Sinners Follow the King

Sinners Follow the King

Have you ever asked yourself the question, “What happens when someone joins the military service?” Those who are accepted into service basically give up their lives. They don’t sleep until it is commanded of them. They run on orders. They walk on orders. They basically have no life of their own. The become the “property” of the government which they serve. In the United States our soldiers are supposed to be under the care of our government as well. If one gets sick the government cares for it. If there is a need for dental work, we care for it. Housing and food is provided while in training and in service during war, at least.

I hope you see the picture we need to see in this message. When we choose to follow Jesus as He calls we forsake everything and follow Him. We are no longer our own. We belong to a new Master. We realize that it is by His hand we live, move, breath and or sleep. We are at His beckoned call morning, evening and night – 24 hours per day. It just might be at the expense of our life. It cost Him His for us.

When we follow Him we become His representatives of the healing and reconciliation power He alone gives.

“And as Jesus passed forth from thence, he saw a man, named Matthew, sitting at the receipt of custom: and he saith unto him, Follow me. And he arose, and followed him. And it came to pass, as Jesus sat at meat in the house, behold, many publicans and sinners came and sat down with him and his disciples. And when the Pharisees saw it, they said unto his disciples, Why eateth your Master with publicans and sinners? But when Jesus heard that, he said unto them, They that be whole need not a physician, but they that are sick. But go ye and learn what that meaneth, I will have mercy, and not sacrifice: for I am not come to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance.” Matthew 9:9-13 (KJV).

In the thinking of the people of Jerusalem in this day the Tax Collector was a despised individual of their society. They viewed a fellow Hebrew as a traitor to have such a job. The friends of the tax collector was usually other tax collectors, because no one else wanted to be near them, nor did they want to be identified with them in any way.

Jesus finds Matthew (Luke calls him Levi in Luke 5:27) sitting at his usual site collecting taxes from the people. The Master extends a call to Matthew as, “Follow Me”. There appears to be no question, no hesitance; he just gets up and leaves his place of work, and follows Jesus. Matthew probably hated the job of tax collector anyway, but had chosen to do it because he needed to make a living, and it was the only means he had. When Jesus came along and gave him the recognition that He did, and spoke to him as though he were not a despised tax collector, but a man in need; he immediately left his despised position, and followed Jesus.

We also find that Matthew invites Jesus to his home, and has invited his friends to come and meet Jesus. When Jesus has so dramatically changed your life it is an exciting thing to tell others of what Jesus has done for you. The “Publicans” are the tax collectors. “Sinners” is reference to any who did not see themselves as better than others in religion and such. They also were the despised and rejected of society. We need to understand that Jesus still befriends sinners and calls them to Himself. Those who are clean – in their own eyes – try to find fault with the One who is pure.

The words of Jesus in verses 12 and 13 is a strong reference to the self-righteousness of those who attack Jesus. Jesus is stating quite clearly that physicians treat only those who come to them, but Jesus went to sinners; He came down for us didn’t He. There once was a time when doctors made house calls, but no more. It is almost so in the spiritual area of life as well. If the sick do not see themselves as sick they will not seek after a physician, even if one is standing by.

The one’s who hold the oracles of the faith have the means of healing sin sick souls. The doctor who has the means of healing and because of some bias or bigotry withholds healing is not a caring, compassionate individual. This is what the Pharisees were guilty of. This is what Christians are guilty of who withhold the gospel of Jesus Christ from others.

No one is righteous apart from faith in Jesus Christ and His finished work. Self-righteousness is seeing oneself as good enough without need of someone else to save. People come to this state of mind by keeping their own set of standards; or at least appearing like they do; and by adding “Loopholes” to God’s standards. Those who practice this sort of self-righteousness are also quick to condemn those who are already condemned, and offer them no hope.

The people who depend on Jesus and His righteousness are more apt to practice mercy (Hosea 6:6), and show Jesus in the way they live. Rituals were meant to be a means of worship, but they can often get to the place where they become a form of self-righteousness (Amos 5:21-24). It is quite clear from the teaching of the Old Testament and from the life of Jesus that He hates ritualistic sin that leads to a lack of mercy toward others. When people depend on ritual as their righteousness they often judge others without mercy.

We have been given the ministry of reconciliation (2 Corinthians 5:18-20). The ministry of the resurrected Jesus Christ has been entrusted to the care of those indwelt by the Spirit of Christ Jesus for the purpose of reconciling sinners with the Father. To bring to God those who are separated from Him – the despised of society, the broken, the hurting, whosoever will. Jesus starts by reconciling us to God the Father. It is a privilege and an honor to bear, to the world, the most wonderful message the world will ever hear.

Only the despised, the broken, the sick, the forsaken can hear the voice of Jesus, and receive His righteousness. When you are so full of yourself, there is absolutely no room for God or His Son Jesus.