The Way that Leads to Life
Mark 10:17-22
Introduction:
The story of “The Rich, Young Ruler”
is one that is repeated in all three of the Synoptic Gospels. Once again, each
one contains some variation in the details, exactly the kind of thing you would
expect from eyewitness testimony. This man came to Jesus searching, he seemed
to realize that something was missing from his life despite his religious and
personal accomplishments. He was seeking. Even so, he was not ready for the
answer that he received from the Lord. Our tendency is to jump ahead to the end
of the story and immediately to question the man’s motives. But this is not one
of the lawyers who come to Jesus to test Him. This man runs to catch up with
Jesus, and falls on his knees before Him, and asks Him about the way to life.
And, importantly, the text tells us that Jesus loved him.
The 3 questions Mark has been
answering in his gospel are before us again in this story: 1) Who is Jesus? 2)
Why did He come? And 3) What does it mean to follow Him? The beginning of the
Gospel was weighted toward the first question: Who is this Jesus? Since
Peter’s confession of faith in 8:29, and Jesus’ call to deny self, take up the
cross, and follow Him (8:34) the emphasis has been on what it means to be a
Christ-follower.
The context illumines what is happening here. Jesus had just spoken
about receiving the kingdom like a child. As Jesus sets out, on His way to
Jerusalem, this man runs up to Him with a question about “life.” As a Jew who
knew the Scriptures the man was asking about life in the Kingdom. An important question!
He wants to know if he is on track, the right path. He is looking for
assurance. That is important for all of us.
The BIG Idea:
Faith in Jesus, believing who He is and trusting in what He did for us, is the
only way to True Life, a new life that will result in a new direction.
I. Jesus answers the man’s query first indirectly, with a question of His own: He essentially asks, “Who do you
say that I am?” (17-18). This was not a deflection of the question, it really
invited this young man to consider the heart of the matter. The foundational
issue is recognizing who Jesus is and responding to Him.
17 And as He was setting out on a journey, a man ran up to Him and knelt
before Him, and began asking Him, "Good Teacher, what shall I do to
inherit eternal life?" 18
And Jesus said to him, "Why do you call Me good? No one is good except God
alone.”
The beginning of this encounter tells us something about the man who
comes to Jesus. We know from the other gospel accounts that the man was a
“ruler” (Lk 18:18), that He was “young” (Mt 19:20), and as we’ll see later in
this account in Mark, that He was wealthy. Hence, we refer to him as “the Rich,
Young, Ruler” even though we don’t have the latter two details in Mark. He
was a respected person, a person of prominence. If he came into most
churches he would likely be greeted and engaged in conversation. This guy would
look like an ideal member and maybe even a potential leader! This stands in
contrast to the little children that were being brought to Jesus in the
preceding context. For a reader of the gospel, one might wonder if a man like
this would be ready to receive the kingdom like a little child?
First of all, we see a sense of urgency, as the man “ran up” to Jesus. Running in public
would have been considered rather undignified for a person of stature. The man
doesn’t seem concerned about that, however. Jesus was leaving, and he had an
important question to ask while he still had the opportunity. He seems
determined to seize the moment. Was this “ruler” a member of the Sanhedrin in
Jerusalem? Did he have some knowledge of what they were already planning to do
when He got there? We don’t know. It is quite a contrast to the story of
Nicodemus, who came to Jesus in private, at night, with his questions (John 3).
We must acknowledge that this man showed some discernment by coming to the One,
the only one, who could meet his deepest need. And he showed some transparency
in the way that he did it. He was willing to be vulnerable and he came with a
searching heart.
The man shows remarkable respect as he runs up and falls on his knees
before Jesus. Think about who this guy is, a ruler, hence a leader who has
risen in stature among his countrymen, and wealthy, someone who has been
successful in building some comfort and security in this life. But he
clearly knew that it was not enough. This doesn’t seem to be the approach
of a self-righteous, arrogant person who thinks he is OK. Something was missing,
and he knew it. So, he comes, and falls on his knees before this itinerate
teacher, maybe around the same age as him, but widely regarded as a prophet, or
something more, yet a man with no wealth or official status, with nothing of
this world other than the clothes on his back, and he asks Him the most
important question of his life. “Good
teacher, what must I do to inherit eternal life?”
A “good” question- “…what
must I do to inherit eternal life?” Many commentators and preachers seem to
fixate on the word “do” in the man’s
question. Is the man assuming that the life He seeks to inherit is based on
human effort, his own good works? Maybe, but it is the same verb that we see in
other contexts that doesn’t seem to rile us in the same way. For example, we
see in Acts 2:37, after Peter’s Pentecost sermon, that “…they were cut to the heart, and said to Peter and the rest of the
apostles, ‘Brothers, what shall we do?’” They use the same word that
we see in this context. Likewise, a little further on in Acts, the Philippian
jailer asks Paul and Silas, “Sirs, what
must I do to be saved?” Those questions aren’t so different from
that of the rich young ruler, are they? We’ll return to that question in point
two, below.
Jesus doesn’t seem disturbed by the verb that the young man uses,
but He seizes first on the adjective that the man uses to describe Him,
“Good teacher…” That word
becomes an opportunity for Jesus to provoke the man to think about the deeper,
and correct, meaning of his own words. He asks, “Why do you call me good? No one is good except God alone!” It
is as though Jesus is asking, “Do you know what you are saying when you call me
good? Do you realize who I really am?
Only God is good, so do you mean to
say that you recognize Me as God?” It isn’t too different than the question
Jesus asked the disciples back in Mark 8:29, “Who do you say that I am?” The man never responds to that question
by the way. In fact, when he addresses Jesus again, he simply calls Him
“teacher.” It is as though he wants to stop using language that evoked any
questions. He had enough questions of his own, he was looking for answers
not questions! He was respectful,
yes, but far from grasping who it really is that stood before him! Apparently,
he did not yet understand that Jesus IS the answer!
Jesus engages him further, giving him an opportunity to express his
heart—and, at the same time, to expose his need. That is the Big Idea: Because faith
in Jesus, believing who He is and trusting in what He did for us, is the only
way to True Life, a new life that will result in a new direction.
II. Jesus then reveals the man’s perspective: The man thinks “Life” comes from
obedience. He was right to connect the two, but the truth is that obedience
comes from life, and life is expressed as obedience (19-20)!
19"You know the commandments, 'Do not murder, Do not commit adultery,
Do not steal, Do not bear false witness, Do not defraud, Honor your father and
mother.'" 20 And he said
to Him, "Teacher, I have kept all these things from my youth
up."
You know the commandments… When
Moses received the ten commandments from God on Mount Sinai, they were written
on two stone tablets by the finger of God. By their very nature we can’t miss
that God is revealing absolute truth, an idea not too popular today. Many echo
the words of Pilate these days, “What is truth?” It is like some interpreters
of the US Constitution that say it means whatever people today say it means.
Others say no, it must mean what the framers intended. God’s Word is truth. The
Ten Commandments were a succinct statement
about morality and faithfulness, what God expected from His people. The first
four commandments (based on the Protestant numbering) deal with God-ward commands, love the Lord alone,
no idols, don’t take His name in vain, keep holy the Sabbath), while the rest
addressed our attitudes and actions toward other humans. Jesus starts
with the so-called second tablet of the Law, the man-ward commandments, those that have to do with loving our
“neighbors.” Remember, Jesus is the discerner of hearts. He knows our thoughts,
and He knows our need. He starts with these laws because they were where
the young man was striving to please God. It seems that Jesus starts here
because this man really treasured these commands and was trying to live them.
“Teacher, all these I have kept
from my youth…” Now we can imagine Jesus confronting the man on how he
inwardly failed to keep the deeper intention of even these commandments. We can
imagine Jesus doing that, but that is not what He does, is it? How did
Jesus respond to the man’s answer? The Bible tells us that He loved Him.
It seems unavoidable that Jesus saw something commendable in him. He, of
course, knew the man’s heart. Did He see a sincere love for the Torah, a
wanting and seeking to be obedient to the Law of God? Could it be that in all of his love for the
Law, this young man had forgotten the primacy of loving the One who gave
the Law? And that is the Big Idea here… faith in Jesus, believing who He is
and trusting in what He did for us, is the only way to True Life, a new life
that will result in a new direction: Life, then obedience. Life as
obedience!
III. And He exposes the man’s need: Do we desire the Giver more than His
gifts? Do we love Jesus more than life (21-22)?
21 And Jesus, looking at him, loved him, and said to him, "You lack
one thing: go, sell all that you have and give to the poor, and you will have
treasure in heaven; and come, follow me." 22 Disheartened by the saying, he went
away sorrowful, for he had great possessions.
Jesus knew this young man’s heart, and He “loved him.” So, He said
what he needed to hear, knowing what was holding him back. He essentially
pointed him back to the first tablet of the Law, and to the first
commandment: “Are you willing to love me with your whole heart, mind, and
soul?” Jesus knew the heart of this rich, young man. He meets him at the
point of his need. He loved him enough to tell him the truth. For all of his
religiosity there was yet something that he lacked. Jesus has a way of breaking
through our camouflage and our masks. He knows our hearts. That needn’t scare
us. He knows the truth about you, and He still loved you so much that He laid
down His life for you!
By the way, we don’t know the heart or the thoughts of other
people. But we do know that they need God. So, we need to love them
enough to tell them the truth. This man had great possessions, and Jesus knew
that his love for his wealth stood in the way of him loving God wholeheartedly.
He needed a heart check. Jesus was, after all, on His way to Jerusalem, and to
Calvary. That is not the way of comfort and security. It is the way to the
Cross.
Think of Abraham and Isaac on Mt. Moriah (Gen 22). God called Abraham to
give up what he loved, the one on whom his hope rested. Offer your son, your only son, Isaac. This was the son of
promise, the son of Abraham’s old age, the one on whom all of his hopes
hung—the son God himself had promised. Give him up? As a sacrifice? God
essentially asked Abraham, “Do you trust me?” Abraham and the boy went up the
mountain. Abraham bound his son and laid him on the wood, preparing to offer
him to God. And when he raised the knife to slay the boy God intervened—Now I know that you fear God, I know that
you love me! God Himself provided the sacrifice!
Here, this rich young ruler had either inherited great wealth, or had
worked to achieve it. Money meant prestige, comfort, security. We, as American
Christians in the 21st century, can relate to him. Even people
considered poor in America are materially “richer” than 90% of the inhabitants
of earth! (Why do you think there is a never-ending caravan passing through
Mexico toward the border!). We are wealthy, and we are very attached to our
“stuff.”
Guess what, the Pharaohs tried, they were buried with riches and even
servants, but you can’t take it with you! It was all there for thieves or archaeologists
to dig up. *Jim Elliot, one of the five young missionaries who lost their lives
in reaching out to the Auca Indians in Ecuador, said: “He is no fool who gives
up what he cannot keep to gain what he cannot lose.” And there is so much to
gain!
Jesus told the man to leave behind the things to which he was so
attached, and to “…come, follow me…” Do
those words sound familiar? Those last words are the same that He had used
as He was calling the twelve (cf.
1:17; 2:14). It is an invitation to discipleship, to become a Christ-follower. It
is the same phrase He used when He explained the call to discipleship in Mark
8:34. In that context, it is a call to death, and an invitation to life,
eternal life, abundant life, kingdom life (cf. Gal 2:20). Here the One who is
truly good stood incarnate before this young man. Emmanuel, God with us. And He
loved him, and He told him to let go and to follow. “You still lack one thing,” Jesus said. That was an answer, and a
call, for which he was not prepared.
This man had great promise. He came to the
right person. He asked the right question. But he wasn’t ready for the answer.
The man’s reaction revealed his heart. His “stuff” had become an idol. Jesus
was asking him, “Do you love me more than this? Will you trust me?” But it
seems he felt the comfort that his wealth brought him here and now was not
worth trading for the Via Dolorosa
that would come with following Jesus – even if that meant hope for the age to
come. He wasn’t ready to let go of the things that he could not keep to gain
what he could not lose. Tragic!
As Jesus will say in what follows, there will be suffering as we
live as kingdom citizens in a fallen world, yes, but also blessing. Eternal
life is a quality of life, a path we walk in His presence. The man went away
sad, disheartened. What did he leave? He walked away from Jesus, the One
who is the Way, the Truth, and the Life. Rather than following Him, he
said “I love my goods more than I
love the One who is Good.”
What is God saying to me in this passage? Faith in Jesus, believing who He is
and trusting in what He did for us, is the only way to True Life, a new life
that will result in a new direction (and a new obedience).
What would God have me to do in response to this passage?
1. Each of us must examine our own heart. There is a warning here:
We can be religious, seemingly good and respected by people, and still be far
from God. Idolatry was not just a problem in the ancient world! Was it D.L.
Moody who said, “You don’t have to go to far-away lands to find idols, American
is full of them!” Yes, American Idol
is not just a television show—it is a religion that is pervasive in our
country—even finding its way into churches. Do we treasure our stuff rather
than treasuring God?
2. Have we dedicated all we have to God? Jesus doesn’t call most
of us to sell all that we have and give it to the poor. But he does tell
us that we must love Him more than anything—to be willing to dedicate it all to
Him—and to take up our cross and follow Him. Is there something in your life
that you treasure more than God?
3. The Biblical order is “Trust and Obey.” The young man was right to
see a connection between salvation and obedience. He just had the order wrong.
It is not “obey to find life,” it is “receive life, then walk in obedience”!
Paul said in Eph 2:8-10,
“For by grace you have been saved
through faith. And this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God, 9not
a result of works, so that no one may boast.
10 For we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for
good works, which God prepared beforehand, that we should walk in them.”
Life, then obedience. Life as obedience! Have you decided to follow Jesus? How then, should
you live? Trust and obey, there is no
other way!
4. So, let’s
examine our hearts as we prepare for Communion, taking a moment to reflect on
the Cross… and to be reminded that Jesus is coming again! AMEN.
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