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The Waters of Convergence

This post aims to offer detailed thoughts about various perspectives concerning ministry types that operate among churches. Some churches will have these functions, while others will have a limited subset not covered here. Over several weeks, I have viewed numerous interviews and read through various texts and articles about ministry as an outpouring of effort in obedience to God’s compassion and love for people to bring about spiritual renewal and reconciliation to Him. First, this paper gets an up-close look at a personal philosophy of ministry derived from a compilation of ministry types. The common thread among them is the biblical standard to which they exist and operate.

Philosophy of Ministry

Ministry types covered here include preaching, worship, counseling, missions, and various others to get a firm grip on a cross-section of ministries common among churches. None of these carry more weight and importance as compared to others. However, some are subordinate in terms of authority and function.

Preaching

Exegetical preaching is working from the Word of God to convey His message to people. As God is the author of the Word, the Holy Spirit and Christ speak to the church through His Word. Whether positive or negative, preaching the Word involves rightly dividing Scripture. Where every piece or passage is cut straight or interpreted correctly, it’s to feed the flock of God from the Word of God. Topical preaching by exposition involves using various Scripture texts that converge on a subject. Comparatively, charismatic or mystical preaching can be subjective and impulse-based. Sentimental preaching is between charismatic and exegetical preaching as it appeals to emotion where sinners are made to feel good about themselves. It attempts to bridge the offense of biblical preaching concerning sin, humanity’s condition, and God’s justice.

The purpose of informing people of the entire counsel of God includes pointing out sin among people. The point of telling people about sin is to direct them to God for mercy, grace, and renewal. People will be offended, but the preacher must attend to the truth out of love for a person’s soul. It is an act of integrity, and to not preach the truth is a betrayal of the conviction about that truth. The preacher is speaking for an audience of one as God is honored. The text of Scripture is made clear during the course of preaching. As the conscience either excuses or accuses, it is the preacher’s responsibility to herald the truth as the correctly interpreted meaning of Scripture brings out a response or action from it.

Every sermon is a monologue as an argument or effort to convince a listener about what is true. The preacher uses the Scripture because it possesses authority beyond himself. The preacher’s method of discourse is to hold the argument to a conclusion consistent with the intended meaning of Scripture. This would involve the logical flow, original language, and other passages reinforcing the message. The path to persuasion through argumentation isn’t sentimental, but it’s to convince a listener of what is necessary to conclude. Teaching is to inform, and preaching is to proclaim.

The preacher speaks to the most biblically astute without being too profound or simplistic. Settling a message to the lowest common denominator of learners accedes to the people who do not love the Word the most. Preaching to the more astute learners pulls up the congregation, where the rest in attendance are informed about where they need to be. It is necessary to backfill what resources are necessary for the discipleship of people who hunger for God and His Word just as well. It is necessary to hold a high standard as people are spiritually developed within the church. Set expectations within the church to feed the continuous hunger among people where everyone is pulled up to a growing or increasing development in their walk with Christ. It follows that the congregation’s richness in worship derives from the theology they’ve learned.

Flexibility around responsibilities is necessary as it is on a path toward spiritual growth. As there is an emphasis on delivering messages from the leader’s or preacher’s gifts, there is a pressing need to train people toward leadership. Where men, women, and volunteers are developed to serve in ministry as necessary. As a pastor, there are two areas of focus and prevalent concern. First to the duties of preaching, and second to the teaching responsibility. The other responsibilities that follow are secondary and tertiary.

The life of the church is to exalt the Lord Jesus Christ. The purpose of the pastor is to feed the sheep. Feeding the flock of God is accomplished through the implanting of the Word. The primary purpose of the church isn’t to evangelize or entertain. Congregants of the church gather together to feed on the Word of God and, in response, worship Him. The goal of the church is Godward. God is the audience as worship in prayer, singing, service, listening, giving, obeying, and loving are fruits of people spiritually regenerated and filled to abide in Him. So, putting God on display is through His Word with theological truths and principles necessary for worship in spirit and truth as an immediate interest within the church.

The church’s ultimate purpose is to go out and live Godly, Christ-exalting, biblically clear lives in the world for evangelistic purposes. An untransformed and entertained group of people who attend church will not make the gospel believable. People have to be transformed. The church gathers to be edified, worship, and then scatters to evangelize. Shepherds don’t have sheep. Sheep have sheep. Shepherds shepherd the sheep, and the sheep reproduce.

Structurally, God delivered his revelation in 66-books. Sequential teaching from beginning to end is the method a preacher generally follows. In preparation, the preacher has read the passage numerous times to get the content in-depth. Further efforts are applied to the background and cultural issues about the passage to go through the book. The effort isn’t to wing it or pick passages at random and speak to them. The effort is thematic and contextual while consulting commentaries during preparation before delivery of a message to a congregation. Doctrinal truths reinforced by cross-references are an integral part of message preparation and delivery. Notes from research and study are then compiled into message delivery from the pulpit while the preacher is spiritually affected by the meaning of truth passages.

As there are many ways to translate a verse, it is better to avoid using other translated words to get at biblical meaning. Going back to the words of Scripture from original root manuscripts provides better meaning within the original context of the biblical writers. Authorial use of original words across Scripture is informative to get further precision about meaning as bible translations are updated to get scripture into the vernacular. Bringing the Bible into a post-modern worldview can introduce errors as it is necessary to place people into the times of Scripture. What a verse a passage meant when it was written is what it means now. Changing the words from translations dilutes meaning, so returning to original languages helps. Relying upon older commentators who are adept at original languages further reinforces intended understanding.

The Old Testament is divine revelation and a book of examples that illustrates God’s attitudes about righteousness and sin. The whole redemptive old covenant story foreshadows the mysteries of the new covenant. The whole counsel of God includes both the Old and New Testaments. So, it’s necessary to draw from the Old Testament to get to the significance and meaning of the New Testament. The New Testament reveals Old Testament mysteries and truths now fulfilled and made evident and preaching and teaching from such a perspective is necessary. Platitudes of Christian living without the appropriate contexts between Old and New Testament revelation are unhelpful.

Clarity of the message is a primary concern. The pastor needs to understand Scripture very well to speak on it and clearly deliver its meaning. If a pastor is not clear to congregants, that probably means the message or communication is not clear to the pastor. Preaching from the intensity of the heart as truth and meaning has a stronger grip on the pastor. A message and its preparation must be poured through the pastor’s soul. An abbreviated, automated, or outsourced approach is not acceptable, and slowing down the sermon preparation process to internalize everything is necessary. By the time the pastor gets to the pulpit, it has to be a message that has to be unloaded. The message has to capture the heart, and it has to take time.

Reading theology, biographies, and monographs serve as models or examples of spiritual development that translates to congregations. By comparison, culture or social-based messages do not offer the substance necessary for the spiritual growth of groups or individuals. Joel R. Beeke, who wrote Reformed Preaching: Proclaiming God’s Word from the Heart of the Preacher to the Heart of His People, is recommended reading as it concerns historical perspectives from prominent preachers (Crossway, 2018, ISBN: 978-1-4335-5927-3).

Preachers must be explicit on sin issues and seek unity, but unity in truth. Truth does not give way to unity. This way, preaching must be bold and loving, and repetition is necessary for retention. Preaching biblical truth is essential but must be varied and fresh to prevent familiarity from breeding contempt. Friendships and congregants who hold high expectations of pastors as preachers are necessary. Preachers let the Bible do its work, and while understanding the church is a long process, it is imperative to be very loving and patient. Pastors must try to ram through changes. Change is a life-long process; much more is accomplished if God’s Word is taught lovingly and faithfully while loving people through the process of change. So, do not make demands and do not force change. Just show people the Word of God, love them as they are, and in the process, change will come. Remain biblical in all that is done as a pastor. Become saturated with Scripture and know what Christ expects, the church, and the ministry. Be faithful to the work given.

Worship

What a person does in corporate worship is a continuation of what happens during private worship. Church worship time is compressed during worship service; if Scripture reading is abbreviated during service, it will be abbreviated in private life. Corporate worship is a model for congregants about what personal worship should be. Regardless of personal mood or someone’s attitude at the time, worship is essential because of who God is and what He does. Considering the magnificence of creation, God is more than worthy of worship at any time and under any circumstances.

Hebrews 10:19 presents to believers the reality and severity of God’s holiness. Yet, with the believer, there is confidence in Christ to approach Him in worship. To approach God requires preparation because of His holiness and where He is. Therefore, daily confession, repentance, or purging of sin is necessary before God in preparation for worship. It is in the individual worshiper’s interest to offer God a pure heart as He is approached. People are to present themselves in worship toward Him with a proper heart attitude (John 4:23-24).

Personal confession is fundamentally essential to prepare before worship. As some high churches are cold and sterile, there is still respect for who God is. And it can be extra challenging to worship in a setting that is not conducive to an environment of silence or reverence. So it is essential to remain in prayer and speak with God while before Him in worship while enduring an unfamiliar or difficult situation. There is no compartmentalization in worship, and worship is a 168-hour-a-week vocation. It is continuous in all facets of life, about who you believe God is and how you worship Him. The priority is God, and the worship offered is directed toward Him and not only what He has done for the worshiper. As it is suggested that worship is boasting in God, according to the Westminster Confession of Faith, “the chief end of man is to glorify God and enjoy Him forever.”

As the Psalms clearly indicate, God is the direction of personal worship (Ps. 145:1, Ps. 45:11, Ps. 99:5). Everything we see in culture, to the contrary, leads to self-worship. Self-adulation is all about “me” to indicate an incorrect direction of worship. Worship is not for self-amusement or entertainment in its cultural format (marketing, commercials, news, media, etc.) and cannot represent our worship experience. God is the only audience in our worship. He is the focus of the worshiper. Worship is what you give to the effort. Not what you are receiving or getting out of it. As echoed by Jesus, “Peter, do you love me?”, “Peter, do you love me?”, “Peter, do you love me?” God’s people are to love Him with their whole hearts. It’s not enough to merely like Him. Worship is an attitude of the heart.

How God’s people prepare for worship correlates to their attitude toward God. If a person is of a pure and willing heart, prepared to worship in spirit and truth, worship is acceptable to God by grace as a person presents him or herself as they are. Before God in praise, singing, presence, prayer, or benediction, insofar as it is up to the worshiper, let him or herself appear in attire better than loose casual wear. The worshiper’s opportunity to present cleanliness as they appear before God is a time of honor and fresh appearance. Washing up and dressing nicely is an expression of preparation. A good night’s sleep and rest before worship, along with eating for energy, adds to the longevity and vitality of worship with time before God.

As the pastor is the worship leader, the music pastor or director assures that worship is theologically correct and biblically rooted during song, prayer, and material reading. Worshipers wash their hearts through the reading of God’s word. While reading out loud, music is to assist in prayer and Scripture reading. Theologically correct music, whether as hymns or contemporary expressions, sets the mood with the occasion. Worship music is music that demands spiritual attention. As spiritually meaningful worship music is theologically deep with lyrical content, it supports deeper engagement by personal expression. If the text of Scripture, doctrine, or confessional subject matter are essential, they must be married to the mind through melody. Harmony makes the message and melody stronger. Rhythm is what ties everything together as music.

In church, the most important piece of worship music is the lyrics. Music is what makes the lyrics stronger. Music is the servant of our faith. The rule is that in corporate worship, the lyrics are most important, and the lyrical value is reduced if the harmony, melody, rhythm, or method of performance becomes most prominent. From the lyrics’ primary use and purpose, the music’s theology supports what is preached and taught. Admonishing, encouraging, and warning are throughout Scripture. The Psalm is exciting because of its meaning and range of substance in worship. The psalter tells us why we worship. It is an offering, and it is a communion and prayer. It’s a reiteration of Scripture.

Counseling

The notion that biblical counseling is a type of discipleship was a different way of looking at the practice. Compared to the conventional way of living out a person’s life as a disciple of Christ, believers are expected to do what Christ instructed by how He defined discipleship in Scripture. Biblical counseling within a church is a ministry, but the character development and correction that happens through ministering the Bible to people with real problems can have therapeutic value. Helping people who want counseling by getting into their lives involves specific one-to-one interest that requires a detailed understanding of a person and the issues faced. Targeted discipleship includes biblical counseling.

To further understand the meaning of biblical counseling, it would be helpful to understand how it is characterized with a description of the practice and distinctions about what it does compared to secular counseling. Interpersonal counsel occurs between people with regularity as an informal type of ministry or discipleship. Still, the formal practice of biblical counseling should have a purpose where further levels of care by qualified counselors can offer more meaningful help to those with more deeply rooted issues. There are various clinical methods of help, but biblical counselors within the church are better supported among the leadership as God’s people. And how Scripture ministers to people at a more personal level does not include dispensing biblical truth through its use by counsel that instead involves more careful attention unique to individual circumstances.

While problem resolution at individual granularity is unpleasant, it’s a vital function of church shepherds who helps people who undergo hardships. Counselors minister to people not as a professional pursuit but as a ministry that reaches people to help solve problems that cause them to seek lasting change. Educated and qualified people who serve as counselors support churches as they minister to people. Still, vetting individuals for soul work should involve more than a standard background check among leaders. There are widespread abuse claims against leaders among churches that generally happen through counseling sessions that take advantage of the vulnerable. Counseling that occurs among elders and congregation members must involve much more than trust, but a high degree of certainty that there could not be undue social repercussions or stigma that follows without consequences to counselors. Confidentiality is of utmost importance as morally, ethically, and legally permitted.

Both public and private proclamation of God’s word is supported through Scripture, as explained by Acts 20:20. Meeting with people privately is a more direct and intimate way of getting at impediments to sanctification as believers mature in Christ. Compared to a public proclamation in the church where exhortations and corrective measures are not specific to a person, pastoral and elder messages are informative and potentially result in heart change among congregants. Individual and private sessions are more kinetic as they produce work within the believer to effect restoration or perspective among hardships. Pastoral counseling is one-to-one with people, as was Apostle Paul’s work and Christ himself. Shepherds of the church should do likewise. Pastors and elders are not to be isolated from church members and are integral to counseling efforts that occur with regularity involving elders, certified counselors, Stephen ministers, and the like. Biblical counseling takes persistence with people, and insights into the human heart, including a deeper understanding of Scripture. Bringing both together for the work of ministry as a biblical counselor is an integral and Scriptural approach to discipleship that honors God.  

Administration

The growth of a church involves the development of a scalable body of believers within an organization structured around people, processes, and systems. It consists of managers and directors who focus on the church as an organization to achieve its objectives coherently. Foundational are the competencies of individuals who fit the organization by requirements defined by a job description involving duties, roles, and responsibilities. Its practices conform to the church’s goals, and its objectives match its leaders’ capabilities to assure performance in accordance with its mission and vision. While the focus of the church organization is coherent with its people, processes, and systems, there is a corresponding recognition that resources are necessary to suit its continued interests. Namely, staffing, budgets, capital, legal support, payroll, human resources, insurance, inventory, administration, and revenues such as fundraising, donations, and giving to function where growth is supported or scaled to desired attendance. 

Pastors and church leaders answer questions about the background and operating characteristics of the church organization. The recruitment and selection process of staff members within the church organization involves spiritual gifts, skills, and talents among qualified people who satisfy eligibility requirements and maximize the likelihood of meeting the organization’s objectives through performance. Pastors and leaders who manage volunteers are responsible for the frontline delivery of ministry functions that satisfy congregants toward their continued spiritual formation and well-being for growth and retention.

People who donate time, energy, and skills are situated among church attendees who seek fellowship, biblical instruction, and growth in sanctification. Whether as musicians, nursery volunteers, parking attendants, and media techs, labor is donated by volunteers who help people within a managed framework of attaining an ongoing return on effort. Volunteers serve God through the church and the community toward organizations and individuals regardless of locale or status. The conduit of spiritual development is often solely through small groups with leadership-prescribed social interests that yield specific topical benefits, aside from pulpit messages that occur each week. Without careful attention, formal discipleship in biblical form rarely propagates through structured means under such a conduit. Discipleship and volunteer work through small groups are not mutually exclusive.

 While carefully listening to the details about a church fraught with unreachable expectations, organizational warning signs, divergent personal aspirations, and off-mission objectives, that church will be strained to make a meaningful contribution or difference in people’s lives. The heaviness or burden of circumstances through undue hardship can appear disheartening and worrisome as pastors and leaders are expected to become insular at some level to “win.” If the church is occupied by functional managers first with pragmatic expectations at every turn, then that is a church that will have limited spiritual reach. Such conditions set an environment of one-upmanship. The church isn’t a veneer of a corporate organization with a business model that serves a community of people to gather in a safe social place with a distant focus on the biblical mandate of spiritual growth, instruction, and what God intended for His church.

The size of the church and the risk of knowing people with needs isn’t a cloak to keep pastors and leaders from common church congregants. If not everyone, at least some, to get a deeper and broader understanding of people’s hearts beyond what they’re informed about from staff and volunteers.

Conflict

The ministry of peacemaking is a desperate area of ministry abundantly needed within the church. While making peace is one thing, achieving reconciliation through peacemaking is different. Relationally, people in opposition to one another become separated by differing views and interests that conflict and could involve resolution or escalation as disputes or animosity remain present and affect others. As believers are people of faith and obedience, it is often of mutual interest to mediate impasses that adversely affect the spiritual health of those involved. People offended or harmed by others who withdraw or hold resentments can become burdened with resentments that bear out as unforgiving in contradiction to biblical exhortations given by Jesus and apostle Paul, “forgiving each other; as the Lord has forgiven you, so you also must forgive” (Matt 6:15, Luke 6:37, Col 3:13, Eph 4:32).

While under relational distress or hardships, believers do not always live out what they say they believe. That produces incongruent thinking that is impossible to reconcile with the word of God. And that, in turn, produces anxiety in the believer who would rather avoid such circumstances. The peacemaker’s role is thus to facilitate restoring relationships among people and with people in their relationship with God to let go of unforgiveness, bitterness, or resentment. Through confession, humility, and repentance, the change of heart occurs more congruent within a biblically guided framework. Ephesians 4 and various additional passages of Scripture offer beneficial aids to get through interpersonal difficulties. Numerous theological and doctrinal concerns immediately affect how and why reconciliation occurs.

Conflict resolution involves deeper disputes involving mediation. Apparently, as an advanced form of biblical counseling, conflict resolution spans a range of difficulties that could involve intense emotions or eventual legal claims counseled against Scripture. For reasons concerning escalation, retaliation, or further damages (emotional or otherwise), mediators would likely have to secure waivers against liability in the unforeseen event that may become a broader problem. In this regard, liability insurance and certifications that protect biblical mediators and their associated ministry are an assumed necessity. Biblical mediation is to reconcile people for restorative purposes without lingering animosity since forgiveness is expected through the process.

The method by which conflict resolution happens is through a careful mediation process that is guided by a period of one-to-one party counseling where biblical and theological principles are discussed to facilitate humble perspectives, confession, and a willingness to forgive. A process that could involve the absorption of pain by one or both individuals (or parties) may involve emotional distress inflicted on a counselor. Still, as God has permitted His name to be disparaged among unbelievers or believers for redemptive and sanctification purposes, the risk of encountering verbal hardship is what it is to be a peacemaker. During the reconciliation process, where biblical principles are learned with emotional and interpersonal pain absorbed, sessions that resolve disputes serve as a life experience with a significant spiritual value that carries over to other areas of problems that could otherwise surface. In this way, the character and interpersonal development that takes place is regarded as a form of discipleship as it becomes clear what it is to understand mercy, grace, and forgiveness with a willingness to live by it.

People who are called to a conflict resolution ministry are those who are willing to be Christlike. Peacemakers are those who can minister the word of God. They are gentle and meek and are not abrasive. They have a calming demeanor with a deep conviction for truthfulness and peace. These are people of love to resolve issues for the compelling beauty of reconciliation. They are foot washers in the ultimate sense as they wipe away unwanted mud, dirt, and stains that negatively affect the testimony of the gospel among believers. As mediators get to the heart of disputes and help people understand false beliefs about fears and the felt needs for security and significance, they offer biblical clarity about where true peace, rest, belonging, and value are in our relationship with God and each other through Christ Jesus.  

Outreach

 As the topic of outreach and missions is more fully considered, various factors can be considered as an approach to the gospel and the great commission. Evangelism and mission are framed as a lifestyle integral to the kingdom worldview attributed to every Christian. Whether locally in a personal or professional context or from more elaborate and well-developed geographical involvement, the practice of developing relationships spans across cultures, languages, and time zones. More narrowly, to “love your neighbor,” the formation of relationships bears the fruit of friendships and an eventual sharing of who we are as believers through the good news of Christ. Our transformed lives in Christ become integral to who we are as people fully invested in others. Contrary to a programmatic approach to outreach, missions, and the gospel, there is an embodiment of continued and persistent interest in others to reach people toward reconciliation and fulfillment in Christ.

 A template or spray-and-pray approach to evangelism and outreach is largely ineffective. As unbelieving people take notice of their sincere and meaningful relationships with believers and the differences in their beliefs, confidence, and perspectives, there is a deeper and more personal impact of the gospel and the offer of reconciliation, security, and purpose. There is a place for evangelism through various means that don’t involve direct personal relationships, but the outreach of that approach, by definition, is limited. Outreach and missions per se are longer-term endeavors that require the fully Christ-saturated person to walk the gospel and speak its meaning into the lives of people who need it. The person who lives the gospel for continued purposes of outreach derives their identity around what it is to be an ambassador of Christ (2 Cor 5:20).

There is an intentionality to the practice of outreach as a lifestyle. There is a prevalent mindset about it when interacting with people. Through authentic friendships, there is a mutual sharing of interests and values, where there is no place for a bait-and-switch way of living out faith among people we love. The preparatory efforts in relationship building as an integral approach to outreach are necessary without strings attached or a fear of losing a friendship over disagreements or rejection of the gospel. During relationship development, when people need support and friendship, it is of utmost value to be a friend to confide in and hear how believers cope and place their faith and hope in Christ.

While thinking through the interactions among unbelieving friends, coworkers, and acquaintances, there is an expected and intentional perspective a believer in Christ should have about their standing before God. More than what is valued about them and how productive our relationships are, a necessary focus is needed to develop better quality and deeper relationships that last. Living the better version of oneself in what is said and done among others within an authentic context of friendship situates friends in a position of mutual compatibility as conversations happen favorable to the purposes of an unbeliever’s interest in the gospel. Not out of overt persuasion as if a person is a project, but to share the heart about matters of life pertinent to the relationship. The overflow of any relationship with Christ Jesus that makes an impression is worth building upon toward an authentic love and interest that the unbelieving friend perceives.

An introverted and analytical person is not usually inclined to be immersed in the lives of a range of people, so it is necessary to be receptive to what God would want about how people become involved with one another. With the intentional perspective of forming relationships for the central purpose of outreach and spiritual reconciliation through the gospel.

Missions

The recruitment, vetting, and equipping processes of mission functions within the church involve mission workers’ successful placement and effectiveness. The coordination and management of numerous individuals, agencies, and local churches that together provide a conduit of ministry is an orchestrated endeavor with many moving parts. How mission workers are placed into the field for ongoing kingdom work is very involved, and the administration and management of individuals or teams in the field involve careful attention to detail. Close interaction with people vested in the physical and spiritual well-being of mission workers requires a long-term commitment, whether mission work is long-term or short-term, across various individuals or teams. The heart of a sending church is not only concerned with the missions in which they serve but also with the people who serve in such a capacity. There is an underlying assumption that the Lord is at work with the people prepared and appointed for the sacred work of the mission field. And the total outreach effort of the sending church between local areas or abroad is not mutually exclusive but a matter of sorting through available resources and priorities. The mandate to take the gospel and discipleship to the world is clear. Choices surrounding mission initiatives are not exclusionary in this regard.

Outreach among local communities and regions further afield includes short-term and long-term mission endeavors, including occupational insertion of people within community groups, work, or social settings. This effort may or may not involve a church planting effort based upon the spiritual need, interests, and or criteria of the sending church and supporting agencies. With church planting initiatives with long-term outcomes and results, the prospect of discipleship and spiritual formation becomes a scalable outreach proposition as others in the field can multiply for added longevity—the logistics and support needs of mission partners in the field are a function of objectives, location, and duration of stay.

For field workers involved in outreach as long-term missions and church planting, there are various means by which support is lined up and sustained. Clear lines of support and authority, well-connected communication, field resources, home facilities, transportation, close family-church inclusion, and periods of rest are all integral to well-developed missions programs from churches that sponsor and charter outreach for lasting impact. To optimize mission work, there are suggested areas of concern about the selection, equipping, and preparation of would-be missionaries. The people skills, biblical literacy, and flexibility of people who prepare and become deployed are necessities for mission objectives and success.

Interpersonal capabilities to form and maintain relationships and resolve disputes are the first of all skills necessary. While mission workers can have a reputation for not working well with one another in the field, short-term missions to develop interpersonal capabilities are an indispensable value toward long-term missions to avoid undue loss of time, money, and resources. The second point of interest includes a lack of biblical depth concerning faith and practice. Principles of discipleship, doctrinal beliefs, and defense of the faith across cultural settings are necessary for a rooted means toward biblical convictions, spiritual formation, discipline, and practice. Finally, it is necessary to develop and maintain a posture of flexibility regarding placement and field objectives during selection, preparation, and deployment. Mission worker candidates must demonstrate commitment, background, preparation, and flexibility in processes, methods, and interdependent relationships among people.

Renewal and Longevity

It is a grace and mercy that people who return to Christ Jesus as the vine (John 15:5) and the source of living water remain with Him. God, through His word, is an unending source of nourishment as His people are trees planted by streams of living water. Renewal by Christ Jesus through His Word produces fruits of the Spirit as believers again drink from streams of life to attain spiritual health and peace. More specifically, cultivating joy that renders deep faith and practice is necessary for continued nourishment, spiritual peace, and mental well-being. As necessary for challenges in life, that joy as a fruit of the trees comes from the inhabited Spirit who is a conduit for others blessed and comforted through their sanctification and sufferings. There are various fruits of the Spirit, as articulated in Galatians 5:22.

Living from the well of life apart from God is to forsake Him (Jer 2:13). Instead of drawing from the spring of living water from God, believers who live by their own will and interests do so from broken cisterns that cannot hold water. Accordingly, setting out on one’s own isn’t sustainable or long-term viable to draw from outside fellowship with God. The fruits of the Spirit spoken as truth are united with His life-giving power from a daily encounter with God. Life-giving nourishment of the Spirit comes from time alone with God through His Word. As Christ Jesus modeled for us, while people were among Him in desperation for teaching, truth, and healing, He withdrew from them to draw close to Father God in prayer (Luke 5:15-16). His time with God was a crucial source of intimacy even with the pressures of ministry among people who wanted to hear Him and be healed of their infirmities.

The two threats that have the potential to separate believers from the intimate connection with God are distraction and self-dependence. In alignment with Matthew 13, Jesus spoke of the parable of the Sower to make clear what chokes out, inhibits, or removes the Word from a person’s life. Valuing the wrong things over Christ Jesus and His Word takes our focus, priority, and intentionality elsewhere. As given by the example in Luke 10:38-42 with Mary and Martha, Jesus spoke of the necessity of choosing the good portion of fellowship with Him and intimacy with God over the busyness of daily necessities. Mary chose not to forfeit the most essential thing with Jesus as compared to Martha attending their gathering with the well-intentioned nobility of hospitality. A believer’s proper perspective about personal identity in Christ is best understood as the branch and vine analogy that He spoke about (John 15:5).

The warning signs about a believer disconnected from the vine include one or more of the following:

  1. Absence of fruit of Spirit
  2. Lack of margin, patience, humility, and charity
  3. Presence of pride, self-interest, defensiveness
  4. Fleshly interests and carnality, or appetites too fleshly
  5. Emotional fatigue and tense attitude of the heart from the grind of work

While circumstances and incident-driven occurrences give temporary rise to these conditions, they cannot be permitted to remain in place. The overwhelming pattern in the life of a believer must be personal time alone in prayer, in God’s Word (the Holy Bible), and worship. In truth and purity, believers shall abide in Christ to regain and sustain the spiritual nourishment essential to walk in the Spirit. Remaining in despair, discouragement, and distress indicates that a believer is disconnected from the vine or drinking from a broken cistern. A pattern and practice of these categories is the absence of margin and joy in a believer’s life.

While doing work unto the Lord, it is with the engine and furnace of the Spirit of God within. Passion, focus, and joy contribute to attitude as a source of fruitful energy that comes from time with God alone. Sin breaks fellowship. Willfulness can break fellowship. Self-interest (sin) breaks fellowship, so there is a need to be in daily immersion in God’s Word. Without the continuous renewal of the Spirit, burnout and fatigue can begin to take hold. Some evident attitudes that point to the onset of burnout include the following:

  1. You think you can fix everyone’s problems
  2. You have to fix everything right now
  3. You are responsible for everything that goes on in the church
  4. You can control everything in the church
  5. You have the answers to everything
  6. You can never show any weakness and need for growth

These attitudes are contradictory to truth statements of Scripture. To remain in proper perspective, intake of the whole counsel of God grows through time alone with Him. Absorption of God’s Word is an intentional, persistent, and conscious effort that requires reserved time (scheduled time) with God first at the beginning of each day, as He matters most. Priorities drive schedule, and emphatic yeses set priorities with non-negotiable noes. So, if priorities are not on your schedule, they’re not as important. The danger of the best is not the bad, it is the good.

Preparation to serve God’s people begins with inner joy and spiritual nourishment. This position of spiritual health derives from a consistent daily time in the Word and prayer while remaining in truth and purity. Believers will be held accountable for their spouses and the spiritual well-being of their families. Most immediate relationships among others before God is what matters most over all other endeavors. The source of life to support a family’s spiritual well-being comes from meditation on God’s Word. Ongoing intentional interaction with God’s Word is necessary to experience an inner life of peace and joy from the spring of living water. So, as a matter of process, some suggested methods of Scripture immersion include the following:

  1. Before sleep, meditate on a Psalm or passage of interest for five minutes to set God’s Word as the last thing on your conscious mind.
  2. In the morning, attempt to memorize a corresponding verse while in the restroom and preparing for the day. Have a verse pack on the go in the bathroom at the sink and shower.
  3. Once ready for the day, evaluate mediated Word in an expanded way through devotion to evaluate meaning and implication further.
  4. Pray the passage of interest at lunch – a cadence of attention to his Word is characterized by a time of personalization throughout the day.
  5. Draw or visualize compelling imagery about the time of contemplation to work out the truth of the verse or passage.
  6. Share the experience in the Word with family, friends, and others. Talk it out to learn it.
  7. Apply it – Not just to know it, but to do it.

Accountability and close personal relationships to encourage and exhort believers are necessary to assure personal alone time with God. However, close and careful attention must be paid to who a believer confides in (Prov 20:6) about passages meditated upon as a matter of reflection and application. Long-term relationships are often betrayed by unfaithful men or women who abandon confidentiality and cause undue harm for intentional or unintentional reasons. If someone reveals to a believer another person’s private life, renewal, and reflection experiences in the Word of God, it can be assured that the person is doing the same with others. Whether in an immediate context or later, the believer must know who is reliable to trust.

Leadership Qualifications

The biblical qualifications for spiritual leadership within the church are extensive, involving various character attributes suitable for people who serve and worship God in a holy congregation. When apostle Paul wrote to Timothy concerning the qualifications of elders within the church, he did so with explicit detail that leaves no question about eligibility requirements. Consistent with biblical writers elsewhere, Paul reinforces the required standards by which leaders serve with baseline character traits suitable and appropriate for the care of people in the first-century church as well as today. These traits complement one another to serve as a model and example of conduct for those in the church. Leadership that attempts to perform its shepherding duties with flaws in character in any of these areas presents problems to the church that ultimately affect congregants.

A leader with a reputation, social status, charisma, and wealth who has impeccable qualifications for leadership in a secular context doesn’t render that person suitable for leadership in the church. Godly character over functional capabilities prevails as qualifying attributes as described in 1 Timothy 3. Each specific qualifying attribute parsed and defined serves as an individually identified requirement with explicit meaning. These attributes, separately or combined, are not guidelines to loosely follow but specify what requirements must be met to serve as an elder or pastor of a church. These requirements are not optional or subject to cultural conditions within secular society that have a bearing on governance and commerce or impose contradictory regulatory requirements. God’s Word through the Apostle Paul has the greatest authority.

This table closely corresponds to Paul’s epistle to Timothy with explanatory descriptions of the root meaning of the biblical text. No consideration was given to church denominations that hold to contradictory traditions or social considerations involving cultural pressures.

QualificationsDefinitions and DescriptionsReferences
BlamelessAbove reproach and not deserving or worthy of rebuke or criticism1 Tim 3:2,
1 Tim 5:7
Husband of One WifeMale, married only once, monogamous, and moral.1 Tim 5:9-15
TemperateNot given to excess or extremes in behavior1 Tim 3:2,11,
Titus 2:2
Sober-MindedSelf-disciplined and wisely keeping self-control over passions and desires1 Tim 3:2,
Titus 1:8,
Titus 2:2,5
Good BehaviorOrganized with admirable propriety and moderation1 Tim 2:9,
1 Tim 3:2
HospitableDisposed to treat guests and strangers with cordiality and generosity1 Tim 3:2,
Titus 1:8,
1 Pet 4:9
Able or Apt to TeachAbility to impart skills or knowledge to people and do it well1 Tim 3:2,
2 Tim 2:24
Not a DrunkardNot a drunkard who is especially predisposed to wine beverages1 Tim 3:3,
Titus 1:7
Not Violent but GentleNot a fighter, bully, or a cruel, violent, and brutal person1 Tim 3:3,
Titus 1:7
PatientLenient and easily pardons human failure – merciful or tolerant of slight deviations from moral or legal rectitude1 Tim 3:3,
Titus 3:2,
Jas 3:17,
1 Pet 2:18
Not A BrawlerNot quarrelsome – Inclined and disposed to peace1 Tim 3:3,
Titus 3:2
Not Greedy
(aischrokerdēs)
Not fond of dishonest gain – being so desirous of acquiring wealth that it brings disgrace and shame on a person1 Tim 3:3,8,
Titus 1:7
Not Covetous
(aphilargyros)
Not a lover of money – not characterized by an immoderate desire to acquire wealth1 Tim 3:3,
Heb 13:5
Manages Household of Children WellManages a Godly family household in an exemplary manner1 Tim 3:4-5,
1 Thess 5:12
Not a Recent ConvertA mature believer in Christ1 Tim 3:6
Well Thought of By OutsidersA confirmed testimony and witness of a person’s good character within the community1 Tim 3:7

The spiritual capacity of leadership is largely contingent upon its reputation, training, and maturity to satisfy biblical requirements and its character obligations. People who obtain a calling of leadership are not to enter ministry lightly. It is a sacred responsibility to shepherd the people of God as caretakers of their faith and practice. While today, pastors and elders often carry out their responsibilities at a distance from the flock, they too often function with partial eligibility among closer relationships within smaller concentric circles of influence and accountability. Elders or bishops and deacons that see to the affairs of the church aside from pastoral work maintain their duties in ministry according to what they are gifted to perform and accomplish. Their reach within the church should encompass the entire flock as shepherds who oversee congregants and never permit the loss of even a single sheep. Each person’s sanctification is precious before God, and the shepherd’s responsibility is to care for His flock to the last person.

Conclusion

The call to ministry is a sacred privilege and a responsibility of enormous gravity. It is a manner in which gifted believers in Christ serve the church and people of various geographies to love and support communities to advance the Kingdom of God. The various areas in which ministry is carried out are numerous. Formal ministry through the local church or informal ministry of individuals among family, friends, and neighbors must be according to spiritual gifts given by God for His church. The work of Creation is to glorify God, and people who serve in ministry participate in what it means to do that. In the numerous forms of ministry, either formal or informal, sanctioned by the local church or not, the ways in which believers express worship, love, and support for people are according to the spiritual and physical needs of others wherever they are.


The Heart Hermeneutic

The notion that biblical counseling is a type of discipleship is a different way of looking at the practice. Compared to the conventional way of living out a person’s life as a disciple of Christ, believers are expected to do what Christ instructed by how He defined discipleship in Scripture. Biblical counseling within a church is a ministry, but the character development and correction that happens through ministering the bible to people with real problems can have therapeutic value. Helping people who want counseling by getting into their lives involves specific one-to-one interest that requires a detailed understanding of a person and the issues faced. Targeted discipleship includes biblical counseling in contrast to group-wide discipleship in a church setting.

To further understand the meaning of biblical counseling, it would be helpful to understand how it is characterized. Or a description of the practice with distinctions about what it does as compared to secular counseling. Interpersonal counsel occurs between people with regularity as an informal type of ministry or discipleship. Still, the formal practice of biblical counseling should have a purpose where further levels of care by qualified counselors can offer more meaningful help to those with more deeply rooted issues. Qualified counselors acknowledge various clinical methods of help, but biblical counselors within the church context are better supported by God’s people. And how Scripture ministers to people at a more personal level don’t include dispensing biblical truth through its use by counsel that involves more careful attention unique to individual circumstances.

While problem resolution at individual granularity can be unpleasant, it’s a vital function of a pastor who helps people who undergo hardships. Pastors and elders minister to people not as a professional pursuit but as a ministry that reaches people to help solve problems that cause them to seek counseling for lasting change. Educated and qualified people who serve as counselors support churches as they minister to people. Still, vetting individuals for soul work should involve more than a standard background check among leaders. There are widespread abuse claims against leaders among evangelical churches that generally happen through counseling sessions that take advantage of the vulnerable. Counseling that occurs among elders and congregation members must involve much more than trust, but a high degree of certainty that there could not be undue social repercussions or stigma that follows without consequences to counselors. Confidentiality is of utmost importance as morally, ethically, and legally permitted by the magistrate.

Both public and private proclamation of God’s word is supported through Scripture (Acts 20:20). Meeting with people privately is a more direct and intimate way of getting at impediments to sanctification as believers mature in Christ. Compared to a public proclamation in the church where exhortations and corrective measures are not specific to a person, pastoral and elder messages are informative and potentially result in heart change among congregants. Individual and private sessions are more kinetic as they produce work within the believer to effect restoration or perspective among hardships. Pastoral counseling one-to-one with people was Apostle Paul’s work and of Christ himself. Shepherds of the church should do likewise. Refer to the Association of Certified Biblical Counselors (biblicalcounseling.com).

Pastors and elders are not to be isolated from church members and are integral to counseling efforts that occur with regularity involving elders, certified counselors, Stephen ministers, and the like. Biblical counseling takes persistence with people, and insights into the human heart, including a deeper understanding of Scripture. Bringing both together for the work of ministry as a biblical counselor is an integral and Scriptural approach to discipleship that honors God.


The Sheep & The Goats

Introduction

Jesus speaks a message of hope and warning about the coming judgment of believers and unbelievers, both righteous and unrighteous among the nations. This is a meticulous verse by verse walk-through of Matthew 25:31-46.

For many centuries Jesus’s words have echoed among readers of Scripture. As they contemplate parables and biblical passages to make distinctions between two types of people that Jesus our Messiah spoke about. They are both Jews and Gentiles, those who believe and accept Christ and those who do not. They are those who have embraced Him in faith and repentance and choose to live a life of service and mercy toward others who are suffering or in need. As Jesus spoke of the Sheep and Goats in our exegetical passage, it is a lasting source of motivation and warning about judgment to come. This verbal illustration is an urgent message to readers of Scripture who listen in on what Jesus told His disciples about what is to happen at the “end of the age.”  It is urgent because it is a preview of what impending judgment looks like. It is what will happen as also written about during the life of Jesus. In the gospel of John, Jesus spoke these words to the religious leaders during the second temple period who were critical of Him:

“Truly, truly, I say to you, an hour is coming, and is now here, when the dead will hear the voice of the Son of God, and those who hear will live. For as the Father has life in himself, so he has granted the Son also to have life in himself. And he has given him authority to execute judgment, because he is the Son of Man. Do not marvel at this, for an hour is coming when all who are in the tombs will hear his voice and come out, those who have done good to the resurrection of life, and those who have done evil to the resurrection of judgment (John 5:25-29 ESV).”

As a matter of theological principle and inescapable reality, this is the glory or the pressure to comprehend and act upon. It is especially concerning the Lord’s judgment upon people, depending upon your perspective. These are the circumstances Jesus informs us about concerning coming judgment. His message in Scripture pertains to everyone as each of us will one day pass into eternity.

Historical and Scriptural Context

This section of Scripture is referred to as the Eschatological Discourse, or more popularly as the Olivet Discourse. It is the second half of a full discourse beginning in chapter 24 just before this section. It references Jesus’s end times messages about the destruction of the temple, His second coming, and exhortations to remain ready (Mt. 24:1-31) for His return. To set up the scene, we must go back to the time and location to get a fuller sense of meaning in this passage. Just before the Lord’s death between 27-30 AD,1 He met with His apostles on the Mount of Olives outside Jerusalem while just across from the Kidron valley. From their vantage point, they could see across the valley and into Jerusalem. In full view of the temple, they were together listening to Jesus speak about the end times and His parables.

Matthew was present during the time of Jesus’s teaching with His followers. Matthew was an eyewitness and direct listener of what Jesus said. As recorded in the book of Matthew from that time period, we have a first-person account of what was spoken by Jesus. Once He and His disciples came up to the Mount of Olives, they saw the temple and the surrounding buildings within Jerusalem. Without inquiry, Jesus proclaims that the temple will undergo destruction as “not one stone shall be left here upon another (Mt. 24:1-2).” Jesus was apparently in distress from Matthew 23 during His interaction with the religious leaders of Jerusalem. More specifically, Matthew 23:1-33 gives precise detail about why Jesus was rightfully upset. His people, the Lord’s people, had rejected Him as prophesied (Ps. 118:22, Is. 53:3) when He had longed to gather them to Himself. He, in turn, proclaimed, “your house is left to you desolate,” and worse yet, “you shall see Me no more.” The glory of the Lord has left the temple, and the people of Israel shall see it (Him) no more.  

The conflict with the Jewish people leading up to their confrontations with Jesus involved His claims that He is equal with God (Jn 5:18). These claims were contradictory to their expectations and view of who and what the Messiah should be. He was expected to be a normal man of great stature and power, but not divine in origin to redeem people from their sins and usher the Kingdom of God to the world. The religious, political, and social tensions between the Jews, the Romans, and Christ were recorded in contrast to Jesus’s continuing mission and their prophetic assertions made over thousands of years prior.

The parables immediately spoken after Jesus’s final encounter in the temple with religious leaders were about the end times. As asked by His apostles, they wanted Jesus to inform them about when destruction would come, what signs to watch, and when He will return (Mt. 24:3). With very little time before Jesus is taken to trial and crucifixion, He sets forward instructions and warnings that will remain permanently forged into the minds of millions of people. People who have not rejected Him but have accepted His words with gratitude, love, and due humility as He is worthy of all worship, honor, and glory.

This is the backdrop by which Jesus delivers a series of parables after He left the temple and ascended the Mount of Olives. He laments over Jerusalem (Mt. 23:37-39), He predicts the destruction of the temple (Mt. 24:1-2), He informs His disciples about the end of the age (Mt. 24:3-14), He warns of the Great Tribulation and false messiahs (Mt. 24:15-28), He reveals the details about His second coming (Mt. 24:29-31), and He exhorts His followers to be fruitful and wait for His return with their good work for the Kingdom (Mt. 24:32-25:30). While He was likely hurt and felt rejected by His people, His extraordinary love, mercy, and grace came through the clear detail of how His people should prepare for the times ahead.

Exegetical Content

Jesus arrives in His glory to separate all nations before Him (v. 31-33).

31 “But when the Son of Man comes in His glory, and all the angels with Him, then He will sit on His glorious throne. 32 “All the nations will be gathered before Him; and He will separate them from one another, as the shepherd separates the sheep from the goats; 33 and He will put the sheep on His right, and the goats on the left.

The parable begins with the conjunction “But when” in the NASB to indicate that what Jesus said just prior is of relevance to the forthcoming message. Nearly all other translations exclude the conjunction word “But” as a transitional expression. Namely, the primary particle term “δέ” does not translate to English except for a rendering in Strong’s dictionary as a connective, continuative, or adversative term.2 So while the ESV, NIV, KJV, NKJV, NET, RSV, NRSV, and NCV translations do not indicate a transition from the prior parables Jesus spoke, the NASB, NLT, and ASV translations do. Therefore, the definitive authority by which the Greek term is conjunctive as “δέ” for “But when” is uncertain without substantial analysis among manuscripts. This means that the transition from prior parables on the Mount of Olives is tentative if we are to accept the weight of meaning in the NASB, ASV, or NLT over the other translations.

The prior context favors the conjunctive transition of this parable in Matthew 25:31-46 as a way to get a fuller meaning of what Jesus said. Then more critically, the outcomes or consequences of what He meant as Matthew gave his firsthand eyewitness account. The Parable of the Talents in Matthew 25:14-30 just before also spoke of a comparative scenario between those who were entrusted by the Lord’s literary proxy and what happens when there is favor or disfavor. In a natural setting between a man and his servants (Mt. 25:14-30) as compared to the Lord and His servants (Mt. 25:31-46). Therefore, in the pure meaning of Jesus’s words, taken in context as a whole, we are given confidence about what He was speaking during His continued eschatological discourse on the Mount of Olives. We are then free to understand and live out the connected truth of the remaining verses found in this passage.

As recorded in the gospel of Matthew, the Apostles asked Jesus about signs about the end times. What will occur, what they were to watch for, and what shall happen at the time they were concerned about (Mt. 24:3). In response, Jesus elaborates with His remarkable and concrete revelation about His return. He has said, when He returns to the earth at His second coming, He will reign as King. He will return in His glory accompanied by angels with Him. Jesus, the Son of Man, to assume His seat of power and judge individuals separately among all the nations that appear before Him. All nations of people gathered in voluntary or involuntary acknowledgment and submission before Him (Phil. 2:10). All together, they are gathered and become separated into two groups as a Shepherd separates His sheep and His goats.  

Notice the translated words reference a separation of sheep from goats. After all the people are assembled, the sheep among them become extracted or removed and set apart as a specific group before Jesus. The wicked people were unbelievers represented as goats and the Lord’s people as sheep that were “the sheep from the goats.” The sheep as submissive, gentle, and easily persuaded as compared to the stubborn, egotistical, and wild nature of goats. Positionally, the goats will go to the left while the sheep will go to the right of the Judge and King of nations. The right side to which represents favor and honor.3

Righteous and blessed people of the Father are accepted into the Kingdom (v. 34-36).

34 “Then the King will say to those on His right, ‘Come, you who are blessed of My Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world. 35 ‘For I was hungry, and you gave Me something to eat; I was thirsty, and you gave Me something to drink; I was a stranger, and you invited Me in; 36 naked, and you clothed Me; I was sick, and you visited Me; I was in prison, and you came to Me.’

Once the separation is made between the people of nations, Jesus as King begins to communicate in the judgment of both believers who accept Him and unbelievers who reject Him. As by evidence in what they did and didn’t do. Evidence that indicates the nature of their relationship with Jesus and the Father. Just as this discourse follows the rejection of Jesus by religious leaders (Mt. 23:1-36), they are condemned among the wicked as those who were people seemingly in a right relationship with God but were not. The goats in total were a people who are outright unbelievers and those who are not authentic believers at His second coming. By comparison, genuine believers are depicted as sheep in Scripture called to inherit the blessing of the King’s kingdom (Mt 9:36, 10:6, 15:24, 18:12, 26:31).4

The righteous and wicked people were made to stand in the presence of Jesus upon His second coming as foretold (Dan. 7:13-14). Jesus will speak judgment while the Holy angels are with Him, while the goats and creation shall witness the decree of Jesus as King of all that is His. All shall recognize and understand the blessings of the sheep. That genuine believers as sheep were those “blessed of My Father,” the subjects of the Lord’s doing. They are people who have bestowed a spiritual blessing in Christ as written about by the Apostle Paul (Eph. 1:3). These people are those who were brought into the Kingdom as their access was pre-planned before the beginning of the world. The passage doesn’t provide specific identities of people, but rather a people as a whole who would believe and accept Jesus (i.e., sheep) by grace through faith (Eph 2:8-9).  

The phrase in this passage, “prepared for you from the foundation of the world,” has far-reaching theological significance. A keyword here is “foundation,” which transliterates as the root Greek word “katabolē.” It is a word reference with the root meaning to “conceive of” with a “foundation.” To lay an initial plan, especially concerning a creative effort. The term “refers to the basis God has established, upon which all people can know Him. This was laid down before the first ray of sunshine or drop of water touched the earth.”5 What is incredibly astonishing is that this foundation plan was designed and set before the world was formed.

Moreover, the inheritance was then prepared for His people, the sheep in this passage, at the setting of this foundation Jesus spoke about to His disciples. That there is this path of access to the kingdom of God. It is through belief, as evidenced by what His people do to care for others.

Righteous believers are surprised by their good works for the Lord (v. 37-39).

37 “Then the righteous will answer Him, ‘Lord, when did we see You hungry, and feed You, or thirsty, and give You something to drink? 38 ‘And when did we see You a stranger, and invite You in, or naked, and clothe You? 39 ‘When did we see You sick, or in prison, and come to You?’

The closest in context meaning of the term “righteous” in this passage articulates the idea of a person characterized with righteous actions and morals. Yet, in this sense, the righteous are represented as a group of people and not only a single person. Even though each person is judged individually, they together answer the King with questions about when He was helped and cared about. The repeated word in this verse is the term “when.” Comparatively, not as “how” or “where,” but “when” to indicate a desire for a specific time reference. The time interest suggests that if they knew each specific instance in their past, the details about who, where, what and how should follow.

Of substantial theological relevance, Dr. John MacArthur wrote by a commentary of this section in Matthew as follows, “The deeds are not the basis for their entrance into the kingdom, but merely manifestations of God’s grace in their lives. They are the objective criteria for judgment because they are evidence of saving faith (Js 2:14-26).”6 The fact that the righteous did not have specifics about when their good works were performed, they were not relied upon for their justification and salvation. What they did without conscious effort did not justify themselves. Instead, they became rewarded for their efforts as an outcome of the faith that saved them. By so much that their identity in Scripture was “the righteous.”

What righteous believers did for the Lord’s people is what they did for Jesus (v.40).

40 “The King will answer and say to them, ‘Truly I say to you, to the extent that you did it to one of these brothers of Mine, even the least of them, you did it to Me.’

Jesus, as Judge and King, answers the questions of His people. With a response about who it was, they as the righteous had helped. It was not a response about “when” they helped people with their charity and good works. So, in responding this way, Jesus answered the question of the righteous sheep more directly and in no uncertain terms. By the King’s volition, He explains, in a surprising way. Those who were there among them, the sheep set apart, were His brothers. They loved and cared for one another — even those who were of the least in social stature, notoriety, or economic status. When there was a need for help among them, they were in unity; they were loved and looked after. The word given in the Greek for “brothers” is ἀδελφός or ho adelphon or adelphoi which is to mean, a believing brother or siblings (brothers and sisters) (Mt. 28:10, Jn. 20:17, Rom 8:29, Heb 2:11). Remarkably, Jesus reveals that their righteousness applied to others was to Him as well.

Wicked unbelievers before the Lord are condemned to eternal fire (v. 41-43).

41 “Then He will also say to those on His left, ‘Depart from Me, accursed ones, into the eternal fire which has been prepared for the devil and his angels; 42 for I was hungry, and you gave Me nothing to eat; I was thirsty, and you gave Me nothing to drink; 43 I was a stranger, and you did not invite Me in; naked, and you did not clothe Me; sick, and in prison, and you did not visit Me.’

In full view of what Jesus said will transpire, the wicked and unbelieving people shall hear what is to befall them in judgment. Jesus speaks to the people, or goats as they are called, and He tells them to depart from His presence. This is the same phrase that appears in Matthew 7:23 when Jesus earlier tells the workers of lawlessness to depart from him. While the phrase “Depart from Me” appears in this passage (v.41), it also appears in Matthew 7:23 as having a further reference to Psalm 6:8. Jesus quotes Scripture in the Matthew 7:23 instance to reference the Psalm, but not here in verse 41. As it is written in the Psalm of David, “Depart from me, all you who do iniquity.”

So, it is explicit that by knowing Jesus in Matthew 7:23, He was loved by helping, comforting, serving, and relieving others of pain and suffering. Specifically, those affected who were His adelphoi (believer siblings) as spoken earlier in this passage.

It is necessary to reiterate that the nations spoken about in this passage are those who are in the Tribulation. They are present as Jesus again returns to earth in His glory. While the context here is concerning specific individuals among all the nations, the theological principle of accountability holds for believers and unbelievers throughout history. As there will be a separate Great White Throne judgment that takes place according to Scripture (Rev. 20:11-15), this prior judgment of the nations is an indication of what is to come among all people both dead and alive. Not just those who are present in judgment at the Lord’s second coming (the sheep & the goats). This judgment at the Lord’s second coming is a glimpse of the final judgment in the distant future. Everyone, according to Scripture, shall be judged by what he or she has done. That is, specifically, those who believe in Jesus, love Him, and by faith act upon what He has commanded. As compared to those who get judged by their actions and do not believe in Christ to simply live for themselves.

The reference of condemnation here pertains to accursed individuals. Notice as compared to verse 34, the “of My Father” phrase is absent from the condemnation to suggest their eternal demise is self-inflicted. Their destination is everlasting punishment. In contrast to what the prophet Daniel wrote about the end times, “Many of those who sleep in the dust of the ground will awake, these to everlasting life, but the others to disgrace and everlasting contempt (Dan. 12:2).” So, both in the Old Testament and the New, there is a difference between the destination of people groups as reiterated with specificity from Jesus in His discourse on the Mount of Olives.

In 2 Peter 2:4, the Apostle Peter makes a remarkable and punctuated point about how God did not spare the devil and his angels, but instead, He cast them into hell. They became bound by the chains of darkness as a place committed to them due to their sin. It is this place that Jesus refers to in His illustration about the sheep and the goats (v.41). A form of due punishment expressed as a place of fire, this is a place of an eternal burning, or an everlasting consuming fire as again spoken about in many places throughout Scripture (Mk. 9:48, Lk. 16:24, Jude 7). Those who became separated to the left of Jesus for judgment get condemned in the presence of everyone there. It is speculative, but inferential that the angels who arrived with Jesus (v.31) have a role in gathering the people together, setting up the separation, with finally the removal and placement of people at their destination of either heaven (the kingdom) or hell (eternal fire).   

As the wicked are driven into darkness and eternal torment, Jesus declares the reasons for their destruction. There were sins of omission and rejection of Christ together committed during a lifetime period of grace. His specifics made plain the absence of what the righteous did by explicit communication. Jesus intended to mean what He said in verses 35-36. Jesus exacted the right and effective judgment against the wicked because they did not demonstrate a love for people. To care for the sick, feed His sheep (Jn 21:17), and visit the persecuted, or captive in prison. These were the specifics that communicate the necessity of loving and caring for those who are in need. To the eternal condemnation of those who do not, they are permanently and eternally separated as they leave the Lord or depart the King’s presence.  

Wicked unbelievers are surprised by their lack of good works for the Lord (v. 44-45).

44 “Then they themselves also will answer, ‘Lord, when did we see You hungry, or thirsty, or a stranger, or naked, or sick, or in prison, and did not take care of You?’45 “Then He will answer them, ‘Truly I say to you, to the extent that you did not do it to one of the least of these, you did not do it to Me.’

It is incredible that verses 44-45 are a mirror image of 35-36 yet were spoken together precisely about what explains the judgment and eternal demise of the wicked. These pronouncements of Jesus were a testimony of what the people would not do to care, help, and serve others. More specifically, these are the people who would not extend mercy to the remnant population of Jewish believers during the Tribulation.7 They are not the “brothers of Mine” that Jesus spoke about in verse 40. Their condemnation was unambiguous as Jesus made His comparison before everyone present in the coming judgment. The sheep population helped others as those who are righteous, while it is the very same thing that the goats would not or did not do. Since it was the nations gathered before Jesus, they were not just professing believers who became separated from genuine believers. It is everyone who appears in judgment at the second coming of Jesus, the Messiah.

Wicked unbelievers enter punishment. Righteous believers enter eternal life (v. 46).

46 “These will go away into eternal punishment, but the righteous into eternal life.”

After the rejection of Jesus by Jewish authorities and by the people in the town of His upbringing (Luke 4:14-30), He spoke of ultimate end-time acceptance and condemnation of everyone who are witnesses of Him, His work, and His glory throughout their lives. Everyone is to face judgment, either from His second coming (Matt 25:31-46) or at an end in the final gathering (Rev 20:11-15) before Him.

As prophesied by the prophet Isaiah (Is 53:1), we see through the course of history, a divine decree about what is to become of those who accept Him, repent and bear the fruit of their faith. Conversely, those who profess that they belong to Christ without receiving Him in faith will perish. In either case, where their works reveal redemption or a lack thereof. Both groups shall “go away” to a destination and state of being due to their temporal condition and circumstances. Either to an eternity of punishment, or reward.

The reward for the righteous is more specific as it is a life of far better quality with Jesus in His kingdom. In contrast, the punishment of wicked unbelievers who reject Jesus becomes driven to where the Devil and his angels are. Two outcomes, two domains, with God in everlasting happiness, satisfaction, contentment, joy, and glory (Mt. 19:29; Jn.3:15f, 36; 5:24; 6:27, 40, 47, 54; 17:2f; Acts 13:46, 48; Rom 2:7; 5:21; 6:23; Gal. 6:8, 1 Jn. 5:11). While the other, according to Jesus, the prophets, and apostles, is unspeakable misery, pain, and torment (Dan. 12:2, John 5:29, Acts 24:15).

Application

Where the gospel is shared, believers and unbelievers today have an unmistakable and clear opportunity to accept Christ and serve Him well by caring for others who are in need. Most notably, by caring for those who are of the faith, those He considers His siblings (Heb 2:11). This is an imperative given to us in Jesus’s answer to His apostles on the Mount of Olives. His words must resonate with us today to act upon them. As Scripture speaks to us about the sheep and the goats, we understand the true meaning of judgment to come. What is to come when we all appear before the Lord to account for our actions or omissions. This specific theological principle explicitly informs us that we are each accountable. For our relationship to and acceptance of Jesus and what it is we do to help, comfort, and serve others.

As a practical matter, to reflect God’s love upon us, we are to love one another by what we do in terms of charity, giving, selflessness, volunteer work, missions, ministry, how we conduct ourselves during employment, in family life, and so forth. Take an interest in sharing your faith with strangers. Encourage your family members with words of Scripture. Give money to causes that support the Lord’s kingdom. Give money to those in poverty, in prison, or who are homeless because you may not know who belongs to the Lord and who does not. Pray about what you can do with conviction which testifies of your love and faith in Christ. Make it your practice to love others well. Not only because of the reward Jesus speaks to us about, but because as He loved us, we are to love others. By doing so, we demonstrate in full assurance that it is He who recognizes our love for Him.

If you are looking for an opportunity to care for others, in one of many innumerable ways, please consider Compassion International. This is an organization that teaches a Christ-centered life while alleviating poverty in numerous locations. You can sponsor a child, or give as desired as your heart leads.

Citations

1 Rose Book of Bible & Christian History Timelines. (Peabody, Mass.: Hendrickson Publishers)
2 A Concise Dictionary of the Words in The Greek New Testament and The Hebrew Bible with their Renderings in the Authorized English Version. (2009) (Logos Research Systems, Inc.), term #1161
3 John Peter Lange and Philip Schaff, A Commentary on the Holy Scriptures: Matthew. (Logos Research Systems, Inc.), Part 5, Section 5, Exegetical and Critical
4 English Standard Version, Classic Reference Bible: 2016. (Crossway Bibles, Good News Publishers). Footnotes: Matthew 25:31-46
5 HelpsTM Word Studies, 2011. Helps Ministries, Inc. (https://biblehub.com/greek/2602.htm)
6 John MacArthur, MacArthur Study Bible 2nd Edition NKJV, 2019. (Thomas Nelson Publishers), 1310
7 John F. Walvoord and Roy B Zuck, The Bible Knowledge Commentary, Sixth Printing, 1986. (Victor Books, SP Publications), 81