Chapter 41

 

ÒWisdom JustifiedÓ

 

ÒAnd the Lord said, Whereunto then shall I liken the men of this generation? and to what are they like? They are like unto children sitting in the marketplace, and calling one to another, and saying, We have piped unto you, and ye have not danced; we have mourned to you, and ye have not wept. For John the Baptist came neither eating bread nor drinking wine; and ye say, He hath a devil. The Son of man is come eating and drinking; and ye say, Behold a gluttonous man, and a winebibber, a friend of publicans and sinners! But wisdom is justified of all her children.Ó (Luke 7:31-35)

 

This Generation

 

First our Lord speaks about a group of people called, Òthis generation.Ó At first glance, it looks as though he is using the word ÒgenerationÓ the way we commonly use it, to speak of that specific group of people living at the time. But that clearly is not the case. If you look through the Scriptures, every time these words are used together, they are used to describe self-righteous religionists. They always refer to lost religious people, like the Pharisees, Sadducees and Herodians of our LordÕs day. And those people called Òthis generationÓ are always hostile, persecuting people. They are the people of whom our Lord spoke specifically when he said, ÒIn the world you shall have tribulation.Ó The words Òthis generationÓ speak of the enemies of our God and of our souls in every age (Psalms 12:1-8; 71:12-18; Matthew 12:41-42; 23:29-38).

 

In Luke 7:31-34 the Lord Jesus shows us that unbelieving religionists are always opposed to, find fault with, and are quick to slander GodÕs servants and his people, because the carnal mind is enmity against God.

 

We ought to always take care not to offend the people of this world. We should always strive to be kind, gracious, thoughtful, and caring of those people among whom we live and with whom we work in this world. As much as possible, live peaceably with all men. Try to get along with people. Make sacrifices to do so. Endeavor to live blamelessly before your neighbors, for ChristÕs sake, for the honor of God, for the gospelÕs sake. Yet, we must not concern ourselves with the cavils of men. If men and women are determined to set themselves in opposition to us, as we endeavor to serve our God, they should not disturb us. We must not court the favor of men; and we must not fear the frowns of men. ÒThis generationÓ is a hard, implacable, peevish, childish generation, which will never be made friends to the cause of Christ. The cross of Christ has always been an offense to them and always will be.

 

            This is the lesson to be learned by our LordÕs comparison describing Òthis generationÓ as children. If we would be saved, we must become as little children, meek, humble, inoffensive, trusting. Yet, lost religionists are also like little children, not adorable, sweet children, but peevish brats. Our Master compares Òthis generationÓ to perverse, rebellious children, who can never be pleased with anything. Nothing satisfies them. Nothing contents them. They find some fault with everything and everyone, but themselves.

 

John the Baptist came, leading a stern, austere, separated life of self-denial; and they said, ÒHe hath a devil.Ó After him, the Lord Jesus came adopting the habits of a more social man, a man who mixed with people; and the very same men of Òthis generationÓ said of him, he is Òa glutton and a winebibber.Ó

 

Their animosity was not really against either John or Jesus of Nazareth as men, or as preachers, but against the message they preached, the doctrine they taught, the God they represented. The men and women of Òthis generationÓ really do not care at all what kind of man the preacher really is. They know they can make their kind of preachers become whatever they want them to be.

 

John the Baptist and the Lord Jesus Christ preached exactly the same thing. Both preached repentance toward God and faith in Christ. But the men and women of Òthis generationÓ are determined not to hear GodÕs Word, bow to his Son, confess their sin and seek salvation by free grace alone. The fact is, Òthe carnal mind is enmity against God.Ó Nothing will ever change that, but grace itself.

 

            The pretended objections of this generation to GodÕs servants are only a smoke screen to cover their rebellion and hatred of God. Anyone who would hear GodÕs message from the lips of the Master would also gladly hear it from JohnÕs lips. And any who would hear GodÕs message from the lips of John the Baptist would gladly hear it from the lips of the Lord Jesus.

 

            How often we see religious men and women who have a blind attachment to a preacher! They follow not the ShepherdÕs voice through the preacher, but the preacherÕs voice. Such people are always fickle and unstable. And rebels will always find an excuse for their rebellion. The carnal mind will always attempt to cover its hatred of God and justify its unbelief. For proud, self-righteous, self-willed religious men and women, no matter who the preacher is, free grace is too easy, faith in Christ is too simple, substitution is too dangerous.

 

Notice this, too. — Most of those things which divide the unbelieving religious world are matters of complete insignificance and indifference. What was it that caused these people to talk? What was it that kept some from hearing John and others from hearing the Lord Jesus and all of them from hearing either? — John the Baptist was a strict separatist, a Nazarite. — The Lord Jesus was far more free in his conduct.

 

Let us not behave as such peevish, silly children. Rather, let us ever behave as mature men and women. We have no right to make indifferent matters of importance. Let us learn to be silent about all those things about which the Book of God is silent. We have no right to impose rules upon GodÕs people that God never imposed. And we dare not make essential matters of indifference. — The gospel of Christ, believerÕs immersion, the observance of LordÕs Supper are matters of primary importance. The doctrine of the gospel, (righteousness by the obedience of Christ, redemption by his effectual blood atonement, salvation by the irresistible gift and operation of grace) cannot be compromised; and these things are held forth perpetually in the symbolic ordinances of the gospel, when those ordinances are observed as our Lord gave them.

 

This generation is a wicked, perverse generation. But our Lord also speaks ofÉ

 

Another Generation

 

There is another generation, called Òhis generation,Ó Òthe generation of thy children,Ó Òthe generation of the upright,Ó and Òa chosen generation.Ó Look at verse 35. Here our Master draws a direct and distinct contrast between those of Òthis generationÓ and his own elect. — ÒBut wisdom is justified of all her children

                                                                                                                        

Certainly there is at least a reference here to the Lord Jesus Christ himself, who is our Wisdom (1 Corinthians 1:30). Christ is the wisdom of God. He is the Word, that One in whom and by whom we know God. He lived in wisdom here and shows us the way of wisdom. The Lord Jesus stood for us as our Wisdom in the counsel chambers of the Almighty in eternity. He fulfilled the wisdom of the covenant. He makes believing sinners wise unto salvation. And he gives us wisdom as we need it in the face of our numerous, subtle foes.

 

All GodÕs elect justify him in all his person and work. — ÒWisdom is justified of ALL her children.Ó All who are born of God, born of wisdom, repent before him and thereby justify God (Psalm 51:4). Repentance is taking sides with God against ourselves, coming into agreement with God, and justifying God in the way he saves sinners.

 

            Yet, there is more. BelieverÕs justify GodÕs wisdom in all things and thereby prove themselves wise indeed. The Scriptures make us wise unto salvation through faith in Christ (2 Timothy 3:15). And God the Holy Spirit is in his people the Spirit of Wisdom, Revelation and Grace. Thus, we are taught and enabled to see the justice and equity of our God in all his works and in all his ways (Psalms 36:6; 48:11; 97:8; 119:75; Isaiah 26:8-9; Revelation 19:1-6).

 

A Great Savior!

 

Even when he is spoken of in derision, our Lord Jesus Christ proves himself to be a great Savior. His enemies constantly derided him, calling him Òa friend of publicans and sinners.Ó How I rejoice to declare that that is exactly who and what the Lord Jesus Christ is. In fact, he is the only friend of Publicans and sinners, the only friend we have; and he is the Friend only of Publicans and sinners (Matthew 9:12-13; Mark 2:17; Luke 5:31-32).

 

            Oh, how willing God is to be gracious! Did you ever notice how often the Lord God refers to our sins as sicknesses, diseases and infirmities? One reason for that is this: — Our heavenly Father views the sins of his people as sicknesses calling for pity, not as crimes calling for punishment!

 

Come, ye sinners, poor and needy, weak and wounded, sick and sore.

Come, ye weary, heavy-laden, lost and ruined by the fall.

Come, ye sinners, come and welcome, GodÕs free bounty glorify!

True belief and true repentance, every grace that brings us nigh!

 

 

 

 

 

Don Fortner

 

 

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