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By John MacArthur
Turn with me in your Bible to Matthew chapter 10.. .Matthew chapter
10. I don't know about you, but we have missed so much, the joy of
teaching through Matthew in the last month as we've been digressing
and am excited about getting back this morning.
We're looking today at Matthew 10 and particularly verses 2 through
4 which give us the names of the disciples, the twelve Apostles. And
today I want us to focus our thinking on a very basic question. As
we came to the tenth chapter I really faced a decision. Whether to
just read the list and go on with the tremendous material about
discipleship that's in the chapter or whether to stop and look at
each individual in the list. And because I believe they were so
special and so wonderful and so uniquely called of God I couldn't
resist the opportunity that faced me to take each one individually
and see who these twelve really were. And then to ask this basic
question - What kind of people does God use for His purposes? What
kind of men did Jesus choose?
When we think of the twelve Apostles we are prone to think of
stained glass saints. People without faults.. .people who have been
canonized. People who manifest none of the failures of humanness
that beset us. And if we do that, we're wrong. Because they are
people just like us, specially called, specially transformed,
specially trained and specially sent by Christ. But people just like
us.
Now we live in a very qualification-conscious society. There are
qualifications for just about everything. In fact, as I was flying
to Boston on Wednesday, I had a copy of the Los Angeles Times
and I thought, you know, it might be interesting to just read
through all of the classified section on job opportunities and see
if I can refresh my mind about qualifications, and what the world
demands. And so I read the whole classified section, all the jobs
that were being offered and some of them were fascinating in terms
of qualification. For example, one said: Wanted: copywriter, must be
self motivated, able to work under pressure, willing to travel,
journalism graduate, minimum three years experience, 50 words per
minute typing, must have own transportation. It didn't say a word
about whether he could write or spell.
Another one said - Wanted: chef, must be able to prepare all
Japanese specialty foods and make French pastry, and must have had
minimum two years experience at both. You're liable to find sushi in
your eclair.
Another one that I thought was interesting said - Wanted: senior tax
consultant and accountant by fast growing Century City firm,
applicant must be familiar with the taxation of estates and trusts
and be able to do tax research, a minimum of two years tax
experience and a certified public accountant are necessary, soft
ball skill is not required but would be helpful.
And it just went on like that page after page after page. All of
these qualifications. Our society has set up standards for
everything and for everybody. Life is made up of qualifying.
Everytime you want to buy a house, you have to qualify. And when you
want to buy a car, you have to qualify. And when you want to get a
credit card, you have to qualify. And when you want to apply for a
job, you have to qualify. And when you want to get into a career
area, you have to qualify. When you want to sign up at a school, you
have to qualify. When you want to be trained for something, you have
to qualify. When you want to join a team, you have to qualify. It
seems like everything you have to do requires qualifying. Somebody
establishes standards that you have to meet. Society has determined
that it's only going to use qualified people.
Now what qualifications does God have? What does God require of
those who serve Him? Of those who are called to be His disciples,
His apostles? What kind of people does Jesus use in His ministry?
What kind of people does it take to advance His eternal Kingdom? Are
you ready for this? Frankly, folks, nobody is qualified... nobody.
Therefore God only has one alternative, use the unqualified to do
the impossible. That is essentially how God works. He takes the
unqualified. Does that make you feel better? It does me. God uses
unqualified people, moves into their life with saving sanctifying
grace and Himself transforms them into usefulness.
I know you're probably like I am, you get discouraged about your own
failures... I do. This has been confessedly a very difficult year
for me at Grace and particularly so in the last four or five months.
I have been discouraged on numerous occasions, extremely
discouraged. And most of the time the basis of my discouragement
stems from my own failures. And I often question how God can use me
and why God doesn't use somebody else and is He through using me,
and whenever I get into that thing of questioning whether God can
use me I just go back to the Bible to see the people He used there.
Because frankly, they're a fairly pitiable lot themselves.
I mean, there was Noah who got drunk and conducted himself in a lewd
way.
There was Abraham who doubted God, lied about his wife and then
committed adultery.
And then there was Isaac who learned how to sin from his father, did
the same thing with his wife Rebekah and lied to Abimelech.
And then there was Jacob who literally extorted the birthright from
Esau, deceived his father and who raised a whole bunch of immoral
children.
Then there was Joseph who was hated by all his brothers.
And then there was Moses. Moses was a murderer. Moses acted in pride
trying to steal God's glory and struck the rock instead of
obediently speaking to the rock as God said and he never entered the
promised land he had led the people to.
And there was Aaron. Aaron the high priest who led Israel in the
worship of the golden calf and the accompanying orgy.
And then there was Joshua. God told Joshua to wipe out the
Gibeonites but he was so deceived by the Gibeonites that he made a
treaty with them instead of destroying them and they hung around to
trouble Israel endlessly.
Then there was Gideon. Gideon who had no confidence in himself and
even less confidence in God's plan and God's power.
And there was Samson who was marked as a man with a lustful love for
a wretched woman.
And there was Ruth in the Messianic line and yet an accursed
Moabitess.
And there was Samuel and he began to serve God as a little kid, what
did he know?
And David the all time ladies man. Everytime he saw a lady he liked
he married her. Didn't matter how many others he had. An adulterer,
a murderer, a lousy father and a man with such bloody hands God
wouldn't even let him build a temple.
And then there was Solomon the world's leading polygamist.
And it goes on like that. God used Isaiah who had put his trust in a
human king.
God used Ezekiel who was a brash tough strong-minded crusty
say-what-you-think priest.
And God used Daniel who was educated in a pagan country and taught
the wisdom of the bitter and hasty Chaldeans. And God used Hosea who
married a prostitute.
And God used Jonah who defied Him in direct disobedience and took a
short ride on a long fish. And then when the Gentiles were converted
he didn't like it one bit. And God used Habakkuk who questioned the
divine plan. And God used Elijah who could handle 850 false priests
and prophets but ran like a maniac from one woman.. .Jezebel. And
God used Paul who killed Christians.
And God used Timothy who was ashamed of Jesus Christ, and had to be
told so by Paul.
You see, you just follow the flow of history and it's the march of
the unqualified, is what it is. They're unqualified. And when you
look at the twelve, you know what? You just meet a group of
unqualified folks like all the rest.
Now remember what I told you, the twelve are divided into three
groups of four. Notice verses 2 through 4 you have twelve names.
They're always in three groups.. .four, four and four. And there are
four different lists in the Bible of the twelve and always each name
appears in the same group of four. The first four were the most
intimate. The next most intimate were the next four. And finally the
last group is the least intimate with Christ. But they were all
there and they were all trained and they were all sent and they all
had a marvelous and effective ministry, with the exception of Judas
Iscariot who was replaced. Not all of them had the same level of
intimacy with Christ. Not all of them had the same gifts and talents
and ministries. Yet they all preached and they all proclaimed and
they all advanced the Kingdom. They all carried the message, but
they were very special unique individual people.
In business today if somebody was coming along and saying -I want
twelve people to do this.. .there would be a string of
qualifications a mile long and they would have figured out exactly
the kind of person they wanted and get twelve just like that. Not
the Lord, He picked twelve unqualified people who were so diverse
it's incredible. And they all had problems. And they all had sins.
Even the best of them. It's just a list of the unqualified.
Now Jesus never intended to go through the work of proclaiming the
Kingdom alone. That's why when He began His ministry He began it not
only by preaching and teaching but by training men with Him at the
same time He began His ministry. He never intended to be alone with
it. He was training them all the while so that when He left they'd
carry it on. And these are the ones He chose, they are the
ambassadors of the King.
Matthew is presenting to us the King. In every part of the Matthew
gospel the King, the King, the King stands forth. Jesus is the King,
the Messiah, the Annointed One, the Christ, the Son of God, the
promised King. And the King has His ambassadors, and that is who we
meet here. Later on in Matthew 19 and verse 28, Jesus said to these
His ambassadors, "I say unto you, that ye who follow.. .have
followed Me," that is the twelve, "in the regeneration, or the
Kingdom, when the Son of man sits on the throne of His glory you
also shall sit upon twelve thrones judging the twelve tribes of
Israel." Ultimately the twelve would sit on the twelve thrones
judging the tribes of Israel in the one thousand year millennial
Kingdom. And they will inherit far more than they've ever given up,
He says in the next verse. And they may have been last in this
world's eyes but ultimately they'll be first. So He promises them
grandiose promises as His ambassadors which they'll inherit in the
Kingdom.
Now as we come to chapter 10 we're getting an insight into how He
trained these twelve. But before we look at the specifics of His
instruction to them, we're meeting them. And we met the first four
and it was a very comforting to meet them, wasn't it? Because they
were very much like us. What kind of people are qualified for the
Lord's work? What kind of people does Jesus use? Well, He uses, we
learned, dynamic, strong, boldleaders like Peter, who take charge,
who initiate, who plan, who strategize, who confront, who rebuke,
who command people to Christ and who frankly often talk a better
game than they play, and often act too hastily. But are usually
eager to be forgiven and restored.
And, our Lord uses humble, gentle, inconspicuous, quiet souls like
Andrew, who seek no prominence, never preach to crowds, but quietly
bring individuals to Christ.
And then He uses zealous, passionate, uncompromising, task oriented,
insensitive, ambitious dynamos like James, who wind up getting
killed because nobody can handle him. They see only a job to do and
they'll die getting it done.
And He also uses sensitive, loving, believing, intimate, truth
seekers like John, who speak in love and attract men to Christ.
Now that was just group one and what a diversity. Now let's go on
and look at group two and we're going to cover two of them this time
and two of them next time.
First is verse 3: "Philip and Bartholomew; Thomas and Matthew the
tax collector." That's group two. Next group comes James, Lebbaeus
or Thaddaeus, Simon the Zealot and Judas Iscariot.
But let's look, first of all, at Philip. This is not to be confused
with Philip the deacon in Acts 6 who later became an evangelist,
this is Philip the disciple. His name is a Greek name. Now all
twelve were Jews so he must have had a Jewish name but we don't know
his Jewish name. For some reason he goes always by his Greek name,
and by the way, his Greek name means lover of horses. We don't know
whether his parents were big on that so they just gave him that
Greek name or what. But he's always gone by the name of Philip, we
don't know his Jewish name. Which is kind of interesting because
when the ... .when the Greeks later on want to see Jesus they go to
Philip so he kind of became the Greek connection. He was the place
where you sort of plugged in from the Greek level, and maybe they
felt comfortable because his name was the Greek name.
He is always in the second list and he is always at the head of the
second list which means that he seems to have been the sort of the
leader of the second group. It's hard to imagine that because he
doesn't really have those kinds of gifts but he may have led more
than they followed, we're not sure.
Now for a while he was a fellow townsman at Bethsaida, and you
remember that Bethsaida up in Galilee was the town where Peter and
Andrew came from, so Philip knew Peter and Andrew. He had perhaps
grown up knowing them, perhaps was a close friend of theirs. Since
they were all God-fearing Jews, Peter, Andrew, Philip and Nathanael
or Bartholomew, we'll get to him later, they probably all knew each
other. They were close friends. And there is in the twelve the very
obvious fact that there is.. .there's a lot of friendship interwoven
there. There was some one-by-one callings of these individuals..
.one to another, to another, to another. And so Philip was kind of
in the group.
He may well have been a fisherman. He appears later on with... with
Andrew and with Peter and with James and with John in John 21
fishing. The three gospels say nothing about him, just his name,
nothing else. But John's gospel mentions him four times. And we
really get to know him in these four passages. Let's look together
at John 1:43 and let's meet Philip. And let's ask the question again
- What kind of people can God use?
Philip will come off as anything but a stained glass saint. Verse
43: "The day following," and that means the day following Peter and
Andrew having an encounter with Christ, the day following the time
when John the Baptist pointed to Christ and said, "Behold, the Lamb
of God," and Peter and Andrew followed Him. "The day following that
Jesus would go forth into Galilee and findeth Philip and saith unto
him, Follow Me."
Now that is the first direct call of a disciple. Peter and Andrew
had already met Christ but they had sort of found Him, they had sort
of come along. John the Baptist had pointed to Him and they sort of
followed Jesus along and got a chance to meet Him and so forth. But
Philip is the first individual to whom the Lord expressly said -
Follow Me. He walked up and found him and said Follow Me.
But may I hasten to add that Philip also had a seeking heart. God
doesn't find people against their will. He had a seeking heart and
if you look at verse 45, after verse 44 where it says he was from
Bethsaida where Andrew and Peter lived, it says Philip then went to
find Nathanael, or Bartholomew same person, and said to him, "We
have found Him." Now from the Lord's viewpoint He found Philip, from
Philip's viewpoint he found the Lord. And isn't that the way your
testimony goes? The sovereign side is that God found you, the human
side is that you found Christ. And in order for it to happen both of
you had to be seeking. "The Son of man has come into the world to
seek and save that which is lost, if you seek with.. .Me with all
your heart you shall surely.. .what?. . .find Me." It is God
seeking, it is man seeking. God seeks that true heart that seeks
Him. And so Philip was seeking the truth. Philip was seeking that
reality. In verse 45 he says, "We found Him of whom Moses in the law
and the prophets did write." In other words, he must have been
studying the law and the prophets, he must have been exposing
himself to that and now he says we found Him and His name is Jesus,
He comes from Nazareth and He is Jesus Bar Joseph, the son of
Joseph. We found Him.
But in a real sense there was no human agency, Jesus just came right
up and said - Follow Me. There was no human voice directed to him.
Philip's eyes and ears were open, his heart was open. And when he
heard the divine voice say - Follow Me, he ran to tell Nathanael
that he had found Him. That the Messiah was here. And you can
imagine the excitement and the thrill and the joy and the ecstasy.
In fact, he.. .he even wanted to bring Nathanel, at the end of verse
46, he says - Come and see... come and see. Find out for yourself.
Now what do we learn about Philip? First thing we learn about him is
he was seeking the Messiah. He was a God-fearing Jew. He was
religious and he was truly religious. He had an honest heart. We
also learn that his response when being found was to find somebody
else. And I'm convinced that the greatest source for evangelism is
friendship. I think friendship provides the most fertile soil for
evangelism. Don't you? Because there's already a relationship of
love. And into that relationship of love you can introduce the
reality of Christ. Invariably, and I say this through years of
experience, invariably when somebody becomes a Christian their first
reaction in the warmth and the joy of that new found life is to find
a friend and tell that person what has happened. And by the way, if
you've lost that then that's only a sad commentary on one of two
things, one you don't have any unchristian friends or two you don't
care anymore. Both are tragic.
But Philip immediately went to Nathanel. The immediate response to
salvation is evangelism, find somebody else and tell them the good
news.
You know, I've noticed this just in Baptism. People who are saved
and told they should be baptized respond instantly. And most
frequently joyously want to give their testimony. People who have
been saved way in the past, and failed to be baptized when years
later they face the fact that they should be obedient and do that,
very often won't do it because they hesitate to stand up in front
and give their testimony. And it's a commentary on what happens to
the heart when that first love begins to grow cold. It's not always
that case but very often that is true.
Well, Philip made a direct shot to tell Nathanael. So, we learn that
he was one who had a friend, who cared about his friend, and wanted
him to know. He had the heart of an evangelist as well as a seeking
heart. And by the way, he went to Nathanael because Nathanael
apparently was his buddy, and he is always associated with
Bartholomew. When the disciples went out two by two it's probably
true that he went out with Bartholomew. On every list he's always
next to Bartholomew, or Nathanael.
Now let's look at chapter 6 and see the next passage about him. And
I think this really cracks open Philip. Now he had a good side and
his good side was he sought God, and he sought the Messiah. And his
good side was that he had the heart of one who was an evangelist.
But now we're going to find out the.. .the stuff about him that sort
of unqualifies him.
Jesus has already made wine at the marriage feast at Cana so He has
demonstrated His supernatural power. That for sure has happened. And
there may have been other miracles and mighty deeds that he had
seen. But we come to chapter 6 and a big crowd has gathered at the
north end of the Sea of Galilee and Jesus has been teaching them all
day and healing them all day of all their diseases. And it's been a
tremendous day but it's coming to the evening now and the crowd is
hungry and there were 5,000 men which means there were probably at
least 5,000 women and 20,000 kids, so it's a big crowd. And they're
all there and you go to chapter 6 verse 5: "When Jesus then lifted
up His eyes, saw a great company come to Him, He said to Philip,"
and here we meet Philip again. "Where shall we buy bread that these
may eat?" Philip, how are we going to get bread. Why did He single
Philip out? You know what I believe? I believe Philip was in charge
of the food. Somebody had to be in charge of the food. We know Judas
was in charge of the.. .what?.. .the money. And somebody had to be
in charge of the food. Figure out how much they needed and how to
get it and buy it and have it because they had to eat as they
travelled around an minister. And it seems to me that that was
Philip's area and so the Lord says to him - Now, Philip, how are we
going to get the bread to feed these folks?
Hmmm, why did He ask him that? Verse 6, "He said this to test him,
for He Himself knew what He would do." He knew He was going to feed
them miraculously and create in His own hand bread and fish but He
was testing Philip. Now, Philip, you've seen Me make wine at the
marriage supper, now we don't have any food for this multitude, how
are we going to get some food?
You know what he said? Verse 7: "Philip answered Him, Two hundred
denariis' worth of bread is not sufficient for them that everyone of
them may take a little."
He gives Him an instant answer which, you know what that proves?
That's another thing that proves to me that he was in charge of the
food, he had already analyzed it. He had it figured out. He
calculated that they could pull an offering out of that bunch of
about 200 pennyworth, or else that's how much they had in the kitty.
And by the way, one of those denarii or one of those pennies is one
day's wages. So, they.. .they could get about 200 day's wages out
and let's assume that they bought barley biscuits, you could get 36
barley biscuits for one denarii and each biscuit was the size of
your hand and an inch and a half thick. It's like a big French roll,
kind of. And he had calculated the whole deal. Let's see, if we got
200 of those times 36 and everybody took a...let's see,. ..a bite
around the edge...and then the next group.. .the next.. .listen,
I've got it figured out - it can't be done... it cannot be done.
You know what you learn about Philip? It never entered into his mind
that the Lord was supernatural. It utterly eluded him that Christ
could do a creative miracle. The supernatural resources of Jesus
Christ totally escaped his thinking. He just calculated the whole
deal. You know what he is? He is analytical. He is pragmatic. I'm
sure he would sit in a board meeting today with one of those little
things.. .and just punch it. Can't do it. We don't have the money.
It cannot be done. He had too much arithmetic to be adventurous. He
was so stuck on facts and figures he missed faith all together.
One writer said, "The supreme essential of a great leader is a sense
of the possible." Philip had a sense of the impossible. He didn't
know that God said: "That with Him all things are.. .what?...
possible." Christ was trying to teach him about faith and he was...
he was such a thick-headed character that he wasn't learning the
lesson.
You know what he should have said? Lord, You made wine at Cana, You
fed Your children in the wilderness with manna, do what You want.
You've got this crowd here, You feed them. You... and you know
something? He had been healing all day long.. .all day long Philip
had watched demonstration of supernatural power. The Lord had
overcome all diseases possible in that multitude and Philip says -
It can't be done. Boy, that is thick-headedness.
And he lost his opportunity and the little boy that came along got
an opportunity. Philip was a materialist. He was a man of practical
common sense. He had measurements. He was methodical, mechanical, he
had very little understanding of the supernatural. He was a facts
and figures guy.. .always going by what appeared on the human level.
Now let's see if he has any improvement in six chapters. Go to
chapter 12 verse 20: "There were certain Greeks who had come down to
Jerusalem for the feast." They were God-fearing Greeks, come for the
Passover, and they had come because they had been devotees of
Judaism and they heard about Christ. "And they came to Philip,"
because he was the Greek connection, he had a Greek name probably
that's the reason they came to him. "And they desired him saying,
Sir, we would see Jesus."
Well, Philip may have been approachable, he may have been a
warm-hearted fellow, but he didn't take them to Jesus. He said, in
affect, - Now you guys wait here, I don't know if this is kosher, I
don't know if this can happen... I've got to go check. So he goes
and tells Andrew. And together they go to Jesus. You know what we
learn about Philip? He was not decisive. He was not forceful. Peter
would have grabbed those Gentiles and dragged them into the presence
of Jesus and said, - Lord, look at these guys, they want to see you.
But not Philip.. .Philip had to check it out.. .check it out with
somebody else. Well, what was bothering him? He was still living in
chapter 10 of Matthew, at the.. .way at the beginning when the Lord
had said, "I am come but for the lost sheep of the house of..
.what?. . .of Israel." So he's saying -These are Gentiles.. .you
know, it's not in the minutes to bring the Gentiles. I don't think
the constitution allows it.. .the bylaws, you know. The Lord said He
has not come for the lost but for the lost sheep of... .you see, he
had no sense of the bigger vision. He didn't get the message of
grace. Yes, He came as the Messiah to Israel but He had also said
clear back in chapter 6:"Him that cometh unto Me I will in no wise..
.what?.. .cast out." I mean, he never got the spirit of the thing.
He's still going by the code, you know. He's still analyzing
everything, still going by the book. He's a literalist. Got this
little dinky focus.. .there's no precedent for this, it's not in the
code.
Boy, he missed the whole vision of grace, didn't he? I mean, he said
we've found the Messiah but beyond that he didn't really have a clue
of what was going on.
Well finally we see him in chapter 14 and it isn't better, it's
worse, if you can believe this. Three years later - verse 8, Philip
says to Jesus, here they are the night before His.. .this is the
Passover, this is the communion, you know, this is the time He's
unfolding His heart to His disciples. He's going to be arrested and
crucified and soforth right after this. It's all coming to an end
and Philip says to Him, "Lord, show us the Father and that will be
sufficient. Jesus said to him, How long do I have to be with you
before you know Me, Philip?" Boy, this guy is really a klutz. I
mean, his spiritual vision is nil. Everything is superficial with
him. "He that hath seen Me hath seen the Father." And how' can you
possibly be saying three years later - Show us the Father.
"Believest thou not that I am in the Father and the Father in Me."
Don't you believe that, Philip? "And the words that I speak unto you
I speak not of Myself but the Father that dwells in Me, He doeth the
works. Believe Me, I am in the Father and the Father in Me or else
believe Me for the very works sake." I mean, My words and My works,
haven't they told you something, Philip? Oh, what puny faith.. .what
a dull character. Show us the Father... He is the leader of the
ignorant and slow of heart. Three years Philip gazed into the only
face of God men ever saw and he still didn't know who it was. He's
not Phi Beta Kappa.
Isn't it wonderful that the Lord uses those kind of people? Aren't
you thrilled? I am. He is no genius. He didn't get lesson one -
Jesus is God - three years he didn't get it. He needs to be in
remedial class, basic has alluded him. He is so skeptical, so
unconvinced. Here is a man of limited ability, here is a man of
inadequate faith, here is a man of imperfect understanding, here is
a man who fools around with numbers instead of meditating. Here is a
man who is stuck on the level of rules and codes and stuff instead
of seeing God. And someday he's going to reign over the tribes of
Israel in the regeneration and is going to inherit gloriously in the
Kingdom, beyond what he would ever have dreamed.. .a pessimistic,
reluctant, insecure, unsure, analytical, skeptical man. Saw facts
and figures and missed the big picture of power and grace. His faith
was limited by money,circumstances and proof.
You know what tradition tells us about this dear fellow? He got his
act together and he wound up dying as a martyr for a Christ he
wouldn't deny. They stripped him naked, according to tradition, they
hung him by his feet upside down and they pierced great holes in his
ankles and his thighs so that the blood would pour out and slowly he
would die. And he said he only had one request and that is that when
he was dead they not wrap his body in linen like his Lord because he
wasn't worthy of that.
Aren't you glad God uses the slow, and the faithless and the
analytical skeptics? Because some of us find ourselves there, don't
we?
One more fellow for this morning, and he's only introduced to us in
one passage and then we just lose him the rest of the time. His name
is Bartholomew in Matthew 10.. .Bartholomew, but that was his last
name. His first name was Nathanael. Bartholomew, by the way, means
Bar-Tolmai, son of Tolmai. . .Nathanael, son of Tolmai, two names,
his first and his last. Nathanael means gift of God, son of Tolmai.
And he was so different than his friend Philip. He was full of faith
and he was so contemplative and so meditative and so in awe of the
supernatural. And he perceived everything as clear as crystal from
the very beginning.
By the way, among the Hebrews there was a sect known as the
Tolmaians who gave great attention to the Scripture and it may we...
well be that Nathanael was somehow connected to them, though that
may be a remote possibility.
He came from Cana of Galilee, again from a little village in
Galilee. He was brought to Jesus by Philip so he was acquainted with
the rest of the gang. Only one passage in the Bible tells us about
him and it's John 1. Let's go back. Verse 43, I think you're going
to find him fascinating. It says in verse 43 that "Jesus went forth
to Galilee and found Philip and told Philip to follow Him." And
verse 45 then says: "Philip finds Nathanael, or Bartholomew, and
said to him, We have found Him, of whom Moses and the law and the
prophets did write, and His name is Jesus of Nazareth and He is
Bar-Joseph, the son of Joseph."
Now, what does this tell us? Well, it implies that Nathanael was a
searcher of Scripture and a seeker after divine truth. It tells us
that Nathanael would have know Messianic prophecy and studied it
because the way that Philip approaches him is - Here's the One the
Scripture told us about. The implication being that Nathanael was a
student of Scripture. A further implication, I believe, being that
Philip and Nathanael had probably spent hours and hours and hours
studying together the Old Testament as they together were looking
for the Messiah. We found Him. The One that Moses wrote about.
So, the first thing we learn about Nathanael is that he was a
studier of the Scripture, a searcher for truth, a seeker for God.
And that's the good part about him, like it was about Philip. He
wanted to know God's truth. He hungered to know God's truth. He
looked for the Messiah.
But verse 46 tells us he had a sin too. He had a weakness.
"Nathanael said to Philip, Can any good thing come out of Nazareth?"
You've got to be kidding. Now he didn't live in anyplace that was
that hot, frankly.. .Cana. I mean, that is a dinky place. But they
had a little class in Cana. Nazareth was a.. .was a despise...
Nazareth was unrefined, you know, no class, rowdy place, wild place,
uneducated. It was the last stop before the Gentile world, you know?
I mean, it was out on the fringe. I mean, nothing ever came out of
Nazareth but trouble.
Well, I don't know whether they had competition between the towns or
not but some kind of thing had built up in Nathanael's heart and he
showed an ugly sin and that sin is the sin of prejudice. He shows
prejudice toward a town. You know what prejudice is? It is an
uncalled for generalization based on feelings of superiority. It's
an uncalled for generalization based on feelings of superiority. He
just blanketed the whole town of Nazareth and said nothing good's
ever going to come out of there. Prejudice is ugly.
I don't know if you've had the opportunity to read The Holy War
by John Bunyan. I know you're probably familiar with Pilgrim's
Progress, but The Holy War is an equally masterful
allegory. And in The Holy War Mansoul is a town. And Emanuel
and his forces are attacking this town. Christ is coming wanting to
invade this life. And as the town of Mansoul sits there, Emanuel's
forces approach and Bunyan says: "Emanuel's forces first attack
Eargate. But Diabolos, who is Satan, sets up a guard at Eargate and
his guard is," says Bunyan, "Old Mister Prejudice, an angry and
ill-conditioned fellow who has under his power sixty deaf men."
Prejudice has stopped a lot of folks from hearing the truth, hasn't
it? Do you know what it was that prevented the scribes and Pharisees
from responding to Jesus Christ? It was prejudice. He was not from
Jerusalem. He was not trained in their schools. And even in Acts
they said of the Apostles, - What do they know? They are ignorant
and unlearned Galileans, hayseeds from the north who haven't been
rightly educated.
Liberals say that about us today. There are people in the world who
think that Christianity is a racist religion. Prejudice is a device
used often by Satan to blind people to the truth. It caused the
Jewish nation to remain deaf to the appeal of their own Messiah.
So, Nathanael showed prejudice. You say - Boy, if there's one thing
you don't want among the twelve it's a guy with prejudice. He was a
good fellow, thoughtful, biblical, looking for the Messiah, quiet,
meditative guy full of prejudice.
Well, Philip offered him a solution at the end of verse 46, he says
- Come and see. Now we're going to find out how deep his prejudice
is. If he's really, really prejudice he's going to say - Not on your
life. I wouldn't go near. But if he's got the kind of prejudice that
can be overcome he's going to respond,and he did respond. Verse 47,
he went and: "Jesus saw Nathanael coming and He said to him..." Here
he is and he's walking up ready to see this supposed Messiah from
Nazareth and up walks the Lord and says, "Behold, an Israelite for
real, in whom there is no hypocrisy." Boy, what an introduction.
Talking about me? Me?
What is the Lord saying? What is an Israelite indeed? I mean, you're
either a Jew or you're not. Right? The word indeed is aleethos, a
true Jew, a true Israelite. You mean you could be a Jew and not a
true Jew? That's right. You mean you could be an Israelite and not a
true Israelite? That's right. An Israelite and not a genuine
Israelite? That's right. "Because circumcision, Romans 3, is not
that of the flesh but that of the heart." Not all Israel is Israel,
Romans 9:6 says. There are Jews in the flesh who are not Jews in the
covenant because they do not believe. Right? Here was a true Jew, a
God-fearing, God-seeking Messiah oriented Jew, true Jew. And He
said, "In him there is no deceit, there's no guile." He is an
honest, sincere Jew who seeks God. What a commendation.. .what a
commendation.
But even someone as good as that.. .and He said there's no deceit in
him. Jesus said that. There's no guile in him. There's nothing phony
about him. But even a man that good was still stained with the sin
of prejudice. So you see, the Lord is always working with the
unqualified at some point or another... even the best of them. His
heart was right. His commitment was to the truth of God. He didn't
have any deceit or hypocrisy in his life. And the Lord just told him
that. What a wonderful, lovely introduction... .wouldn't it be a
wonderful thing if the Lord walked up to you and said - Ah, a true
Christian who is without hypocrisy? Boy, you'd say - Thank You..
.wonderful of You to say that. I mean, he must have been a terrific
guy.
And to show you how really sincere he was he said unto Him, verse
48: "How do You know me?" How do You know this? How do You know my
heart? And He knew he was a true Jew. And He knew he was a
God-seeker. And He knew he was sincere. How do You know that? You
just walk up and You know that. How do You know that?
Jesus answered him, "Oh, before Philip ever went to get you I... I
saw you under the fig tree." Oh, that blew his mind. How do You know
I was under a fig tree? That's where he was.
You say - What's he doing under a fig tree? Did people get under fig
trees? What do you do under a fig tree? Basically in Palestine fig
trees were planted around houses as well as places where they would
be harvested as a crop. And a fig tree would grow to a height of
fifteen feet and spread its branches out about twenty-five feet from
the middle, as far as twenty-five feet. It would be like a very
great shade area and it's very hot there, you know. And in many of
the poorer homes there was only one room and there was little breeze
very often and so you could go out under the fig tree and you could
find shade and comfort and coolness.
But beyond that, a fig tree became the only place you could go to
get away from the house and the hustle and bustle of what was going
on inside. And so it became a place of retreat. It became a place of
respite. It became a place to be alone. It became a place of prayer
and a place of meditation and a place of contemplation, a place of
communing with God, a place of searching the Scripture, a place of
quietness. And it may well be that Nathanael was out under the fig
tree, as so many Jews did, and he was meditating and he was
praying... the quietness and the solitude, away from the activity of
the house. He was seeking God in the privacy of the shade of the fig
tree.
And Jesus is saying to him - I saw you. I saw you meditating, I saw
you seeking, I saw your open heart. I saw you in the secret place,
the private place. I saw your true desire. I saw what was there and
what you wanted to know and I'm here. Pretty exciting.
Well, here was Nathanael very possibly praying under the fig tree -
Lord, show me Your Messiah. And here comes Philip shooting under the
branches saying - Nathanael, I found Him, your prayers answered..
.He's from Nazareth. And then Nathanael says - Ah, you've got to be
kidding. I mean, even he knew that it said in the prophets Micah,
"He shall come forth out of thee Bethlehem." And nothing good ever
comes out of Nazareth. Come and see, come and see. Okay. His desire
overwhelmed his prejudice and off he went.
Well, that's enough for him. Nathanael verse 49: "Answered and said
to Him, Rabbi, Thou art the Son of God; Thou art the King of
Israel."
You want to know something? Three years later Philip wasn't sure
about that, whether He was God. Nathanael knew it immediately. He
saw deity in His presence. Philip's concept was that the one who
Moses spoke about is come but he wasn't too sure who He was but
Nathanael knew instantly, this is the Son of God. Oh, what
commitment.. .oh, what a heart.
And Jesus said this to him: "Because I said unto thee, I saw thee
under the fig tree, thou believest." It shouldn't be a question,
it's a statement. The reason you believe is because of My
omniscience. You were convinced that only God can know everything.
My omniscience convinced you who I was. He says -Listen, you're
going to see greater things than that, my friend. You have only just
begun to see.
He was knocked over by one little act of omniscience. Jesus saw him
under a fig tree. And Jesus says, "You haven't seen anything yet."
And look at verse 51. I don't have time to go into this, you can buy
the tape on John 1, it's all there. But just quickly, "He said unto
him, Verily, verily, I say unto you, from here on you're going to
see heaven open and you' re going to see angels of God ascending and
descending upon the Son of man."
What is this? In specific He's saying this - Nathanael, You think
you saw heaven, you think you saw divine power in that omniscience,
from here on you're going to see stuff going on all the time between
heaven and earth. You're going to see heaven open and angels going
up and down and the Son of man working in response to heavenly
power. You're going to be exposed to heaven come down, is what He's
saying.
And he was.. .miracle after miracle after miracle. And it may well
be that Nathanael understood the glory of Christ better than anybody
else. He never asked another question. He never frames another
query. He never even appears the rest of the time in the whole
account. He was in, solid like a rock, at the start.
So, we meet Nathanael Bartholomew, the seeker of truth, prejudice
but not bound by it, honest, open, a man of prayer, a man of
meditation, a man who made a complete surrender to Christ, a man
with a keen mind and a heart of faith. He saw. He understood. And
Jesus promised to him the most wonderful revelations and everything
he saw from then on he knew was heaven open.. .heaven open. Philip
was never sure what it was.
God uses slow, plodding, dull, thick, mechanical, analytical, weak
faith skeptics like Philip. And God uses great faith, clear
understanding, meditative souls like Nathanael. You know what He
does? He takes the raw material and He transforms it into what He
can use.
I wish I could tell you the story between Philip's training and his
death. I bet it would be glorious. Cause the Lord made him what He
wanted him to be. The Lord can use any raw material that's
available, and He's in the business of making the most out of the
unqualified.
Can I ask you this in closing? Do you qualify among the unqualified?
Because if you do the Lord wants to use you. Let's pray.
Lord, again we thank You for the fact that this is such a heartening
word to us. That You can use us in spite of ourselves. Not as we
are, so much, but as You will make us and mold us and shape us. May
we be willing to start out as learners...matheetees...disciples,
to become apostles, trained to be sent for Your glory in Christ's
name. Amen.
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