The next two curses go hand in hand – corruption and perversion. If you remember from the last post we were discussing how the Scribes and Pharisees were keeping people from the kingdom by their actions. They were corrupting and perverting the purpose that God had given to Abraham, to be a blessing to the world.
They had lost their focus, instead of focusing on the bringing the world to the Lord they were instead focused on their own comfort and their own prosperity.
First let’s talk about the corruption described in verse 15.
Jesus begins with you travel land and sea to win one proselyte. What’s a proselyte? A proselyte is an outsider who has come into a religion. Shouldn’t Jesus be commending them for their efforts, after all they traveled land and sea to bring the Gentiles in? Their motives were not as pure as we might think. Look at this section pulled from the MacArthur commentary:
There were two kinds of proselytes in the synagogues. One was called “a proselyte of the gate,” a Gentile who only attended the services. He now worshipped the true God, but he had not committed himself to full ritualistic and legalistic Judaism. Such proselytes are referred to in the book of Acts as a person who was devout, as “God-fearing”, or as a “worshiper of God”.How do you think one of the “proselytes of righteousness” carried himself? What do you think that he had to go through to become and accepted as a Gentile? Now this is just preacher’s imagination but I would imagine that the things that he had to endure to be admitted into “the club” would have made college hazing or our time look tame.
The other kind was referred to as “a proselyte of righteousness,” so called because he became as religiously Jewish as a Gentile could become. The participated in all the ceremonies, rituals, and feasts; they observed all the cleansing and other rites, both biblical and traditional; and if males, they were circumcised. Those converts were even given Jewish names in order to separate them as much as possible from their pagan past. Contrary to their popular appellation, however, they became anything but righteous. Like the scribes and Pharisees who instructed them, the became paragons of self-righteousness The MacArthur New Testament Commentary: Matthew 16-23… John MacArthur
How much compassion and mercy is he going to show to those that are around him? Isn’t he going to push those around him at least as hard as he was pushed? Twice the son of hell Jesus calls them. The students had passed their teachers in their ability to keep people out of the kingdom. They had corrupted the original beautiful intent of God to bring the entire world into the kingdom into something petty and ugly that kept men out. No wonder the Savior’s heart is breaking
Next lets talk about the perversion Jesus describes in verses 16 to 22. These verses all deal with how the scribes and Pharisees dealt with their vows toward God.
In the Sermon on the mount Jesus condemned all swearing of vows. We are instructed to tell the truth at all times because we are godly people. The examples of vows made to God in the Old Testament are usually related to praise and thankfulness, not to insure that the truth was being told or that a service would be rendered. Part of being holy and set apart for God is the fact that our word is good.
The leaders living at the time of Christ however were not concerned with praise. They had perverted the Old Testament examples given to us in the Psalms of keeping vows to God into something used to ease their own conscience or to offer themselves a way out.
They had set up a whole chain of how to get out of a vow. Swearing on the temple was not the same as swearing on the gold in the temple, if you swore on the gold you had to keep that. Swearing on the altar was not the same as swearing on the sacrifice, if you swore on the sacrifice you had to keep that. Do you see the flaw in the logic here?
Who does the temple belong to? God
Who does the gold belong to? God
Who does the altar belong to? God
Who does the sacrifice belong to? God
Jesus is reminding them that the vows that they make are all made to God. There is no getting out of them just to cover your lie… Fast-forward to Acts ch 5 and Ananias and Sapphira.
Ananias and Sapphira had decided to sell a piece of land and that they were going to give the money to the church afterwards. For whatever reason after the sale they decided to keep some of the money for themselves and lied about the amount that they had sold the land for. What happens? God strikes them dead. Did God strike them dead because their offering was less? No, He struck them dead because they lied about it. They did not honor God in their actions.
Jesus reminds us of this fact in verse 20. When they were swearing on the temple they were in essence swearing by God’s holy name. When they broke their vow they brought dishonor to God.
Perversion and corruption are two very dangerous enemies of the church today. When God’s word becomes uncomfortable we have a tendency to twist into something more palatable. When our service to Him becomes too uncomfortable we will justify our disobedience.
Let us learn from the examples of the scribes and Pharisees. Let us seek to bring people into the kingdom but let’s not make them legalistic. Let us win them into the kingdom by showing them compassion, grace and mercy. Ask God to break you today if you have a spirit of self-righteousness. Remind yourself that you did not save yourself and it is God’s amazing grace that has brought you in.
Also let us take some time to examine our service to Him. Are we fulfilling all of our vows to the Lord? Are we truthful at all times? Are we seeking to bring honor to Jesus’ name? Ask God to break your heart in this area as well if the need is there.
Let us not keep people out of the kingdom by our example.
Grace and Peace to you all…
