
Saying and Doing
[This chapter is based on Matt. 21:23-32.]
"A certain man had two sons; and he came to the first, and said, Son, go work
today in my vineyard. He answered and said, I will not; but afterward he repented, and
went. And he came to the second, and said likewise. And he answered and said, I go, sir;
and went not. Whether of them twain did the will of his father? They say unto him, The
first."
In the sermon on the mount Christ said, "Not every one that saith unto Me, Lord,
Lord, shall enter into the kingdom of heaven; but he that doeth the will of My Father
which is in heaven." Matt. 7:21. The test of sincerity is not in words, but in deeds.
Christ does not say to any man, What say ye more than others? but, "What do ye more
than others?" Matt. 5:47. Full of meaning are His words, "If ye know these
things, happy are ye if ye do them." John 13:17. Words are of no value unless they
are accompanied with appropriate deeds. This is the lesson taught in the parable of the
two sons.
This parable was spoken at Christ's last visit to Jerusalem
before His death. He had driven out the buyers and sellers from the temple. His voice
had spoken to their hearts with the power of God. Amazed and terrified, they had obeyed
His command without excuse or resistance.
When their terror was abated, the priests and elders, returning to the temple, had
found Christ healing the sick and the dying. They had heard the voice of rejoicing and the
song of praise. In the temple itself the children who had been restored to health were
waving palm branches and singing hosannas to the Son of David. Baby voices were lisping
the praises of the mighty Healer. Yet with the priests and elders all this did not suffice
to overcome their prejudice and jealousy.
The next day, as Christ was teaching in the temple, the chief priests and elders of the
people came to Him and said, "By what authority doest Thou these things? and who gave
Thee this authority?"
The priests and elders had had unmistakable evidence of Christ's power. In His
cleansing of the temple they had seen Heaven's authority flashing from His face. They
could not resist the power by which He spoke. Again in His wonderful deeds of healing He
had answered their question. He had given evidence of His authority which could not be
controverted. But it was not evidence that was wanted. The priests and elders were anxious
for Jesus to proclaim Himself the Messiah that they might misapply His words and stir up
the people against Him. They wished to destroy His influence and to put Him to death.
Jesus knew that if they could not recognize God in Him or see in His works the evidence
of His divine character, they would not believe His own testimony that He was the Christ.
In His answer He evades the issue they hope to bring about and turns the condemnation upon
themselves.
"I also will ask you one thing," He said, "which if ye tell Me, I in
like wise will tell you by what authority I do these things. The baptism of John, whence
was it? from heaven, or of men?"
The priests and rulers were perplexed. "They reasoned with themselves, saying, If
we shall say, From heaven, He will say unto us, Why did ye not then believe him? But if we
shall say, Of men, we fear the people; for all hold John as a prophet. And they answered
Jesus, and said, We can not tell. And He said unto them, Neither tell I you by what
authority I do these things."
"We can not tell." This answer was a falsehood. But the priests saw the
position they were in, and falsified in order to screen themselves. John the Baptist had
come bearing witness of the One whose authority they were now questioning. He had pointed
Him out, saying, "Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the
world." John 1:29. He had baptized Him, and after the baptism, as Christ was praying,
the heavens were opened, and the Spirit of God like a dove rested upon Him, while a voice
from heaven was heard saying, "This is My beloved Son, in whom I am well
pleased." Matt. 3:17.
Remembering how John had repeated the prophecies concerning the Messiah, remembering
the scene at the baptism of Jesus, the priests and rulers dared not say that John's
baptism was from heaven. If they acknowledged John to be a prophet, as they believed him
to be, how could they deny his testimony that Jesus of Nazareth was the Son of God? And
they could not say that John's baptism was of men, because of the people, who believed
John to be a prophet. So they said, "We can not tell."
Then Christ gave the parable of the father and the two sons. When the father went to
the first son, saying, "Go work today in my vineyard," the son promptly answered, "I will not." He
refused to obey, and gave himself up to wicked ways and associations. But afterward he
repented, and obeyed the call.
The father went to the second son with the same command, "Go work today in my
vineyard." This son made reply, "I go, sir," but he went not.
In this parable the father represents God, the vineyard the church. By the two sons are
represented two classes of people. The son who refused to obey the command, saying, "I will not,"
represented those who were living in open transgression, who made no profession of piety,
who openly refused to come under the yoke of restraint and obedience which the law of God
imposes. But many of these afterward repented and obeyed the call of God. When the gospel
came to them in the message of John the Baptist, "Repent ye; for the kingdom of
heaven is at hand," they repented, and confessed their sins. (Matt. 3:2.)
In the son who said, "I go, sir," and went not, the character of the
Pharisees was revealed. Like this son, the Jewish leaders were impenitent and
self-sufficient. The religious life of the Jewish nation had become a pretense. When the
law was proclaimed on Mount Sinai by the voice of God, all the people pledged themselves
to obey. They said, "I go, sir," but they went not. When Christ came in person
to set before them the principles of the law, they rejected Him. Christ had given the
Jewish leaders of His day abundant evidence of His authority and divine power, but
although they were convinced, they would not accept the evidence. Christ had shown them
that they continued to disbelieve because they had not the spirit which leads to
obedience. He had declared to them, "Ye made the commandment of God of none effect by
your tradition. . . . In vain they do worship Me, teaching for doctrines the commandments
of men." Matt. 15:6, 9.
In the company before Christ there were scribes and Pharisees, priests and rulers, and
after giving the parable of the two sons, Christ addressed to His hearers the question,
"Whether of them twain did the will of his father?" Forgetting themselves, the
Pharisees answered, "The first." This they said without realizing that they were
pronouncing sentence against themselves. Then there fell from Christ's lips the
denunciation, "Verily I say unto you, That the publicans and the harlots go into the kingdom of God before you. For John came unto you
in the way of righteousness, and ye believed him not; but the publicans and the harlots
believed him: and ye, when ye had seen it, repented not afterward, that ye might believe
him."
John the Baptist came preaching truth, and by his preaching sinners were convicted and
converted. These would go into the kingdom of heaven before the ones who in
self-righteousness resisted the solemn warning. The publicans and harlots were ignorant,
but these learned men knew the way of truth. Yet they refused to walk in the path which
leads to the Paradise of God. The truth that should have been to them a savor of life unto
life became a savor of death unto death. Open sinners who loathed themselves had received
baptism at the hands of John; but these teachers were hypocrites. Their own stubborn
hearts were the obstacle to their receiving the truth. They resisted the conviction of the
Spirit of God. They refused obedience to God's commandments.
Christ did not say to them, Ye cannot enter the kingdom of heaven; but He showed that
the obstacle which prevented them from entering was of their own creating. The door was
still open to these Jewish leaders; the invitation was still held out. Christ longed to see them convicted and converted.
The priests and elders of Israel spent their lives in religious ceremonies, which they
regarded as too sacred to be connected with secular business. Therefore their lives were
supposed to be wholly religious. But they performed their ceremonies to be seen by men
that they might be thought by the world to be pious and devoted. While professing to obey
they refused to render obedience to God. They were not doers of the truth which they
professed to teach.
Christ declared John the Baptist to be one of the greatest of the prophets, and He
showed His hearers that they had had sufficient evidence that John was a messenger from
God. The words of the preacher in the wilderness were with power. He bore his message
unflinchingly, rebuking the sins of priests and rulers, and enjoining upon them the works
of the kingdom of heaven. He pointed out to them their sinful disregard of their Father's
authority in refusing to do the work appointed them. He made no compromise with sin, and
many were turned from their unrighteousness.
Had the profession of the Jewish leaders been genuine, they would have received John's
testimony and accepted Jesus as the Messiah. But they did not show the fruits of
repentance and righteousness. The very ones whom they despised were pressing into the
kingdom of God before them.
In the parable the son who said, "I go, sir," represented himself as faithful
and obedient; but time proved that his profession was not real. He had no true love for
his father. So the Pharisees prided themselves on their holiness, but when tested, it was
found wanting. When it was for their interest to do so, they made the requirements of the
law very exacting; but when obedience was required from themselves, by cunning sophistries
they reasoned away the force of God's precepts. Of them Christ declared, "Do not ye
after their works; for they say, and do not." Matt. 23:3. They had no true love
for God or man. God called them to be co-workers with Him in blessing the world; but while
in profession they accepted the call, in action they refused obedience. They trusted to
self, and prided themselves on their goodness; but they set the commands of God at
defiance. They refused to do the work which God had appointed them, and because of their
transgression the Lord was about to divorce Himself from the disobedient nation.
Self-righteousness is not true righteousness, and those who cling to it will be left to
take the consequences of holding a fatal deception. Many today claim to obey the
commandments of God, but they have not the love of God in their hearts to flow forth to
others. Christ calls them to unite with Him in His work for the saving of the world, but
they content themselves with saying, "I go, sir." They do not go. They do not
co-operate with those who are doing God's service. They are idlers. Like the unfaithful
son, they make false promises to God. In taking upon themselves the solemn covenant of the
church they have pledged themselves to receive and obey the word of God, to give
themselves to God's service, but they do not do this. In profession they claim to be sons
of God, but in life and character they deny the relationship. They do not surrender the
will to God. They are living a lie.
The promise of obedience they appear to fulfill when this involves no sacrifice; but
when self-denial and self-sacrifice are required, when they see the cross to be lifted,
they draw back. Thus the conviction of duty wears away, and known transgression of God's
commandments becomes habit. The ear may hear God's word, but the spiritual perceptive
powers have departed. The heart is hardened, the conscience seared.
Do not think that because you do not manifest decided
hostility to Christ you are doing Him service. We thus deceive our own souls. By
withholding that which God has given us to use in His service, be it time or means or any
other of His entrusted gifts, we work against Him.
Satan uses the listless, sleepy indolence of professed Christians to strengthen his
forces and win souls to his side. Many, who think that though they are doing no actual
work for Christ, they are yet on His side, are enabling the enemy to pre-occupy ground and
gain advantages. By their failure to be diligent workers for the Master, by leaving duties
undone and words unspoken, they have allowed Satan to gain control of souls who might have
been won for Christ.
We can never be saved in indolence and inactivity. There is no such thing as a truly
converted person living a helpless, useless life. It is not possible for us to drift into
heaven. No sluggard can enter there. If we do not strive to gain an entrance into the
kingdom, if we do not seek earnestly to learn what constitutes its laws, we are not fitted
for a part in it. Those who refuse to co-operate with God on earth would not co-operate
with Him in heaven. It would not be safe to take them to heaven.
There is more hope for publicans and sinners than for those who know the word of God
but refuse to obey it. He who sees himself a sinner with no cloak for his sin, who knows
that he is corrupting soul, body, and spirit before God, becomes alarmed lest he be
eternally separated from the kingdom of heaven. He realizes his diseased condition, and
seeks healing from the great Physician who has said, "Him that cometh to Me, I will
in no wise cast out." John 6:37. These souls the Lord can use as workers in His
vineyard.
The son who for a time refused obedience to his father's command was not condemned by
Christ; and neither was he commended. The class who act the part of the first
son in refusing obedience deserve no credit for holding this position. Their frankness
is not to be regarded as a virtue. Sanctified by truth and holiness, it would make men
bold witnesses for Christ; but used as it is by the sinner, it is insulting and defiant,
and approaches to blasphemy. The fact that a man is not a hypocrite does not make him any
the less really a sinner. When the appeals of the Holy Spirit come to the heart, our only
safety lies in responding to them without delay. When the call comes, "Go work today
in My vineyard," do not refuse the invitation. "Today if ye will hear His voice,
harden not your hearts." Heb. 4:7. It is unsafe to delay obedience. You may never
hear the invitation again.
And let none flatter themselves that sins cherished for a time can easily be given up
by and by. This is not so. Every sin cherished weakens the character and strengthens
habit; and physical, mental, and moral depravity is the result. You may repent of the
wrong you have done, and set your feet in right paths; but the mold of your mind and your
familiarity with evil will make it difficult for you to distinguish between right and
wrong. Through the wrong habits formed, Satan will assail you again and again.
In the command, "Go work today in My vineyard," the test of sincerity is
brought to every soul. Will there be deeds as well as words? Will the one called put to
use all the knowledge he has, working faithfully, disinterestedly, for the Owner of the
vineyard?
The apostle Peter instructs us as to the plan on which we must work. "Grace and
peace be multiplied unto you," he says, "through the knowledge of God, and of
Jesus our Lord, according as His divine power hath given unto us all things that pertain
unto life and godliness, through the knowledge of Him that hath called us to glory and
virtue: whereby are given unto us exceeding great and precious promises; that by these ye might be partakers of the divine nature, having escaped the
corruption that is in the world through lust.
"And beside this, giving all diligence, add to your faith virtue; and to virtue
knowledge; and to knowledge temperance; and to temperance patience; and to patience
godliness; and to godliness brotherly kindness; and to brotherly kindness charity." 2
Peter 1:2-7.
If you cultivate faithfully the vineyard of your soul, God is making you a laborer
together with Himself. And you will have a work to do not only for yourself, but for
others. In representing the church as the vineyard, Christ does not teach that we are to
restrict our sympathies and labors to our own numbers. The Lord's vineyard is to be
enlarged. In all parts of the earth He desires it to be extended. As we receive the
instruction and grace of God, we should impart to others a knowledge of how to care for
the precious plants. Thus we may extend the vineyard of the Lord. God is watching for
evidence of our faith, love, and patience. He looks to see if we are using every spiritual
advantage to become skillful workers in His vineyard on earth, that we may enter the
Paradise of God, that Eden home from which Adam and Eve were excluded by transgression.
God stands toward His people in the relation of a father, and He has a father's claim
to our faithful service. Consider the life of Christ. Standing at the head of humanity,
serving His Father, He is an example of what every son should and may be. The obedience
that Christ rendered God requires from human beings today. He served His Father with love,
in willingness and freedom. "I delight to do Thy will, O My God," He declared;
"yea, Thy law is within My heart." Ps. 40:8. Christ counted no sacrifice too
great, no toil too hard, in order to accomplish the work which He came to do. At the age
of twelve He said, "Wist ye not that I must be about My Father's business?" Luke 2:49. He had heard the
call, and had taken up the work. "My meat," He said, "is to do the will of
Him that sent Me, and to finish His work." John 4:34.
Thus we are to serve God. He only serves who acts up to the highest standard of
obedience. All who would be sons and daughters of God must prove themselves co-workers
with God and Christ and the heavenly angels. This is the test for every soul. Of those who
faithfully serve Him the Lord says, "They shall be Mine. . . in that day when I make
up My jewels; and I will spare them, as a man spareth his own son that serveth him."
Mal. 3:17.
God's great object in the working out of His providences is to try men, to give them
opportunity to develop character. Thus He proves whether they are obedient or disobedient
to His commands. Good works do not purchase the love of God, but they reveal that we
possess that love. If we surrender the will to God, we shall not work in order to earn
God's love. His love as a free gift will be received into the soul, and from love to Him
we shall delight to obey His commandments.
There are only two classes in the world today, and only two classes will be recognized
in the judgment--those who violate God's law and those who obey it. Christ gives the test
by which to prove our loyalty or disloyalty. "If ye love Me," He says,
"keep My commandments. . . . He that hath My commandments, and keepeth them, he it is
that loveth Me. And he that loveth Me shall be loved of My Father, and I will love him,
and will manifest Myself to him. . . . He that loveth Me not keepeth not My sayings; and
the word which ye hear is not Mine, but the Father's which sent Me." "If ye keep
My commandments, ye shall abide in My love; even as I have kept My Father's commandments,
and abide in His love." John 14:15-24; 15:10.
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