“ …whoever is not against us is for us.”
This morning might get confusing, so take another sip of coffee.
Today's verse shares similarities with verses in Luke 11 and Matthew 12 but they appear to be opposites. … Luke and Matthew record Jesus saying, “Whoever is not with me is against me”. But in Mark He says, “whoever is not against us is for us”. The modification is no accident, so what is the significance?
If we examine the circumstances, we see that he is speaking to the Pharisees in Luke and Matthew, and to the Disciples in Mark… Different audience… different message.
When Jesus says, “if they’re not against us, they’re for us” to His disciples, it seems like an admonishment for those of us who follow Christ and expect every worship service to look and sound like ours. Cautioning us to stop searching for unbiblical ways to disqualify people. He is saying stop excluding those who don’t worship exactly like you do … If they love ME, and follow scripture, they’re on our team.
On the other hand, Matthew and Mark are directed at the Pharisees who accused Jesus of casting out demons because He was the Prince of demons. About them, He says, “Whoever is not with me is against me;”. He is telling the religious elite that He is the only way to God. If you don’t cling to Jesus alone, you are not a Christian. He is the only way, and if you are offended by the Cross, and insist on adding your traditions, you are against the gospel.
So, there is a narrow path and wandering away from scripture in either direction will get you a reprimand. I need to think through these situations and understand the times when God is inclusive, and the times God is exclusive… because He is both.
Some religious leaders today demand unbiblical uniformity, while others ignore scripture because it is inconvenient to their lifestyle… both are wrong.
We are to call sin, sin… not adding to, or ignoring culturally unpopular Scripture. We are also to embrace those who love and follow His Word, regardless of how they dress, or their preferred style of worship music.
Jesus meant what He said… both times … and He still does.
“We must be hard where the Bible is hard, and soft where the Bible is soft"- John Stott