A believer whose spiritual eyes have been opened develops spiritual discernment through the Word personally, rather than blindly following a pastor who is spiritually blind.
A believer whose spiritual eyes have been opened
develops spiritual discernment through the Word
personally, rather than blindly following
a
pastor who is spiritually blind.
“He also spoke a parable to them: ‘Can a blind person lead a blind
person? Will not both fall into a pit? A disciple is not above his teacher, but
everyone who is fully trained will be like his teacher’” (Luke 6:39–40).
As I meditate on these
words, I desire to receive the lessons they give.
(1)
As I
meditated on today’s main passage, Luke 6:39, I was first led to meditate
together on Matthew 15:14: “Leave them alone; they are blind leaders of the
blind. If a blind man leads a blind man, both will fall into a pit.”
(a)
As I did so,
I began to think about whom Jesus was referring to when He spoke to His
disciples of those who are “blind and lead the blind.” The Korean Modern Bible translates this phrase
as “blind guides.”
(i)
Here, the
“blind guides” refer precisely to the “Pharisees” and “scribes” (v. 1), who are
“hypocrites” (v. 7). Jesus called these
legalistic and hypocritical religious leaders “blind guides” because they
misinterpreted the Law, were themselves spiritually darkened, and led others
onto the wrong path, ultimately causing all of them to fall into
destruction—“the pit” (v. 14; Lk. 6:39) (Ref.: Internet).
·
What it
means that these legalistic and hypocritical religious leaders misinterpreted
the Law is that they were breaking God’s commandments because of their
traditions (Mt. 15:3).
-
For example,
God said, “Honor your father and mother,” and also, “Anyone who curses father
or mother must be put to death.” Yet
they taught that if someone said what should have been given to parents was
offered to God, then that person did not need to honor his parents. In this
way, because of their traditions, they nullified (made void) the word of God
(vv. 4–6).
n
Even now,
Jesus says to hypocrites, “You have abandoned the commandments of God and
are holding on to human traditions,” and “You set aside the commands of God in order to
observe your traditions” (Mk. 7:8–9). When pastors, according to church traditions
(?), neglect their wives and children (their families) and even sacrifice them
in order to serve the Lord’s church devotedly, this nullifies the word of God
(v. 13), abandons God’s command (v. 9), and such people are “those who have
abandoned the faith and are worse than unbelievers” (1 Tim. 5:8).
·
Therefore,
Jesus said to them: “You hypocrites! Isaiah was right when he prophesied about
you, saying: “These people honor Me with their lips, but their hearts are far
from Me. They worship Me in vain; they
teach as doctrines the commandments of men’” (vv. 7–9).
-
In today’s
terms, those who abandon God’s commandments in order to keep church traditions
are hypocrites in the Lord’s sight. If
they honor the Lord only with their lips while their hearts are far from Him,
they are merely worshiping the Lord in vain. Such hypocrites clean the outside but are full
of greed and self-indulgence on the inside (23:25), and they are like
whitewashed tombs, which appear beautiful on the outside but inside are full of
bones and all kinds of uncleanness (v. 27).
(b)
As I
meditated together on Luke 6:39 and Matthew 15:14, the second thing I
considered was whom Jesus was referring to as the other “blind” (Lk. 6:39; Mt.
15:14)—those who are led by the “blind,” namely the “hypocrites” (v. 7), the
“Pharisees” and “scribes” (v. 1), those legalistic and hypocritical religious
leaders.
(i)
They refer
to the people who, being spiritually dark and lacking discernment, receive
false teaching from the Pharisees and scribes—Jewish legalists—and follow them,
losing spiritual discernment and together falling into the path of destruction,
“the pit” (Lk. 6:39; Mt. 15:14) (Ref.: Internet).
·
I would like
to share a portion of a devotional reflection I wrote on July 18, 2018,
centered on Genesis 27:23, under the title “Pastor, please discern and bless
us!”: “Right now, many of our pastors are becoming corrupted. Their spiritual eyes have grown dark, so they
bless believers recklessly without discernment. Clearly, believers are living
deceptively like Jacob; clearly, believers are living in disobedience to God’s
commandments; clearly, believers are trying to justify their lives while being
yoked with the world. Yet pastors,
instead of rebuking the believers we love as Jesus does (Rev. 3:19; cf. Prov.
27:5), are blessing them instead. Right
now, pastors’ spiritual eyes have grown dark, and they are seeking the material
blessings that spiritually blind believers like. Clearly, believers are not first seeking the
kingdom of God and His righteousness, yet pastors are praying blessing prayers
so that ‘all these things’ may be added to them. Clearly, this is not the time
to pray blessing prayers; rather, it is clearly the time for all of us to
repent. Right now, spiritually blind
pastors are leading spiritually blind believers. Just as Jesus said, the blind are leading the
blind (Mt. 15:14). As a result, both
have fallen into the pit (v. 14). Even
though pastors, who are blind, and believers, who are blind, have already
fallen into the pit, we are unable even to discern that fact. To this extent, we have now lost spiritual
discernment” [Ref.: https://blog.naver.com/kdicaprio74/222415937059].
- Here,
two sentences come to mind once again: (1) “Right now, our pastors’ spiritual
eyes have grown dark, and they are seeking material blessings that spiritually
blind believers like.” (2) “Right now,
pastors whose spiritual eyes are dark are leading believers whose spiritual
eyes are also dark.”
n
Can you
imagine the scene of spiritually blind pastors leading spiritually blind
believers?
·
When I asked
a computer artificial intelligence about “the scene of spiritually blind
pastors leading spiritually blind believers,” I received the following
response: “‘The scene of spiritually blind pastors leading spiritually blind
believers’ metaphorically expresses, from a biblical perspective, a dangerous
situation in which people are led in the wrong direction through spiritual
ignorance or blindness. It emphasizes the absence of true, Word-centered,
Spirit-led pastoral ministry and strongly underscores the importance of having
one’s spiritual eyes opened to know God rightly and to live a life that longs
for heaven. This is connected to the warning that when a blind person leads
another blind person, both may fall into a pit (Matthew 15:14), and it carries
the meaning of a powerful warning that urges people to receive proper spiritual
discernment and guidance within the truth” (Internet).
-
“Core
meaning and biblical background
The importance of spiritual eyes: This refers not simply to physical
eyesight, but to “spiritual eyes”—the ability to discern God and the spiritual realm through the
illumination of the Holy Spirit.
Biblical warning: Just as in Jesus’ words, “If a blind man leads a blind
man, both will fall into a pit” (Mt. 15:14), it warns that if a spiritually
dark leader guides a spiritually dark group, all may stray from the truth.
The danger of the absence of truth: This refers to a state of not
knowing God rightly (John 17:3) and being unable to provide true life and
salvation, suggesting that such a state may lead to a condition without
salvation and life.
What this metaphor implies
The need for true leaders: It emphasizes the need for pastors whose
spiritual eyes have been opened by the illumination of the Holy Spirit, who
know God rightly, stand firmly on the Word of Scripture, and can lead believers
along the right path.
Believers’ wakefulness: It emphasizes that believers themselves must
also be spiritually awake, possess discernment, and, rather than following
blindly, cultivate spiritual discernment personally through the Word.
Worldly values vs. spiritual values: It stresses that true faith is a
life that does not cling to what is seen with physical eyes, but lives while
longing for heaven through spiritual eyes” (Internet).
n At this point, when I read the statement, “Believers’ wakefulness: believers themselves must also be
spiritually awake, possess discernment, and, rather than following blindly,
cultivate spiritual discernment personally through the Word,” I was reminded again of a devotional reflection I wrote on August 31,
2020, under the title “We Must Discern (3)”, meditating on 1 John 4:1–6: “Second,
Scripture says, ‘Do not believe every spirit, but test the spirits to see
whether they are from God.’ Look at
today’s passage, 1 John 4:1: ‘Beloved, do not believe every spirit, but test
the spirits to see whether they are from God, because many false prophets have
gone out into the world.’ Dear friends,
should we blindly believe pastors’ sermons? Or should we discern—even pastors’
sermons—whether they are correct or incorrect based on Scripture? In Acts 17:11, the Bible says that the people
in Berea were more noble than those in Thessalonica, for they received the
(Word of God) with eagerness and examined the Scriptures daily to see whether
these things were so. In other words,
the Bereans studied the Scriptures every day to determine whether the word of
God they heard through the apostle Paul was true. Applied to today, this means that you must
study the Bible daily to determine whether the sermons you hear through pastors
are truly the word of God or not. We must no longer, as some pastors used to
say in the past during sermons, close the Bible and believe everything
unconditionally. We must verify it. The reason is that there are too many false
pastors, and false gospels and false sermons delivered through their mouths are
rampant” [Ref.: https://blog.naver.com/kdicaprio74/222495257815].
(2) As I meditated on today’s main passage, Luke
6:40—“A disciple is not above his teacher, but everyone who is fully trained
will be like his teacher”—I was first led to meditate as well on the first part
of Matthew 10:24–25: “A disciple is not above his teacher, nor a servant above
his master. It is enough for the disciple to be like his teacher, and the
servant like his master ….”
(a) In these two Scripture passages, the meaning of
the statement “a disciple is not above his teacher” is that a blind disciple
will be no better than a blind teacher, and that disciples who receive the
guidance and teaching of the Pharisees remain bound within the framework of
those false teachings and go no further than that (Hochma).
(i)
And the
statement, “everyone who is fully trained will be like his teacher” (Lk. 6:40b)
[“it is enough for the disciple to be like his teacher” (Mt. 10:25)], means
that if the disciples of the Pharisees fully follow their teacher’s
instruction, they will become Pharisees exactly like their teacher (Hochma).
·
However, we
must not overlook that behind these words lies another intention of
Jesus—namely, the exhortation, “Should not the disciples who follow Me be
different from these people? Through all
the teaching you have received so far, be made complete and become like Me.” Although no one among humanity can ever reach
the level of Jesus, believers must grow in every way up to Christ, who is the
Head (Eph. 4:15; Col. 1:18) (Hochma).
-
True
disciples of Jesus do not follow hypocritical and misguided teachers, but fully
understand and practice the teachings of Jesus, the true Teacher. They grow, are transformed by the Holy Spirit,
and mature to become like Jesus (Ref.: Internet).
n This is a word that emphasizes a disciple’s resolve and perseverance: a disciple cannot surpass the teacher, and
just as the teacher experiences humiliation, persecution, and suffering, the
disciple may also experience them. Therefore,
even amid such suffering, the disciple should not lose heart, but be satisfied
simply to walk the same path of suffering as the Lord (Mt. 10:25) (Internet).
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