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Self-Sacrivice and Kingdom Entrance
Matthew 5:29-30
Part 1 of 2
by Bob Wilkin
And if your right eye causes you to sin,
pluck it out and cast it from you; for it is more
profitable for you that one of your members
perish, than for your whole body to be cast
into hell.
And if your right hand causes you to sin,
cut if off and cast it from you; for it is more
profitable for you that one of your members
perish, than for your whole body to be cast
into hell. (Matt. 5:29-30)
This same saying is found in one other
passage in Matthew (18:9-10) and in Mark's
Gospel as well (9:4248). What did the Lord
Jesus mean?
This passage is widely regarded to he very
difficult to understand. Nothing in the context of the three
places in which it occurs
gives any further details which might help us
understand it. This would have been a great
place for the disciples to ask the Lord to
explain what He meant.
Let's begin with the easier task of determining what this
passage doesn't mean.
Clearly Jesus was not speaking literally of
dismembering our bodies. He had some sort
of spiritual application of this illustration in
mind.
Most commentators take it that the reference to one's eye or
hand refers to sins in
one's life. Plucking it out or cutting it off is
taken to refer to turning from the sins in
question.
Most identify the types of sins which need
to be turned from as those which the Roman
church calls mortal sins: adultery, murder,
homosexuality, etc. Rarely are sins like jealousy, covetousness,
and hatred mentioned.
I once heard this passage preached in this
way: Is there some sin to which you are
clinging which is keeping you from God and
eternal life? If so, give it up. It is better to
give up your sin and go to heaven than to keep
the sin and spend eternity in hell.
A number of commentators make similar
statements. Witness, for example, the following two quotes. The
first is on the Markan
parallel and the second on our passage.
"It is better to be a disciple and to enter
eternal life (cf. Mk 10:17, 30) in God's
future kingdom (Mk 9:47), and to do so
maimed, minus earthly possessions that
have been renounced, than to be an unbeliever. An unbeliever
retains his allegiance to this world, refuses eternal life
with God on His terms, and so will be
thrown into hell" (John D. Grassmick,
The Bible Knowledge Commentary, NT
Edition, p.147).
"To abstain from even wishing to possess one's
neighbour's wife is far from
being enough. To lust after her, or any
woman, is a breach of the commandment. Not only is social purity
binding
on both the married and the unmarried,
whether male or female, but purity of
heart (Mt. 5:8) is absolutely indispensable for admission to the
Kingdom. so
indispensable is it, that no sacrifice ought
to be regarded as too great, if it is the only
means of securing the necessary cleanness of thought and
will" (Alfred Plummer, Matthew, p.81).
Is this sort of interpretation likely what
Jesus meant? A consideration of other statements by Him suggests
otherwise. To the
woman at the well Jesus said nothing about
her needing to give up her sinful lifestyle. He
offered her living water as a free gift (John
4:10). Jesus said nothing to Martha about
needing to turn from her sins. Rather He said
that whoever believes in Him shall live even
though he dies (John 11:25-26). Jesus was
called a friend of sinners because He accepted them as they were
(cf. Matt. 11:19;
Luke 7:34-50; 15:1-2). In His conversation
with Nicodemus Jesus gave no mention of
turning from sins. The only condition He
gave for eternal life was faith in Him alone
(John 3:16). He called people to recognize
their sinfulness and then look to Him to
forgive their sins (Matt. 9:10-13; Mark 2:16-17; Luke 7:36-50;
18:9-14).
F. W. Beare recognized the difficulties
with such an interpretation. Note especially
the last two sentences:
"If this [Mt. 5:29-30] is to be taken as a
'demand' of Jesus, then it must be said
that he is demanding the impossible, for
it is the universal experience that the
sexual impulses are uncontrollable. Like
Paul, we can 'delight in the law of God in
our inmost self,' and yet find 'another
law in our members, at war with the law
of our mind and making us captive to the
law of sin which dwells in our members'
(Rom. 7:22-23). There is surely an underlying thought here
that when we judge
others we condemn ourselves. We all
stand in need of God's forgiveness, and
we cannot hope to overcome the evil in us
but by divine grace" (Matthew, p. 152,
italics added).
Whatever He meant, Jesus was not teaching salvation by self
sacrifice. Jesus taught
that the sole condition of eternal salvation is
faith in Him alone (John 3:16; 6:47; 11:25-27). Salvation is not
of works; there is no
room for any boasting (Eph. 2:9; Titus 3:5).
There are several options which adopt a
Free Grace understanding of the text. I will
address those options next month.
Bob Wilkin is the
Executive Director of
Grace Evangelical
Society.
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