Matthew 25:8-9. And the foolish said to the wise, “Give us some of your oil, for our lamps are going out.” But the wise answered, saying, “No, lest there should not be enough for us and you; but go rather to those who sell, and buy for yourselves.”<\/strong><\/p>\nThe foolish virgins ask the wise virgins to give them oil. But the wise virgins wisely realize that if they split their reserves, nobody will have enough. So they tell the foolish virgins to go find some merchants and buy some oil from them. This would have been very difficult to do – especially at this late hour – but it was the only way.<\/p>\n
So what is the oil? First of all, it is not salvation. If these foolish virgins were not saved, they would not have been called virgins. Furthermore, if oil represents salvation, they would not have been told to go and buy it, for salvation is not bought. It is given free of charge to anyone who wants it. The gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord. For by grace are you saved, through faith, and this not of yourselves, it is the gift of God, so that no one can boast.<\/p>\n
So the oil is not salvation. What is the oil? The oil is their preparation. Though all prepared to one degree or another. They all brought torches. But some of them prepared better than others and brought not only a torch, but also a vessel filled with oil. The wise virgins were prepared because they had enough oil to get them through the night. The foolish virgins were unprepared. They had a torch, which would last them a few minutes or so, but it was not enough. They were not well prepared. They lacked reserves of spiritual oil. They did not prepare well enough. And so when the final three and a half years of the tribulation begins, many of them fail to stand up for Christ. Many of them give in to the pressure and temptations. Many of them stop living for Christ. All because they did not prepare well enough.<\/p>\n
Similarly, if you and I are not willing to take the time and expense and build up our spiritual reserves while we have the chance, a time may come when a crisis happens in our life – a sickness, a death, a loss of finances or a job, or persecution – and we will find that we do not have the spiritual reserves to get through. In such times, we may look at those who made it through similar trials and say, “I wish I had your faith. How did you get so much faith? Can’t you give me some of your spiritual strength?” And of course, they cannot. Faith and spiritual strength comes only through day by day discipline. It comes only through constant reading and studying of the Word. It comes only through praying without ceasing. It comes only through personal preparation.<\/p>\n
Now, while we have the time, we must get into the Word, and expend the effort necessary to get to know it and to get our lives well soaked with the Word. We must learn how to pray and what prayer does. We must learn to walk in the Spirit. It is hard to live for God now. But when times of crisis come, it will harder still. If it hard to keep your lamp lit now, it will be harder still when pressure and persecution threaten to blow your light out. And we do know that due to a lack of preparation, as the end times draw near, and also during the end times, the love of many will grow cold (Matt. 24:12).<\/p>\n
It is the wise who prepare for the future. This past week, I sat down and realized that it had been ten years since I had done a physical work out. You may look at me and see someone who doesn’t need to worry about exercising. But if my next ten years are like my last ten years, problems will begin to develop. When I reach 50, 60 and 70, I want to still have the strength and stamina that many of you have to continue serving the Lord with all my body, soul, mind and strength. And so I started working out physically this week. It is as they say – it is never too late and it is never too early to begin working out.<\/p>\n
The same is true for developing spiritual strength and stamina. Whatever you do now, take it up a notch this week. Not a huge notch, for that will wear you out too quickly. But memorize one extra verse a week. Pray for five extra minutes. Study scripture five minutes longer. Start devotions with your wife or children. During this church age, there is balance between living with the state of mind that Christ could return at any moment, but also living with the understanding that we must prepare for the future as if He will not come in our lifetime. Though we are to be watchful and alert at all times, and never think that the Lord delays his coming, we are also to use the days and hours we have now to prepare ourselves for whatever the future might hold. Jesus says that if the world hated him, it will hate us.<\/p>\n
Here in the United States, we think we are relatively safe. But Rome fell in a day to barbarian hordes. We must not be so proud to think that our nation might not face the same fate. And if that happens, and if you are alive, will you be prepared? I am not talking about a cave in the mountains stockpiled with food and guns. I mean, if all of a sudden, it is illegal to be a Christian, would you be prepared to stand up for Jesus Christ no matter what? Do you know enough of the Bible that you could get by without one because they took all our Bibles away? Even if this does not happen, even if the United States continues on as the greatest and richest and most powerful nation in the world for many generations to come, are you making preparations now to hold the fort for future Christian generations?<\/p>\n
Europe used to be a Christian stronghold. The Reformation began in Germany, Switzerland and France. They are all pagan nations today. The United States is not far behind. Christ may come back tomorrow. But if Christ does not return for 25 or 50 years, will there still be a Christian influence in the United States? Not if we keep going the way we are going. Alistair Begg thinks that if we keep going the way we are going, we are only 25 years away from becoming a pagan society just like most of Europe. One of the reasons for this sad state of spirituality is that many Christians are so convinced that Christ will come tomorrow, that we don’t need to prepare for the day after. Well, He may come tomorrow, and I hope He does. But He may not come tomorrow. Or the day after. And if we do not make preparations now, if we do not have another reformation now, our light will soon be snuffed out.<\/p>\n
We must prepare while there is still time. People say, “There’s no time to prepare! There’s too much to do!” We would be much more effective in what we do if we had taken the time to adequately prepare. Remember Paul? He wanted to get right out and start converting his Jewish brethren. But God had him spend 17 years in preparation before Paul went on his first missionary journey. We’re thankful for Paul, but we should be even more thankful for those 17 years. If it weren’t for those 17 years, there would be no Paul.<\/p>\n
Good pastors and teachers must go through times of studying and preparing for ministry before God will use them. It took Moses 40 years to get his BD degree – the backside of the desert degree – before God called on him. Even Jesus spent 30 years in preparation before he began his three years of ministry. Christ may return tomorrow, and we all hope he does. But what are doing to prepare for the future, just in case His coming is delayed? We must, if we are going to prepare ourselves for the future, we must be working out now. These foolish virgins failed in this, and so when the bridegroom came, they were not around. They had gone to find oil, but it was not something they could obtain on the spur of the moment. Spiritual reserves of oil are only built up over time. These foolish virgins go to get some oil, and as a result, miss out on the dance they were supposed to perform.<\/p>\n
The Door is Shut (Matthew 25:10-12)<\/h2>\n Matthew 25:10-12. And while they went to buy, the bridegroom came, and those who were ready went in with him to the wedding; and the door was shut. Afterward the other virgins came also, saying, “Lord, Lord, open to us!” But he answered and said, “Assuredly, I say to you, I do not know you.”<\/strong><\/p>\nThey did not miss entrance into eternal life. There is no suggestion that these foolish virgins are now going to hell. There is not mention of suffering. There is not even a mention of weeping and gnashing of teeth as we saw in 24:51. Zane Hodges suggests that those Christians living during the tribulation who do not have the strength and stamina to get through it are those Christians who die in the tribulation. Matthew 24:12 talks about the love of many growing cold. This is like their lamp going out. Their light being snuffed. But then Matthew 24:13 says that he who endures to the end will be saved. This is not talking about eternal life, but about surviving the tribulation. Even down in verse 22, this is how the word saved is to be understood. Jesus is saying is that those who have enough oil, those who have enough strength to persevere and stay faithful, it is these whom God will protect and allow to survive the tribulation. Why? So that they can accomplish Matthew 24:14 – the preaching of the Gospel into all the world.<\/p>\n
Those Christians who die during the tribulation still make it to heaven. We read about them in Revelation 5:9-11 and Revelation 7:9-17 where they are pictured as waiting for the Tribulation to end. Why are they waiting? Because until the Tribulation is over, there really is not a place for them. The bride and his bridegroom are still in the Wedding Ceremony and Wedding Supper, which they do not belong at. Then there is the wedding Celebration on earth for those elect who survive the tribulation. But these, since they did not survive it, can’t take part in that either. The door has been shut to them.<\/p>\n
But when the new kingdom begins, then there is a place for them, and they will be given their rightful place in that kingdom. So because they have died, they miss out on the torch dance they were supposed to take part in. They miss out on welcoming Christ and His new Bride back to earth. When the celebration is over, they will still be part of the kingdom. But they missed out on the special privilege of dancing in the celebration.<\/p>\n
They still want to perform the function they had been called to, but when they ask to get involved, Jesus answers, “Sorry, I don’t know you. You do not have any part in this.” This is not a statement that Christ doesn’t know who they are. The Greek word used here is oida which carries with it the idea of respect, appreciation and honor. The word does not mean that they do not have a relationship with Him, but that he does not know them in the sense of honoring them.<\/p>\n
Jesus had counted on them to provide entertainment for His wedding celebration. They were supposed to be there for His bride. But when they were called, they didn’t show up. It would be like if your musicians never showed up for your wedding, but then wanted to come to the reception. Because they had failed to do their part, you probably would not let them into the reception either. It was insulting and disappointing to you to ask them to sing in the wedding, but then they don’t show up. So the door is shut to them to the door of the celebration, not to eternal life, or even to the kingdom.<\/p>\n
Christ’s concluding warning is in Matthew 25:13, and I think that he speaks this application to us.<\/p>\n
Be Ready for the Return of Jesus (Matthew 25:13)<\/h2>\n Matthew 25:13. Watch therefore, for you know neither the day nor the hour in which the Son of Man is coming.<\/strong><\/p>\nBe ready. Get prepared. Although this is about believers living during the tribulation, there is application for us as well. Some Christians today are looking for Christ’s return, but are not preparing for it. The Bible says that if you faint in the day of adversity, your strength is small. The real test of out strength is not when things are going well, but how we react when things do not go well.<\/p>\n
We all know men and women who became a Christian, and lived faithfully for God for a while. But then something bad happened in their life. They lost a loved one. They contracted a terrible illness. They lost their job and faced financial difficulties. Maybe all of these happened. And because of these adversities, these people are no longer attending church. They are no longer walking in fellowship with God. They discovered they did not have the oil they needed. If they were saved, they did not lose their salvation. They just didn’t prepare well enough for the times of trouble. Just as there are these sorts of Christians in our day, so also will there be these sorts of Christians during the tribulation.<\/p>\n
The May 1984 National Geographic showed through color photos and drawings the swift and terrible destruction that wiped out the Roman Cities of Pompeii and Herculaneum in A.D. 79. The explosion of Mount Vesuvius was so sudden, the residents were killed while in their routine: men and women were at the market, the rich in their luxurious baths, slaves at toil. They died amid volcanic ash and superheated gasses. Even family pets suffered the same quick and final fate. It takes little imagination to picture the panic of that terrible day. The saddest part is that these people did not have to die. Scientists confirm what ancient Roman writers record–weeks of rumblings and shakings preceded the actual explosion. Even an ominous plume of smoke was clearly visible from the mountain days before the eruption. If only they had been able to read and respond to Vesuvius’s warning!<\/p>\n
There are similar “rumblings” in our world: warfare, earthquakes, the nuclear threat, economic woes, breakdown of the family and moral standards. While not exactly new, these things do point to a coming day of Judgment (Matthew 24). People need not be caught unprepared. God warns and provides an escape to those who will heed the rumblings. Let us therefore watch, and get ready.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"
http:\/\/media.blubrry.com\/one_verse\/www.tillhecomes.org\/Bible\/Audio\/Matthew\/Matt_25_1-13.mp3 Outline of Matthew 24-25 – The Olivet Discourse I. Questions (Matthew 24:1-3) II. Answers (Matthew 24:4-39) A. The Signs (Matthew 24:4-35) 1. Summary of The Day of the Lord and preliminary events (Matthew 24:4-14) 2. Focus on the Great Tribulation (final 3 1\/2 years of the Day of the Lord) (Matthew 24:15-35) B. The […]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":6210,"parent":6107,"menu_order":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","template":"","meta":{"_bbp_topic_count":0,"_bbp_reply_count":0,"_bbp_total_topic_count":0,"_bbp_total_reply_count":0,"_bbp_voice_count":0,"_bbp_anonymous_reply_count":0,"_bbp_topic_count_hidden":0,"_bbp_reply_count_hidden":0,"_bbp_forum_subforum_count":0,"_genesis_hide_title":false,"_genesis_hide_breadcrumbs":false,"_genesis_hide_singular_image":false,"_genesis_hide_footer_widgets":false,"_genesis_custom_body_class":"","_genesis_custom_post_class":"","_genesis_layout":"full-width-content","footnotes":""},"class_list":{"0":"post-6214","1":"page","2":"type-page","3":"status-publish","4":"has-post-thumbnail","6":"entry"},"yoast_head":"\n
Matthew 25:1-13 - Ready or Not, Here I Come! | Sermon by Jeremy Myers<\/title>\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n\t \n\t \n\t \n \n \n \n\t \n