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Tares Among the Wheat (evangelical/protestant caucus)
Ligonier.Org ^ | 2/11/2016

Posted on 02/11/2016 6:49:31 AM PST by Gamecock

"He told his disciples to have a boat ready for him because of the crowd, lest they crush him, for he had healed many, so that all who had diseases pressed around him to touch him" (vv. 9-10). - Mark 3:7-10

Pastors and church elders well understand the difficulty of knowing the hearts of the people in their congregations. Though there are signs of spiritual maturity that leaders can look for, they are not omniscient, so they cannot know with absolute certainty the states of the souls under their care. A church may have a large membership, but not everyone in the congregation is necessarily there for the right reason-to gather with God's people to worship Him. In fact, the reality of wheat and tares in the church until Christ returns almost certainly guarantees the presence of unregenerate people in every church gathering (Matt. 13:24-30).

Even Jesus ministered to crowds that included people who did not follow Him for the proper reason. Our Lord attracted a large and diverse following during His earthly ministry, as Mark 3:7-10 informs us. Not only did people from Galilee, the northern portion of the Promised Land, follow Jesus, but also people from Idumea, located 120 miles south of Capernaum. Jews from Judea and Galilee flocked to Him, but there were almost certainly Gentiles in the crowds as well. People also came to Jesus from Tyre and Sidon, Gentile inhabited cities in Lebanon that sat fifty miles north of Capernaum.

Given the size of the crowds reported in today's passage, tares had to have been present. Some people came not because they loved Jesus and sought His yoke of discipleship. This is evident from Mark 15:6-15, as the crowd that welcomed Jesus into Jerusalem on Palm Sunday quickly turned against Him, and that crowd likely included at least some of the people mentioned in today's passage. Mark's description of the crowd in 3:7-10 also indicates the compromised motives of the people. The desire for physical healing drove many of them to the Savior, and while it is not inherently wrong to seek physical healing, there is little evidence that the people in the crowd wanted anything more than that. They were not coming to Jesus to learn from Him or to serve His kingdom but rather to see what they could get from Him. Mark 1:45 offers confirmation of this. The huge, clamoring crowds were something of a burden for Jesus, for they made it impossible for Him to preach the gospel in many places.

All this cautions us not to measure the spiritual vitality of a group of people by its size. It is not wrong to take the number of people to whom we minister into account, but the number itself tells us nothing about the maturity of the congregation.

Coram Deo

In the drive to build a large church, elders can lose sight of what is most important-congregational discipleship. A large congregation might be spiritually mature, but it could also be that the tares outnumber the wheat in a given locale. The same dynamics are true of smaller churches as well. Let us encourage our pastors and elders to do the work of discipleship, and may we seek to be involved as well, according to our circumstances and abilities.

Passages for Further Study

Numbers 13-14

2 Kings 17

Matthew 26:47-56

Luke 23:8-12


TOPICS: Theology; Worship
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 02/11/2016 6:49:31 AM PST by Gamecock
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To: Alex Murphy; bkaycee; blue-duncan; boatbums; caww; CynicalBear; daniel1212; Dutchboy88; ealgeone; ..

Ping


2 posted on 02/11/2016 6:49:58 AM PST by Gamecock ( Do not be afraid of those who kill the body but cannot kill the soul...Matthew 10:28)
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To: Gamecock

I assume Judas would be considered a tare among the wheat?


3 posted on 02/11/2016 7:01:33 AM PST by Mark17 (Thank God I have Jesus, there's more wealth in my soul than acres of diamonds and mountains of gold)
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To: Mark17

Along with the Pharisees and their spies who would surely be following His every move.

It’s not hard to look at those Mega Churches and come to the same conclusion.


4 posted on 02/11/2016 7:04:18 AM PST by Roman_War_Criminal (Amnesty advocates call me "Tio Tomas")
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To: Roman_War_Criminal
It's not hard to look at those Mega Churches and come to the same conclusion.

Decades ago, I was helping out with the youth in a good church. A few were asked to tell about their salvation experience. One simply said he was raised in a Christian home, and he had been going to church all his life. I just shook my head, and thought some of these people may be tares among the wheat.

5 posted on 02/11/2016 7:25:00 AM PST by Mark17 (Thank God I have Jesus, there's more wealth in my soul than acres of diamonds and mountains of gold)
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To: Mark17

>>Decades ago, I was helping out with the youth in a good church. A few were asked to tell about their salvation experience. One simply said he was raised in a Christian home, and he had been going to church all his life. I just shook my head, and thought some of these people may be tares among the wheat.

You have to be careful with that. Being raised Christian so that it is your only worldview is God’s Plan A for his Elect. He wants families to raise their children as his children. Plan B is the person who lived away from him for years and suddenly has a dramatic conversion experience.

I’m a Plan B person and wish I had been a Plan A person so all those years wouldn’t have been spent on some of the things I spent them on.


6 posted on 02/11/2016 7:56:11 AM PST by Bryanw92 (Sic semper tyrannis)
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To: Bryanw92
I'm a Plan B person and wish I had been a Plan A person so all those years wouldn't have been spent on some of the things I spent them on.

I am also a plan B, as you call it. I wish the same, that I had been raised in a Christian home. Unfortunately, I was not. I also spent time on stuff that I wish I had not spent time on.

7 posted on 02/11/2016 8:13:34 AM PST by Mark17 (Thank God I have Jesus, there's more wealth in my soul than acres of diamonds and mountains of gold)
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To: Mark17; cyn
Decades ago, I was helping out with the youth in a good church. A few were asked to tell about their salvation experience. One simply said he was raised in a Christian home, and he had been going to church all his life. I just shook my head, and thought some of these people may be tares among the wheat.

That reminds me of the parable about the king who sought to choose his successor out of all the children in the kingdom.

They all lined up (what mother was going to miss out on *this* opportunity?). The king gave them each a seed to plant and grow and nurture. At an appointed time, they were to return with their project, so that the king could assess their abilities.

The day arrived. Each child brought forth his plant. Quite a line-up of beautiful flowers and greenery. Whose would be the best? Who would merit the kingdom?

One little boy, however, could only present the king with an empty pot of dirt. The child did the best he could, but his seed didn't grow. He was very sad, but that's what happened, so that's what he told the king.

Well you can see who merited the kingdom, because none of the seeds the king gave to the children were any good.

8 posted on 02/11/2016 10:55:23 AM PST by Ezekiel (All who mourn the destruction of America merit the celebration of her rebirth.)
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