive you can be.
In 1989, right after the fall of Nicolae Ceausescu, I had the privilege of visiting Romania. As we traveled across the landscape by train, I could see thousands of babushkas, “grandmothers,” wearing black dresses down to their ankles, out in the fields with wooden hoes and wooden rakes, loading their produce on ox-drawn or donkey-drawn carts. It was very primitive and unproductive agriculture. Why could the Romanian farmers not produce as much as American farmers? Was it because the Romanian men were not as strong physically as American men? No. Was it because they were not as smart? No. Was it because they did not have specific knowledge of agriculture? No, all the best methods for growing things was available in their language. The one thing the Romanian farmers did not have that American farmers had was tools. They did not have tractors and mechanical harvesters. That was the reason American farmers could produce a thousand times more in a month than Romanian farmers. It all came down to tools.
What is the single most important factor for acquiring tools? The answer is a really unpopular word—profit. In order to buy tools, you must have surplus capital. If you do not have the surplus capital, you must use wooden hoes and rakes. Profit is simply what is left over from your revenue after you pay your expenses. Somehow we have come to hate the idea of profit. But if you do not have profit, you will not have tools. And if you do not have tools, you will not have production. And if you do not have production, you will not have a shirt on your back, a loaf of bread to eat, or a house to live in.
So, Jesus wants His people to be productive with the things God has given to them. In other words, He wants us to use those things fruitfully, so that they increase.
Good Servants and a Lazy Servant
Jesus then related what happened when the master returned: “After a long time the lord of those servants came and settled accounts with them. So he who had received five talents came and brought five other talents, saying, ‘Lord, you delivered to me five talents; look, I have gained five more talents besides them.’ His lord said to him, ‘Well done, good and faithful servant; you were faithful over a few things, I will make you ruler over many things. Enter into the joy of your lord.’ He also who had received two talents came and said, ‘Lord, you delivered to me two talents; look, I have gained two more talents besides them.’ His lord said to him, ‘Well done, good and faithful servant; you have been faithful over a few things, I will make you ruler over many things. Enter into the joy of your lord’ ” (vv. 19–23). When the master learned how productive the first two servants had been, he said: “Well done. You’re a good servant, a faithful servant. Since you’ve been faithful in little, I’m going to make you responsible for more and more things.” He gave the same message to the man who doubled the two talents. He was given fewer talents, but he was just as productive with them.
What of the third servant, the man who was given one talent? Jesus said: “Then he who had received the one talent came and said, ‘Lord, I knew you to be a hard man, reaping where you have not sown, and gathering where you have not scattered seed. And I was afraid, and went and hid your talent in the ground. Look, there you have what is yours’ ” (vv. 24–25). This man came not with a report of productivity but with excuses. He said: “Lord, I knew you were a hard man. You’re the kind of man who reaps where you haven’t sown.” What kind of man was the servant talking about? He was describing a capitalist, one who buys a field and hires other people to sow the seed and reap the harvest. They get a salary but the master gets the largest portion of the profit because his capital was working for him.
That excuse did not curry the master’s favor. Jesus told His disciples: “But his lord answered and said to him, ‘You wicked and lazy servant, you knew that I reap where I have not sown, and gather where I have not scattered seed. So you ought to have deposited my money with the bankers, and at my coming I would have received back my own with interest. Therefore take the talent from him, an5

6


*
1 Morris, L. (1992). The Gospel according to Matthew (pp. 626–632). Grand Rapids, MI; Leicester, England: W.B. Eerdmans; Inter-Varsity Press.
2 Augsburger, M. S., & Ogilvie, L. J. (1982). Matthew (Vol. 24, p. 18). Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson Inc.
3 Wiersbe, W. W. (1996). The Bible exposition commentary (Vol. 1, p. 92). Wheaton, IL: Victor Books.
4 Hindson, E. E., & Kroll, W. M. (Eds.). (1994). KJV Bible Commentary (pp. 1950–1951). Nashville: Thomas Nelson.
5 Sproul, R. C. (2013). Matthew (pp. 723–728). Wheaton, IL: Crossway.

6 MacArthur, J. F., Jr. (1985). Matthew (Mt 25:13–28). Chicago: Moody Press.

Thursday, November 30, 2017

fake teaching

himself shall be exalted. (23:1–12)
Matthew 23 records Jesus’ last public sermon. It was not a sermon on salvation, on the resurrection, or on principles for living the kingdom life but rather a vital and sobering message of condemnation against false teachers. In verses 1–7 He warns the people about false religious leaders in Israel, and in verses 8–12 He admonishes the disciples and other true spiritual leaders not to emulate them. He then turns His attention directly to the false leaders themselves, epitomized by the scribes and Pharisees, and gives them His final and most scathing denunciation (vv. 13–36). In His closing comments (vv. 37–39) He expresses His intense compassion for unbelieving Israel and gives the assurance that one day, in fulfillment of God’s sovereign promise, His chosen people will turn back to Him in faith.
Since the Fall, the world has always had false religious leaders, pretending to represent God but representing only themselves. False leaders were active in the rebellious scheme to erect the tower of Babel. Moses came into serious conflict with the religious sorcerers and magicians of Egypt when he demanded the release of God’s people by pharaoh, who probably considered himself to be a god (see Ex. 7:11–12, 22; 8:7). Ezekiel faced the false prophets in Israel, whom God called “foolish prophets who are following their own spirit and have seen nothing” (Ezek. 13:3).
Jesus referred to spurious religious leaders as “false Christs and false prophets [who] will arise and will show great signs and wonders, so as to mislead, if possible, even the elect” (Matt. 24:24). Paul called them preachers of a perverted gospel (Gal. 1:8) and purveyors of the doctrines of demons (1 Tim. 4:1). Peter spoke of them as those who “secretly introduce destructive heresies, even denying the Master who bought them” (2 Pet. 2:1). John called them antichrists who deny that Jesus is the Messiah, the Christ (1 John 2:18, 22). Jude called them dreamers who “defile the flesh, and reject authority, and revile angelic majesties” (Jude 8). As Paul declared to the Ephesian elders in his brief and touching reunion with them on the beach near Miletus, false religious leaders are “savage wolves” of the spirit world whose purpose is to corrupt and destroy God’s people (Acts 20:29).
The religion pages of major newspapers in our day are filled with advertisements for every kind of sect and false religion, including deviant forms of Christianity as well as cults and the occult. Many of those groups masquerade as forms of Christianity and claim to teach a new and better gospel. But while purporting to offer spiritual life and help, they instead teach the way of spiritual death and damnation. While chiming to lead people to heaven, they usher them directly into hell.
Scripture makes clear that as the second coming of Christ comes near, counterfeiters of the gospel will proliferate and amass to themselves great followings and immense influence (see, e.g., 2 Thess. 2:3–4; 1 Tim. 4:1–3; 2 Tim. 3:1–9; 2 Pet. 2:1–3;). The only time in history equal to what that future demon-inspired age will be like was the time of our Lord’s ministry on earth. At that time all hell garnered its forces in a three-year assault against the Son of God in a desperate effort to contradict what He taught and to counteract what He did. It is against the human instruments of that satanic attack that Jesus addresses this last public and permanently instructive message, given near the end of a long and grueling day of teaching and confrontation in the Temple.
Dialogue between Jesus and the Temple authorities had ended, because “no one was able to answer [Jesus] a word, nor did anyone dare from that day on to ask Him another question” (Matt. 22:46). Although the Lord had frequently spoken against the unbelieving religious leaders (see Matt. 5:20; 15:1–9; 16:6–12; John 8:44), it was necessary to give a final word, a last comprehensive warning, to them and to everyone else, about the eternal danger of their perverse teachings. Jesus also no doubt wanted to give those unbelieving leaders themselves opportunity to turn from their falsehood and follow Him to forgiveness and salvation.
It seems evident that many hearts were softened to the gospel that day, including the hearts of some of the leaders. On the day of Pentecost alone some three thousand souls came to the Lord (Acts 2:41), and it may well have been that eight or ten times that number believed within a few more months, as the apostles “filled Jerusalem with [their] teaching” (Acts 5:28). We can be certain that many, and perhaps most, of the converts in those early days had seen and heard Jesus personally and been drawn by the Holy Spirit to His truth and grace. Perhaps for some, this message was the point of initial attraction to Jesus Christ.
The Description of False Spiritual Leaders
Then Jesus spoke to the multitudes and to His disciples, saying, “The scribes and the Pharisees have seated themselves in the chair of Moses; therefore all that they tell you, do and observe, but do not do according to their deeds; for they say things, and do not do them. And they tie up heavy loads, and lay them on men’s shoulders; but they themselves are unwilling to move them with so much as a finger. But they do all their deeds to be noticed by men; for they broaden their phylacteries, and lengthen the tassels of their garments. And they love the place of honor at banquets, and the chief seats in the synagogues, and respectful greetings in the market places, and being called by men, Rabbi. (23:1–7)
At this time Jesus spoke directly to the multitudes and to His disciples, but the religious leaders, most particularly the scribes and the Pharisees, were within earshot nearby (see v. 13).
When the Jews returned to Palestine after the seventy years of captivity in Babylon, the Scriptures for a while regained their central place in Israel’s life and worship, humanly speaking due largely to revival under the godly leaders Nehemiah and Ezra (see Neh. 8:1–8). Ezra was one of the first Jewish scribes in the sense in which the title was used in Jesus’ day.
An ancient Jewish saying held that God gave the law to angels, angels gave it to Moses, Moses gave it to Joshua, Joshua gave it to the elders, the elders gave it to the prophets, and the prophets gave it to the men of the synagogue who were later called scribes. Over the course of the years, those synagogue scribes became responsible not only for copying and preserving but also for teaching and interpreting God’s law. There were no more prophets after the Exile, and the scribes inherited the primary role of spiritual leadership in Israel. In Jesus’ day scribes were found among both the Pharisees and Sadducees but were more commonly associated with the Pharisees.
Although the precise origin of the Pharisees is unknown, they appeared sometime before the middle of the second century b.c. Numbering perhaps as many as six thousand, many of them were also scribes, authorities in Jewish law, both scriptural and traditional. As has been noted many times in this study of Matthew, the Pharisees were by far the dominant religious group in Israel in Jesus’ day and the most popular with the masses. The other major party, the Sadducees, were largely in charge of the Temple, but their driving concern was not for religion but for money and power. As their name suggests, the Herodians were a political party loyal to the Herod family. The Essenes, which are not mentioned in Scripture, were a reclusive sect who devoted much of their efforts to copying the Scriptures, and the Zealots were radical nationalists who sought to overthrow Rome militarily. Like the Sadducees, the Herodians’ and Zealots’ interest in religion was motivated primarily by desire for personal and political gain. Consequently, it was to the scribes and the Pharisees that the people looked for religious guidance and authority, a role those leaders greatly cherished.
William Barclay, who devoted many years to biblical research in Palestine, reports that the Talmud (Sotah, 22b) speaks of seven kinds of Pharisees.
The first group Barclay calls “shoulder Pharisees,” so named because of their custom of displaying accounts of their good deeds on their shoulders for other people to see and admire. When they prayed, they put ashes on their heads as an act of humility and wore sad expressions on their faces to suggest piousness.
The second group he calls “wait a little,” due to their cleaver ability to come up with a fabricated spiritual reason for putting off doing something good. Pious excuses were their stock in trade.
The third group were the “bruised and bleeding.” In order not to commit the sin of looking at a woman lustfully, those Pharisees closed their eyes whenever women were around. Understandably, they received many bruises and abrasions from bumping into walls, posts, and other objects. They measured their piousness by the number and severity of their injuries.
The fourth group were the “humpback tumbling.” In order to show off their supposed humility, they slouched over with bent hacks and shuffled their feet instead of taking normal steps, leading to frequent stumbles and tumbles.
The fifth group were the “ever-seeking,” named because of the meticulous record keeping of their good deeds in order to determine how much reward God owed them.
The sixth group were the “fearing” Pharisees, whose terror over the prospect of hell motivated everything they did.
The seventh and last group were the “God-fearing,” those whose lives were motivated out of genuine love for God and a desire to please Him. The Pharisee Nicodemus (see John 3:1; 19:39) would doubtlessly have been classed in this group.
But Nicodemus and the few other Pharisees who believed in Jesus were very much the exceptions. For the most part, the Pharisees were the Lord’s most strident critics and implacable enemies. In Matthew 23:2–7, Jesus presents five characteristics of the unbelieving scribes and the Pharisees, characteristics that typify all false spiritual leaders.
False Leaders Lack Authority
[they] have seated themselves in the chair of Moses; (23:2b)
The initial characteristic describing false religious leaders is lack of divine authority. The key to our Lord’s point is the fact that the scribes and Pharisees had seated themselves. They were not appointed by God to sit in the chair of Moses and had not even been elected by the people. They had simply arrogated to themselves that position of authority, which was therefore spurious.
Chair is from kathedra, the Greek term from which we get cathedral, which originally referred to a place, or seat, of ecclesiastical authority. The same idea is found today in such expressions as “chair of philosophy” or “chair of history,” which refer to the most esteemed professorships in a college or university. When the pope of the Roman Catholic church speaks in his full ecclesiastical authority, he is said to be speaking ex cathedra.
For Jews, Moses was the supreme law giver, the supreme spokesman for God. Therefore to sit in the chair of Moses was tantamount to being God’s authoritative spokesman, and it was that very claim that many of the scribes and Pharisees made for themselves.
It was for that reason they were envious of Jesus and so determined to undermine Him. They were infuriated because the people discerned that Jesus taught with an authority that seemed genuine (Matt. 7:29). Even to the uneducated masses, something about the teaching of the scribes and Pharisees did not ring true, whereas Jesus’ teaching did. Jesus was therefore a threat to those leaders and to their heretofore unchallenged religious authority.
Jeremiah was confronted by false prophets in his day, prophets the Lord repeatedly said were not sent by Him and were not preaching His word. “I have neither sent them nor commanded them nor spoken to them,” God declared to the prophet; “they are prophesying to you a false vision, divination, futility and the deception of their own minds” (Jer. 14:14). “I did not send these prophets, but they ran,” the Lord later said to Jeremiah. “I did not speak to them, but they prophesied. … ‘Behold, I am against those who have prophesied false dreams,’ declares the Lord, ‘and related them, and led My people astray by their falsehoods and reckless boasting; yet I did not send them or command them, nor do they furnish this people the slightest benefit,’ declares the Lord” (23:21, 32; cf. 27:15; 28:15; 29:9).
God told Isaiah that many of the people would not listen to his words. “For this is a rebellious people,” He said, “false sons, sons who refuse to listen to the instruction of the Lord; who say to the seers, ‘You must not see visions’; and to the prophets, ‘You must not prophesy to us what is right, speak to us pleasant words, prophesy illusions’ ” (Isa. 30:9–10). Sinful people resist God’s truth because it is a rebuke to them, and they just as naturally turn to false religions and philosophies because those systems in one way or another approve and indulge their wicked inclinations and desires. They are therefore easy prey for false teachers who appeal to their base natures.
Jesus warned that such teachers and leaders are lying shepherds who do not enter the sheepfold by the door but climb in surreptitiously over the fence to wreak havoc among the flock. They are thieves who come “only to steal, and kill, and destroy” (John 10:1, 10). They do not represent God or speak in His name or in His authority but are deceivers, usurpers, and destroyers of God’s Word, God’s work, and God’s people.
They are in marked contrast to those who are genuinely sent by the Lord as ministers of His gospel, which He has committed to them (Gal. 1:15). Like Timothy, they have been called and set apart by God by the laying on of hands as confirmation of their divine commission and authority (1 Tim. 4:14). They are like the apostles, on whom the Lord breathed, saying, “Receive the Holy Spirit” (John 20:22) and to whom He later said, “All authority has been given to Me in heaven and on earth. Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations” (Matt. 28:18–19).
False leaders, on the other hand, lack divine authority in what they say and do. They are self-appointed ministers of human ideas and traditions, and as they promote their false notions they obscure God’s truth and pervert God’s righteousness for their own selfish purposes.
As in the prophets’ times and in Jesus’ time, the world still abounds with teachers who claim to speak in God’s name and power but do not. They usurp the place of the Lord’s true shepherds with lies, false promises, delusions, dreams, visions, and usually are guilty of immoral living.
False Leaders Lack Intergity
therefore all that they tell you, do and observe, but do not do according to their deeds; for they say things, and do not do them. (23:3)
Second, false religious leaders are characterized by lack of integrity, hypo-critically demanding of others many things they never do themselves.
In exhorting His followers, “All that they tell you, do and observe,” Jesus obviously was not speaking comprehensively of the lies and errors they taught but only of their instructions that conformed to Scripture. He had made clear that the righteousness acceptable to God must exceed the hypocritical, works-oriented self-righteousness the scribes and Pharisees advocated and practiced (Matt. 5:20). In His following comments He also made clear that their countless man-made traditions, many of which actually contradicted God’s law, were absolutely worthless and led people away from God rather than to Him. They were wrong about murder, fornication, divorce, adultery, swearing, praying, worship, and virtually every other area of living (see 5:21–48). They “invalidated the word of God for the sake of [their] tradition” (15:6).
Jesus was not giving blanket approval for following the teachings of the scribes and Pharisees but was rather warning against throwing the baby out with the dirty bath water. In other words, if they speak God’s truth, you should do and observe it, Jesus was saying. The Word of God is still the Word of God, even in the mouth of a false teacher. Insofar as the scribes and Pharisees accurately taught the law and the prophets, their teaching was to be heeded.
The verb poieō (do) is an aorist imperative and demands an immediate response. Tēreō (observe) is a present imperative and carries the idea of continuing action. Jesus was therefore saying, “Immediately obey and keep on obeying whatever the scribes and Pharisees teach if it follows God’s Word.”
But do not do according to their deeds. When the scribes and Pharisees did occasionally teach God’s truth, they did not obey it themselves. “They say things, and do not do them,” Jesus declared. They were religious phonies, consummate hypocrites who did not practice what they preached.
The unbelieving religious leaders did not have the ability to keep God’s law even had they genuinely wanted to, because they possessed no spiritual resources to make such obedience possible. Being unredeemed, they lived only in the flesh and by the flesh’s power, and the flesh is not capable of fulfilling God’s law (Rom. 3:20). It has no power either to restrain evil or to do good. It can develop impressive and sophisticated systems of external morality and ethical codes of conduct, but it cannot empower men to live up to them. It may talk much about God’s love and about His will for man to live in love, but it cannot produce love in a sinful heart. It may talk much about serving the poor and living in peace, but it cannot produce genuine love for the poor or genuine peace in the heart, much less in the world. Many religions, sects, and cults have high moral standards, promote close family ties, and advocate generosity, neighborliness, and good citizenship. But because all such systems are man-made, they work entirely in the power of the flesh, which can only produce the works of the flesh. Only the new person in Christ can “joyfully concur with the law of God in the inner man” (Rom. 7:22), and only the redeemed life, the life “created in Christ Jesus for good works” (Eph. 2:10) is able to do good works.
Later in this diatribe against the scribes and Pharisees the Lord speaks of their carefully tithing “mint and dill and cummin” but neglecting “the weightier provisions of the law: justice and mercy and faithfulness” (Matt. 23:23). Mint, dill, and cummin were not farm crops grown for profit but were garden spices used in cooking, and a tithe of those herbs was therefore worth very little. But whereas those leaders were meticulous in giving every tenth herb seed to the synagogue or Temple, they were totally unconcerned about fulfilling the moral demands of God’s law, represented by justice, mercy, and faithfulness. They were adroit at making good appearances of right living, of cleaning the outside of the cup. But inside, Jesus declared, they were nothing but self-indulgent thieves, the decaying carcasses of spiritually dead men. You “outwardly appear righteous to men, but inwardly you are full of hypocrisy and lawlessness” (vv. 25–28).
The false religious leader tries, often unsuccessfully, to put a cap on his wicked behavior to keep it out of view, but in so doing he merely traps it underneath the surface, where it festers, putrefies, and becomes still more corrupt. Paul speaks of such hypocrites as being “seared in their own conscience as with a branding iron” (1 Tim. 4:2). They have sinned so long and so willfully that their consciences have lost all sensitivity to truth and holiness, just as scar tissue loses sensitivity to pain.
Peter vividly portrays the nature of false prophets and teachers, about whom he solemnly warns believers. They “secretly introduce destructive heresies, even denying the Master who bought them,” he said, “bringing swift destruction upon themselves.” They “follow their sensuality and because of them the way of the truth [is] maligned; and in their greed they will exploit you with false words” (2 Pet. 2:1–3). He further describes them as,
those who indulge the flesh in its corrupt desires and despise authority Daring, self-willed, … unreasoning animals, born as creatures of instinct to be captured and killed, reviling where they have no knowledge, … stains and blemishes, reveling in their deceptions, … having eyes full of adultery and that never cease from sin, enticing unstable souls, having a heart trained in greed, accursed children, … springs without water, and mists driven by a storm, … speaking out arrogant words of vanity they entice by fleshly desires, by sensuality, those who barely escape from the ones who live in error, promising them freedom while they themselves are slaves of corruption. (vv. 10, 12–14, 17–19)
As noted earlier, Jude refers to them in similar terms, calling them dreamers of wicked dreams, defilers of the flesh, rejecters of authority, and revilers of angelic majesties, unreasoning animals, hidden reefs, clouds without water, “trees without fruit, doubly dead, uprooted; wild waves of the sea, casting up their own shame like foam; wandering stars, for whom the black darkness has been reserved forever” (Jude 8, 10, 12–13).
In the unregenerate heart, vice cannot be restrained and virtue cannot be produced. That is why even the best man-made system, even one that espouses many standards that Scripture itself espouses, cannot keep its followers from doing wrong or empower them to do what is truly right-for the simple reason that it cannot change their hearts. That is also why every system that gives man the duty to make himself right before God is doomed to hypocrisy and sham, because the best it can produce is outward righteousness, outward good works, outward love, outward peace, while the depraved inner person remains unchanged.
False Leaders Lack Sympathy
And they tie up heavy loads, and lay them on men’s shoulders; but they themselves are unwilling to move them with so much as a finger. (23:4)
Third, false religious leaders are characterized by lack of sympathy They not only are usurpers and hypocrites but are loveless and uncaring.
The picture Jesus gives here reflects the common custom of that day, and of people in many underdeveloped countries today, of loading up a donkey, camel, or other beast of burden to the point where it can hardy move. As they traveled down the road, the owner would walk alongside, carrying nothing himself, berating and bearing the animal if it happened to stumble or balk, with no concern for the animal’s feeldings or welfare.
That, Jesus said, is exactly the way the scribes and Pharisees treated their fellow Jews. They piled up heavy loads of religious regulations, rules, and rituals on men’s shoulders until they were unbearable and impossible to carry. And when the people failed to keep all of the requirements, as they were doomed to do, they were chided and rebuked by the leaders, who thereby added the burden of guilt to those of weariness and frustration.
The people were taught that it was only by their own good works they could please God. If at the end of life the good works outweighed the bad, then God would grant entrance into heaven. But the scribes and Pharisees offered the people no help in achieving even those fleshly goals, much less any spiritual ones. They themselves were unwilling to help move those unbearable burdens with so much as a finger. Consequently, Judaism had become insufferably depressing and debilitating.
The good news that Jesus brought, on the other hand, was that He would take away the load of sin that always outweighed their good works. That is why Paul was infuriated with the Judaizers, who tried to draw the Galatian believers back into legalism. He did not care who they were or claimed to be. “Even though we, or an angel from heaven, should preach to you a gospel contrary to that which we have preached to you, let him be accursed. As we have said before, so I say again now, if any man is preaching to you a gospel contrary to that which you received, let him be accursed” (Gal. 1:8–9). “It was for freedom that Christ set us free,” he said later in the same letter; “therefore keep standing firm and do not be subject again to a yoke of slavery” (5:1).
The scribes and Pharisees had no interest in God’s grace, forgiveness, and mercy, because those divine provisions make no allowance for human merit or good works. They could not comprehend and were utterly offended by a gospel that did not credit their own goodness. And they were scandalized by a gospel that declared, “Humble yourselves, therefore, under the mighty hand of God” (1 Pet. 5:6).
They did not feel they needed God’s grace for themselves and did not want it preached to others, because that liberating truth undercut the entire system of works-righteousness by which they kept the people in subjection to their own human authority.
Certain false leaders in the early church forbad marriage and the eating of particular foods, which Paul declared “God has created to be gratefully shared in by those who believe and know the truth” (1 Tim. 4:3). Under the name of Christ Roman Catholicism still forbids marriage of their clergy and teaches abstinence from certain foods on certain days and other legalistic and unscriptural doctrines.
Peter declared of false teachers that “in their greed they will exploit you with false words” (2 Pet. 2:3). Those under the care of such a fieshly, ungodly leader are no more than merchandise to be exploited to feed his ego and his wallet.
For centuries Israel had been stumbling and falling under the burden of unscrupulous, hardened religious leaders who, although they claimed to minister in God’s name, had love neither for God nor for His people. Long before the time of Christ, the Lord spoke to Ezekiel about such men, saying,
Son of Man, prophesy against the shepherds of Israel. Prophesy and say to those shepherds, “Thus says the Lord God, ‘Woe, shepherds of Israel who have been feeding themselves! Should not the shepherds feed the flock? You eat the fat and cloth yourselves with the wool, you slaughter the fat sheep without feeding the flock. Those who are sickly you have not strengthened, the diseased you have not healed, the broken you have not bound up, the scattered you have not brought back, nor have you sought for the lost; but with force and with severity you have dominated them. And they were scattered for lack of a shepherd, and they became food for every beast of the field and were scattered.’ ” (Ezek. 34:2–5)
False religious leaders today are still building empires and amassing fortunes by fleecing those they pretend to serve. It would be impossible to determine the millions of believers and unbelievers alike who are misled spiritually, abused emotionally, and bilked financially in the name of Christ Like the false shepherds of ancient Israel, they feed on their own sheep.
Earlier in His ministry, as He looked out over the multitudes who had so long been exploited by the corrupt religious leaders of Israel, Jesus “felt compassion for them, because they were distressed and downcast like sheep without a shepherd” (Matt. 9:36). It must have been gloriously refreshing for those people to hear Jesus say, “Come to Me, all who are weary and heavy-laden, and I will give you rest. Take My yoke upon you, and learn from Me, for I am gentle and humble in heart; and you shall find rest for your souls. For My yoke is easy, and My load is light” (Matt. 11:28–30).
Following the spirit and example of his Master, the apostle Paul always ministered to those under his care like the gentlest of shepherds, even like the most caring of mothers. “We proved to be gentle among you?” he reminded the Thessalonians, “as a nursing mother tenderly cares for her own children. Having thus a fond affection for you, we were well-pleased to impart to you not only the gospel of God but also our own lives, because you had become very dear to us. For you recall, brethren, our labor and hardship, how working night and day so as not to be a burden to any of you, we proclaimed to the gospel of God” (1 Thess. 2:7–9).
False Leaders Lack Spirituality
But they do all their deeds to be noticed by men; for they broaden their phylacteries, and lengthen the tassels of their garments. (23:5)
Fourth, false religious leaders are chacterized by lack of spirituality, by the absence of a genuine desire to please God. Like the scribes and Pharisees, the motivation for all their pretentious religious activities and deeds is to be noticed by men. Everything is done for outward show rather than from the heart, for fleshly gratification of ego rather than selfless service to God and to others in His name. The issue for them is not godly character but fleshy appearance, the making of “a good showing in the flesh” (Gal. 6:12). Their purpose is to glorify themselves, not God.
The Jewish religious leaders paraded their piosity everywhere they went. The center of their living was “practicing [their] righteousness before Men to be noticed by them” (Matt. 6:1). When they prayed in the synagogue or on the street corner, they did so with great ostentation (v. 5), and when they fasted, they went out of their way to call attention to the sacrifice they were making (v. 16).
Such people, Jude says, are “worldly-minded, devoid of the Spirit” (Jude 19). They follow their natural appetites and ambitions without restraint or shame, considering themselves to be the spiritually elite with a favored status before God as well as before men.
Hundreds of such fleshly frauds without the Holy Spirit still proclaim themselves as representatives of God and are followed by millions of gullible people who support them with hundreds of millions of dollars every year. In order to feed their egos and to amass wealth and power, thee false leaders sometimes pastor huge churches, head colleges and seminaries, direct radio and television empires, and promote many other personally-oriented activities in the name of the gospel.
In Jesus’ day, the means for being noticed by men were much more limited and less sophisticated, but false leaders then reflected the same fleshly desire to elevate self. Everything they did was to advance themselves and to foster the admiration of men.
To flaunt their religiosity, the scribes and Pharisees would broaden their phylacteries, and lengthen the tassels of their garments.
Four times in the Pentateuch (Ex. 13:9, 16; Deut. 6:8; 11:18) the Lord commanded that His law was to be upon the hands and foreheads of His people as a reminder of Him. The ancient Jews understood that command as it was given, not to be token literally but as symbolic of God’s law being the controlling factor in their lives, not only in what they did, represented by the hand, but in what they thought, represented by the forehead. Both their thoughts and their actions were to be directed by God’s Word. Far from having the purpose of promoting external human pretense and pride, that instruction was meant to elevate the Lord and to draw His people closer to Himself.
As the centuries passed, many Jews came to look on the injunction not as a means of making God’s Word dominant in their lives but of making themselves dominant in the eyes of their fellow Jews. They literalized and externalized the command and turned it into a means of feeding their own egos.
Phylacteries were sometimes called tephillin, a name derived from the Hebrew word translated “frontals” in Deuteronomy 6:8 and 11:18 (cf. Ex. 13:16). Phylacteries were small square boxes made of leather from a ceremonially clean animal. After being dyed black, the leather was sewn into a box using twelve stitches, each stitch representing one of the twelve tribes of Israel. Placed into each phylactery were copies of Exodus 13:1–10 and 13:11–16 and of Deuteronomy 6:4–9 and 11:13–21. The phylactery worn on the head had four compartment, each containing one of the texts on a small piece of parchment. The phylactery worn on the hand contained a single piece of parchment on which all four texts were written. The Hebrew letter shin (y) was inscribed on both sides of the box worn on the head, and the head strap was tied to form the letter daleth (d) and the hand strap to form the letter yodh (j). The three letters together formed Shaddai, one of the ancient names of God usually translated “Almighty.” Long leather strops were used to bind one box to the forehead and the other to the arm and left hand, because the left side was considered to be closer to the heart.
In Orthodox Judaism still today every boy is given a set of phylacteries when he comes of age on his thirteenth birthday Like the other Jewish men, he then wears his phylacteries at morning prayer, as was the general custom in Jesus’ day.
There is no record of the use of phylacteries until about 400 b.c. during the intertestamental period. Relics of them were found in the Essene community at Qumran near the Dead Sea. Phylacteries is a transliteration of the Greek phulaktēria, which referred to a means of protection or a safeguard. In pagan societies it was sometimes used as a synonym for amulet or charm. Although trust in such magical protection was dearly condemned in the Old Testament, as apostate Jews drifted away from God’s Word-the very Word of which the phylactery was meant to remind them-they invariably picked up pagan beliefs. Consequently, some Jews came to look on their phylacteries as magical charms for warding off evil spirits and other dangers.
The story is told in rabbinical literature of a rabbi who had an audience with a king. Ancient custom dictated that a person who left the king’s presence always walked away backwards while bowing, since it was considered a mark of great dishonor to turn one’s back on a monarch. That particular rabbi, however, simply turned around and walked away, apparently to demonstrate his conviction that, because of their high standing before God, rabbis were superior to royalty. When the irate king ordered his soldiers to kill the man for his effrontery, the straps of his phylacteries were said to blaze with fire, putting fear into the hearts of the soldiers and the king and thus saving the rabbi from death.
Some scribes and Pharisees held the phylacteries to be even more sacred than the golden head plate worn by the high priest, because God’s name was written twenty-three times in the phylacteries but only once on the golden head plate. God had been so made over into their own image that many Pharisees believed the Lord Himself wore phylacteries. Some Jewish writings from intertestamental and New Testament times give the impression that God was often thought of as little more than a glorified rabbi who studied the law three hours a day.
Rather than wearing their phylacteries only at prayer time, as the custom was for most Jewish men, the Pharisees wore them continually as a sign of superior spirituality. They also would broaden their phylacteries, making them larger than normal to signify supposed greater devotion to God. In a similar way and for the same purpose, they would lengthen the tassels of their garments.
As with phylacteries, the use of tassels had its origin in Scripture. The Lord instructed Moses to tell the sons of Israel “that they shall make for themselves tassels on the corners of their garments throughout their generations, and that they shall put on the tassel of each corner a cord of blue. And it shall be a tassel for you to look at and remember all the commandments of the Lord, so as to do them and not follow after your own heart and your own eyes, after which you played the harlot, in order that you may remember to do all My commandments, and be holy to your God” (Num. 15:38–40).
Jesus Himself wore tassels, and it was these tassels, or fringes, on His cloak that the woman win the hemorrhage touched (Matt. 9:20). In later Judaism the tassels were worn on the man’s inner garments, and today the remnant of the tassel tradition is seen in the prayer shawls, called tallithim, worn by Orthodox Jewish men.
The purpose of both the phylacteries and the tassels was ostensibly to remind the people of God and His Word and to set them apart as His people (cf. Zech. 8:23). Both of those outward symbols were intended to be toward reminders and motivators. They were given a means of calling attention to God, but the scribes and Pharisees turned them into a means of calling attention to themselves. Because of their misuse, the broadened phylacteries and lengthened tassels became marks of carnality rather than spirituality.
False Leaders Lack Humility
And they love the place of honor at banquets, and the chief seats in the synagogues, and respectful greetings in the market places, and being called by men, Rabbi. (23:6–7)
Fifth, false religious leaders are characterized by lack of humility. As with their modern counterparts, the scribes and Pharisees loved the place of honor at banquets. They vied with each other for a place at the host’s table in order to be in the center of attention. They gloried in being given places of prestige and eminence. It was that ego-centered spirit that led James and John to ask their mother to request of Jesus that they be appointed to sit at His right and left hands in the kingdom (Matt. 20:20–21).
Out of the same motivation the scribes and Pharisees prized the chief seats in the synagogues. As in most churches today, synagogues typically had a raised platform in front where the worship leaders would sit. Visiting rabbis and other religious dignitaries were often asked to participate by reading Scripture and giving a homily It was on the basis of that custom that Jesus was asked to read and expound the text from Isaiah 61:1–2 in His home synagogue in Nazareth (Luke 4:16–21). Far from having Jesus’ humble spirit, however, the religious leaders often used such opportunities to ostentatiously display themselves before the congregation.
Christian pastors are tempted at times to use their positions and the Christian activities in which they are involved for their own gratification and glory. Unfortunately, many congregations encourage ostentation and show by providing elaborate and ornate pulpits and other platform furnishings and by treating their pastors with unjustified distinction.
In addition to having seats of honor, the scribes and Pharisees also loved to have respectful greetings in the market places, and being called by men, Rabbi. As they traveled through town they doted on being treated with special honor. Rabbinical writings report that a certain pagan governor in Caesarea flatteringly spoke of the rabbis’ faces as faces of angels.
They especially loved the formal and respectful title Rabbi, which was used in that day much as “doctor” is today. In fact, the Latin equivalent of rabbi comes from docēre, which means to teach and is the term from which the English word doctor is derived. In Jesus’ day, the title Rabbi carried the exalted ideas of “supreme one, excellency, most knowledgeable one, great one,” and such. One rabbi insisted that he be buried in white garments when he died, because he wanted the world to know how worthy he was to appear before the presence of God.
Rabbinical writings included detailed systems of protocol for such things as addressing, consulting with, and entertaining rabbis and scribes. They were held in such high regard that, according to one passage in the Talmud (Sanhedrin, 88b), it was considered more punishable to act against the words of the scribes than against the words of the Scripture.
The Declaration to True Spiritual Leadeers
But do not be called Rabbi; for One is your Teacher, and you are all brothers. And do not call anyone on earth your father; for One is your Father, He who is in heaven. And do not be called leaders; for One is your Leader, that is, Christ. But the greatest among you shall be your servant. And whoever exalts himself shall be humbled; and whoever humbles himself shall be exalted. (23:8–12)
Contrary to the proud and ostentatious practices of the scribes and Pharisees, Jesus declared, true spiritual leaders are to avoid elevated titles and be willing to accept lowly service.
True Leaders Avoid Elevated Titles
But do not be called Rabbi; for One is your Teacher, and you are all brothers. And do not call anyone on earth your father; for One is your Father, He who is in heaven. And do not be called leaders; for One is your Leader, that is, Christ. (23:8–10)
Godly spiritual leaders are to shun pretentious titles such as Rabbi, which carried the basic idea of teacher but had come to signify much more than that. Jesus Himself is the believer’s only true Teacher in the elevated sense in which rabbis and scribes were commonly addressed and treated in Jesus’ day. He is the supreme and only source of divine truth, for which human teachers are but channel of communication.
Human teachers who faithfully proclaim and interpret God’s Word are to be appreciated, loved, and highly esteemed by those they serve (1 Thess. 5:12–13). But they are not to seek honor, much less demand it or glory in it. They need to remember that they are neither the source of truth, which is God’s Word, nor the illumination of truth, which is God’s Spirit. Human teachers, including the apostles whom Jesus addressed on this occasion, are all brothers with every other believer. No maps calling, however unique, justifies his being given a title intended to portray him as being spiritually superior.
Consequently, the Lord went on to command, “Do not call anyone on earth your father.” Jesus was of course using the sense of spiritual father, indicating a superior spiritual position and even suggesting one’s being a source of spiritual life. Members of the Sanhedrin, the high Jewish council, loved to be called by the title father, especially when acting in official capacities.
In direct contradiction of Jesus’ prohibition, the Roman Catholic Church and even some formal Protestant churches use the term father as an official form of address for their clergy. Even the titles abbot and pope are forms of father.
For One is your Father, He who is in heaven,” Jesus said. The title of Father in a spiritual sense is to be reserved for God, who alone is the source of all spiritual life and blessing. To call any human being by that name is a dear violation of Scripture.
And do not be called leaders; for One is your Leader, that is, Christ. As with the other titles, this one is forbidden when used in the formal, exalted sense that was common in ancient Judaism and is still common today in many religious circles. When wrongly used, such titles can place barriers between those in leadership positions and others in the church but, even worse, they arrogate for God’s human instruments the honor and glory that belong only to Him.
True Leaders Accept Lowly Service
But the greatest among you shall be your servant. And whoever exalts himself shall be humbled; and whoever humbles himself shall be exalted. (23:11–12)
Godly leaders not only avoid elevated titles but also willingly accept lowly service in their Lord’s name, following their Lord’s example.
As Jesus Himself beautifully exemplified, the greatest person is the one who is a willing servant. Jesus’ human greatness not only was manifested in His perfect sinlessness and love but in His being the perfect servant. In His humanity He was the Servant of servants just as in His divinity He is the Lord of lords and the King of kings. His mission on earth was not to be served but to serve, He said, “and to give His life a ransom for many” (Matt. 20:28).
During His last time alone with the disciples in the Upper Room, Jesus reiterated the lesson of servanthood He had taught and demonstrated so often. In the midst of the supper He arose,
and laid aside His garment; and taking a towel, He girded Himself about. Then He poured water into the basin, and began to wash the disciples’ feet, and to wipe them with the towel with which He was girded. … And so when He had washed their feet, and taken His garments, and reclined at the table again, He said to them, “Do you know what I have done to you? You call Me Teacher and Lord; and you are right, for so I am. If I then, the Lord and the Teacher, washed your feet, you also ought to wash one another’s feet. For I gave you an example that you also should do as I did to you. Truly, truly, I say to you, a slave is not greater than his master; neither is one who is sent greater than the one who sent him. If you know these things, you are blessed if you do them.” (John 13:4–5, 12–17)
The greatest person in God’s sight is not the one with the most degrees or rifles or awards but the one who serves in genuine humility as a selfless servant.
Jesus sums up the reaching about true and false teachers by declaring, “And whoever exalts himself shall be humbled; and whoever humbles himself shall be exalted.” That is the opposite of the world’s standard for exaltation. The world teaches that it is the one who exalts himself who gets ahead and the one who humbles himself who loses out and gets pushed aside. Looking out for number one is the accepted principle for success.
But in His sovereign wisdom God has decreed otherwise, and self-exaltation has no place in those who represent Christ. The paradox Jesus teaches here represents God’s absolute truth, and a life that does not conform to that truth is doomed to failure and insignificance, no matter what human accomplishments, titles, and recognition may be achieved. The proud, ostentatious, arrogant, self-serving person ultimately shall be humbled. And just as assuredly, the humble, unpretentious, self-giving, serving person ultimately shall be exalted.
Peter exhorted elders in the church: “Shepherd the flock of God among you, exercising oversight not under compulsion, but voluntarily, according to the will of God; and not for sordid gain, but with eagerness; nor yet as lording it over those allotted to your charge, but proving to be examples to the flock” (1 Pet. 5:2–3). To all leaders in the church, both young and old, he then gave the admonition: “Clothe yourselves with humility toward one another, for God is opposed to the proud, but gives grace to the humble. Humble yourselves, therefore, under the mighty hand of God, that He may exalt you at the proper time” (vv. 5–6).
The nineteenth-century Scottish preacher and author Andrew Bonar said he knew a Christian was growing when he talked more of Christ than of himself.The maturing Christian, Bonar said, sees himself growing smaller and smaller until, like the morning star, he gives way to the rising sun. Thomas Shepherd, founder and first president of Harvard University wrote in his dairy for November 10, 1642, “Today I kept a private fast to see the full glory of the gospel and to seek the conquest of the remaining pride in my heart.”
Unlike the proud and arrogant scribes and Pharisees, the true spiritual leader works in God’s authority, and he lives in integrity, sympathy, spirituality, humility, and lowly service. He is filled with grace, mercy, love, and willing self-giving. Like his Master, the Lord Jesus Christ, he manifests the heart of a servant who humbles himself and exalts God.1




1 MacArthur, J. F., Jr. (1985). Matthew (Mt 23:1–11). Chicago: Moody Press.