Matthew 11:28-29 "
Come unto me
all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.
Take my
yoke upon you and learn of me; for I am meek and lowly in
heart: and ye
shall find rest unto your souls."
THE
BEGINNING AND THE END OF ALL
BIBLE STUDY
Lesson One
INTRODUCTION
These
verses speak to those who
labor and are heavy laden. Somehow, I can’t help but feel
that any one of
us fits that category at various times in our lives. We
certainly fit
that group if we are lost and without Christ because there is no
greater case of
souls that are burdened down and labor under the most grievous weight
than the
case of those who carry their own load of sin, trying to shoulder some
of it
and finding it necessary to drag the rest forward like a ball and chain
toward
eternal doom, day by day. For those who might be in that
condition, it is
a labor of woe and promises the worst of paychecks.
Ultimately, if they
labor under the load of their own sins from the cradle to the grave,
the
paycheck they will earn is eternal damnation. What a horrific
thing to
receive as wages for spending a lifetime carrying a Mac truck on their
backs
and dragging a freight train behind at the same time.
Then, saints of God become overburdened from time to time in their
lives and
the weight of such things as beset them is more than they can easily
bear. The toil of it is just too much. The effect
of it on their
spiritual lives is drastic. The weight of it bends their back
to the
ground and they cannot help but feel the greatest drain on all their
vigor and
strength, both physical, emotional and spiritual. Things come
upon
God’s people from all directions. There is
sickness, making a
living, dealing with loss, dealing with gain, family woes, woes from
friends,
woes from dealing with our possessions or dealing with the lack of
possessions. Like Jonah, sometimes the worm eats and kills
our gourd vine
and a blasting east wind of trial and blazing hot sun of trouble causes
us to
faint. Sometimes, like the disciples on the
So, Jesus Christ speaks to all who labor and are heavy laden, because
He would
have them know that they can step out of that condition and be at
rest.
The lost sinner can rest from his own works and rest IN Jesus
Christ’s
finished work and lay down his heavy load of sin at the cross and rise
up a new
person created in Christ Jesus unto good works, having the
righteousness of
Christ, having his sins washed away, having a new life and a new start
as an
heir of God and joint heir with Christ (Romans
8:17) . Then, the saved person
can take his burdens to the
Lord and just let the Lord take care of them. He can swap the
yoke of
worldly care, concern, and overburdening conflict for the yoke of Jesus
and
find that yoke easy and the burden of it light (Matthew
11:30).
In
doing this, he will enter into a process that leads to rest for the
soul.
And this is where we get to the portion of the Lord’s
statement from
which we draw our bible lesson today. “Take
my yoke upon you and LEARN OF ME, for I am meek and lowly in heart, and
ye
shall find rest unto your souls.”
The verse tells us plainly that if we will simply learn of Christ we
shall find
rest unto our souls. And that is the grand hope of all the
Lord’s
people! To find rest from all the things that assail the
children of
Adam! We know that this does not mean retiring from the
labors which
accompany our faith. We are reminded that we are created in
Christ Jesus
“unto good works, that God hath before ordained that we
should walk in
them (Ephesians
2:10).
We know also that the full discovery of that rest will be when we are
gathered
with Christ in heaven and then share with Him in the eternal blessings
of
enjoying the new heaven and the new earth. But, Jesus is
talking in our
text about finding rest to our souls WHEN we take His yoke upon us and
learn of
Him. We have entered into a rest when we are saved and that
rest has the
potential to grow and grow, beginning NOW. We are not
instructed to come
unto Him and then sit down and wait for the final discovery of that
rest when
we get to heaven. We are rather, given instructions about how
to begin to
discover rest unto our souls while we live on this earth. And
the centerpiece
of that process is, as He says, “Learn
of me...”.
So let’s begin today to look at what our Lord means when He
says “Learn of me.”
We will try to showcase what
the bible reveals to us about the Lord; who He was as exemplar
on earth and is just now
in heaven, what He
considers important, how He went about His earthly life. By
learning these
things we will have learned of Him. But we have a first step
of two parts
that we need to attend to and we will look at that as a
starter.
There are two conditions we must meet in order to take advantage of
this great
blessing Christ has promised. Thinking again about
our Savior's
words we remember that He said "Come
unto me..."
This is the first thing that must be done. Now, you might
think that this
is such a simple thing that anyone would be willing to do it if there
was a
fair likelihood that in doing so, they would find a rest for themselves
never
before discovered. In fact, common sense tells us that a
person would be
looking for rest if he were wandering in a treacherous landscape in a
hot and
merciless desert where every step is fraught with something to cause
pain,
discomfort, or danger; where prickly pears stick in the feet, sand gets
in the
shoes, certain crawling things wait under rocks to sting or bite,
thirst haunts
the body, and the sun becomes the enemy. Yet, humans distancing
themselves from
Christ, the very source of living
water
are
plodding along in a barren land without any hope of resting or
quenching the
thirst of their souls! Seemingly one step away from certain
and eternal
rest they wander in the land of desolation even with the invitation of
Jesus
the Merciful ringing in their ears! How can this be?
Such an
anomaly can happen because
humans are
self-contradictory in many things. Getting to a place of rest
is no
exception. Jesus noted in John
5:40 when
speaking to some Jews: “And
ye will not come to
me that ye might have life.” This is a
good summary
statement about the attitude of all men who reject the Lord
Jesus
Christ. Imagine such a contradiction! Here is a man
dying of a
cancer. The Doctor who holds the cure for all forms of cancer
walks up to
him and says "Come over here and I will heal you." The man
stares at the Doctor, turns away and wanders off in another direction.
He
thinks about what the Doctor said, remembers what the scene looked
like, has a
mental image of the Doctor, knows where he is, but wanders around out
there somewhere
until he falls over dead from his disease. This is the very
thing Jesus
was talking about when he addressed those thick-headed Jews and
said, "...ye will not come to me that ye might have life."
Notice that the Lord points squarely at the cause of their
refusal to
come to Him. "...ye will not...." This is the case
of
unbelieving men. They "will not" to come to Christ.
Said another way, it is their WILL not to come to Him.
And that is
the
crux of the
obstinacy which
besets the carnal spirit of the children of Adam. Away with
the idea that
sensible men will reason with themselves and "decide" to follow Jesus
when presented the plain truth about the benefits to be had by repentance toward God and faith in Christ!
They WILL NOT
come to Him that they might have life! "...there is none that
seeketh after God" (Romans
3:11). This statement
accurately describes all unregenerate people!
So, some may ask, "If no human will come to Christ, why does He bother
to
invite them? And, why are there people who have
confessed belief in
Christ and admitted that they have gone to Him and are following Him
if, as you
say, none will come to Him when invited?" Ah! Here
is a good
question. It begs a thorough answer.
Why Humans Cannot and
Will Not Come to Christ
Humans in their natural state have the mind and will that they received
from
their parents. This is that which came from Adam, the parent
of all
humans. Adam died spiritually and began dying physically
when he
disobeyed God (Genesis
3:3-6)
, just as God
had warned him that he would (Genesis
2:16-17) . He still had the
human nature, but he lost touch
with the nature of God. In a state of spiritual death, and
with only the
natural state to guide them, humans cannot receive or know the
spiritual things
of God (I
Corinthians 3:14) .
In
addition, the bible describes people in their natural state as
having a
"carnal (fleshly) mind." That carnal (fleshly) mind is at
enmity
with God (Romans
8:7) .
In
this state no
human will seek after God .
All humans are found in this state naturally, and in this
state all
have sinned . They are dead
in trespasses
and sins .
Dead people are incapable
of doing anything. Humans cannot approach God
because of their sin.
Moreover, that incapacity is the result of a will not to
approach God.
Which means, that if they had the means to approach God and
make peace,
they would not do so, at any rate (John
5:40) .
There is an impasse which humans will not try to mend by
using means
prescribed by God. This impasse must be broken by God,
because humans are
too proud to admit wrong; and incapable of making amends to God
because their dead state makes them insensible to the need to
be
reconciled to their Maker. God steps in and establishes a
means for them
to be reunited with Him; a means for settling the difference between
Himself and
humans. That means resides in the complete and finished work
of Jesus
Christ (Ephesians
2:13-15) . We will consider aspects
of this in Lesson Two.