Questions for life's quest
People often forget that there
will be some form of
assessment of our lives
MANY students get very busy at
the end of the year. It is time for important examinations that
they are told will determine the course of their lives. These
exams are often drenched with the perspiration of anxiety, both
of the students as well as that of their nervous parents.
Many students, trying to predict the questions that will appear
in their forthcoming exams, study books containing exam questions
from past years with model answers. If they had predicted correctly
and prepared themselves adequately, it would be smooth sailing.
If not, it would be nail-biting despair.
In many ways, life is also like this, is it not? The questions
we face become important in determining our well-being, and even
destiny. But truth be told, the preaching about these matters
is rather thin in church. Or sometimes, like badly or hastily
written 10-year series, they are grossly off the mark.
Scripture teaches that "we will all stand before God's judgment
seat" and that "each of us will give an account of himself
to God." (Rom. 14:10, 12). There will be some form of assessment
of our lives on earth - an examination, if you like. In their
busy lives, people often forget this truth. I have noticed that
often it is only when people hear the bell that indicates it is
the final lap of their race that they begin to think seriously
about the approaching "mother of all exams". Some try
to cram for it. Gross mistakes can be made.
In Mathew's
Gospel, Jesus talks about the "final exam" in two places
- in chapters 7 and 25. In the first text, He describes people
who had read the wrong books. They answered their wrongly anticipated
questions from heaven correctly, but alas, they were the wrong
questions. Those questions were not asked. However, like anxious
students they answered the questions that were never asked, hoping
perhaps to impress God with their answers.
Jesus declared that "Not everyone who says to me, 'Lord,
Lord' will enter the Kingdom of heaven, but only he who does the
will of my Father who is in heaven." (Mt. 7:21). Some of
His keen listeners (and readers down the ages) may have quickly
concluded (correct to a point) that whether you get into heaven
has not so much to do with how you talk, but how you walk. Not
what you have learned to say but what you have learned to do.
In their mind they would have quickly drawn up a list of actions
that would look good on their CV. Now that they had a hint, they
would have gleefully predicted the questions that would be asked
in heaven.
Jesus quickly shook them out of their imaginary exams. He said,
"Many will say to me on that day, 'Lord, Lord, did we not
prophesy in your name, and in your name drive out demons and perform
many miracles?' " (Mt. 7:22). The listeners may have congratulated
themselves that they had predicted the questions correctly.
But notice that these questions were never asked. Those who were
judged offered answers to questions that did not appear in the
script. The listeners could have anticipated that Jesus would
commend these answers. But what Jesus said shocked them. "Then
I will tell them plainly, I never knew you. Away from me, you
evildoers!" (Mt. 7:23). They had obviously prepared themselves
for the wrong kind of exam.
The other text in Mt. 25 reveals how the "final exam"
might be. If Jesus does ask a question, it might be something
like, "What did you do for the least of these brothers of
mine?" He would point to those who had been in great need
and often neglected in the world - the hungry, thirsty, sick,
lonely, imprisoned, poor and marginalised. In fact, in the text,
no questions are asked. Instead Jesus would make statements that
sound like verdicts. You gave me, you invited me, you looked after
me
Come you who are blessed. Where is the exam then?
The truths in these texts that should disturb us are these. Firstly,
the exam would have already ended when you step into the exam
hall. An employer wanting to hire honest employees planted some
tempting "lost" money in the waiting room and watched,
through a closed circuit TV, what the prospective employees did.
Everyone, except one, helped himself to the money. Only the honest
man got the job. There was no interview. Those who had dressed
impressively for it and were all prepared to impress the employer
were surprised when told that they didn't get the job.
Secondly, if it is not your talk but your walk that counts, then
you may get it all wrong too. Sometimes what is celebrated as
spiritual may not impress God. What is sensational in church may
not impress heaven. In fact, in Mt 25, those who were commended
were not even aware that their simple daily acts of compassion
had impressed Christ.
Which brings me to the third point - that the heart of the matter
is not what you say or even what you do, but how you relate with
Christ. "I do not know you" Jesus said to those who
thought they knew Him. To the others who were commended, their
response showed that their attention was on their relationship
with Christ, so much so that their lives showed the difference.
They were not performing but enjoying the relationship with Christ.
Their primary concerns were in the right place.
The "final exam" is not in the future. It is now. The
questions would not be asked then, but they are being asked now.
Often, we live our lives in response to the questions that are
being asked by the world. What is your job? How much do you earn?
Where do you live? What car do you drive? What do your children
do? The questions in the ultimate exam that matters are different.
They are not asked by earth, but by heaven.
Beware of wrong and seductive questions (cf. Gen. 3:1). Rather,
let your life's quest be guided by questions that will not be
asked in some distant future, but are being asked daily - by God,
in the innermost recesses of your heart.
QUOTE:
GOD'S QUESTIONS
'Often, we live our lives in response to the questions
that are being asked by the world
Beware of wrong and seductive
questions. Rather, let your life's quest be guided by questions
that will not be asked in some distant future, but are being asked
daily - by God, in the innermost recesses of your heart.'