March 23rd 2025: Graham John

Acts 9:10-29.

            The ministry of encouragement is one of the most important ministries in the Christian Church. Everyone finds themselves at one time or another in need of encouragement. It is not just pastors, preachers, or Church officers who can exercise this work, for all Christians ought to be encouragers. Some may have a natural ability of enthusing others. For many this is not part of their natural makeup, but every Christian can develop this gift of encouragement. Perhaps you can look back over your Christian experience and point to others who have encouraged you along the way?

            God is described as “the Father of mercies and God of all comfort” by Paul (2Corinthians 1:3). The Holy Spirit is the One who ministers encouragement for He is described as the “Comforter” (John 14:216,26; 15:26; 16:7 – KJV), and He exercises this ministry of comfort or encouragement to believers (Acts 9:31). The gospel or good news is, of course, a comfort to needy sinners, If we want to be like the Lord then we ought to be encouragers. If we want to be godly people and Christlike, then it is imperative that we engage in a life of encouraging others, especially when there are great difficulties to be faced.

            We shall look at this ministry of encouragement under three headings.

[1] God’s high value on those whom He has redeemed.

            The Lord highly values His own people and their welfare. This is evident throughout Scripture, but perhaps supremely in the coming of Christ Jesus to save sinners. If God so values those whom He has saved, we too ought to set the same high value on believers.

            By nature the sinful man is proud, boastful, arrogant, idolatrous, selfish, greedy and so on, but with all of these characteristics we discover that God still sent His Son to die for us (Romans 5:8). In Romans 14 the apostle Paul speaks of how we ought to treat those who are “weak in the faith” (Romans 14:1). Towards the end of the chapter Paul wrote:

Yet if your brother is grieved because of your food, you are no longer walking in love. Do not destroy with your food the one for whom Christ died. (Romans 14:15).

If Christ gave up His life for the Church, even when each individual was still a sinner, we ought to hold our brethren “for whom Christ died” in high esteem. The basis for our ministry of encouragement, then, is the high value God placed on believers in sending His Son to die in their place.

            Let us seek to reproduce the love of God towards the brethren, not as a duty but on account of the love we have for God who first loved us. Are we willing to overlook past offences and forgive one another as Christ forgave us? Christ never asked: ‘are these for whom I am dying worthy of me’? Is Christ’s love for me transforming me to be a useful, loving, and kind believer? God has highly valued His people.

[2] The importance of Scripture in the ministry of encouragement.

            Paul wrote these words to the Romans:

For whatever things were written before were written for our learning, that we through the patience and comfort of the Scriptures might have hope. (Romans 15:4).

Of course Paul was referring to the Old Testament here but we are justified in applying them to the New Testament too. The Scriptures are given to us as a gift, but it does require us to put some effort into grasping them. Amongst many other themes and subjects, the Scriptures give as lessons about:

  • Christ, His person and work.
  • The unspeakable love of God.
  • The Kingdom of God and how we enter this and live within it.
  • The life of a disciple of Christ Jesus.

These eternal truths are the same for all ages and all cultures the world over. There are two points we need to make here concerning the importance of the Bible.

[a] The entire Bible is important.

            The text we quoted from Romans 15 tells us that whatever things were written,” and this leads us to the idea that all of Scripture is important for us. There are ‘less well know’ parts of Scripture that are often neglected. But all of the Bible is the inspired word, and every word that comes from God’s mouth is needed. In some of these ‘less well know’ parts are to be found great gems and pearls. A study of the temple and the tabernacle in its imagery is well worth making even if it takes time, for these speak supremely of Christ and His work. The history of Israel and her failures are worth the effort of study too, for in these we see our failure and rejoice in the One true Israelite who succeeded in keeping the Old Covenant on our behalf, (i.e. Christ Jesus). Some parts of the Bible are less clear than others. Undoubtedly some parts may be ‘weightier’ than others. The Lord Jesus reprimanded the Pharisees because in the zeal for detail, they had “neglected the weightier matters of the law: justice and mercy and faith” (Matthew 23:23). Whilst some parts need more time to study and digest, we dare not neglect these!

            I remember a communist man who was converted in his 90s. He was in a care home and often had visitors, but he was in the habit of asking them to leave him because they were taking up his valuable time in reading and studying Scripture! He was desperate to ensure he missed nothing and wanted to go through the whole Bible before he ran out of time! I also remember a Buddhist who was converted and began to read the Bible from Genesis, but we convinced Him to start at John’s gospel so he could discover the love of God in Christ first. These examples teach us that we need to be wise in our approach to Scripture, but we do need to consider it in its entirety. We need to change our attitude from ‘duty,’ to ‘delight’ for the Scriptures are God’s very word to us. Do we love Him? Then why would we not want to read all that He has said and written down?

[b] There is a practical purpose.

            We ought to have some pattern and policy to our reading and study. Make a plan to read and study all of Scripture. We need to be able to receive encouragement from others and we need to grow in dispensing encouragement too. The Scriptures will show us how. For example there are many places where we are taught to look beyond the current difficulties we face towards the glory to be revealed. We are exhorted by Paul to “comfort one another” with the words concerning Christ’s return (1Thessalonians 4:18).

[3] Barnabas – the ‘son of encouragement.’

            In Acts chapter 4 we come across a man named “Joseph” (he is called “Joses” in the NKJV but is the same name), who was a native of Cyprus and a Levite. This man sold some land he owned and gave the proceeds to the apostles so that those in need could be looked after (Acts 4:36,37). He was “named Barnabas by the apostles (which is translated Son of Encouragement)” (Acts 4:36). It is perhaps speculation, but it would seem that Barnabas’ action was not something done out of duty or simply through necessity, but was rather done from a heart full of love towards God. Barnabas gave freely not because he had to, but because of his love for the Lord. And this action motivated the apostles to give the name “Son of Encouragement.” Everything Barnabas owned was the Lord’s. Perhaps his Levitical upbringing helped here?

            Now the ministry of encouragement is much more than the passing on of words. It includes sharing our wealth, our time, our homes, and even our very lives. We next find reference to Barnabas in Acts 9 which we read earlier. He was the one who introduced Paul to the apostles in Jerusalem. Everyone else was suspicious of him because of his former reputation as a persecutor. The disciples at Jerusalem were afraid to welcome him because they thought he was going to revert to his persecuting ways. Many were not convinced of his genuineness. But Barnabas took him to the apostles and explained to them all about his conversion and the fact that he was now preaching Christ as the Son of God (Acts 9:27). Barnabas was bold enough to risk his own life and reputation by taking Paul, about whom many thought of still as a persecutor, and he recommended him to the apostles.

            Was anyone praying for Paul during those years of persecution I wonder? Were they guilty of thinking that Paul was such a person beyond redemption? He was a fierce enemy of the gospel and hounded Christians mercilessly. But were any moved to pray for him to be converted? Now Barnabas had such a high view of Christ’s saving power that Paul’s conversion was something that he accepted readily. Others may have had their suspicions but Barnabas knew that Christ could save even Paul. Barnabas also had such a high view of the Church and Christian Fellowship that he couldn’t allow the newly converted Paul to be ignored or feared and so he brought Paul to the apostles so that he could be accepted into the fellowship of believers. I wonder how much weaker would the Church have been if Barnabas did not do this? Barnabas could not know that Paul would be so important to the Church, nor that Paul would be responsible for a large part of the New Testament. We do not know where our ministry of encouragement to another believer will ultimately lead. Are we encouraging others as we seek to bring men, women, boys, and girls to Christ and His word?

February 9th 2025: Alan Davison

Luke 10:25-37

Introduction.

            It is a truism that we do not like to be inconvenienced. There are certain things in life which are dramatic and introduce great change. Things like redundancy, bereavement, terminal illness, grief and so on. But what about those things which are simply inconveniences? These irk us. Someone once said that “an itch is worse than a pain.” In many ways this parable that the Lord taught was something of an irritant to the lawyer’s world view. There are some things that are not too great an issue but which nevertheless irritate us and we cannot handle them.

            For our purposes we need to consider the whole context of this passage first before we focus on the text of Luke 19:25. In the secular world this parable of the Good Samaritan has come to stand for the act of doing good to others in need in a random fashion, or the doing of good deeds from a desire to be compassionate. But what the Lord was teaching goes much deeper than these basic views.

            In Luke 10:25 the lawyer asks the Lord Jesus: “what shall I do to inherit eternal life?” This man was a lawyer in Israel, and so was very much concerned with the Torah, the Law. Now the Lord Jesus sought to point the lawyer back to the Torah (verse 26). And then in response in verse 27 the lawyer quotes two passages, one from Deuteronomy 6:5 and the other from Leviticus 19:18:

You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your strength. (Deuteronomy 6:5).

… you shall love your neighbour as yourself: I am the Lord. (Leviticus 19:18b).

The Lord Jesus responded to this by saying “You have answered correctly; do this, and you will live,” (verse 28). Here is a classic statement of the covenant of works. To our minds it looks very much like a salvation by works. Right at the end of the parable the Lord Jesus adds these concluding words: “You go, and do likewise,” (verse 37). These things are impossible for fallen human beings to do. The only one who could keep the law in perfection was the Lord Jesus. So by emphasising the need for obedience to the law, the Lord Jesus was leading the lawyer to the point of realisation that he was incapable of keeping it and needed a Saviour.

            But knowing that he could not do these commands, the lawyer sought to “justify himself,” (verse 29), and so asks the question “and who is my neighbour?” (verse 29). He was, in effect, seeking a loophole. Something lower in standard that he could keep. By asking this question he wanted an escape route. If his neighbour could be defined in narrow terms then that would go a long way to him being able to keep these commands.

            One thing the lawyer knew well from his recollection of the law was that the two commands, to love the Lord wholeheartedly, and to love one’s neighbour as oneself, were inseparable. He probably thought that he was keeping the first commandment pretty well (i.e. to love God), by his observance of the ceremonial laws. But in order to “justify himself,” he wanted to narrow down the commandment to love his fellow man into something manageable.

Text focus.

            Now the text we shall consider is found in verse 25, which reads as follows:

And behold, a lawyer stood up to put him to the test, saying, “Teacher, what shall I do to inherit eternal life?”  (Luke 10:25).

For our purposes we shall home in on what the lawyer asks under three headings as follows:

[1] What shall I do?

[2] To inherit.

[3] Eternal life.

[1] What shall I do?

            This is the age old problem that mankind faces. What should I do? Well, the Lord made it very plain in the Old Testament, and especially in the Law, that there are certain over-arching rules which must be kept fully always. The book of Deuteronomy stresses this point and repeatedly states that obedience is required for blessing. The Israelites were to keep all the laws, statutes, and precepts, if they wanted to life in the land of promise and be blessed. God’s law is perfect, holy, good, spiritual, and right (see Romans 7). And it is incumbent upon all to do all that God requires (Micah 6:8).

            But the great problem is that no one can keep these laws. None have done so. Israel, given so much blessing and advantage by the Lord as His chosen vine failed repeatedly. We know from the New Testament that the law was added as a school master to lead us to Christ (Galatians 3:24,25). Its main purpose was to convict us of sin. By looking at the law, and by trying to keep it, in our failure we are brought to see our great need of mercy from the Lord. For the Christian the law is now a promise. It is no longer “thou shalt” as an imperative, but “thou will” as a promise. Through faith in Christ and His righteousness freely given by grace to us, we are enabled to live as Christ in this world. We are not perfect, but we press on and keep walking by faith in Him (Galatians 2:20). In this way the law is a blessing to the believer, for through it we see Christ, an in it we see how we can live by faith in Him.

            The priest and the Levite were very much concerned with keeping the ceremonial law. They were concerned that if they went to the wounded Jew they would become defiled and would no longer be able to minister. Their problem was that they had split the two great commandments into separate parts. They would have been made ceremonially unclean in handling the man, but there was provision in the law for them to become clean again. In treating the man they would have been keeping the second great commandment to love their neighbour. Perhaps they had limited their thoughts to the first great commandment saying ‘God must come first” but the Lord Jesus made it clear elsewhere that these two commandments (to love God and to love our neighbour) were actually inter-twinned and inseparable.

On these two commandments hang all the Law and the Prophets. (Matthew 22:40).

There is no other commandment greater than these. (Mark 12:31).

If we focus on one or the other, we are out of balance. When we love the Lord we ought as a consequence to love our fellow man. No man can truly love God if they hate or ignore their fellow man (1John 4:20). We must always be wary of diluting these commands, of bringing them down to our level so as to keep them in our own strength. Keeping these is only possible for us fallen human beings by faith in Christ and with the aid and power of the Holy Spirit.

            Now the priest and the Levite were keen to keep the law as best they could but they were only seeking to follow the letter of the law and not the heart or spirit of it. Samaritans were considered to be ‘mongrels’ by Jews. They were an impure mix of races and not pure Jews of the twelve tribes of Israel. They were also idolaters. Jeroboam I at the division of the kingdom of Israel instituted two false calves for the Israelites in the north to worship. But despite their mixture and their distorted practices, they still had access to the word of God. It is possible that the Lord Jesus was alluding to an incident recorded in 2Chronicles 28. In this chapter Israel had defeated Judah and had taken captive 200,000 “women, sons, and daughters,” together with “much spoil,” and brought them into Samaria (2Chronicles 28:8). These captives were going to be forced into slavery in Samaria. But then all of a sudden we read that a prophet called Oded came and spoke to the people at Samaria (2Chronicles 28:9).  He remonstrated with the people at Samaria who had wanted to make these captives into slaves (2Chronicles 28:10). Oded implored the people to return these captives because of the wrath of God which was upon them (2Chronicles 28:11). At this point some of leaders of Ephraim take this advice on board and declared that these captives were no to bring the captives into Samaria to be slaves (2Chronicles 28:12,13). Consequently the armed men (who presumably were guarding the captives) left the captives and the spoil “before the leaders and all the assembly” (2Chronicles 28:14). And then we read these words:

Then the men who were designated by name rose up and took the captives, and from the spoil they clothed all who were naked among them, dressed them and gave them sandals, gave them food and drink, and anointed them; and they let all the feeble ones ride on donkeys. So they brought them to their brethren at Jericho, the city of palm trees. Then they returned to Samaria. (2Chronicles 28:15).

Here we have an account of Samaritans aiding weak and troubled Jews. Just like the Good Samaritan in Jesus’ parable, they clothed them, dressed them, fed them, and even anointed them to tend to their needs. Note here that this action was all as a response to the word of God through the prophet Oded.

            It is possible, then, that our Samaritan in the parable was someone who depicted for us as having acted out of response to hearing God’s word. We do not have such in the text of Luke 10, but the text from 2Chronicles 28 leads us to think that the Lord intended this lawyer to think along these lines. It was God who motivated the good Samaritan.

[2] To inherit.

            It is interesting that the lawyer does not speak of earning or of gaining eternal life but refers instead to the idea of inheriting it. How does one inherit something? Well, it certainly does not come to a person by right, or through effort, or by means of works. An inheritance is a gift. It is something received and not earned. The key point (generally speaking) is that the one inheriting is somehow related to the donor or benefactor. Now believers inherit on account of their adoption into the family of God. Consider these words from Peter:

Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who according to His abundant mercy has begotten us again to a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead, to an inheritance incorruptible and undefiled and that does not fade away, reserved in heaven for you, who are kept by the power of God through faith for salvation ready to be revealed in the last time. (1Peter 1:3-5).

God the Father has begotten us again and has adopted us into His family to a living hope and to an inheritance described as being “incorruptible,” “undefiled,” which “does not fade away,” and which is “reserved in heaven” for us. It is a sure and certain inheritance. And we also learn too that we are “kept by the power of God through faith” for this inheritance. There is a sure and certain inheritance reserved for believers, and believers are kept or preserved for this too. All of grace!

[3] Eternal life.

            In one way or another humanity struggles with its mortality and hankers after eternal life in one form or another. Many in the secular world merely speak about their ‘legacy’ hoping that their name, achievements or fame may live on after they are gone. The Egyptians were keen on immortality and so they built impressive tombs for the afterlife. But the Bible has a very clear definition of eternal life. It is not just a matter of prolonging life on earth, but rather a quality of life. In John 10:10 the Lord speaks about coming to give life in “abundance.” A life that is over and above the norm and the experience of life here on earth. Resurrection life is much more than life perpetuated. New birth is the start of this eternal life. Our Lord and Saviour made reference to this the night before He died:

And this is eternal life, that they may know You, the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom You have sent.  (John 17:3).

Now the Samaritan spent some time with the wounded man and then after leaving told the inn keeper that he would return with further payment to cover all that was needed. He sought for the man not only to be tended, but to be healed, and to make a full recovery. Perhaps him telling the inn keeper that he would return was to ensure that the wounded man was properly cared for. It rather reminds us too of the Lord’s promise to return for us at His second coming. In the rescue and recovery of this wounded Jew we can see our salvation. It is noteworthy that the Lord Jesus was actually called a “Samaritan” by some (perhaps just before this parable) (John 8:48).

            The new born life is a life in Christ and expressive of Christ’s life (Galatians 2:20; Philippians 1:21). To smile when you have a hard time at work, or to not yell back when someone viciously berates you is of the way of Christ and His righteousness. These attitudes are not self-imposed or drummed up but come from the indwelling Spirit as we feed on Christ. A person who truly knows God and loves Him will live a life of pleasing and beauty. Again it is not by self but through faith in Christ and with the aid and power of the Holy Spirit.

            When the Lord concluded His parable He asks the lawyer: “Which of these three, do you think, proved to be a neighbour to the man who fell among the robbers?” (verse 36). The lawyer could not bring himself to say “the Samaritan,” but instead said “the one who showed him mercy” (verse 27). He accepted the parable, but only grudgingly. The Lord Jesus was saying to this lawyer: “you copy this good Samaritan.” Why? Well because he fulfilled the law. He loved God and out of his love for God he cared fully for the wounded man.

Conclusion.

            What shall we conclude? Looking at the lawyer and the Samaritan we see two different approaches. Both believed in God. Both wanted to honour the Lord. But the lawyer wanted to operate on his own terms, for he sought to “justify himself.” In contrast, the Samaritan demonstrated the life of God. In like manner we should love God wholeheartedly and show such devotion by loving all mankind and being a good neighbour to all we come across.