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As Jesus wraps up the section of parables we have spent the last several episodes focusing in on, He asks the disciples if they understand Him. To my surprise when reading this, the disciples answer that they do understand, and then as a final wrap-up statement, Jesus shares another short, one-verse parable that is powerful when we stop to actually look a little closer at it.
This last parable in this section of parables is found in Matthew, chapter 13, and we will read it from the Good News Translation. In verse 52, Matthew tells us that Jesus replied by saying:
52 [So he replied,] “This means, then, that every teacher of the Law who becomes a disciple in the Kingdom of heaven is like a homeowner who takes new and old things out of his storage room.”
In this short illustration, we discover a special place in God’s kingdom for those who entered into the kingdom as teachers of the Law. While many people living after the first century see Christianity as a complete replacement for Judaism, according to this parable, both are significant. This parable strongly suggests that teachers of the Law who enter God’s kingdom are able to draw from a rich storeroom of spiritual truth that was contained in the Old Testament Jewish faith and culture, while also being open and aware of all the new things God is doing.
This parable is also applicable to us today. It challenges us on where we place our focus and on what we determine is relevant. Just as the first century was a time when there were huge shifts in the spiritual culture, the time we are living in today is also experiencing significant shifts.
When navigating these significant times in history, this parable helps to align and remind us of what is truly important.
In this parable, we discover two ditches we can fall into when moving from the old into the new. The first ditch is hanging on to the old, the traditions, and the way things were simply because they are more comfortable, more familiar, or even more acceptable by others. While familiarity and acceptability are not negative attributes, they become negative if they stop us from moving forward when God asks us to move forward.
Hanging on to the past and rejecting the new is the first ditch we can fall into that this short parable warns us about. This is best illustrated by the religious leaders in the first century who rejected Jesus simply because Jesus did not their idea of who the Messiah would be.
The second ditch we can fall into is by rejecting the past in favor of the present. Many people fall into this ditch regularly believing that our own experiences and situations today are more significant and relevant than the experiences and situations that those in the past faced. While everyone can only see the world through the filtered view of their eyes and their own experiences, the past is our best teacher when navigating tricky situations in the present.
Discarding the past when we face the new is the other ditch we can fall into that this parable warns us about. This is best illustrated by those who believe that the New Testament replaced the Old Testament, and that the Old Testament is no longer relevant. Those living in the first century had a word for the Old Testament. They called it the scriptures.
So how does this parable help us navigate through life avoiding these ditches?
Let’s read our parable again. Jesus concluded by telling the disciples that “every teacher of the Law who becomes a disciple in the Kingdom of heaven is like a homeowner who takes new and old things out of his storage room.”
In this parable, we are challenged to draw both new and old things from our spiritual storeroom. The old has not been done away with as some might think. Instead, the old is the lens looking forward to what Jesus would do. In contrast, the new is simply paying attention to what God is doing in the world today. Just like it is bad to ignore what is happening in the world around us, it is also bad to ignore or forget what happened in the past.
Our parable challenges us to learn from both the present and the past. If we never learned from our past, we would continually make the same mistakes moving into the future. The same can be said of a culture or a community. If we choose to reject learning from our past, we will make the same mistakes moving into the future.
But the beauty of learning from our past when looking from the perspective of a culture or a community is that we can learn without having to make the same mistakes ourselves. By looking at other people’s mistakes, we can learn without experiencing the pain ourselves. This is one big way we can draw relevance from the old things in our storeroom.
The Bible is the best spiritual guide we have. This is not because it displays perfection for us to model, but because it clearly reveals the flaws, shortcomings, and failures that people experienced in the history of our race. Not only does the Bible reveal God’s working and moving in the world for over 2000 years leading up to Jesus and the first century, the Bible teaches us in a real way how no-one is perfect, and how everyone needs a Savior. Jesus came into this world to be the Savior and Jesus is the best example of how we can embrace the old as we boldly move into the new!
As we come to the end of another podcast episode, here are the challenges I will leave you with:
As always, intentionally seek God first and move towards Him in your life. Don’t delay coming to God until you get perfect enough, because it is impossible to be perfect enough. Instead, come to God as you are and let Him transform you through the power of His Holy Spirit!
Also, as you come to God, remember to pray and study the Bible for yourself to learn firsthand what God is like. While the Bible contains many challenging events that don’t appear to make sense on the surface, take your questions to God in prayer. I believe He will lead you to the answers He wants you to learn, and if any questions are left at the end of your life, then I’m positive Jesus will be ready, waiting, and willing to answer them when we reach heaven. Don’t let an unanswered challenge or question stop you from growing closer to God!
And as I end every set of challenges by saying in one way or another, never stop short of, back away from, chicken out of, or drift away from where God wants to lead you to in your life with Him!
Year of Parables – Episode 21: As Jesus wraps up a big set of parables about the Kingdom of heaven, He shares a short parable that challenges believers living today to hold onto what God has revealed in the past while moving forward into the future!
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