Each passing day tells us that the times of the end as declared by the Lord are fulfilling. Our attention is being called to defining particularities that identify us as to whether we are His or the devil’s. Let us take a dimension of such peculiarities in the interpretation of one of the parables spoken in Matthew 13. Our theme text speaks to the two plantings, the wheat, and the tare; but before their separation, the wheat had to relate or deal with the tare. How?
The Lord Jesus Christ provides the perfect example of how to treat and interact with a tare. He had to deal with a tare close to Him throughout His ministry. In John 6:70-71, John writes, “Jesus answered [His disciples], ‘Did I not choose you, the twelve, and one of you is a devil?’ He spoke of Judas Iscariot, the son of Simon, for it was he who would betray Him, being one of the twelve.”
How Christ dealt with Judas sets the example for how we ought to deal with recognized tares. Jesus knew Judas; He knew his character and heart after traveling with him throughout His three-and-a-half years of ministry. Yet, Judas was allowed responsibilities and given duties just as the other disciples were. Judas worked and prayed, appearing just as religious as the other eleven—but Judas was only like them in appearance, not in character. First you recognise the tare by the character (Matthew 7:16-20).
The Lord Jesus never revealed to the other disciples that Judas was a tare. Even in the John 6 text while specifically identifying who He meant, Christ only mentions the presence of a tare, forcing the disciples to look inward and evaluate their own hearts. It is clear the disciples were unaware of Judas’ corrupt character even after spending more than three years with him. At the last Passover, the disciples had no idea who would betray the Master, each of them began to say to Christ, “Lord, is it I?” (Matthew 26:22).
Instead of singling out Judas and treating Him poorly, Jesus showed love and kindness to him, His own disciple who would betray Him and cause His death. Christ showed His enemy courtesy, respect, and humility, and even in a position of servitude, washed Judas’ feet (Matthew 5:43-45). He never revealed the tare among them, but instead allowed Judas to expose his own character through his actions. Perhaps Jesus knew that if He revealed Judas’ character, He would risk uprooting some of His other disciples. Loving the eleven so strongly, Christ would not risk losing one of them on account of Judas.
As we mature as Christians, it is our responsibility to discern and judge ourselves first (Matthew 7:3-5). While under training to be priests and kings in the coming Kingdom of God, and in both of these positions, judging plays a major role, we must constantly evaluate and recognize sin in order to avoid it, without presuming to know the heart of whoever sins. We must actively judge our own lives, recognizing the sin within ourselves. But when we recognize sin in others, and even correctly identify a tare in the church, we must still show love and kindness being careful not to be drawn into their sin (Ephesians 5:15-17; 2 Thessalonians 3:2)
God has not given us the responsibility of removing the tares; He has reserved that job solely for Himself. God, in wisdom infinitely greater than our own, will separate the wheat from the tares. The wheat cannot reap even itself, much less the tare—only the reaper can reap.
As wheat, our responsibility is to grow in kindness, patience, and godly love, producing healthy and good fruit. This requires an attitude of meek, humble, and godly service. Most importantly, we have the responsibility to grow into the perfect image of our Savior, Jesus Christ (Philippians 1:11 (NLT). *Culled from Taking Care With the Tares by Ted E. Bowling
Selah
Pastor Afolabi Oladele
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