Perhaps you have noticed there are times when
someone asks Jesus something,
but his response doesn’t really answer the question!
Rather, Jesus answers the question that should have been asked.
So, today, “Someone asked him, Lord, will only a few be saved?”
Pay attention to how Jesus responds.
He refers to a narrow gate—so that sounds like “few,” right?
But, later, he refers to people coming from east and west,
north and south—that sounds like a lot.
So the question Jesus actually answered was,
not “how many” are saved; but simply, how to be saved.
And that is by striving to enter the “narrow gate.”
In the Gospel of John, Jesus says, “I am the gate,
and whoever enters through Me will be saved.”
So, why is the gate is “narrow”? That sounds bad.
But remember why cities had gates:
because they also had walls, to keep out threats.
A narrow gate means you can see clearly who comes and goes.
That is perfectly apt for Judgment Day:
no one will slip anonymously into the Kingdom.
One by one, you and I will meet the gaze of Jesus our King,
and either he knows us, or not.
A narrow gate doesn’t mean only few enter;
it means you have to be patient and wait your turn.
It also means that while you might squeeze in,
Nothing you bring with you, will.
Not bad habits and attachments to food or booze or the Internet.
Nor the baggage of unforgiveness and recrimination.
All that must be left outside, or else we are left outside.
Notice also what our Lord said:
“Many will attempt to enter, but won’t be strong enough.”
In fact, none of us is “strong enough”! No one!
You and I have got to drive out of our minds
every last trace of the idea that anyone
gets to heaven because we’re good enough!
No one can be “good enough”; no one can be strong enough.
You and I get there by grace, which makes us fit for heaven.
Remember the lost sheep – how did it get back home?
The Lord puts it on his shoulders.
Only Jesus is “strong enough”—and he will carry us through!
Till now, there’s a word I haven’t uttered: hell.
Is hell real? Jesus knows that it is. He talks about it a LOT.
In the Gospel, Jesus says that people will be cast out,
because he never knew them.
That means there was never a true friendship.
What’s more, when you and I arrive at the narrow gate,
will we actually be willing to leave behind whatever we brought along?
People assume that there will always be a chance to repent, later.
But let’s be candid: as the years go by,
we not only get hardening of arteries;
even more, you and I also get hardening of habits and attitudes.
“Later, later, later” pretty easily turns into “never.”
Assuming you can always repent later is called “presumption.”
And it leads to a hardness of heart.
So, what about hell?
The conclusion I reach is this:
No one is “sent to hell” so much as people turn away from heaven.
We “refuse” heaven by refusing the graces God gives us.
The most dangerous spiritual place to be
is not being constantly in line for confession,
having failed over and over, and feeling as weak as a kitten.
No, the dangerous frame of mind is to think,
I don’t need conversion. I’m just fine.
But the good news, which Jesus puts right in front of us, is:
There is a way to heaven; it’s narrow, but wide enough for two;
Jesus, carrying you.
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