Tuesday Oct 08, 2024
The Challenge of Wealth and Salvation: A Lesson from Jesus in Matthew 19
A) We pick it up in Matthew chapter 19, verse 23, where Jesus tells the disciples something that makes them absolutely astounded. He tells them it's very hard for a rich person to get into the kingdom of heaven.
B) It's important to break the story down into its components. The reason that Jesus talked about this was because rich people think that they are already blessed by God, so of course they're going to go to heaven. That's not only what they thought, but that's what the Pharisees taught—that money was a sign of God's blessing.
C) In our society, we still function under the idea that the quality of a person is on the outside and not the inside, which is contrary to what God said when referring to how He looks upon man. We look upon people with fame with great admiration and appreciation and wish we could almost be like them. But God doesn't want that for any one of us; He wants us to be like Jesus
D) Then Jesus blows their minds by saying it's easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich person to enter the kingdom of God. Let's just debunk the lie once and for all. This has nothing to do with a camel going through a certain gate of the wall in Jerusalem. There was never a mention in history until the 13th century.
E) When the disciples said, "Well then, how can anybody be saved?" Jesus responds with, "The only way a person can be saved is with God. With human beings, it's impossible, but with God, everything is possible." It takes a miracle for a person to be saved; it takes God for a person to be saved. It's even harder for rich people to let it all go, become saved, and lay up treasures in heaven. That's the fact, Jack.
**Takeaways:**
Jesus teaches that it is extremely difficult for a rich person to enter the kingdom of heaven, challenging common beliefs about wealth being a sign of God’s favor.
During that time, many believed, as taught by the Pharisees, that wealth signified God’s blessing and guaranteed entry into heaven. This mindset persists in modern society, where outward success and fame are often mistakenly equated with inner worth.
Jesus emphasizes that salvation is not about external appearances or material wealth but about becoming like Him, reflecting God’s values over worldly standards.
The metaphor of a camel passing through the eye of a needle is meant to show the impossibility of a rich person entering heaven by their own merit, dispelling myths about historical interpretations of this saying.
Ultimately, salvation is not something that can be achieved by human efforts alone. Jesus reminds the disciples that while it is impossible for people to save themselves, with God, all things—including salvation—are possible. It is a divine act of grace, requiring trust and dependence on God.
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