On one occasion, while Christ was in the
midst of His work of teaching and healing, one of the company
assembled about Him said: "Master, speak to my brother,
that he divide the inheritance with me." Luke 12:13.
This man had witnessed Christ's wonderful
works. He had been astonished at the clearness of His comprehension,
His superior judgment, and the fairness with which He viewed the cases brought to Him. He heard
Christ's stirring appeals and His solemn denunciations of the
scribes and Pharisees. If words of such command could be spoken
to this brother, he would not dare to refuse the aggrieved man
his portion. He solicited Christ's influence on his side. "Speak
to my brother," he said, "that he divide the inheritance
with me."
The Holy Spirit was pleading with this
man to become an heir of the inheritance that is incorruptible
and undefiled, and that fadeth not away. He had seen evidence
of the power of Christ. Now the opportunity was his to speak
to the Great Teacher, to express the desire uppermost in his
heart. But like the man with the muckrake in Bunyan's allegory,
his eyes were fixed on the earth. He saw not the crown above
his head. Like Simon Magus he valued the gift of God as a means
of worldly gain.
The Saviour's mission on earth was fast
drawing to a close. Only a few months remained for Him to complete
what He came to do in establishing the kingdom of His grace.
Yet human greed would have turned Him from His work to take up
the dispute over a piece of land. But Jesus was not to be diverted
from His mission. His answer was: "Man, who made Me a judge
or a divider over you?" Luke 12:14.
Christ gave the man plainly to understand
that this was not His work. He was striving to save souls. He
was not to be turned aside from this to take up the duties of
a civil magistrate.
How often today labor is forced upon the
church that should never be allowed to enter the work of the
gospel ministry!
Again and again Christ had been asked to
decide legal and political questions. But He refused to interfere
in temporal matters. He knew that in the political world there
were iniquitous proceedings and great tyranny. But His only exposure
of these was the proclamation of Bible truth. To the great multitudes
that thronged His steps He presented the pure, holy principles
of the law of God and spoke of the blessing found in obeying
these principles. With authority from on high He enforced the
importance of justice and mercy. But He refused to become entangled
in personal disputes.
Christ stood in our world as the Head of the great spiritual kingdom that He came to our world to establish -the kingdom of righteousness. His teaching made plain the ennobling, sanctifying principles that govern this kingdom. He showed that justice and mercy and love are the controlling powers in Jehovah's kingdom.