The two parables we study in this lesson show that Jesus had a simple world view when it came to putting human beings into categories. There are only two categories, the righteous and the wicked, and only two eternal destinies, life and destruction. To Jesus people are divided into "the sheep" and "the goats", people who walk in the "narrow way" to eternal life, and people who walk in the "broad way"
The parables of The Two Gates and The Sheep and the Goats show how we must choose now which of the two multitudes we will be among
These parables highlight the
Mtt 7, Mtt 25, Jhn 10
Mtt 7:13-14
This parable begins with a command. "Enter through the narrow gate"
These are the only two alternatives. We eitrher obey or disobey the Lord's command. There is no third alternative. If we refuse to enter by the narrow gate, then we must pass through the wide gate. We cannot enter both, and we cannot enter neither. We must choose which of the two gates
Who is the narrow gate? Jesus said, "I am the gate for the sheep... I am the gate, whoever enters by me will be saved"
How does one enter by the narrow gate? The answer to this is in the six steps of hearing Jesus, believing in Jesus, confessing Jesus, baptism into Jesus, and dedicated living for Jesus. The seventh step is the one you will take into heaven at the last day. The six steps are presented in the
Why is the gate said to be narrow? It is "the narrow gate" in the sense that there is only one truth yet there are thousands of lies. There is only one true Saviour yet thousands of false prophets. So the gate of the lies is very wide, whilst the gate of the True one
Mtt 25:31-46
The parable begins with the word "as" in
The representative dialogues highlight the same problems as the two parables that we studied in the lesson
The image of Christ as the Shepherd of the sheep is developed in our next lesson,
The main idea in the parable of the sheep and the goats is that Christ divides the people of the world into two. There are philosophies and world views that divide the world into three, four, or more classes. There are also those who see the people of the world untimately as one united multitude. Jesus however sees the world as ultimately divided into two multitudes. Call them what you will, sheep and goats, saved and lost, wise and foolish, righteous and wicked, blessed and cursed, believers and unbelievers, obedient and disobedient... there are two multitudes, not one,
The important issue is which of the two divisions Christ will judge you to be in when he comes to judge the world. If you choose to take the six steps summarised in the chart below, then you will be among the "sheep" and be known by the Lord