The Second Last Sunday in the Church Year – November
14, 2021
Psalm 54; Daniel 7:9-14; 2 Peter 3:3-14
St.
Matthew 25:31-46
In
the name of the Father, and of the T Son, and of the Holy
Spirit. Amen.
Christ our Lord has two primary lessons
for us to learn this morning, both concerning the division of the Sheep and the
Goats. First, we will examine the fact that the Sheep and the Goats are divided
based on who or what they are, not by their actions. Second, we will see the
fruit born of this identity and how it applies to us today.
The beginning of today’s lesson tells
us that Christ is speaking of his second coming. “When the Son of Man comes in
His glory, and all the holy angels with Him, then He will sit on the throne of
His glory.” On the last day, Jesus will return as
he ascended, riding on a cloud. However, it will not only be visible to those
gathered on a mountain top. There will be lightening in the East and all eyes
will see him coming in glory. Christ will descend with all the heavenly host
such that no living thing will miss it. All the nations, every human being will
be gathered before him. After everyone has been gathered, Christ will separate
humanity. He will divide his sheep from the goats.
When a shepherd divides his flock,
placing the sheep on the right and the goats on the left, he is not judging the
amount of wool a particular animal has provided nor the quality of cheese made
from its milk. The shepherd divides the animals according to what they are –
sheep and goats are different animals.
So too, when the Good Shepherd divides
the flock of humanity, we will be divided based on who or what we are. Are you
a child of God? Are you a baptized child of the Heavenly Father? Are you a
repentant sinner? Do you have a white garment with your name on it in the
Heavenly banquet hall? Do believe in Jesus Christ, Son of God and Son of Man,
who died for your sins? Then the Shepherd sets you to his right.
The Goats are more difficult to
comprehend. The obvious goats are all who have rejected the Son of God. All
supposed atheists, Buddhists, Sikhs, Muslims, “spiritual but not religious,”
and any other worshipers of false gods are clearly goats. But there are also
goats in sheep’s clothing. These are those who have despised their Baptism. He
might attend the Sunday service regularly but sees it as a networking
opportunity. She might volunteer for every board so that the other ladies will
be jealous of her status masquerading as piety. These goats are the hypocrites
in the Church, who confess with their lips, but their heart is far from God.
It is these goats in sheep’s clothing
who will protest the judgment of Christ most loudly. “How dare you call me a
goat! I did everything you said, and I still get no thanks. What kind of God
are you?” Sadly, these goats may even be more sympathetic. “How could you God? I
did everything you asked of me and still I suffered. In my day of need you were
silent. If I have rejected you its your own fault!”
The goats have long since evicted the
Holy Spirit from the temple of their soul. The goats have kept the law
outwardly but are spiritually dead. They are no different than the Pharisees
whom Christ calls “whitewashed tombs.” The temptation to become a goat is
often in the name of hypocrisy. The goats are the most likely to complain, “The
church is too interested in right doctrine. The church doesn’t do enough for
the hungry, thirsty, stranger, naked, sick, or imprisoned. This should be our
focus!”
The church absolutely should care for
these people. But care for the poor is for the purpose of the salvation of his
soul. The primary purpose of the church is to preach the gospel, the pure
gospel of Christ – which means calling sinners to repentance and forgiving the
sins of the repentant. The preaching of the gospel requires pure doctrine. If
our doctrine is false or muted by the whims of the world, we risk preaching
people into goats. We risk raising an entire flock of goats rather than sheep.
We risk damning those we encounter rather than speaking to them salvation in
Christ.
Having an idea of who the Sheep and the
Goats are, we must again notice they are divided long before their works are
recounted. The Sheep are Sheep. The Goats are Goats. Sheep go to the right.
Goats go to the left. They are divided based on their identity, who and what
they are, not what they’ve done.
After the division, our Lord speaks to
each group in turn and recounts their works, or their lack thereof; but before
we can examine the list of works, there is one more character in this parable
that we must define: “the least of these My brethren.” This phrase could simply refer to the
destitute, anyone who is hungry, thirsty, a stranger, naked, sick, or in
prison. There is certainly a truth in this. All Christians are called to serve
their neighbor, especially those of the household of faith, and especially in
her time of need.
The key phrase in this word of our Lord
is “My brethren.” There is only one group of people in Scripture to whom our
Lord refers as “My brethren”: The Twelve. The Twelve Apostles are the only
group which Jesus calls “My brothers” in Scripture. All Christians are brothers
and sisters in Christ, but our Lord reserved this title especially for those
men called into the Office of the Holy Ministry because these men are called to
serve in his stead, enduring particular hardships and receiving particular
blessings. Thus, it is natural to read, “the least of these My brethren” as
referring to pastors.
In this case, the works which are
recounted by Christ refer to how the Sheep or the Goats received their pastors.
These works are not strictly about how often you’ve served in the soup kitchen
but rather how you received the man sent to you by God to bear God’s gifts to
you. How have you received the man who bears the medicine of immortality, the
Word of Life, and the font of pure water?
None of this is to say, how have you
judged the individual called to minister to you. There is a distinction between
the man and the Office but the Office is filled by an individual. What does a
hearer owe his pastor according to his Office?
·
“The
Lord has commanded that those who preach the gospel should receive their living
from the gospel.”
·
“Anyone
who receives instruction in the word must share all good things with his
instructor. Do not be deceived: God cannot be mocked. A man reaps what he sows.”
·
“The
pastors who direct the affairs of the church well are worthy of double honor,
especially those whose work is preaching and teaching. For the Scripture says,
‘Do not muzzle the ox while it is treading out the grain,’ and ‘the worker
deserves his wages.’”
·
“We
ask you brothers, to respect those who work hard among you, who are over in the
Lord and who admonish you. Hold them in the highest regard in love because of
their work. Live in peace with each other.”
·
“Obey
your leaders and submit to their authority. They keep watch over you as men who
must give an account. Obey them so that their work will be a joy, not a burden,
for that would be of no advantage to you.”
The Sheep in the parable have heard the
preaching of the Gospel and responded with joy. They have recognized the
beautiful feet of those who preach the gospel of peace and bring glad tidings
of good things, who proclaim salvation and says to the Church, “Your God
reigns!”
It is true that I, nor the vast
majority of pastors preaching in Christ’s church in the West, have never truly
experienced hunger, thirst, homelessness, poverty, or prison. It is in the
nature of the Office of the Holy Ministry to experience being a stranger.
Often, we are called far away from our family, even if for just the four years
of seminary. When we receive a call to a congregation, very rarely will we
arrive knowing anyone or anything in the area. Making friends is very difficult
because of the demands of the Office and our families. Those closest to us in
the church are still our parishioners, still our spiritual children, and thus
not candidates for the closest of friends.
What then do the actions of the Sheep
look like in the modern West? Ensuring your pastor has a living wage and the
ability to care for the physical, spiritual, and emotional needs of his family,
including their health. It also looks like making sure he has the opportunity
to study the Word of God so that he is able to minister to you; to purchase
books to broaden his knowledge so that he is able to teach you; to have time
and space to contemplate the needs of the congregation and the mysteries of
God. It looks like ensuring he has time to pray for you and his family. It
looks like sitting attentively during the Divine Service, Bible Study, and when
your pastor comes to visit you. The actions of the Sheep look like
communicating with your pastor and thinking twice before disregarding his
words.
The actions of the Sheep look like sharing
the fruits of your garden with your pastor’s family or taking him out for lunch
to talk about sports, books, or home improvement. It looks like giving him the
opportunity to attend conferences, visit brothers in the ministry, and subscribe
to journals so that he might be refreshed in his zeal for the Lord.
The actions of the Sheep also look like
ensuring your pastor has time to rest; has time to play with his children; has opportunity
to attend to his house; and is able to be the husband and father God has called
him to be. It looks like encouraging him to care for his beloved wife so that
she does not become lonely, isolated, or resentful.
This exhortation is not a checklist of necessary
actions for your salvation nor is it a laundry list of my personal complaints.
It is however, a list of examples of what it means to serve the ‘least of
these, Christ’s brethren.’ This service should be rendered with a joyful heart,
such that you might not even realize what you’ve done. The Sheep have no idea
what they’ve done because they were simply grateful to have the Word of God
preached to them so that they would be saved; so that they would be numbered
among the Sheep at the final judgement.
The Goats respond to Christ’s judgment
by calling themselves ministers. ‘When did we see you in these situations and
not minister to you?’ The Goats believe they know better how
to manage God’s church than the men called to serve, and yet they refused to seek
this knowledge in the Word of God. They are set in the ways of the world and
have no heart for the ways of God. “The fear of the Lord is the beginning of
Wisdom.”
Most certainly, each of us has Goat
moments. If we are honest and measure ourselves according to the Word of God,
examining our own consciences against the Ten Commandments, we will quickly see
there is no hope for us. Each of has despised the Office of the Holy Ministry,
sinned against our own pastor or another man called to be a pastor. If you have
the slightest bit of humility, you will know that you deserve to be a Goat.
Thanks be to God you are not the one
who determines when and how you become a Sheep. The Blood of Christ sheers the
coarse goat fur from your back and replaces it with white wool. For each of
those Goat moments, cry out to the Father for mercy for the sake of Jesus. The
Sheep are marked by repentance, for they know they are poor, miserable sinners.
The Sheep also know they are pure as fresh snow on account of the forgiveness
of Christ. You became a Sheep when the Name of the Triune God was placed upon
you in Holy Baptism. To endure as a Sheep in this world is to receive the gifts
of God from your pastor as from God himself. When you get your Goat up, repent
and receive the gift of absolution from your pastor as from God himself. Pray
for your pastor. Honor your pastor. Treat him as an angel, a messenger, of God.
Above all, receive the Word of your pastor for it is not his word, but the Word
of God.
In
T Jesus’ name. Amen.