Reading: Luke
12:1-12
In our modern communities we often see
warnings. Places are dangerous, so we are
commanded to keep out, or medicines are
dangerous, so we are warned not to exceed the
prescribed dose or that some medicaments are not
to be taken internally, etc. All sensible people
take due notice of
such warnings of danger and act accordingly, but
strangely enough Christians tend not to take
some of the warnings of Scripture seriously,
even though it is the Lord Jesus Himself who
cries, "Beware".
In this
instance the Lord was surrounded by eager
crowds, but it was to His disciples that He
spoke, "First of all, Beware of the leaven of
the Pharisees which is hypocrisy". Here, then,
is a solemn warning of danger which the Lord
directs to all of us who are disciples. We may
be surprised that such a warning was directed
especially to them. Were they more in danger of
becoming hypocrites than the general mass of
people? Yes indeed they were! And so are we!
Especially when we imagine ourselves to be
exempt from this sin. Perhaps it is just because
we regard ourselves as out of danger that we can
be caught in this snare.
In fact
a good deal is said in the New Testament about
hypocrisy, so the matter must be important. The
Lord Jesus seems to have been more severe about
this sin than about most others. He called it "the leaven of the
Pharisees", presumably to stress how hypocrisy
permeated everything they said or did, even in
those matters in which they appealed to be so
pious and sincere. Hypocrisy is a secret sin
which can spread its influence in ways which are
not readily detected. The disciples were being
warned about a special kind of hypocrisy, for in
the original it reads: "Beware of the leaven of
the Pharisees which is the hypocrisy". The Lord
was speaking about religious hypocrisy. Just as
the principle of sin is more than just outward
acts of sinfulness, so hypocrisy is more than
what might be obvious. It is a power, just as
sin is a power. And as every sinner is a slave
of sin, so every hypocrite is a slave of
hypocrisy, though often quite unaware of his
bondage. The sinner thinks only of sin as a
moral concept, not realising that it is a
spiritual power. In the same way, the hypocrite
thinks only of hypocrisy as of a moral concept
and does not suspect that it is also a spiritual
power. He thinks that hypocrisy is putting on a
show of godliness, making out that one is what
one is not, but the subsequent words of the Lord
Jesus reveal that there is much more to it than
this.
Having
given the warning to His disciples, the Lord
Jesus went on to say: "There is nothing covered
up that shall not be revealed... what you have
spoken in the ear in the inner chambers shall be
proclaimed upon the housetops" (verses 2-3). At
first glance these words do not seem difficult
to understand, for the Lord was warning against
that kind of hypocrisy which we all detest,
whispering bad things about people in so called
'confidences' while speaking smoothly to the
faces of those concerned. That is all too
common, but it is easy to understand. What is
more difficult in this context is the warning
which follows. Having said that a day will come
when He will bring all those secret evils into
the light, He continues: "I say unto you my
friends, Be not afraid of them which kill the
body, and after that have no more that they can
do. But I will warn you whom you shall fear;
Fear Him which... hath power to cast into
Gehenna; yes, I say unto you, Fear him" (verses
4-5).
Here are
two safeguards about hypocrisy. The first is
that in the light of the coming disclosures we
should fear ourselves, but the second is the
suggestion that we shall be protected from
hypocrisy if we truly fear God.
Why
should we fear ourselves? Because it is all too
possible to seek to defend God's interests with
a mind which is contrary to the mind of God.
This is indeed the leaven of the Pharisees for
they fought wholeheartedly for what they
imagined to be the will of God. Perhaps that is
why the Lord amplified this warning about the
leaven of the Pharisees by His subsequent words
about those who can kill the body, for He went
on to enlarge on this theme by foretelling the
behaviour of these hypocrites who would
persecute and seek to destroy the disciples
(verse 11). Why would they act in this way?
Simply out of a mistaken zeal for God. Saul of
Tarsus is the great example. Who was more
wholehearted than he? No doubt he detested
obvious hypocrisy, as we all detest being
something in secret that is not true openly, yet
he was a slave of hypocrisy for he sought to
defend God's interests with a heart that was
hard and quite contrary to God.
How
easily can we do the same! If we think of the
words of Jesus which say that to be angry is to
kill, we wonder what will be manifested when our
true spirit in His service is brought into the
light. Has it not been hypocrisy when we have
fought for the truth with hard and angry hearts?
We think that God is with us as the Pharisees
also thought, but we are quite mistaken. God is
never on the side of the Pharisees.
We might
think it unnecessary to warn true disciples
about this kind of hypocrisy, but has it not so
often been evidenced by Christians who have
sought to serve Christ in an unchristlike
spirit? If there has been anything which has
characterised the history of the Church, it is
fighting for the truth with an unbroken heart,
fighting for God without really fearing Him. Men
have been adept at taking the lives of other
believers, robbing them of their honour and
reputation, instead of being adept at laying
down their lives for one another, as true
Christians should. Alas, much that has claimed
to be zeal for the Lord can only really be
described as "the leaven of the Pharisees".
Then how
shall we fight for the truth? There is a
parallel passage earlier in this Gospel which
affirms this same truth that "nothing shall be
hid that shall not be made manifest; nor
anything secret that shall not be known and come
to light" (Luke 8:17). It is commenting on "the
good ground, those who have an honest and good
heart, having heard the word, hold it fast and
bring forth fruit with patience" (8:15). This is
the positive side of 12:2-3, for it encourages
us by saying that the hidden work of the Word
will later be revealed and the secrets (of the
inner life) be finally displayed in their full
glory. It reminds us that all we have whispered
in the inner chambers of secret prayer will be
proclaimed from the housetops.
We will
be delivered from hypocrisy if we are careful to
see that God's interests are served by keeping
close to Him, hiding His Word daily deep in our
hearts and proving that the Holy Spirit will
teach us what we ought to say (12:12). To have
recourse to carnal means in an attempt to serve
God's interests will bring us under the power of
hypocrisy. Clearly, then, the Lord Jesus was
telling the disciples to find their liberation
from hypocrisy by fearing themselves and fearing
God. So shall we best serve Him.
But what
if this provokes the persecutors to kill us? It
is in this connection that the Lord Jesus spoke
His comforting words about the five sparrows and
the hairs of our head (verses 6-7). What is more
striking is that He had already disclosed that
God's wisdom governs all: "Therefore also said the wisdom of God, I
will send unto them prophets and apostles; and
some of them they shall kill and persecute..."
(Luke 11:49). So it is the wisdom of God which
governs what happens to His servants, and it is
the same wisdom which will be given by the
Spirit to teach them what to say under such
circumstances (verse 12).
What is
true of us personally is also true of our
service, the word committed to us. We have to
look back to verses 2 and 3 to remind ourselves
that nothing of the glory and riches of the Word
which seemed hidden in our hearts will remain
so, but will be revealed and proclaimed from the
housetops. In other words, this means that our
words will be proclaimed much more widely and
with much more effect than we can imagine when
they are being met by hatred and persecution.
Our task therefore is just this, to confess the
Lord before men and not deny Him (verses 8-9).
But here
again, it is so important that we beware of
hypocrisy, for the words of our confession must
be matched by concern never to meet our
adversaries with enmity and bitterness, but only
in the Spirit of Christ. If we truly confess the
Lord by having a right heart attitude towards
Him, then nobody can hinder that testimony from
being spread abroad. Who can destroy the power
of our prayers whispered in the inner chambers?
No one! Nothing!
We glory
in the title of 'Evangelical Christians' and are
perhaps inclined to feel that we know the truth
better than others, being specialists about the
infallibility of the Bible and the doctrine of
justification by faith. This is excellent, but
only if our testimony is substantiated by that
sacrificial love which is the mark of what
belongs to the gospel and can therefore truly be
called 'Evangelical'. We must agree that there
can be no greater catastrophe than that
evangelical Christians should be exposed as
hypocrites.
Yet
everything that calls itself Christian and does
not correspond to Christ is stamped by the Lord
as hypocrisy. And it is in the realm of love
that the peril of hypocrisy is greatest, not
least when we think that our own love is the
same as the love of Christ. We are inclined to
be severe when our Lord is mild and then
tolerant when He is severe, and even when we are
rightly severe in our attitude, we can be
inwardly lacking in the tender compassion of the
Saviour. It is temptingly easy for us to express
our natural feelings and imagine that
these are the same as the love of Christ, or to
put on some outward show of what we think is
love without having the inward reality. Do we
not know that without the mind of Jesus, that
is, without His pure, self-sacrificing love, all
our critical words about our brothers, however
much they may seem to be justified, make us into
sounding brass or clanging cymbals or, in other
words, hypocrites.
Now I
will not enlarge on this further, for surely it
is clear to us that hypocrisy is a deceptive
power, just like sin, and that in ourselves we
are just as helpless and powerless as regards
hypocrisy as we are with regard to sin. The
difference may be that we are more on our guard
against what we know to be sin, whereas we need
to be constantly warned about hypocrisy. In a
sense, hypocrisy is an intensified form of sin;
I might even say that it is the sin to which
Christians are most prone.
Yet we
need not despair, however much we may or should
be afraid of ourselves in this connection for,
with regard to hypocrisy in its innumerable
shapes and forms, Christ is our perfect
Redeemer. When the trembling sinner comes to Him
with all his sin, he finds grace and freedom and
is relieved - not in the sense that the
lightening of his conscience makes him treat sin
lightly, but in the sense that he knows himself
to be liberated from his guilt and sin. In the
same way, when the trembling disciple comes to
Christ with his hypocrisy, which may seem to him
so great, he also finds grace and can breathe
freely again - not that he treats hypocrisy
lightly but that he now keeps closer to his
Saviour than ever before and finds that heart
fellowship with Christ brings him deliverance
from hypocrisy. In this passage Luke reminds us
that the Lord not only voiced a solemn warning
but also gave real heart encouragement. In the
same passage in which He tells us to beware, He
also speaks His gracious words, "Fear not!"
(verse 7).
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