Archive for the ‘hypocrisy’ Tag
Matthew 23:25-28 – The Sixth and Seventh Woe to the Pharisees
Matthew 23:25-28 – “25 Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! For you clean the outside of the cup and the plate, but inside they are full of greed and self-indulgence. 26 You blind Pharisee! First clean the inside of the cup and the plate, that the outside also may be clean.27 Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! For you are like whitewashed tombs, which outwardly appear beautiful, but within are full of dead people’s bones and all uncleanness. 28 So you also outwardly appear righteous to others, but within you are full of hypocrisy and lawlessness.”
I have never worked at a restaurant, but I have been told one of the hardest things to do as a waiter/waitress is to put a smile on your face and pretend you are happy when everything in your life is literally crumbling. I can imagine the difficulty of putting on that mask as your heart is tearing at you from the inside out, for I had a similar ordeal when my parents left me in Maryland for my internship. That day I had to go into this new workplace with people I did not know, pretending that everything was okay, when my heart was longing to go home with them. I tried as hard as I could to hold back my tears, but when they called to tell me they were boarding the plane and would see me in a few months, my heart broke and those tears flowed. Fortunately, I was able to muster a little decorum and get back to work, but I wouldn’t doubt if all my colleagues knew that I had just been crying. It was hard to put on that mask of happiness when my whole world was changing. I am definitely not good at putting on a mask, because I am a person who wears his heart on his sleeve.
The thing is though most people are actually pretty good at putting on masks in front of other people. Just look at all the celebrities who appear to have their lives all together but are struggling with depression and other mental issues. No one would suspect any of that just by looking at how they are in public. Take an example from reality shows like “The Bachelor” where some girls put on a mask of kindness, care, and love in front of the guy but then when he isn’t looking lash out at all the girls. Look at all the politicians who say they are for defending your rights and helping people but are just in there to make the biggest buck. It’s just a mask. They look one way in front of one group of people and another in front of another group. It is all a lie. If only we could see what a person was really feeling on the inside, what they were really thinking, what they were really dealing with, then maybe we could actually know the person. For what we see outside means nothing; what matters is the heart.
Jesus’ sixth and seventh woe to the Pharisees focused on this exact issue – the Pharisees appeared righteous, clean, and pure on the outside, but they were actually devils in their hearts. They looked good but were full of “hypocrisy and lawlessness.” We must remember that the Pharisees were the religious leaders of their day; people looked up to them to understand and teach the law. They were held with great esteem and were likely treated the same way society treats actors and actresses today. Nobody would have thought of them as filled with wicked thoughts and motives, when they seemed to uphold all the laws and traditions. Christ rebuked them for this hypocrisy twice in these two woes, using different metaphors to help them get the picture. In the sixth woe, He compared them to what appeared to be a clean cup and plate on the outside but were filled with unwashed filth on the inside. He rightly accused them of being filled with greed and self-indulgence, for all they were concerned about was their wealth and power. They cared nothing for the people. They faked like they cared by creating additional laws to prevent people from breaking God’s laws, but they were really just placing burdens on them that they did not intend to keep either. They acted like they wanted to find the Messiah, but they would rather reject Him if it meant power for them. They acted like they loved the law but did not follow its foundation. Just look at all the times in the Gospels that they would compromise the law to fulfill their evil deeds. They would look for false prophets to accuse Jesus when it is clear that they should not bear false witness against their neighbors. They would try to trick the Lord into entrapping Himself (which they never could do), which they knew was wrong. They even took a part in putting the Lord on the cross, making them an accessory to murder if not the actual perpetrators, since they planned it. They were appearing clean, when they were actually filled with filth. They cleaned the outside appearance, but the heart was wicked. The seventh woe compared them to white washed tombs, which appear clean and beautiful when looking outside but are filled with dead men’s bones inside. According to Jewish law, being around the dead, would make you unclean; therefore, when Christ said this woe, He was basically letting them know that just like a tomb, they looked beautiful on the outside (We can all agree that some cemeteries look beautiful.) but were only filled with the dead and unclean inside. To help you better picture this, think about the Taj Mahal; it is a beautiful piece of architecture, but it actually is a mausoleum for a king’s dead queen. These Pharisees did a great job of appearing righteous, but their hearts were filled with wickedness, which Christ called them on by calling them hypocrites.
Although living righteously through our actions and examples are very important, what is more important is our heart behind it. It matters nothing if all we are trying to do is use righteousness as a ruse to gain power or fame. If all we want is to gain the attention and praise of people, then it is nothing but wickedness, deception, and hypocrisy. Christ came not to teach us to live holy lives but to make us holy. He did not come just to set an example but to change our hearts so we cannot help but be that example. He did not come to give us new laws but to make us new creatures. Unlike the Pharisees, who had to constantly try to upkeep their mask of righteousness in order to hide their truly wicked hearts, we as disciples of Christ have been given new hearts that are overflowing with Christ’s love and Spirit. Yes, we must live for Him. Yes, we must be wary of the example we put out in front of people. Yes, we must do all these things. But, first and foremost, we must make sure our hearts are right with God, for we can do all these actions, but if we have no relationship with Him, it means nothing. But if we do have a thriving, growing relationship with Him, those fruits cannot help but come out. Christ did not rebuke the Pharisees for being clean outside but for not being clean inside. He wanted them to not only live righteously but be righteous. As Christians, we must always examine our hearts and make sure that it is in the right place with our Lord. That all begins with the acceptance of Christ as Lord and Savior (for only He can make a heart clean) and moves into discipleship, growth, and Bible reading and prayer. There is nothing worse than being a white-washed tomb or a semi-clean cup, for those are still dirty; so let us not only live righteously to be seen by men, but because we cannot help but do so due to what Christ has done in us.
Matthew 23:13 – The First Woe to the Pharisees
Matthew 23:13 – “But woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! For you shut the kingdom of heaven in people’s faces. For you neither enter yourselves nor allow those who would enter to go in.”
When Jesus came to earth and began His ministry, He did not attack the people you would normally think He would go after like the prostitutes and the tax collectors (traitors to the Jewish nation), and the sinners; instead, He went after the religious leaders, those who were at the forefront at the Temple, those who should be setting the best example for the people to follow, those who would be considered “righteous” in the population’s eyes. But Christ saw their hearts and did not find one that longed for the glory of God but their own. He saw behind their hypocrisy and reproved them constantly but none so much as is found in Matthew 23, where He pronounced eight woes upon them for various reasons. As we all know, the word woe indicates trouble and grief and heartache, just like when one says, “Woe is me.” It is not a word of blessing but a word of pain and trouble. When Christ pronounced these “Woes” to the Pharisees and scribes and other religious leaders of His day, He was clearly rebuking them for a number of actions.
This first woe that began it all is found in our passage today, “But woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! For you shut the kingdom of heaven in people’s faces. For you neither enter yourselves nor allow those who would enter to go in.” Christ began His rebuke with the one most atrocious thing that these religious leaders did – they tried to keep people from the kingdom of heaven, in other words, they tried to keep people from turning to Christ. These Pharisees and scribes not only rejected the Gospel but they did everything in their power to make sure others wouldn’t accept it as well. They would discourage them. They would cast them out of the Temple. They would defame the name of Christ. They would lie, deceive, cheat, murder, and do any other heinous act to destroy the Gospel and to prevent people from turning to Christ. They were so afraid of losing their power and position, that they missed the Messiah in front of them and incited the mob who would call for His death. Like power hungry rulers, they tried to stifle any opposition, but what they did not realize was they were fighting against God. They were preventing people from turning to God.
In our day and age, we see this happening all around us. There are people who reject the Gospel and try to persuade others to their opinion, and if they cannot, they usually force them. This happens in science, a realm that I am quite familiar with, working in a research lab. Many of the top scientists like Richard Dawkins and Stephen Hawking do everything they can to discredit those who believe in Creation and the literal interpretation of the Bible. They will not even consider a person who does not fully accept evolution as a good scientist. In philosophy, you surely have this bias too, for the Christian worldview is not readily accepted but one that must be fought for and defended in a much more rigorous fashion. Christian principles and doctrines are looked upon as outdated in society, and those who accept Christ as the only Way are seen as intolerant. I can go on and on about how people are rejecting the Gospel and doing everything they can to prevent others from accepting it too.
But that is not what we, as disciples of Christ, need to focus on, for we already knew that persecution like the ones we are experiencing today will come. Our focus should be on our own lives and whether we are helping people to enter the kingdom of heaven or not. Are we being hypocrites to the cause of Christ? So often, it is the witness of some Christian that prevents a person from turning to Christ, for they see the wickedness and sin that he is still participating in and consider it hypocrisy. They see people who have no love for people, no concern for others, no mercy, grace, or compassion; they only see “religious nuts” out to condemn them yet still continue in sin themselves. If we were to be honest with ourselves, we would have to admit that most of us at some point have tarnished the name of Christ and our witness. We have, in a way, prevented a person from entering the kingdom of heaven; we have placed a stumbling block for them. This woe would at least partially apply to us. If it does, let it not cause you to be burdened by guilt; instead let it encourage you to remove that stumbling block, to live an enticing, holy life, and to encourage others to turn to Christ. Use this as a wake-up call to straighten up and live in a way that will not prevent others from entering the kingdom of heaven.
Side Note: In a way, we can look at this verse from a different angle as well, although it may be stretching the context of it. This woe spoke of those who refused to enter the kingdom of heaven and prevented others from doing so as well. There are many occasions in which we are told to obey God and would rather sit in our own devices and disobey. In those cases, usually God sends someone who will obey to convict and to draw to Him. But instead of repenting and obeying, the tendency is to do the exact opposite and try to convince that other person to fall into sin, as well. We must be careful never to do that, but to instead obey the Lord and follow Him, encouraging others to do so also. In Matthew 18:6, we are told that those who cause others to stumble should have a millstone tied to their necks and drowned in the ocean. Jesus Christ said this, making it clear, that He took this sin of leading others astray very seriously. We must never do anything to push a person away from Christ. We must do everything in our power to draw them to Him, whether it is encouraging them to grow in Christ or to start a relationship with Him. Be wary never to allow this first woe to apply to you.
Quick Note – Titus 1:16
Titus 1:16 – “They profess to know God, but they deny Him by their works. They are detestable, disobedient, unfit for any good work.”
One of the most common comments that those who are unbelievers make about Christians and the church are that they are filled with hypocrisy. Although I would like to tell them that that isn’t true and that Christians are what they preach, if I were to be honest and critical, I would have to agree with them in a majority of cases. Too many people today are associating their name with Christ and yet do not do anything to follow His Word. These are hypocrites. Too many Christians today are out telling the world that He loves them yet do nothing to display that love to the world. These are hypocrites. Too many Christians have conformed to this world and began to look so much like it that there are more just and admirable people who are not Christians. These conformed Christians are hypocrites. As Christians and disciples of the Lord Jesus Christ, we are called to give our lives as a living sacrifice to Him – to live lives that are transformed before the world not conformed to it (Romans 12:1-2). This transformed life means that our actions, our characters, and our desires are all in line with God’s. But too many of us today have allowed the cares and worries of this world to choke the fruit that Christ wants to bring out from us; instead what we produce are works that deny the name of Christ. Our verse today reminds us that those who claim to know God must be obedient to Him and show faithfulness through their works. On the other hand those who make that claim of knowing God yet never living for Him are likely not Christians at all. There is nothing worse than a “Christian” who professes to know God but who does not live according to His Word – who is detestable, disobedient, and unfit for any good work. I would rather he not say that he is a “Christian” then to allow Him to continue to defame the name of Christ through his actions. When a Christian makes a profession of faith, the eyes of the world begin to watch him, keeping track of his daily actions; therefore, it is important that his daily walk matches his daily talk and both are pleasing to God. Let us not be like these false teachers in the book of Titus, who profess to know God but deny Him by their works; instead, may our works be the light that draws people in to hear the Gospel.
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