Introduction
In our text for this morning, we will see not only why Jesus was
willing to do such much on our behalf but also what He desires of us.
Turn with me to Matthew 9:35.
"And Jesus was going about all the cities and the villages, teaching
in their synagogues, and proclaiming the gospel of the kingdom, and
healing every kind of disease and every kind of sickness. And seeing the
multitudes,
He felt compassion for them, because they were distressed
and downcast like sheep without a shepherd. Then He said to His
disciples, ‘The harvest is plentiful, but the workers are few. Therefore
beseech the Lord of the harvest to send out workers into His harvest.’"
We are going to look at this passage in three sections. His work, His
compassion, and His call. As we do look at each of these sections,
think about what they mean to you personally. Jesus had His work. What
is your work? Jesus demonstrated deep compassion. What compassion do you
have? Jesus calls us to respond to the need. How are you responding?
HIS WORK
The first thing we note about Matthew 9:35 is that it is almost the same as Matthew 4:23. The reason is that between Matthew 4 and the end of chapter 9, Matthew has presented the work of Jesus throughout the region of Galilee. Matthew 5, 6, & 7 presents the teaching and proclamation of Jesus, while Matthew 8
& 9 demonstrates Jesus’ healing ministry. The chronological
narrative picks up again at this point for Matthew has proven his case
that Jesus is the Messiah. His teaching could only have come from God
Himself and the authority He has over disease & sickness, the
natural, the supernatural, sin and death could only have come from God
Himself. Jesus is the anointed one sent by God to redeem His people.
The only difference between the two verses is that Matthew 4:23 says He was going about "in all Galilee," and Matthew 9:35 says that Jesus was going about "all the cities and villages." The
former signifies the general area covered, while the latter
demonstrates the extensiveness of the work done. The area of Galilee was
about 40 miles wide and 70 miles long. Josephus, a Jewish historian
living at the time of Christ, tells us that there were around 200 cities
and villages in that region with 15,000 people in the smallest of them
(due to the fertility of the region). This means that there were at
least 3 million people in the region. Taking note that Jesus went about
in "all Galilee" and that He went into "all the cities and villages," it is reasonable to assume that the majority of these 3 million people would have had some direct exposure to Jesus.
That is the extensiveness of Jesus’ work done for the people of this land who were described in Matthew 4:16 as "sitting in darkness." Jesus
was the light shining in that darkness, and Jesus brought the light of
truth and hope to them in three ways: Teaching, Proclaiming, and
Healing. That is the work that is needed to bring truth and hope to
people in darkness.
TEACHING IN THEIR SYNAGOGUES
Jesus took advantage of the custom of the time for visiting Rabbis to
bring the message in the Synagogue. He would call for a certain Old
Testament passage to be read and then He would explain the passage
showing God’s plan for their redemption. An example of this is seen in Luke 4:14f when Jesus returned to Nazareth, entered the Synagogue on the Sabbath, then at the appropriate time stood and read Isaiah 61:2,
then He sat down to explain what He read and its application for the
present time which in this case was the fulfillment that day of Isaiah’s
prophecy.
This was one aspect of Jesus’ ministry that He did throughout the
region of Galilee in every city and village. It was the means by which
Jesus was able to show the people that He was indeed fulfilling the Old
Testament prophecies. He was the Messiah.
PROCLAIMING THE GOSPEL OF THE KINGDOM
Related to the teaching was the proclaiming. The teaching was more
centered on explaining the meaning of the Old Testament Scriptures to
the people. The proclamation of the gospel of the kingdom was the direct
application and announcement to the people that the prophecies were
being fulfilled and they needed to repent for the kingdom that was at
hand. The proclamation was good news (gospel) of God’s graciousness and
mercy to His people. The Messiah was present and among His people.
HEALING EVERY KIND OF DISEASE AND EVERY KIND OF SICKNESS.
The presence of the Messiah brought about the fulfillment of Isaiah 35:4-6 & 53:4, and what we have pointed out the last several weeks as we have been examining Matthew 8
& 9. Jesus banished sickness and disease from His presence through
His ministry of healing. The blind received their sight, the lame walk,
lepers were cleansed, the deaf could hear, and the dead were raised up.
Jesus healed every kind of sickness and every kind of disease as He
ministered throughout Galilee.
The response to Jesus’ ministry was mixed, as we pointed out last
week. Some believed and followed. Most were amazed at all He did and
said, but it made no lasting difference in their lives. And some
rejected Him openly and spoke and worked against Him. (See: The Response to Jesus’ Ministry).
But the responses did not deter Jesus from fulfilling the ministry
that God had for Him on earth. He taught in the synagogues, proclaimed
the gospel of the kingdom, and healed every kind of disease and sickness
throughout all of Galilee. There would be no excuse for these people
not to know that the Messiah had come, for He was in their midst.
Matthew 9:35 tells us what Jesus did and verse 36 tells us why He was compassionate.
"And seeing the multitudes, He felt compassion for them, because they
were distressed and downcast like sheep without a shepherd." The feelings that arose in Jesus as He saw the people were strong. The word translated here "felt compassion"
is the strongest word available to describe His feeling. The word is
actually a reference to His stomach, and is descriptive of the sense you
might get when your child has had an accident and you see him or her in
the hospital for the first time. It hits you right in the pit of your
stomach and you want to exchange places with them if at all possible
because of your compassion for what they are going through. You have
empathy, not just sympathy. You feel with them, not just for them.
That is the way that Jesus felt for the multitudes. A feeling much
stronger than just a casual feeling of feeling "sorry for them," "that
it was too bad for them – a sad situation." Jesus felt for them and He
felt it physically in the pit of His stomach.
Why such a strong feeling? Because the situation the multitudes were in was desperate. Our text describes them as "distressed and downcast." The KJV has "they fainted, and were scattered abroad." The NIV says, "harassed and helpless." The Amplified version puts all of these together and says, "bewildered – harassed and distressed and dejected and helpless."
The first word (esklmenoi / esklmenoi) has a root meaning of "being flayed" or "having the skin torn" as might happen to a sheep wandering among the brambles and sharp rocks. Its derived meaning would be "harassed" or "severely troubled." It would carry the idea of being battered, bruised, mangled, ripped apart, worn out, exhausted.
The second word (from rhynumi / rapsnumi) means to be thrown down prone and helpless," as
would an exhausted sheep or a person who had suffered a mortal wound.
This word was used in reference to corpses lying on the ground.
Jesus was not fooled by religious fronts. He sees the heart, and He
saw the hearts of these people as wounded and torn by the effects of
sin. They were inwardly devastated and helpless in their sinful and
hopeless condition.
They were "like sheep without a shepherd." They were
entrapped in a system led by the Scribes and Pharisees that had codified
the Mosaic Law and left them wounded and wandering. Those that were
supposed to be leading them were not leading them to God, for they were
instead wolves leading them away from the true and proper worship of
God. These sheep had no shepherd, and like a sheep without someone to
protect and guide them they had become battered, bruised, confused, and
disheartened.
Jesus’ compassion on them in their helpless state was great. So great
that He Himself was busy in traveling throughout Galilee ministering to
them. He was teaching them the truth of the Scriptures, proclaiming to
them the good news of the kingdom of God, that the kingdom was at hand,
the Messiah was present to redeem them from their sins and they had to
but believe in Him, and Jesus was busy mending their afflictions. He was
healing them from every sickness and disease.
But what about you? What do you think? What do you feel when you see
people entrapped in sin? What goes on within you when you see a drug
addict or a drunkard stumbling down the street? Disgust or sorrow? What
goes through your mind when you see people suffering from the immorality
of our society whether it be women who are pregnant out of wedlock,
people with STD’s or AIDS? Is it revulsion because they are unclean or
pity because they are so lost? I don’t know what is in your heart or
mind, but God does. Let me challenge you to give serious consideration
to the example that Jesus has set for us in our response to those
enslaved by sin. Jesus was moved with compassion and so should we. Jesus
did not see them as the enemy and neither should we. We should see them
as sheep without a shepherd.
Jesus’ compassion did not end with a feeling, but moved on to
ministry. He did much while on earth, but He saw the need was great and
would need to be met by more than just Himself. Jesus is God, but He is
God in Human flesh and that humanity limited Him in how much He could
accomplish. Jesus’ compassion for the multitudes led Him to issue a call
in Matthew 9:37 & 38 for His disciples to see what He was seeing.
HIS CALL
"Then He said to His disciples, ‘The harvest is plentiful, but the workers are few." Jesus
wanted His disciples to see the need of the multitudes. They were sheep
without a shepherd, and they needed to be led and guided. There was a
plentiful harvest, and there were few workers to bring it in. Jesus
wants the disciples to recognize the need for workers.
What harvest is Jesus talking about? There is quite some discussion
that is made about that. Some say it is a harvest of multitudes of
souls, which is a common theme for missions’ speakers. They see the
harvest as fields of wheat ready for men to just go gather it and bring
it in. Others say the harvest is God’s judgment, which is a more common
theme among theologians who recognize that more often than not the term
harvest in the Old and New Testaments is used to refer to judgment. For
example, Joel 3:13, 14 and Matthew 13:30, 39. They view the harvest more as tender for the fire. Joel 3:13, 14 says, "Put in the sickle, for the harvest
is ripe. Come, tread, for the wine press is full; The fats overflow,
for their wickedness is great. Multitudes, multitudes in the valley of
decision! For the day of the LORD is near in the valley of decision." This is certainly a passage in which the "harvest" is one of judgment upon the wicked. The same is true in Matthew 13:30, 39 which says in the parable of the wheat and the tares, "Allow both of them to grow together until the harvest; and in the time of the harvest
I will say to the reapers, ‘First gather up the tares and bind them in
bundles to burn them up; but gather the wheat into my barn.’" Verse 39, "and the enemy who sowed them is the devil, and the harvest
is the end of the age; and the reapers are angels. Therefore just as
the tares are gathered up and burned with fire, so shall it be at the
end of the age."
Certainly with passages like that we can get the idea that the harvest is one of judgment. But at the same time, passages like John 4:35, 36 support the idea of the harvest being souls. "Do you not say, ‘There are yet four months, and then comes the harvest‘?
Behold, I say to you, lift up your eyes, and look on the fields, that
they are white for harvest. Already he who reaps is receiving wages, and
is gathering fruit for life eternal; that he who sows and he who reaps
may rejoice together."
What is the answer? I think both because that is fitting within the
context of the passage. Remember that Jesus is seeing the multitudes as
people who are distressed and down cast as sheep without a shepherd, and
what Jesus feels for them is compassion, and what He has done for them
is minister by teaching, proclaiming the gospel and healing. I do not
think you can get away from the idea that Jesus’ call to His disciples
in this verse is that they see the people in the same way as those who
are in need of help.
At the same time you cannot get away from the idea of judgment, and
that most of these people will end up in judgment for that was the theme
of the verses in the immediate context concerning the response of the
people to Jesus’ ministry. Some believed and followed. Most were amazed,
but unmoved, and some rejected and were antagonistic.
I believe what Jesus wanted the disciples to see, and for us to see
too, is that the need for workers to go out into the fields and bring in
those that are saved, while the rest will be gathered by the angels for
everlasting punishment. I see the harvest more as fields that are a
mixture of wheat & tares as in the parable. The wheat is to be
gathered into the barns which signify salvation and heaven, while the
tares are burned up signifying everlasting punishment and hell. That
same theme is also in the Joel passage, for Joel 3:16
& 17 speak of the Lord being the refuge for His people while He is
judging wicked people. I think this is also more fitting to what we see
around us. We see a lost and dying world that is in entrapped in sin and
the people in it are bruised and battered by sin and its effects. They
are confused and lost without hope. The majority of them will die in
that condition, but there are some that are responding to God’s call and
workers are needed to direct them to Jesus Christ.
The need that Jesus saw and wanted His disciples to see was great.
And in verse 38 He makes His request to them to respond to this need, "Therefore beseech the Lord of the harvest to send out workers into His harvest."
Now that may surprise you! You would have thought Jesus would have
told them to be workers and go out into the harvest, but instead He
calls on them to pray asking God to send workers. This is an important
point and one we need to understand. Next week we will see Jesus
commission His disciples to go out into the harvest so we know the
ultimate effect of His request was that they went into action. So why
doesn’t Jesus just say that to begin with. "The harvest is great, so get out there and get busy!"
Two reasons. First, we are limited and can only be individually
involved in so much, but Jesus wants us to be concerned about more than
we can be personally involved with. So, when there are areas we cannot
be personally involved in, yet see the need, we can still be involved by
seeking the Lord in sending others to meet the needs. Most of our
missions praying is directly along those lines. We pray for countries
and people that need to be taught the Word of God and hear the gospel,
and as we do God sends His workers there. We pray for His workers to go
into the harvest.
The second reason is more personal. We must remember that the work of
the Lord is the Lord’s work and it must be done in His way and in His
timing and not ours. No one is fit to do the Lord’s work until they have
sought Him first. Isaiah had to be cleansed and have his iniquity taken
away and his sin forgiven before he was fit to respond to the Lord in Isaiah 6:8, "Here I am, send me." We
should never get involved in a ministry without seeking the will of the
Lord out first. You may not be ready, and He may want someone else.
There is a great harvest out there and workers are desperately
needed. There are a thousand and one things to do to be involved in
bringing in the Lord’s harvest. There are not only the various
ministries that take place in and around the church such as Sunday
School, VBS, Children’s ministries, Youth Ministries, Music, Worship
services, visitation, follow-up, discipleship, Men’s fellowship, women’s
fellowship, parenting classes as well as the support ministries of
keeping the physical plant and basic functions of the church going.
There are also so many things around us that are open to us such as the
Christian Woman’s Club and the Gideons, but also Jail Ministry, Hospital
ministry, Crisis pregnancy counseling, community outreach, community
leadership, speaking to schools or other organizations about a host of
issues from the Christian perspective – abortion, human sexuality,
morality, drug abuse, creation science, etc. Then there are all the
opportunities you as an individual have to affect other people for the
cause of Christ in your personal contacts through your neighborhood,
work, school, friends, and special interests.
The opportunities are vast, for the harvest is plentiful, but to be
used by the Lord you have to first see the need and have the compassion
of Christ for sinners. Second, beseech the Lord for workers to meet
those needs, and then third, do whatever the Lord wants you to do.
Let me challenge you in each of these areas. First, get on your knees
and pray for the Lord to open your eyes to what is around you and fill
you with His compassion for this sinful world. Second, stay on your
knees and plead with Him for workers to labor in the areas you see, and
third, seek out what He wants you to do, and then do it whether it be
something grand or small. If you are faithful in a little, He will
entrust to you greater work in the future.
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