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The Choice is Yours!
Matthew 7:13-23
Introduction: 1) In the spring of 1977 I was faced with a choice that would impact
the course and direction of my life. I was invited by the baseball coach at the
Junior College I was attending to travel with the team throughout the summer in
Latin America as we would play daily double-headers seven days a week. As a
left-handed pitcher, I would be a valuable team member certain to see a lot of
action. However, I had begun to walk with the Lord again and had my heart set on
going on a 2 week mission trip in June/July to an Indian Reservation in Arizona.
Much to the dismay and disbelief of my baseball coach, I turned his offer down,
explaining my reason. Little could I have imagined at the time that it would be on
that mission trip that the Lord Jesus would call me into the gospel ministry. My
life was altered and changed forever by that choice, that decision.
2) Life is filled with choices, decisions, what are often called “forks in the road.”
The Bible recognizes this and speaks to it on several occasions.
Joshua 24:15 says choose which God/gods you will serve.
Psalm 1 says choose the way of the righteous or the way of the wicked.
Proverbs 15:19 says choose the way of the slacker or the way of the upright.
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And Deuteronomy 30:19-20 says, “I have set before you life and death, blessing
and curse. Choose life so that you and your descendants may live, love the Lord
your God, obey him, and remain faithful to him. For he is your life…”
3) Matthew 7:13-27 sets before us a series of choices, forks in the road that require
us to make important choices that will not only impact our life, they will impact
our eternity.
- Will you choose the difficult road and the narrow gate that leads to eternal
life or the broad road and the wide gate that leads to eternal destruction
(7:13-14)?
- Will you choose the good tree with good fruit or the bad tree with bad fruit
(7:15-20)?
- Will you choose a genuine confession marked by obedience or a false
profession marked by disobedience (7:21-23)?
- Will you be a wise man and choose to build on the rock solid foundation of
God’s word or will you be a fool and build on sand that will lead to your
destruction (7:24-27)? We will examine the first three in this study. We
will see that the choice is ours. We will see that we must choose wisely.
Much hangs in the balance.
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I. You must choose between the narrow gate that leads to life and the wide gate
that leads to destruction 7:13-14
A poem written by Sara Stowell nicely sets the stage for these verses.
“Forks in the Road”
“There will always be forks in the road,
Decisions that have to be made.
You will always have to bear the load,
Of each debt that has to be paid.
Every fork has a destination,
With consequences to each choice.
Be wary of Earthly temptation,
For it may have the loudest voice.
Other paths will intersect your own,
Other lives will feel its effect.
The aftermath may remain unknown,
With results you may not expect.
Be careful not to be led astray,
From the righteous course you once strode.
Only through Faith can you find your way,
When you reach the forks in the road.”
We have, in a sense, reached the climax of the Sermon on the Mount. Our
Lord’s teachings demand a response. Sitting idly by and trying to remain
neutral is not an option. Sitting on the fence will not work. Two paths, two
gates, stand before us. The one you choose has massive consequences.
1) The wide gate leads to eternal death 7:13
Jesus immediately shoots a command in our direction; “enter through the
narrow gate.” “Enter” is an imperative and calls for decisive and
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immediate action. That which we are to enter or “come into” is described
as “the narrow gate.” Verse 14 tells us it is the path that leads to eternal
life. The reason our Lord delivers such an urgent command is quickly
made plain. There is another gate and another road that leads in a
different direction and to a different destination. It leads to destruction,
to damnation. This gate is wide. This road is broad. “There are many
who go through it.”
The road that leads to the gate called destruction is large, attractive and
well-traveled (Carson, 123). Lots of people walk down it. It is very
attractive. It is the popular road, the well-known road. Ideologically, it
is not narrow in its thinking. It is open-minded. Morally, it is not
restrictive in its behavior. It has very few rules. Virtually, anything goes.
Spiritually, it is inclusive. There is a wide highway to heaven. Take the
left, take the right, or stay in the middle. We are all headed to the same
place its signs tell us.
This road is not new. It has been around a long time. You find its origin
in the Garden of Eden when Satan said to Adam and Eve, “trust me
rather than God.” Solomon warned his son of it in Proverbs 1:10-16.
The words there are striking and ominous. We ignore them at our own
peril. “My son, if sinners entice you, don’t be persuaded. If they say –
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“Come with us! Let’s set an ambush and kill someone. Let’s attack some
innocent person just for fun! Let’s swallow them alive, like Sheol, whole
like those who go down to the Pit. We’ll find all kinds of valuable
property and fill our houses with plunder. Throw in your lot with us, and
we’ll all share the loot” – my son, don’t travel that road with them or set
foot on their path, because their feet run toward evil and they hurry to
shed blood.” But, don’t neglect verse 18, “but they set an ambush to kill
themselves; they attack their own lives.”
Those on the broad road say, “All aboard!” They say, “Come join the
party.” Little do they consider this road is a dead end of eternal
destruction. They are, as Solomon warns, setting their own eternal
ambush.
2) The narrow gate leads to eternal life 7:14
Jesus calls us to walk the road less traveled. He calls us to pursue the
narrow gate and the “difficult road.” Why? Two reasons are given.
First, this road leads to a gate called eternal life. Second, because this
road is difficult, “few find it.”
There is no universalism in the teachings of the Bible. Not everyone is
going to be saved. There are not many roads that lead to heaven. Just
consider the words of Jesus, Peter, and Paul.
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John [Link] “Jesus told him, “I am the way, the truth, and the life. No one
comes to the Father except through me.”
Acts [Link] “There is salvation in no one else, for there is no other name
under heaven given to people by which we must be saved.”
1 Timothy [Link] “For there is one God and one mediator between God and
humanity, the man Christ Jesus.”
Jesus is crystal clear in His teachings. The way to God is exclusive and
restrictive. There is only one way, one road. The road that follows
Christ is a road that is difficult and will involve suffering and persecution
(cf. 5:10-12), but it is a road that takes us to a gate called eternal life. It
is a road that can cause us to doubt and even despair if we get our eyes
off the end game, if we lost sight of how it will all turn out. Sinclair
Ferguson points out the wisdom of Psalm 73, a psalm of Asaph, at this
point (p. 164). It is worth reading its 28 verses: “God is indeed good to
Israel, to the pure in heart. But as for me, my feet almost slipped; my
steps nearly went astray. For I envied the arrogant; I saw the prosperity
of the wicked. They have an easy time until they die, and their bodies are
well fed. They are not in trouble like others; they are not afflicted like
most people. Therefore, pride is their necklace, and violence covers them
like a garment. Their eyes bulge out from fatness; the imaginations of
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their hearts run wild. They mock, and they speak maliciously; they
arrogantly threaten oppression. They set their mouths against heaven,
and their tongues strut across the earth. Therefore his people turn to them
and drink in their overflowing words. The wicked say, “How can God
know? Does the Most High know everything?” Look at them – the
wicked! They are always at ease, and they increase their wealth. Did I
purify my heart and wash my hands in innocence for nothing? For I am
afflicted all day long and punished every morning. If I had decided to
say these things aloud, I would have betrayed your people. When I tried
to understand all this, it seemed hopeless until I entered God’s sanctuary.
Then I understood their destiny. Indeed, you put them in slippery places;
you make them fall into ruin. How suddenly they become a desolation!
They come to an end, swept away by terrors. Like one waking from a
dream, Lord, when arising, you will despise their image. When I became
embittered and my innermost being was wounded, I was stupid and
didn’t understand; I was an unthinking animal toward you. Yet I am
always with you; you hold my right hand. You guide me with your
counsel, and afterward you will take me up in glory. Who do I have in
heaven but you? And I desire nothing on earth but you. My flesh and
my heart may fail, but God is the strength of my heart, my portion
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forever. Those far from you will certainly perish; you destroy all who are
unfaithful to you. But as for me, God’s presence is my good. I have
made the Lord God my refuge, so I can tell about all you do.”
There are those who “will certainly perish.” There are those who will
discover “God’s presence is my good.” It’s that road I want to be on. It
is that road we find our Jesus on.
II. You must choose between the good tree that produces good fruit or the bad tree
that produces bad fruit 7:15-20
Jesus now moves the discussion from the path of destruction to teachers of
destruction, False prophets He calls wolves in sheep’s clothing (v. 15). Just
as it matters greatly what spiritual and moral road we travel, it also matters
greatly what spiritual teachers we listen to and what moral guides we follow.
Looks can be deceiving so we must pay close attention. Jesus tells us to 1)
watch how they act towards God’s people and 2) examine the fruit of their
teaching. In the end, these false prophets will be exposed as those who
walked on the broad road that leads to eternal destruction.
Before examining verses 15-20 we should note the New Testament
repeatedly addresses the danger of false teachers. Jesus will do it again in
Matthew 24:23-26. Paul will do it in Acts 20:28-30, 2 Cor. 11:3-4, 12-15,
and 2 Timothy 3:1-9. Peter will do it in 2 Peter 2:1-22. John will do it in 1
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John 2:18-23 and 4:1-6 and 2 John 7-11. Jude will dedicate his short 25
verse book to the subject.
False teachers produce bad fruit. We need to be careful from which trees we
pick our fruit! Three principles are provided to help us pick well.
1) False teachers are deceptive 7:15
Jesus once again fires off a command in our direction, “Be on your guard
against false prophets.” Be on guard is a present imperative. It means to
pay attention, be on the alert. Keep your spiritual guard up. Why?
Because the devil also has his prophets, “false prophets.” However, and
this is crucial, they do not come fully exposed and transparent in their
intentions. Rather, they dress themselves up like us, coming in “sheep’s
clothing.” But, remember! “Be on your guard.” In reality they are not
sheep. Get past the façade and the surface and you will find “ravaging
wolves.” Spurgeon well says, “Sheep’s clothing is all very fine, but we
must look beneath it and spy out the wolves” (Matthew, 74). Carson
likewise is helpful when he writes, “the false prophet can only be
someone who does not advocate the narrow way presented by
Jesus…They do not tell the whole truth, and their total message is false”
(Sermon on the Mount, 127-28). Disciples of Jesus must never let their
spiritual guard down. They must be spiritually discerning, testing every
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teaching by the gospel of Jesus Christ and the Word of God. Eloquent
speech is not the issue. Faithfulness to the Bible is!
2) False teachers can be detected 7:16-18
Quarles notes, “False teachers disguise themselves as Jesus’ disciples
in order to live undetected among the sheep of the flock and thus
devour the sheep with great ease” (322). However, the wolves need
not succeed. Jesus tells us we can “recognize them by their fruit.” He
then provides a contrasting illustration to make His point.
- Grapes come from grapevines not thorn bushes.
- Figs come from fig trees not thistles.
- Good fruit comes from good trees not bad trees.
- Bad fruit comes from bad trees not good trees.
- Good teaching comes from true prophets not false prophets.
- False teaching comes from false prophets not true prophets. Got it?
I believe there are two essential tests that will expose false teachers,
wolves in sheep’s clothing that work to slip into our communities of
faith. There is the doctrinal test and the practical test. The doctrinal
test: do their teachings line up with the gospel of Jesus Christ that
salvation is by grace alone, through faith alone? Do they avoid the
deadly mathematics of false teachers who add to the Bible, subtract
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from the person and work of Christ, multiply the requirements of
salvation and divide the people of God by a divisive and destructive
spirit? The practical test: are they antinomians on the one hand or
legalists on the other? Do they throw off all constraint to the extreme
or do they seek to shackle us with legalistic obligations that are
suffocating? Pay attention! Rotten fruit will expose a rotten teacher!
3) False teachers will be destroyed 7:19-20
The destiny of false prophets is a signed, sealed and settled reality. They
do not produce good fruit. Their end? They are “cut down and thrown
into the fire.” The words of our Lord echo those of his cousin John the
Baptist in Matthew 3:10 where he says, “The ax is already at the root of
the trees. Therefore, every tree that doesn’t produce good fruit will be
cut down and thrown into the fire.” False prophets are on the broad road
to hell. Those who follow them will face the same fate, the same eternal
destiny. This is the word of God not ours. The responsibility we bear is
found in verse 20, “So you’ll recognize them by their fruit.” Daniel
Doriani is right, “Many may deceive for a time, but words and deeds
eventually reveal where the heart lies…. No one evades God’s justice
forever. Bad trees, trees that bear no fruit, are cut down and thrown into
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the fire (7:19). But it is not enough to examine others. We must watch
ourselves as well” (Matthew, REC, 299-300).
III. You must choose between the genuine confession of the obedient or the
false profession of the disobedient 7:21-23
These are some of the most terrifying verses in all of the Bible. They follow
quite naturally from verses 13-20. I tremble every time I read them. To
think I could say “Jesus is my Lord” and to hear him respond to me, “I never
knew you.” To think that I could preach and even do miracles in his name
and have Him say to me on the Day of Judgement, “Depart from me, you
who work lawlessness.” These words should send shivers down our spine
and cause our heart to skip a beat. They should drive us to ask not, “Do I
know Jesus?” but instead to ask, “Does Jesus know me?!”
The idea of true lordship dominates the passage as the word “Lord” appears
4 times in two couplets. Jesus will make a clear distinction between a false
profession and a genuine confession. He will provide an ironclad, rock solid
test to distinguish between the two. Again, all that is at stake is ones eternal
destiny!
1) We give evidence that we know Him by our obedience 7:21
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Jesus begins with a surprising and even startling statement in verse
21, “Not everyone who says to me, “Lord, Lord,” will enter the
Kingdom of heaven.” Now, it is important to note that Jesus does not
say that our profession of Him as our Lord is unimportant. Scripture
makes crystal that our confession of Jesus as Lord is very important!
Paul says in Romans 10:9 that, “If you confess with your mouth,
“Jesus is Lord,” and believe in your heart that God raised him from
the dead, you will be saved.” And Paul says in 1 Corinthians 12:3 that,
“no one can say, ‘Jesus is Lord,’ except by the Holy Spirit.” (cf. also
Phil 2:9-11). The implication is that by the Spirit’s enablement we
can truly and authentically declare Jesus is Lord and that this is an
evidence of authentic Christianity.
But, Jesus wants us to understand we can profess Christ as Lord
without knowing Christ as Lord. It is possible, and some do, to
profess Christ as Lord and yet that profession is deemed false and
inauthentic by the only one who matters, Jesus Himself.
What is the litmus test that must accompany one’s profession of faith?
The answer is this: a transformed and obedience life. The one who
“will enter the kingdom of heaven” is the one who: 1) professes Jesus
as Lord and 2) “does the will of my Father in heaven.” Obedience is
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an evidence, a confirmation, that a profession of Christ is true, that it
is real. Spurgeon says it so well “An orthodox creed will not save if it
stands alone... without personal holiness, the caster-out of devils will
be cast out himself. . . .Nothing will prove us to be true Christians but
a sincere doing of the Father’s will” (Spurgeon, Matthew, 76).
2) We give evidence that we do not know Him by our disobedience
7:22-23
Three times in verses 22-23 the false professors declare that we did
what we did “in your name.” Standing before God in eschatological
judgment, “On that day,” they will declare: 1) “We prophesied in your
name, 2) we drove out demons in your name, and 3) we did many
miracles in your name.” Nevertheless, they will hear from the One
they called Lord, “I never knew you. Depart from me, you
lawbreakers.” (cf. Ps. 6:8). The word “lawbreakers” (Gr. anomia)
connects back to the idea that they failed to do “the will of my Father
in heaven.”
Once more we are confronted with what I call “demon faith” (cf.
James 2:19). There is an orthodox confession and even an impressive
spiritual resume as judged by men. God, however, sees things in a
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completely different light. He sees us as we truly are. Don Carson
brings a helpful perspective on all of this when he writes,
“It is true, of course, that no man enters the kingdom because of
his obedience; but it is equally true that no man enters the
kingdom who is not obedient. It is true that men are saved by
God’s grace through faith in Christ; but it is equally true that
God’s grace in a man’s life inevitably results in obedience. Any
other view of grace cheapens grace, and turns it into something
unrecognizable. Cheap grace preaches forgiveness without
repentance, church membership without rigorous church
discipline, discipleship without obedience, blessing without
persecution, joy without righteousness, results without obedience.
In the entire history of the church, has there ever been another
generation with so many nominal Christians and so few real (i.e.,
obedient) ones? And where nominal Christianity is compounded
by spectacular profession, it is especially likely to manufacture
its own false assurance.” (Sermon on the Mount, 131).
Quarles insightfully adds, “Just as false prophets were ravenous
wolves who disguised themselves as sheep, some goats (25:31-46)
[attempt] to masquerade as sheep as well” (p. 330).
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Conclusion: These verses teach us how imperative, how important, it is to stay
close to Jesus, to know Him, love Him and obey Him. When you and I consider
the road to walk, we must remember Jesus is the way and no one comes to the
Father but by Him (John 14:6). When you and I consider the two gates that opens
before us two eternal destinies, we must remember Jesus is “the gate for the sheep”
(John 10:7). As the Lord, Himself promises, “I am the gate. If anyone enters by
me, he will be saved…” (John 10:9). When you and I consider the teachers we
will follow and who we can trust to give us the words of eternal life, we must heed
the words of the apostle Peter who said to Jesus, “Lord, to whom will we go? You
have the words of eternal life. We have come to believe and know that you are the
Holy One of God” (John 6:68-69). And, when it comes to the essential wedding of
our confession and obedience, we will daily recall the words of our Savior in John
14:15, “If you love me, you will keep my commands.” Life is truly filled with
choices, with decisions we must make. May we always choose Jesus. It is
absolutely certain, we will never be let down or disappointed.