Chapter 28Levi-Matthew
OF the Roman officials in Palestine, none were more hated than the
publicans. The fact that the taxes were imposed by a foreign power was a
continual irritation to the Jews, being a reminder that their
independence had departed. And the tax gatherers were not merely the
instruments of Roman oppression; they were extortioners on their own
account, enriching themselves at the expense of the people. A Jew who
accepted this office at the hands of the Romans was looked upon as
betraying the honor of his nation. He was despised as an apostate, and
was classed with the vilest of society.
To this class belonged Levi-Matthew, who, after the four disciples at
Gennesaret, was the next to be called to Christ's service. The Pharisees
had judged Matthew according to his employment, but Jesus saw in this
man a heart open for the reception of truth. Matthew had listened to the
Saviour's teaching. As the convicting Spirit of God revealed his
sinfulness, he longed to seek help from Christ; but he was accustomed to
the exclusiveness of the rabbis, and had no thought that this Great
Teacher would notice him. Sitting at his toll booth one day, the
publican saw Jesus approaching. Great was his astonishment to hear the
words addressed to himself, "Follow Me." Matthew "left all, rose up, and
followed Him." There was no hesitation, no questioning, no thought of
the lucrative business to be exchanged for poverty and hardship. It was
enough for him that he was to be with Jesus, that he might listen to His
words, and unite with Him in His work.
So it was with the disciples previously called. When Jesus bade Peter
and his companions follow Him, immediately they left their boats and
nets. Some of these disciples had friends dependent on them for support;
but when they received the Saviour's invitation, they did not hesitate,
and inquire, How shall I live, and sustain my family? They were obedient
to the call; and when afterward Jesus asked them, "When I sent you
without purse, and scrip, and shoes, lacked ye anything?" they could
answer, "Nothing." Luke 22:35.
To Matthew in his wealth, and to Andrew and Peter in their poverty,
the same test was brought; the same consecration was made by each. At
the moment of success, when the nets were filled with fish, and the
impulses of the old life were strongest, Jesus asked the disciples at
the sea to leave all for the work of the gospel. So every soul is tested
as to whether the desire for temporal good or for fellowship with Christ
is strongest.
Principle is always exacting. No man can succeed in the service of
God unless his whole heart is in the work and he counts all things but
loss for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ. No man who makes any
reserve can be the disciple of Christ, much less can he be His colaborer.
When men appreciate the great salvation, the self-sacrifice seen in
Christ's life will be seen in theirs. Wherever He leads the way, they
will rejoice to follow.
The calling of Matthew to be one of Christ's disciples excited great
indignation. For a religious teacher to choose a publican as one of his
immediate attendants was an offense against the religious, social, and
national customs. By appealing to the prejudices of the people the
Pharisees hoped to turn the current of popular feeling against Jesus.
Among the publicans a widespread interest was created. Their hearts
were drawn toward the divine Teacher. In the joy of his new
discipleship, Matthew longed to bring his former associates to Jesus.
Accordingly he made a feast at his own house, and called together his
relatives and friends. Not only were publicans included, but many others
who were of doubtful reputation, and were proscribed by their more
scrupulous neighbors.
The entertainment was given in honor of Jesus, and He did not
hesitate to accept the courtesy. He well knew that this would give
offense to the Pharisaic party, and would also compromise Him in the
eyes of the people. But no question of policy could influence His
movements. With Him external distinctions weighed nothing. That which
appealed to His heart was a soul thirsting for the water of life.
Jesus sat as an honored guest at the table of the publicans, by His
sympathy and social kindliness showing that He recognized the dignity of
humanity; and men longed to become worthy of His confidence. Upon their
thirsty hearts His words fell with blessed, life-giving power. New
impulses were awakened, and the possibility of a new life opened to
these outcasts of society.
At such gatherings as this, not a few were impressed by the Saviour's
teaching who did not acknowledge Him until after His ascension. When the
Holy Spirit was poured out, and three thousand were converted in a day,
there were among them many who first heard the truth at the table of the
publicans, and some of these became messengers of the gospel. To Matthew
himself the example of Jesus at the feast was a constant lesson. The
despised publican became one of the most devoted evangelists, in his own
ministry following closely in his Master's steps.
When the rabbis learned of the presence of Jesus at Matthew's feast,
they seized the opportunity of accusing Him. But they chose to work
through the disciples. By arousing their prejudices they hoped to
alienate them from their Master. It was their policy to accuse Christ to
the disciples, and the disciples to Christ, aiming their arrows where
they would be most likely to wound. This is the way in which Satan has
worked ever since the disaffection in heaven; and all who try to cause
discord and alienation are actuated by his spirit.
"Why eateth your Master with publicans and sinners?" questioned the
envious rabbis.
Jesus did not wait for His disciples to answer the charge, but
Himself replied: "They that be whole need not a physician, but they that
are sick. But go ye and learn what that meaneth, I will have mercy, and
not sacrifice: for I am not come to call the righteous, but sinners to
repentance." The Pharisees claimed to be spiritually whole, and
therefore in no need of a physician, while they regarded the publicans
and Gentiles as perishing from diseases of the soul. Then was it not His
work, as a physician, to go to the very class that needed His help?
But although the Pharisees thought so highly of themselves, they were
really in a worse condition than the ones they despised. The publicans
were less bigoted and self-sufficient, and thus were more open to the
influence of truth. Jesus said to the rabbis, "Go ye and learn what that
meaneth, I will have mercy, and not sacrifice." Thus He showed that
while they claimed to expound the word of God, they were wholly ignorant
of its spirit.
The Pharisees were silenced for the time, but only became more
determined in their enmity. They next sought out the disciples of John
the Baptist, and tried to set them against the Saviour. These Pharisees
had not accepted the mission of the Baptist. They had pointed in scorn
to his abstemious life, his simple habits, his coarse garments, and had
declared him a fanatic. Because he denounced their hypocrisy, they had
resisted his words, and had tried to stir up the people against him. The
Spirit of God had moved upon the hearts of these scorners, convicting
them of sin; but they had rejected the counsel of God, and had declared
that John was possessed of a devil.
Now when Jesus came mingling with the people, eating and drinking at
their tables, they accused Him of being a glutton and a winebibber. The
very ones who made this charge were themselves guilty. As God is
misrepresented, and clothed by Satan with his own attributes, so the
Lord's messengers were falsified by these wicked men.
The Pharisees would not consider that Jesus was eating with publicans
and sinners in order to bring the light of heaven to those who sat in
darkness. They would not see that every word dropped by the divine
Teacher was a living seed that would germinate and bear fruit to the
glory of God. They had determined not to accept the light; and although
they had opposed the mission of the Baptist, they were now ready to
court the friendship of his disciples, hoping to secure their
co-operation against Jesus. They represented that Jesus was setting at
nought the ancient traditions; and they contrasted the austere piety of
the Baptist with the course of Jesus in feasting with publicans and
sinners.
The disciples of John were at this time in great sorrow. It was
before their visit to Jesus with John's message. Their beloved teacher
was in prison, and they passed their days in mourning. And Jesus was
making no effort to release John, and even appeared to cast discredit on
his teaching. If John had been sent by God, why did Jesus and His
disciples pursue a course so widely different?
The disciples of John had not a clear understanding of Christ's work;
they thought there might be some foundation for the charges of the
Pharisees. They observed many of the rules prescribed by the rabbis, and
even hoped to be justified by the works of the law. Fasting was
practiced by the Jews as an act of merit, and the most rigid among them
fasted two days in every week. The Pharisees and John's disciples were
fasting when the latter came to Jesus with the inquiry, "Why do we and
the Pharisees fast oft, but Thy disciples fast not?"
Very tenderly Jesus answered them. He did not try to correct their
erroneous conception of fasting, but only to set them right in regard to
His own mission. And He did this by employing the same figure that the
Baptist himself had used in his testimony to Jesus. John had said, "He
that hath the bride is the bridegroom: but the friend of the bridegroom,
which standeth and heareth him, rejoiceth greatly because of the
bridegroom's voice: this my joy therefore is fulfilled." John 3:29. The
disciples of John could not fail to recall these words of their teacher,
as, taking up the illustration, Jesus said, "Can ye make the children of
the bridechamber fast, while the bridegroom is with them?"
The Prince of heaven was among His people. The greatest gift of God
had been given to the world. Joy to the poor; for Christ had come to
make them heirs of His kingdom. Joy to the rich; for He would teach them
how to secure eternal riches. Joy to the ignorant; He would make them
wise unto salvation. Joy to the learned; He would open to them deeper
mysteries than they had ever fathomed; truths that had been hidden from
the foundation of the world would be opened to men by the Saviour's
mission.
John the Baptist had rejoiced to behold the Saviour. What occasion
for rejoicing had the disciples who were privileged to walk and talk
with the Majesty of heaven! This was not a time for them to mourn and
fast. They must open their hearts to receive the light of His glory,
that they might shed light upon those who sat in darkness and in the
shadow of death.
It was a bright picture which the words of Christ had called up, but
across it lay a heavy shadow, which His eye alone discerned. "The days
will come," He said, "when the bridegroom shall be taken away from them,
and then shall they fast in those days." When they should see their Lord
betrayed and crucified, the disciples would mourn and fast. In His last
words to them in the upper chamber, He said, "A little while, and ye
shall not see Me: and again, a little while, and ye shall see Me.
Verily, verily, I say unto you, That ye shall weep and lament, but the
world shall rejoice: and ye shall be sorrowful, but your sorrow shall be
turned into joy." John 16:19, 20.
When He should come forth from the tomb, their sorrow would be turned
to joy. After His ascension He was to be absent in person; but through
the Comforter He would still be with them, and they were not to spend
their time in mourning. This was what Satan wanted. He desired them to
give the world the impression that they had been deceived and
disappointed; but by faith they were to look to the sanctuary above,
where Jesus was ministering for them; they were to open their hearts to
the Holy Spirit, His representative, and to rejoice in the light of His
presence. Yet days of temptation and trial would come, when they would
be brought into conflict with the rulers of this world, and the leaders
of the kingdom of darkness; when Christ was not personally with them,
and they failed to discern the Comforter, then it would be more fitting
for them to fast.
The Pharisees sought to exalt themselves by their rigorous observance
of forms, while their hearts were filled with envy and strife. "Behold,"
says the Scripture, "ye fast for strife and debate, and to smite with
the fist of wickedness: ye shall not fast as ye do this day, to make
your voice to be heard on high. Is it such a fast that I have chosen? a
day for a man to afflict his soul? is it to bow down his head as a
bulrush, and to spread sackcloth and ashes under him? wilt thou call
this a fast, and an acceptable day to the Lord?" Isa. 58:4, 5.
The true fast is no mere formal service. The Scripture describes the
fast that God has chosen,--"to loose the bands of wickedness, to undo
the heavy burdens, and to let the oppressed go free, and that ye break
every yoke;" to "draw out thy soul to the hungry, and satisfy the
afflicted soul." Isa. 58:6, 10. Here is set forth the very spirit and
character of the work of Christ. His whole life was a sacrifice of
Himself for the saving of the world. Whether fasting in the wilderness
of temptation or eating with the publicans at Matthew's feast, He was
giving His life for the redemption of the lost. Not in idle mourning, in
mere bodily humiliation and multitudinous sacrifices, is the true spirit
of devotion manifested, but it is shown in the surrender of self in
willing service to God and man.
Continuing His answer to the disciples of John, Jesus spoke a
parable, saying, "No man putteth a piece of a new garment upon an old;
if otherwise, then both the new maketh a rent, and the piece that was
taken out of the new agreeth not with the old." The message of John the
Baptist was not to be interwoven with tradition and superstition. An
attempt to blend the pretense of the Pharisees with the devotion of John
would only make more evident the breach between them.
Nor could the principles of Christ's teaching be united with the
forms of Pharisaism. Christ was not to close up the breach that had been
made by the teachings of John. He would make more distinct the
separation between the old and the new. Jesus further illustrated this
fact, saying, "No man putteth new wine into old bottles; else the new
wine will burst the bottles, and be spilled, and the bottles shall
perish." The skin bottles which were used as vessels to contain the new
wine, after a time became dry and brittle, and were then worthless to
serve the same purpose again. In this familiar illustration Jesus
presented the condition of the Jewish leaders. Priests and scribes and
rulers were fixed in a rut of ceremonies and traditions. Their hearts
had become contracted, like the dried-up wine skins to which He had
compared them. While they remained satisfied with a legal religion, it
was impossible for them to become the depositaries of the living truth
of heaven. They thought their own righteousness all-sufficient, and did
not desire that a new element should be brought into their religion. The
good will of God to men they did not accept as something apart from
themselves. They connected it with their own merit because of their good
works. The faith that works by love and purifies the soul could find no
place for union with the religion of the Pharisees, made up of
ceremonies and the injunctions of men. The effort to unite the teachings
of Jesus with the established religion would be vain. The vital truth of
God, like fermenting wine, would burst the old, decaying bottles of the
Pharisaical tradition.
The Pharisees thought themselves too wise to need instruction, too
righteous to need salvation, too highly honored to need the honor that
comes from Christ. The Saviour turned away from them to find others who
would receive the message of heaven. In the untutored fishermen, in the
publican at the market place, in the woman of Samaria, in the common
people who heard Him gladly, He found His new bottles for the new wine.
The instrumentalities to be used in the gospel work are those souls who
gladly receive the light which God sends them. These are His agencies
for imparting the knowledge of truth to the world. If through the grace
of Christ His people will become new bottles, He will fill them with new
wine.
The teaching of Christ, though it was represented by the new wine,
was not a new doctrine, but the revelation of that which had been taught
from the beginning. But to the Pharisees the truth of God had lost its
original significance and beauty. To them Christ's teaching was new in
almost every respect, and it was unrecognized and unacknowledged.
Jesus pointed out the power of false teaching to destroy the
appreciation and desire for truth. "No man," He said, "having drunk old
wine straightway desireth new: for he saith, The old is better." All the
truth that has been given to the world through patriarchs and prophets
shone out in new beauty in the words of Christ. But the scribes and
Pharisees had no desire for the precious new wine. Until emptied of the
old traditions, customs, and practices, they had no place in mind or
heart for the teachings of Christ. They clung to the dead forms, and
turned away from the living truth and the power of God.
It was this that proved the ruin of the Jews, and it will prove the
ruin of many souls in our own day. Thousands are making the same mistake
as did the Pharisees whom Christ reproved at Matthew's feast. Rather
than give up some cherished idea, or discard some idol of opinion, many
refuse the truth which comes down from the Father of light. They trust
in self, and depend upon their own wisdom, and do not realize their
spiritual poverty. They insist on being saved in some way by which they
may perform some important work. When they see that there is no way of
weaving self into the work, they reject the salvation provided.
A legal religion can never lead souls to Christ; for it is a
loveless, Christless religion. Fasting or prayer that is actuated by a
self-justifying spirit is an abomination in the sight of God. The solemn
assembly for worship, the round of religious ceremonies, the external
humiliation, the imposing sacrifice, proclaim that the doer of these
things regards himself as righteous, and as entitled to heaven; but it
is all a deception. Our own works can never purchase salvation.
As it was in the days of Christ, so it is now; the Pharisees do not
know their spiritual destitution. To them comes the message, "Because
thou sayest, I am rich, and increased with goods, and have need of
nothing; and knowest not that thou art wretched, and miserable, and
poor, and blind, and naked: I counsel thee to buy of Me gold tried in
the fire, that thou mayest be rich; and white raiment, that thou mayest
be clothed, and that the shame of thy nakedness do not appear." Rev.
3:17, 18. Faith and love are the gold tried in the fire. But with many
the gold has become dim, and the rich treasure has been lost. The
righteousness of Christ is to them as a robe unworn, a fountain
untouched. To them it is said, "I have somewhat against thee, because
thou hast left thy first love. Remember therefore from whence thou art
fallen, and repent, and do the first works; or else I will come unto
thee quickly, and will remove thy candlestick out of his place, except
thou repent." Rev. 2:4, 5.
"The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit: a broken and a contrite
heart, O God, Thou wilt not despise." Ps. 51:17. Man must be emptied of
self before he can be, in the fullest sense, a believer in Jesus. When
self is renounced, then the Lord can make man a new creature. New
bottles can contain the new wine. The love of Christ will animate the
believer with new life. In him who looks unto the Author and Finisher of
our faith the character of Christ will be manifest
.