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The Master's Men - Part 3
by
John MacArthur
(A copy of this message on cassette tape may be obtained
by calling
Matthew 10:3b Tape GC 2274
It’s a tremendous thrill for me, and I trust for you as
well, to find out that these men chosen as the personal
agents of Jesus Christ, these men that we imagine so often
to be stained glass saints with some kind of holy perfection
that has alluded the rest of us, are nothing more than
people just like we are. And that God is in the business of
using all kinds of people to do very, very high level,
divine, spiritual and eternal tasks.
It struck me, particularly this week, as I was thinking
about the Apostles, how few there were of them. You know,
when we think about a church having a great impact we think
about a church having a lot of people. I was talking to a
gentleman yesterday from Europe who said to me — You know,
it’s so difficult for us because we only have 29 people in
our church. And he said — I live in a city, the city of
Lyon, which has two million people and there are only 15
churches and most of them don’t have any impact at all. The
odds are so much against us. And yet as you study the
disciples you find that these twelve, really eleven, were
pitted against not only the human system but the demon
system as well. Just eleven faithful men, not particularly
gifted either.
As we saw last week, all of them basically unqualified
for the task. And yet these men literally turned the world
upside down. It is amazing what God can do with just a very
few people. Humanly speaking the world hails the few who
attack the many, you know? I mean, when an individual goes
up against great odds, the world esteems them heroes even if
they lose.
Some of you, perhaps, remember from your days of
literature reading The Charge of the Light Brigade. The six
hundred at Balaklava, the heights were manned by skilled
soldiers standing behind a vast circle of cannons. The
command went forth — Forward the Light Brigade, charge for
the guns. The soldiers knew they were totally outmanned,
they knew that there was no way they could win. They knew
that someone had blundered, in the command but theirs was
not to reason why, theirs was to do or die. And the poet
says, “Half a league, half a league, half a league onward
all into the valley of death marched the six hundred. Cannon
to the right of them, cannon to the left of them. Cannon in
front of them, volleyed and thundered. Stormed at with shot
and shell. Boldly they rode and well. Into the valley of
death. Into the mouth of hell.. .rode the six hundred.” They
are remaining through history as heroes. Not because they
won but because they were so few against so many and it
speaks of such courage and such devotion to duty.
And then there was that great charge that we know as
The Charge of Pickett in the Civil War. The Union Army had
the heights. They had the heights manned with three times
the number of men Pickett had in his command. They were
supported in the rear by a powerful armed battery and yet
General Lee gave the command to charge. The command came
through his subordinate...subordinate General Longstreet,
and Longstreet faced Pickett who was to lead the men and he
couldn’t speak. And he stood hesitatingly without saying a
word and Pickett said to him —“General, shall I go forward?”
And Longstreet almost broken hearted at the prospect of the
inevitable death of the flower of the Southern Army,
couldn’t speak a word so he merely nodded his head. And
Pickett went and the Charge of Pickett was the great heroic
charge of the Civil War but all of them men fell like grass
before the sickle.
We remember their courage. We remember their devotion
of duty, but they lost. I believe there are some more
amazing things than this. You see, man may be courageous.
Man may be devoted to fulfill his duty. But he is still man.
And because he is weak he cannot overcome certain odds. But
quite the contrary is it when God gets into the act. For God
can take a very few, fewer than the six hundred and fewer
than Pickett had, and He can overrun the most vast enemy of
all.
Elijah in one day can slaughter 850 false prophets by
himself.
Samson can pick up the jawbone of an ass and with it
slay 20,000 Philistines.
Shamgar, a judge in Israel, one day picks up an ox goad,
a sharpened stick used to prod an ox, and with it kills 600
enemies.
And soon after the great victory of Deborah and Barak,
a new enemy arose in the land of Israel, the enemy was the
Midianites. And in league with the Amalekites they sort of
dominated Israel for seven years. Israel came to the place
where they were about ready to give in to this oppressing
domination when God raised up a very unique man by the name
of Gideon. Gideon was ready to do battle with the Midianites
and their allies the Amalekites and he gathered his army and
his army numbered 32,000 men. God said, That’s too
many. That's 31,700 too many. And He cut it down to 300 men.
And in Judges 7:12 it describes the enemy: “And the
Midianites and the Amalekites and all the children of the
east lay along in the valley,” and it was the valley of
Moah, “and they were like grasshoppers for multitude, and
their camels were without number like the sand by the
seaside for multitude.” It doesn’t mean that God couldn’t
count them, it means that standing there and looking there
was no way you could sort out heads or animals to make a
count. They were just like the sea sand. And here was Gideon
with his 300. You know who won? Gideon, and all he did was
make a bunch of noise and the Midianites and the Amalekites
all killed each other in the confusion.
You see, when you add the supernatural then the few not
only become heroes because of their courage and their
devotion but because of their victory.
One more illustration, and maybe this sums up the
point. First Samuel chapter 13, turn to it for a moment. The
seemingly endless struggle with the Philistines is going on.
Saul is the reigning monarch of the people of Israel. And
they again face a battle with the Philistines. They are in a
severe situation, very bad. And as you flow through chapter
13 it goes from bad to worse to worst.
Verse 5, I Samuel 13: “The Philistines gathered
themselves together to fight with Israel, thirty thousand
chariots, six thousand horsemen, and people like the sand
which is on the seashore in multitude. And they came up and
encamped in Michmash, eastward from Bethaven.”
Now here is an overwhelming enemy, literally
overwhelming enemy. "And when the men of Israel saw that
they were hedged in, for the people were distressed, the
people did hide themselves in caves and thickets and rocks
and high places and pits.” You just get the picture — they
see these Philistines, everybody dives for the nearest
cover, jumping in holes and caves and behind the bushes,
climbing hills and some of the Hebrews, verse 7 says, even
went over the Jordan to the land of Gad and Gilead. They got
out of the country, they left the nation. “And Saul was in
Gilgal and everybody else was shaking.” Overwhelming enemy.
Verse 8: “He tarried there seven days, according to the
set time that Samuel had appointed; but Samuel came not to
Gilgal and the people were scattered from him.” He’s getting
a little antsy now. “And Saul said, Bring here a burnt offering to me, and peace offerings.” Now he’s getting so
nervous that he’s going to do something religious to get God
involved. And so verse 9 says he offered a burnt offering.
And Saul said, Bring this burnt offering, and he offered the
burnt offering. Now the problem with that is there was only
one personality in the land that was permitted to carry out
the offering of an offering and who was it? Priest. Paul is
intrud.. .or rather Saul — Paul, Saul is intruding into the
office of a priest.
“It came to pass as soon as he had ceased offering the
burnt offering, behold, Samuel came and Saul went out to
meet him, that he might bless him.” Now he’s going to act
real religious, see, real spiritual. “And Samuel said, What
have you done? And Saul said, Because I saw that the people
were scattered from me, and that thou camest not within the
days appointed,” and he knew that he was a representative of
God and he wasn’t there, “And the Philistines gathered
themselves together at Michmash.” And he’s going in to all
of these excuses - Well, you weren’t here, and the time was
running out and the Philistines were there and I said: “The
Philistines will come down now upon me to Gilgal,” self
defense, you know, I’m going to get it. “And I haven’t made
supplication to the Lord and I forced myself therefore.”
In other words, I just knew I shouldn’t do it but I
just made myself do it and offered a burnt offering. “And
Samuel said to Saul, Thou hast done foolishly; thou hast not
kept the commandment of the Lord thy God, which He commanded
thee; for now would the Lord have established thy Kingdom
upon Israel forever.” If you’d just obeyed God, God would
have defeated the Philistines and established your Kingdom
for good.
“But,” verse 14, “now thy Kingdom shall not continue:
the Lord hath sought Him a man after His own heart.” Who was
that? David the next king. “And the Lord hath commanded him
to be captain over His people because thou hast not kept
that which the Lord commanded.” Your disobedience got you
nothing.
Now the problem to begin with was an overwhelming enemy
and now the problem is a lack of a leader. They not only
have an overwhelming enemy but they’ve just lost their
leader. To make it worse, verse 19: “There was no blacksmith
throughout all the land of Israel: for the Philistines said,
Lest the Hebrews make themselves swords or spears.”
Apparently the Philistines had sort of eliminated all the
blacksmiths so they couldn’t make any weapons.
“So all the Israelites,” verse 20, “went down to the
Philistines to sharpen every man his plowshare and his
mattock, and his axe, and his sickle. And they had a file
for the sickles and the mattocks and the forks and the axes
to sharpen the goads.” In other words, all they had left was
farm implements, and so they were all there sharpening their
farm implements to use in this war and the only people who
had a sword, it says in verse 22, were Saul and Jonathan.
Third problem, number one — overwhelming enemy; number
two —no leader; number three — inadequate weapons. They
really are in trouble. Now watch what happens.
“Jonathan says to the young man that bears his armor,”
chapter 14 verse 1, “Come, let’s go over to the Philistine’s
garrison, that’s on the other side.”
You say - Now wait a minute, Jonathan, what are you
going to do? You take your armor... The armor bearer was
usually a small boy. What are you going to take this little
kid and go do this for? What’s the point? Verse 6 kind of
crystallizes it, this is a key verse: “And Jonathan said to
the young man who bore his armor, Come, let’s go over to the
garrison to the uncircumcised: it may be that the Lord will
work for us.” Now watch this line, here’s the key — “For
there is no restraint to the Lord to save by many or by..
.what?. . .few.” Did you get that? It doesn’t matter to God
whether you have a lot or a little. That is never the issue
with Him.
He can put all of His divine power through one person
as easily as He could put it through a multitude. It doesn’t
matter to the Lord. Verse 7: “His armor bearer said to him,
Do all that is in thine heart: turn thee; behold, I am with
thee according to thine heart.” Now that’s a good little
guy.. .that’s a good guy.
All right, Jonathan says, you and me, let’s go over
there and take on the Philistines. And he says in verse 10:
“If they say, Come up unto us; then we’ll go up; for the
Lord hath delivered them into our hand and this shall be a
sign.” In other words, God, we’re going to trust You to give
us a sign. If they say come up we’ll say the Lord’s going to
give them to us and we’ll go right up. The Philistines are
up on the heights and they’re down below.
And so they got there, verse 11, and they said - Hey up
there, it’s Jonathan and my armor bearer. Verse 11: “And
both of them disclosed themselves to the garrison of the
Philistines: and the Philistines said, Behold, the Hebrews
come forth out of the holes where they’ve hidden themselves.
And the men of the garrison answered Jonathan and his armor
bearer, and said — Come up to us and we will show you
something.” We’ll show you your head is what they meant.
“And Jonathan said to his armor bearer, Come up after me for
the Lord has delivered them into the hand of Israel.” Now
that is faith, folks, that is faith. The victory is ours,
let’s go.
And so they started climbing up this, whatever it is,
cliff or hillside, verse 13: “And Jonathan climbs on his
hands and his feet.” Here he is crawling up the thing on
four. “And his armor bearer is coming up behind him.” And
they got to the top and they fell before Jonathan and his
armor bearer slew all of them. “And the first slaughter
which Jonathan and his armor bearer made is about twenty
men.” And you can imagine that little guy wondering what in
the world was going on, when all these guys were dropping at
his feet. I don’t know what he was using. “And the earth
started to quake and everything started shaking and
trembling.” And before the whole thing was over, you can
drop all the way down really to verse 22: “All the men of
Israel who had hidden themselves in Mount Ephraim, when they
heard that the Philistines fled, even they also followed
hard after them in the battle. So the Lord saved Israel that
day.”
Now listen, here’s the point. God is not restrained by
many or by few, it doesn’t matter. Not only can God make
them heroes because of their courage and their devotion but
because of their victory.
Now let’s go back to Matthew 10 and with that as a
background, remind ourselves of the uniqueness of these
twelve men. Twelve men who literally turned the world upside
down. Not only were they heroes because of their courage,
because of their devotion, their obedience but because they
accomplished their goal. They literally established the
church. And you and I are the product of their work. They
touched a whole world. They extended the Kingdom, just these
twelve, one of them unfaithful, eleven faithful, humble,
simple people just like us. And we’re right back where we
started, people. Listen, what kind of people does God use?
He uses the common kind like we are. He uses the
unqualified. Remember last week? God is in the business of
accepting unqualified people because nobody’s qualified.
The Lord uses strong, bold leaders like Peter who take
charge, initiate plans, strategize, confront, command people
and who make big, big blunders.
And He uses humble, gentle, inconspicuous souls like
Andrew who seek no prominence but quietly bring people to
Christ.
And He uses zealous, passionate, uncompromising
task—oriented, insensitive, ambitious men like James.
As well as sensitive, tender, loving people oriented,
believing, intimate truth seekers like John.
And He uses skeptical, analytical, mechanical, slow-
witted, weak-faith, visionless, pessimistic, insecure men
like Philip.
And He uses seekers of truth, honest, open,
clear—minded, meditative, deeply surrendered men like
Nathanael Bartholomew who are full of faith and
understanding and yet who are flawed by serious sin such as
prejudice.
Now, we’re going to meet two others that He uses this
morning; Matthew and Thomas.. .Verse 3. The second group of
four is Philip, Bartholomew or Nathanael, Thomas and
Matthew. Let’s take Matthew first because we have already
examined something of Matthew’s life in looking at chapter
9.
Matthew is mentioned in every list, always in the same
group, but nothing is ever said about Matthew and nothing is
ever said by Matthew except one tiny little thing. And look
in Matthew 9:9 and that’s where you find it. Mark and Luke
both allude to the same thing in just the same few words and
that is the extent of everything we know about Matthew.
“And as Jesus passed forth from there He saw a man
named Matthew sitting at the tax office and He saith unto
him, Follow Me. And he arose and followed Him.”
And when Matthew puts his name in the list in chapter
10 verse 3 he says: “Matthew the tax collector.” And may I
hasten to add that no other disciple in the list is ever
associated with his job. Why does Matthew say - Matthew the
tax collector? I mean, that’s not something you’re proud of.
No. A tax collector was the most hated, despised, despicable
human being in the society of Israel. And Matthew is showing
us his genuine humility and sense of sinful unworthiness.
Why does Matthew even comment about himself in verse 9?
“As Jesus passed forth from there He saw a man named Matthew
and He said, Follow Me.” What is the point of putting that
there? The point is in verses 1 to 8 Matthew is giving a
demonstration that Jesus came to forgive sin. Verse 5: “Thy
sins be forgiven thee.” Verse 6: “The Son of man hath power
on earth to forgive sins.” And Matthew slips himself in
there in one verse to show that indeed Jesus can forgive
sin. For he sees himself as the vilest sinner. It may be a
reason.. .that may be a reason why Matthew never speaks. He
never asks a question. He never makes a comment. He never
appears in an incident. He just is absolutely faceless and
voiceless through the entire narrative of the gospels. And
it may be that his humility was born out of his overwhelming
sense of sinfulness. That he was so overwrought by the ...
the sin of his life, that once forgiven, grace was so
superabundant in his case that he felt himself unworthy to
even speak a word. And so he is the silent man, until the
Spirit of God asks him to pick up his pen. And then he is
given the privilege of writing the opening of the New
Testament.. .28 chapters on the majesty of the King of Kings
Himself.
Matthew was a traitor. Matthew was an extortioners.
Matthew was a robber and a thief. Matthew was greedy.
Matthew was a social pariah, or outcast. And he knew it. You
see, to be a tax collector is to be a publican. And what
that meant was you as a Jew were used by the Roman
government to collect taxes from the Jews to give to Rome.
You then sort of worked for the oppressor. You were a
traitor first class. And not only that, but you bought the
right to collect taxes, so you paid the government, you
bought into the system. And then the government would
stipulate a certain amount of tax that had to be collected,
and that was given to Rome. And then you were free to
collect anything more you could from the people and that you
kept for yourself. And so there were bribes and
extortionists roots taken, abuses beyond what we could even
dream.
They hated a tax collector so much that the Talmud
said, “It is righteous to lie and deceive a tax collector.”
That is the Talmud says that not the Bible, so keep that in
mind. No tax collector was ever permitted to testify in a
court of law because everyone knew they were liars, and took
bribes. No tax collector or publican could ever enter a
synagogue or a temple to worship God because they were cut
off from God and that’s why in Luke 18 when you have the
publican, it says — “And the publican standing a far off,
beat on his breast and said, Lord, be merciful to me a
...what?... a sinner.” He couldn’t even go in the place.
They were the worst, turned their back on their people,
bought into an evil oppressive system... A pagan
uncircumcised system where the people worshipped a false
god, the emperor.. .traitors.
There were two kinds, there were gabbai’s—g-a-b-b-a-i, they were the general tax collectors, they collected
property tax, income tax, poll tax, standardized. There was
not apparently as much graft at that level.
Then there were the Mokhes, m-o-k-h-e-s. They collected
the duties, they collected duty on everything. They set up
their little deal where the roads crossed and they collected
on all import, all export, all items bought, all items sold.
They set tolls on roads, tolls on bridges, tolls on harbors.
They set tolls on axles, how many legs on your donkey,
packages, letters, you name it, everything...everything.
That was Matthew. He was a Mokhes, taxed everything.
There were two kinds of Mokhes. There was one who was called
a Great Mokhes. He was a guy who hired some hireling to do
the tax collecting and he faded into the background. He
didn’t really want to be associated with the actual activity
itself. And he... he retained a little more dignity because
he backed off. That was called a Great Mokhes. Then there
was the Little Mokhes, the small Mokhes. He was too cheap to
hire somebody to collect the taxes, he was so greedy he did
it himself, and didn’t care about the social stigma. And
Matthew was that - Little Mokhes. He was, verse 9, “Sitting
at the tax office himself.” Greedy extortioner, traitor to
his people.
I think what makes it so fascinating to me also, he
also had a name Levi which indicates that he really was in
the flow of Jewish tradition. And what also is interesting
is that in the gospel of Matthew, you might be interested to
note, there are more quotes of the Old Testament than in
Mark, Luke and John combined. So, Matthew knew the Old
Testament. In fact, he quotes out of the three sections of
the Old Testament that a Jew knew — the law, the prophets
and the Hagiographa, the Holy Writings. Matthew knew the law
of God in the Old Testament. And yet we have no idea of him
at all being interested in spiritual things. But when Jesus
comes along, verse 9, He says to him — Follow Me and he
arose and followed Him... instantly. Now what is involved in
this? First of all, he just walked away from his career. I
mean, it wasn’t like the earlier guys who were fishermen. If
they didn’t like what went on with Jesus there were always
fish. Right? And there were always nets. And there were
always boats. And they could go back. And in fact, they did
in John 21, they all went back fishing. And the Lord showed
them they couldn’t catch anything. But when Matthew walked
away from that table, believe me the Roman government would
have somebody there the next day. And somebody was in line
to buy into that and he was cutting off his career for good.
No lingering.
Also, he was identifying with somebody who was equally
rejected by the establishment.., for the Pharisees and the
scribes hated Jesus as much or more as they hated him as a
publican. So he was really going from the frying pan into
the fire. It’s a high price he paid.
You say - Well, why did he do that? Well, I’ll tell you
why he did it. There is only one reason. This little section
in chapter 9, the thread that keeps weaving its way through
here is the forgiveness of sin. In verse 10 Matthew calls a
feast after Jesus calls him. And he gets together tax
collectors and sinners. And Jesus is the guest of honor at
the feast. You’ll remember when we studied that. And the
Pharisees say - Well, why does He hang around with tax
collectors and sinners? And Jesus says, “They that are well
need not a physician but they that are sick.” You better go
and relearn your lesson that I am come not to call the
righteous but.. .what?. . .sinners to repentance. The point
of the banquet then was for Jesus to call sinners to
repentance. So the whole thread here is confession of sin,
repentance and forgiveness and Matthew plops himself in
there because I think that’s the issue with him. Nobody in
the world knew better his sin than Matthew knew. He knew he
was a sinner. He knew his graft, his abuse, his extortion,
his greed. He knew that he had betrayed his people. He knew
that he could be bought for money. He knew that. And I
believe he despised it. I believe he wanted out. I believe
he wanted a way.. .to get away from it and he had heard
about Jesus and he had heard Him preach because he was in
that little town of Capernaum. And I believe when Jesus came
to him and said — Follow Me — he knew that inherent in that
was the forgiveness of sin and he ran to get that. And he
was willing to say goodbye to his career and everything else
because he wanted forgiveness.
What kind of people does God use? Stained glass saints?
No. Vile, wretched, rotten sinners, the most despicable
people in society who are willing to be forgiven.
You say — Yeah, but He can’t use them for much. Oh? How
about writing the gospel that introduces the New Testament?
You see, God is in the restoration business. He takes the
unqualified and transforms them. That’s His business. And I
believe Matthew risked a lot more than the fishermen did
because he could never go back. And he was a vile sinner.
What if Jesus couldn’t forgive him? There he would be stuck
with the same sin and no job to go back to. But he quietly
forsook all. And the genuineness of his repentance, I
believe, is found in the fact that you see his humility. He
is utterly humble. He has nothing to say about himself. He
has nothing to say about his talent and what he has to offer
the Lord. The only thing he wants to say is Jesus forgives
sin and one of the ones He forgave was a man named Matthew
who was really a sinner and whose only friends were a lot of
other sinners, tax collectors and sinners.
And so we learn about his humility. I think we learn
another thing. He had a heart for the lost. There are some
people in this world who just kind of gravitate to the down
and outers, you know? That must have been Matthew. I mean,
if ever there was a discussion about whether the disciples
ought to get involved with some riffraff, I’m sure Matthew
would have led the parade toward the riffraff, having been
one. I’m glad that when the Lord puts together a team of men
He takes some from out of the deepest pit or some of us
might never be willing to go back into that pit not knowing
that something can really happen there.. .and that was
Matthew.
What a man. A criminal, an outcast, the most hated of
men, he was utterly convinced of his sin and when given an
opportunity to believe, he believed and he followed. He
became a man of quiet humility who loved the outcasts, who
gave no place to the religious establishment, a man of great
faith, a man of total and utter surrender to the Lordship of
Jesus Christ and a man who knew the Old Testament and a man
that God used to write the gospel. One writer calls it “The
glorious unconventionality of the Lord Jesus Christ. He
chooses the most unlikely people.”
That brings us to the last man in group two.. .Thomas
is his name. And immediately when I say Thomas what is the
first word you think of? Doubt Thomas has gotten bad press.
Thomas is a better man than you think. In fact, I’m
convinced that most people really don’t understand Thomas.
We just say Thomas the doubter. I think you’re going to
learn some things about Thomas you didn’t know in the next
few minutes. Listen.
Matthew, Mark and Luke give us nothing about Thomas.
But John again, always digging into the heart of people,
opens Thomas up to us. John chapter 11, we look at three
very brief texts. .John chapter 11, let’s really get to know
Thomas.
Verse 14, the Lord is up by the Jordan river and the
Lord is out of the city of Jerusalem, the pressure has been
tremendous, the plot to take His life has been hatched. In
fact, they had to get out of Jerusalem because His time was
not yet come and He had to do it to preserve His life. He
and the disciples are up by the Jordan. The report comes to
them that Lazarus is sick. That is significant because Jesus
loves Lazarus in a very special way.
Verse 14, Jesus has tarried to give sufficient time for
Lazarus to die and then says this: “Lazarus is dead. And I
am glad.” Now wait a minute, why are You glad? “For your
sakes, I’m glad I wasn’t there, for the reason that you may
believe.” In other words, I’m going to do a miracle to
increase your faith. They were a weak bunch, weren’t they,
as we’ve learned. And they always needed some kind of
demonstration of His power. And so He says he’s dead and I’m
glad for your sakes that I wasn’t there because now you’re
going to see something that will make you believe.
Then verse 15: “Let us go unto him.” Let’s go. Now
where was Lazarus? Bethany. Where’s Bethany? Two miles easy
of Jerusalem. Now that is a scary announcement because all
the disciples can think about is — Oh, this is suicide, this
is absolute suicide. We can’t go back to Jerusalem. And the
implication is that they’re sort of beginning a little
disintegration and some of the guys are probably saying — I
think I’m going to go see my. .my old friend in Galilee.
Jerusalem... And Thomas apparently moves into this situation
with some leadership, verse 16: “Then said Thomas, who is
called Didymus,” which means the twin, he had a twin brother
or sister likely. “And he says to the fellow disciples,
Let’s also go that we may die with Him."
Now, I see several things in that. First of all I see a
certain amount of initiative. Don’t you see that? He kind of
takes over doesn’t he? He kind of rises to the top and says
— Wait a minute, guys, let’s go with Him and die with Him. I
also see pessimism, don’t you? I see some pessimism. Now he
was convinced Jesus was going to be killed. And if they went
they would die. I mean, it was all very clear to him. You
know, the greatest courage in the world is not the courage
of an optimist. An optimist Has courage. He Has courage because
he believes the best will happen. The greatest courage in
the world is the courage of a pessimist because he knows the
worse is going to happen and is willing to go anyway. You
see? Thomas says — We’ll die, so let’s go. That’s.. .that’s
a lot of courage. I think it was cut and dry with him, he
had already figured out his epitaph and everything. He could
only see disaster but he was grimly determined to die with
Christ.. .much tougher for a pessimist than an optimist.
Now, why does he want to do this? You know, if you
think of him only as a doubter, if you really think that
Thomas doubted Christ then this doesn’t make any sense. I
mean, why was he willing to go die with Jesus? Not because
he doubted Him, but because he so totally believed Him. He
so utterly believed Him. I believe this, I believe that
Thomas perhaps only equaled by John had such a deep and
intense love for Jesus that he could not endure existence
without Him. Do you understand that? And I believe what he’s
reflecting here is - If Jesus is going to die, then let’s go
die with Him, because the alternative is to be without Him.
You see? Let’s go with Him. Let’s go with Him. These are the
words of love. These are the words of faith. He believed he
could die and be with Jesus.
Herbert Lockyer says, “Like those brave knights in
attendance upon the blind King John of Bohemia who rode into
the battle of Crecy with their bridles intertwined with that
of their master, resolved to share his fate, whatever it
might be.. .so Thomas, come life, come death, was resolved
not to forsake his Lord seeing he was bound to Him by a deep
and enthusiastic love.” end quote.
He had no illusions. He saw the jaws of death. He was
willing to die. A man of courage and a man of love. He did
not want to be separated from Christ. Put it this way, death
— yes.. .disloyalty -never. He could never be disloyal to
Jesus. He could die for Him before he’d be disloyal. That’s
how deep his love.
Go to chapter 14 and we see him again. And the same
attitudes come out again. Jesus gives this little message
about letting not your heart be troubled and believing in
God and He’s going to prepare a place for you, and I’ll come
again and receive you unto Myself and where I am there you
may be also and whither I go you know, and the way you know.
He says - You know where I am going and you know how to get
there. Verse 5: “Thomas saith unto Him, Lord, we know not
where Thou goest and how can we know the way?” This is the
same heart that’s saying - Lord, don’t You go somewhere
where we can’t come. It’s the same thing. The thought of
separation was the issue with Thomas. I don’t like what I
hear, You’ re going to go and we’re not going to know where
You are or how to get there. His heart, I think, is nearly
broken as he speaks. And he’s a pessimistic and he says —
We’ll never find the place. It’s a bleak negative bewildered
heart. Jesus tells him, “Thomas, I am the way, the truth and
the life; no man cometh unto the Father but by Me.”
What He’s saying is — I’ll take you, Thomas. .I’ll take
you there. I’m the way, you don’t have to fear. I’m not
going to go someplace and leave you. You see the same
pessimism again, don’t you? And you see the same love again.
Let’s go to a third and last look at Thomas. .John 20.
Jesus died. You know what happened to Thomas when Jesus
died? He said, I knew it.. .He died and I didn’t die and He
went somewhere and I don’t know where He is. I knew it. And
all of his fears came true.. .all of the worst things that
he had ever thought. He felt betrayed. He felt rejected. He
felt forsaken. And it was out of love that he was shattered.
He was like a wounded animal. And he didn’t want to be
around people so he just split, that’s what he did. And when
all the rest of the disciples came together he just wasn’t
there, he was.. .he was out and he was depressed because he
loved so deeply. He would have died with Jesus but Jesus
died without him. He wanted to go with Jesus but Jesus went
without him. And now his pessimism is vindicated, and he’s
really in the pits.
And in verse 24 it says: “Thomas, one of the twelve,
called Didymus wasn’t with them when Jesus came.” Sure. .he
was out licking his wounds. And Jesus appeared to the
remaining disciples and Thomas wasn’t there. Well guess who
found Thomas? John, verse 25, “The other disciple.. .other
disciples..” I would guess John. That’s a stab in the dark.
“Said to him, We have seen the Lord.” We’ve seen the Lord,
Thomas, and you weren’t there. You didn’t show up. But
Thomas is depressed. Did you ever try to talk to somebody
who is depressed? Really difficult isn’t it? Very difficult.
He says, “Except I shall see in His hands the print of the
nails, put my finger into the print of the nails, thrust my
hand into His side, I will not believe.”
Now he’s a pessimist, admit it. I’ve got to see it. But
before you pounce on him with both feet, would you kindly
remember this? That none of the disciples believed until
they saw Jesus. I mean, after all, it is not that easy to
believe that somebody rose from the dead. I mean, on the
road to Emmaus in Luke 24, two are walking along and the
Lord is with them and they’re moaning and groaning about His
death. And they don’t believe either. Nobody believed till
they saw Him. So don’t make Thomas the doubter. You see,
he’s a.. .he’s a loving pessimist is what he is. That’s
better than being a doubter. I want to see before I believe,
he says.
So, the Lord — by the way, in case you don’t know, the
Lord doesn’t mind people wanting to be sure. If you want to
be sure He’ll accommodate that desire. “Eight days after,”
verse 26 says, “the disciples were inside and Thomas was
with them. Jesus came, the doors being shut.” I like that.
Just rearranged the molecules in His body and came through
the wall. And always He says when He does that, “Peace be
unto you.” It’s understandable. It seems a fitting greeting,
doesn’t it?. .to the chaos that must have occurred.
And then He zeros in on this dear soul that loves Him enough
to die with Him and is utterly depressed and shattered. He
said to Thomas, “Thomas, reach here your finger, behold My
hands, and reach here your hand and thrust it into My side
and be not faithless but believing.” Did Thomas do that? It
doesn’t say he did it. It just says immediately, without
doing anything, “He answered and said unto Him, My Lord and
my God.” The greatest single confessional ever made. He
affirmed the deity of Jesus Christ. He affirmed the Lordship
of Jesus Christ. He affirmed that He was God.
You know, he wanted that so bad. Jesus was back. And
Jesus said. “Thomas, because you’ve seen Me you believe.”
And you’re not alone, the rest of them had the same basis.
"Blessed are they that have not seen and yet believed.” You
know who that is? Everybody who came after that. That’s you
and me. We’ve never seen but we believed. “Blessed are
they.”
Thomas - yes he was melancholy, he was moody,
pessimistic, comfortless, shattered, but when he saw the
Lord Jesus Christ, "omy, he gave the greatest testimony
ever given. And you know what? In that one little statement
Thomas gave the speech that literally destroys every lie
that has been told about Jesus not being God that has ever
been uttered in the history of man. It is a monumental
statement - My God, - he said. The isms and chisms and
spasms and Yogi’s and all the rest that come and deny the
deity of Christ are put to silence by Thomas. Learn a
lesson. Jesus wants you to be sure. Surety most frequently
comes when you hang around other believers. It does not mean
that Christ cannot come to you in a solitary place. But more
likely does He appear among those who are His own.
Thomas - tradition tells us a lot about him,
preached... some say he went as far as India preaching. And
one tradition says that he died in a very special way. They
took a spear and rammed it through him. Because of his faith
in Christ, it would be kind of fitting climax for one who
was told to reach forth his hand and feel the spear mark in
his own Lord.
What kind of people does God use? Vile sinners like
Matthew. Tender-hearted, moody, melancholy pessimists like
Thomas. You name it, they’re all unique and He can use you
too. Let’s pray.
Father, we thank You that the ability that You want
from us is availability. Thank You that You can take the
unqualified and do the transforming of their lives. What a
happy privilege, God. What a happy privilege that we should
be used. I know my own weaknesses. All of us do.. .our sins,
our failings. And yet You use us.. .You use us for Your
Kingdom.. .You use us to advance Your cause, to preach Your
truth, to bring people into the knowledge of God. You use us
to sing Your praise. You use us to bring petitions that
activate Your sovereign power. You use us. We thank You that
we are the company of the unqualified who have been
transformed to useful vessels.. .vessels of honor, fit for
the Master’s use.
Lord, if there are some in our fellowship this morning,
who have never come to Jesus Christ, may they confess as
Thomas did - My Lord and my God. May their hearts open up.
May they receive Jesus as Lord and Savior and in so
receiving come into divine usefulness...o the pity of a life
without purpose.. .the pity of an eternity without value. May
we know that the only meaning in time and eternity comes in
serving You. And may we know that You can fit us for that,
no matter what our weaknesses are. May the truth that we
have learned today linger in our hearts and make us better
than we were had we not been here. For Your glory, in
Christ’s name. Amen.
Jesus Christ
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