Today, I am reading and commenting on Matthew 25-26.
Chapter 25 contains three parables about getting into the kingdom of heaven. The first parable is about being prepared for the Day, despite not knowing when it will be. The second parable is about making use of every opportunity we have to serve God, and how the more we make use of those opportunities the more we have. The final one is about serving God through serving others. All three parables make closely related points. However, I want to look more closely at an aspect of the third parable that we usually only think about in a secondary manner. So, the third parable talks about feeding the hungry, clothing the naked, caring for the sick, and visiting those in prison. But what I want to focus on is the reply of both the sheep when they were told why they were being rewarded: “When did we do that?” They honestly did not remember doing the things which God was rewarding them for doing. Or, to be more precise: their thought when they had done these things was, “But that doesn’t count.” When I think about this, I think about a book I own about a village in France during WWII which saved thousands of Jews from the Nazis. After the war, several of the people in the village were asked why they did what they did. Their answer was, “When they came to my door, I just did what anyone would have done.” We know that that is not true. Most people throughout France did not do what they did. So, when you see people doing nice things for the homeless, or the sick, or the poor who would say, “Well, I just did what anyone would do,” you are seeing someone doing what Jesus said the sheep in this parable did. They did not do it for reward, they did it because they cared. Do we care?
I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.