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There is a story
about a school teacher addressing her class which was studying
statistics. She informed them that somewhere in the world
there is a woman having a baby every 12 seconds. Her question
to the class was, ”What do you think about that?” One brightyed
student spoke up excitedly saying, ”Find that woman and stop
her.”
Statistics won’t
mean a thing to us if we fail to understand what they are
teaching us. Statisticians throw a lot of numbers at us in
order to convince us that we should buy this product or that.
When it comes to the Truth, the one statistic we learn from
God is that the majority is always wrong. You can never prove
you are in the right by quoting the number who support this
belief or hold that doctrine.
At the time of
the flood there were at least one billion, thirty million
people on the earth. (This is worked out mathematically using
only five children to a family based on Genesis 5.) Of this
number only eight entered the ark. When God decided to destroy
Sodom and Gomorrah, Abraham hoped God would save cities if
there were 50 righteous found in them. Concerned this figure
might be too high, he finally hears God assure him that he
would save the cities if there were ten. Unfortunately this
figure was still more than twice as many as were found there.
When they asked
Jesus if there are few that be saved his reply was, ”Strive
to enter in at the strait gate: for many, I say unto you,
will seek to enter in, and shall not be able.” In Matthew’s
gospel Jesus said, ”Strait is the gate, and narrow is the
way, which leadeth unto life, and few there be that find it.”
So the fact is
that while many seek to enter, only a few do. What is the
difference between the many who seek and the few who find
it? Certainly Christ died for all; Peter tells us that the
Lord is ”not willing that any should perish, but that all
should come to repentence.” Why then are so few going to be
saved?
The simple answer
is that most will not be saved because most did not really
want salvation more than anything else in all the world. The
key is in the difference between seeking and striving. Jesus
told us to strive, which according to the Companion Bible
means to struggle or agonize. The word seek has simply the
meaning of desire. There is a saying in the world that ”if
wishes were horses, beggars would ride.” A beggar usually
is too lazy to work hard enough to provide his own transportation
but he doesn’t mind wishing.
If we simply wish
to be saved, then we won’t; but if we really strive to be
saved, then we will. Jesus tells us that it is his Father’s
good pleasure to give us the Kingdom. We cannot earn it, but
God is not going to give it to those who do not want it more
than anything else in the world.
Even in this life
many people are failures because they do not want success
enough to work for it. We are to ”work out our own salvation
with fear and trembling.” Not that our work will earn it,
for as the next verse explains, ”It is God which worketh in
us both to will and to do his pleasure.” God is willing to
work in us and through us if we really want to receive His
gracious gift of salvation.
God is not going
to grab anyone by the heels and pull them kicking and screaming
into the Kingdom. If we don’t want the kingdom enough to strive
to enter, then rest assured, we won’t be there. On the other
hand, God’s good pleasure is to give the kingdom to all who
really want it with all their hearts. The one statistic to
remember is this: God is not willing that any should perish
but most will. If we will truly strive to enter in at the
strait gate, Jesus will be there to say to us, ”Come ye blessed
of my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the
foundation of the world.”
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