Pastor Tim Patoka
`August 21, 2022 The Door to Heaven Luke 13:22-30 1) Is Narrow for All 2) Is Open to All
The college student is about their new class known as a weeder – a class that is intentionally difficult so it weeds out the not-so-driven students. Anxious about having to retake the class, the student asks their advisor how many people fail it their first time through. The newly married couple is head over heels for each other, but they’ve heard about the seven-year itch, the notion that marriages struggle once the novelty becomes reality seven years in. So they look up divorce rates to see if they will live happily, ever after. The newshound has heard about the latest prevalent disease and wonders, “will I remain in good health?” So they dive into the research on mortality and severe infection rates. What do these three people have in common? They’re concerned and they want to know how they stack up against the odds. Yet the odds don’t determine what will or won’t happen. Rather, it’s the underlying actions like good grades, open communication, and a healthy lifestyle that makes the difference. In our verses this morning, we meet an unidentified believer was concerned about their salvation. Wanting to know how they stacked up against the odds, they asked Jesus, “Lord, are only a few going to be saved?” (Luke 13:23) Jesus responds with a parable about a shut door, people still outside, and a decisive master of the house. It is through this parable that Jesus directs our attention to what is most important – not how many will be saved, but how you are be saved. So he tells us about the door to heaven and how it is narrow for all yet open to all. 1) Is Narrow for All Since a parable is central to Jesus’ lesson, it’s good to correctly understand it. The master of the house is Jesus and the house he’s gatekeeping is heaven. When he shuts the door, time has run out to enter heaven whether it be on the Last Day or a person’s own last day. Those left outside may have known about Jesus, but they were still lost in their sins and defined as evildoers. And the weeping and gnashing of teeth they do after departing Jesus is a common biblical expression to describe hell and its eternal sorrow and disappointment.
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