Luke 18:18-30 – Do you seek eternal life or life with Jesus?

POST OVERVIEW. An examination of the encounter of the rich young ruler with Jesus in Luke 18:18-30. What is eternal life and how do we obtain it?

“Good Teacher, what shall I do to inherit eternal life?”

Each of the synoptic gospels records Jesus’ encounter with the so-called “rich young ruler.” We will be exploring the account in Luke 18:18-30 in this study and asking ourselves, “What was the nature of this wealthy ruler’s search?”

The ruler’s opening question for Jesus seems promising enough. “Good Teacher, what must I do to inherit eternal life?” (Luke 18:18). This fellow is seeking eternal life and he is asking Jesus how he can obtain it. Nothing wrong with that! But upon a moment’s reflection, there could be room for concern. He calls Jesus, “Good Teacher,” not “Lord.” Does that mean this fellow sees Jesus as just an exalted rabbi or does he acknowledge that Jesus is God in human flesh and is, therefore, Lord of all? Also, he asks about “inheriting eternal life.” That is a curious expression, since it suggests that eternal life is passed down from one generation to another or maybe from one person to another.

DIFFERENT OBJECTIVES

Upon further reflection, we see that this wealthy religious ruler is seeking something very different from what Jesus is offering. The ruler seeks eternal life as the entire goal of his search, a commodity obtained in a brief transaction, but Jesus is offering Himself to anyone who will worship Him, life everlasting in unending fellowship with the living God.

WHAT DO YOU MEAN BY ETERNAL LIFE?

Perhaps it would be better to define what we mean when we say, “eternal life.” The ruler of Luke 18:18ff defined eternal life as living forever without the fear of death while still getting to keep all his wealth. The eternal life he wanted cost him nothing of value. He wanted to keep living as he was living but without the prospect of death. His eternal life was rich-ruler-centric. The emphasis was on duration of life, not on relationship with the living God.

But the eternal life that Jesus offers (John 3:16) begins in this physical life when a person surrenders everything to Jesus (Luke 5:11, 27-28; 9:23; Phil. 3:7-8) and follows Him in obedient worship. The one who possesses this eternal life experiences fellowship and relationship and joy with Jesus Himself and also with those who are joined to Jesus’ one body, the church. This eternal life emphasizes the quality of life. This is true life, real life, a “raised to newness of life” (Rom. 6:4) life, a “take hold of that which is life indeed” (1 Tim. 6:19) life, a “made alive together with Christ” (Eph. 2:5) life. Jesus Christ offers those who follow Him a resurrection life now in which those who believe in Him will never die (John 11:26). True eternal life is the life that believers possess now, even though we see through a mirror dimly (1 Cor. 13:12), and that we will possess in its glorified fullness for all of eternity as we stand before the throne praising the risen Lamb (Rev. 7:9-12). This eternal life is entirely Christ-centric.

WHAT MUST I DO?

The ruler had asked the Lord a direct question and the Lord gave the ruler a clear answer. The ruler asked, “What must I do?” and Jesus replied with a simple two-step plan for obtaining eternal life (18:22). If the ruler does these two actions, he will have eternal life – guaranteed. First, sell all that you possess and distribute it to the poor. Second, come, follow Me. That’s all. Do these two things and the Lord of the universe has guaranteed you eternal life. Notice that these two steps were entirely within this man’s ability. The instructions were not vague or ambiguous and there were no prerequisites to these two actions. The ruler could have easily done both of these steps immediately. Yet he refused to do either one. Instead of responding to Jesus with trusting obedience, “he became very sad” (18:23). And so the ruler went away without eternal life. He got to keep his law-keeping (18:21) and his wealth and his comfortable position in respectable society, but he forfeited everlasting fellowship with the King of kings in the kingdom of God.

ALL OF US MUST MAKE THIS SAME CHOICE

The answer that Jesus gave to the rich young ruler is the same answer He gives to any who would obtain eternal life in any geography and in any age. Regardless of how our question is phrased, the answer is the same. If you would inherit eternal life, you must surrender everything and come, follow Jesus.

Of course, these steps are to be understood figuratively, but a figurative understanding of these two steps does not diminish their reality. Step one is for you to surrender everything to Jesus. Jesus demands that those who come to Him have first surrendered all. He will be King over everything in your life or He will not be your King at all. To receive all that He is you must first give away your ownership of all that you are. You come to Him figuratively naked and penniless, on bended knees, offering Him your life for service.

And step two is to follow Him wherever He leads. As a disciple of Jesus, you have surrendered your independent plans and your bucket lists and your selfish ambitions and you have, instead, consented to listen for His voice to walk on the path that He chooses. Whether He leads you along pleasant and peaceful paths or He leads you into the dark and dangerous valley, you must follow where He takes you. The eternal life you seek requires that you surrender everything to Jesus and obediently follow where He leads.

Have you done that?

Soli Deo gloria            rmb                 12/13/2023                 #682

A transaction for eternal life? (Luke 18:18-23)

POST OVERVIEW. An investigation into Luke’s account of the encounter between “rich young ruler” and the Lord Jesus. Why was this man not converted? How does this affect our evangelism?

Each of the synoptic gospels contains this encounter between Jesus and the “rich, young ruler.” Our young friend seems to ask the right question of the right Person and he seems to be genuinely interested in eternal life, yet, in the end, he walks away from Jesus empty-handed. What went wrong? What did he miss?

TWO APPROACHES TO THE ENCOUNTER

I want to take two different approaches to this episode with the rich young ruler. The first post will be the traditional one where we simply examine the text, studying this meeting between a religious young man and the Lord Jesus to see why some people never receive the gospel, even though they appear to have every reason to do so.

But in a second post will focus on Luke 18:22 and consider what we who are disciples of the Lord Jesus can learn about stewarding those things which the Lord has entrusted to us.

CONSIDERING THE ENCOUNTER ITSELF

As mentioned before, the most striking feature of this encounter between Jesus and this “rich young ruler” (RYR) is that this man who seemed so ripe for harvest and so eager “to inherit eternal life” went away from Jesus without it. There must be something here that requires deeper exploration, because for some reason, the Lord of glory did not convert this simple evangelistic opportunity. A closer look at this story reveals that the RYR’s claim to desire eternal life was only a passing whim.  

TWO DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVES ON THE SAME ENCOUNTER

In this encounter, even though the young ruler and Jesus seem to be talking about the same thing using a common vocabulary, they are, in fact, seeing this encounter and its outcome from two very different perspectives. So, when the RYR expresses a desire for eternal life, instead of quickly answering his question, Jesus presents him with a series of tests to see if his desire is sincere.

So, first, Jesus tests the RYR to see if he understands Jesus’ true identity. Those who receive eternal life confess Jesus Christ as Lord, and they will only do that when they grasp that Jesus is incarnate deity, God in human form, the Word made flesh. The RYR has addressed Jesus as “good Teacher (Luke 18:18),” but does he understand that Jesus is divine? Jesus thus issues him a test, essentially asking the RYR, “Do you understand that I am God?” The man fails the first test and remains willfully ignorant of Jesus’ identity.

But also, it is telling that the RYR comes to Jesus for eternal life, not for an eternal relationship with the living God. It seems that the man expects the good Teacher to give him a short list of required behaviors so that he can check the boxes, nail down this eternal life thing, and get back to his wealth. As Simon the magician (Acts 8:18-19) wanted to obtain the Holy Spirit without saving faith in Christ, so the RYR wants to inherit eternal life without surrendering everything to Jesus. His thoughts are of a commercial transaction, a fair price for a desired good. Perhaps his thinking goes like this: “Good Teacher, I have a lot of money and can afford to give some of it away to gain eternal life. So, go ahead; name Your price and we can do this deal and You can move on and so can I.” The young man is interested in what the good Teacher can provide, not in the good Teacher Himself. But it is precisely an eternal relationship with Himself that Jesus is offering. To the one who declares Jesus as Lord, to the one who will bow before Him and obey His commands, Jesus gives Himself forever and He will never leave him or forsake him. The RYR must realize what we all must realize that Jesus is not selling eternal life, but He is calling people to deny themselves and take up their cross daily and follow Him (Luke 9:23). Jesus is offering an eternal relationship with the one true and living God to all those who will give away everything and submit to His lordship and follow Him.

Jesus next tests the young man’s awareness of his own sin and his consciousness of his sin’s consequences (18:20). Does the RYR realize that he is a sinner deserving God’s wrath and full judgment for his rebellion, or does he see himself as a decent chap who is better than most? In the parable that Jesus has just told in Luke 18:9-14, is the RYR the Pharisee or the tax collector? Our young friend’s response (18:21) reveals that he is the Pharisee in the parable. Thus, he fails another test.

A FINAL TEST

At this point in our story, this man wants to obtain eternal life without declaring Jesus as Lord, he wants eternal life apart from loving the One who gives eternal life, and he wants eternal life without confession of sin and repentance from sin. He wants eternal life on his own terms for his own ends. As an act of grace, Jesus gives the man one last opportunity. If our friend passes this last test, he will certainly obtain eternal life.

“Sell all you possess and distribute it to the poor, and come, follow Me (18:22).”

This is a direct command from the Lord of the universe. Like all biblical commands, there are only two possible responses, obedience or disobedience. There are three parts to the Lord’s command and the man must obey all three parts. The RYR’s hardness of heart is starkly revealed in his refusal to obey any of them. Jesus commanded him to sell all he possesses and he flatly refused. Obviously, he had nothing to distribute to the poor. And, most damning of all, when commanded to follow the King of kings, the RYR walks away. He disobeys Jesus and turns his back on Him because he wants to keep his money and his position and his respectability much more than he wants eternal life.

So, what at first appeared to be a man ripe for harvest, a man whom the Father was drawing (John 6:44), turned out to be someone whose heart was still hard and who was only willing to inherit eternal life if it cost him nothing.

APPLICATION TO OUR OWN EVANGELISM

As we reflect on this story and its surprising outcome, it may be instructive to consider how this bears on our own evangelism. Because my own evangelistic opportunities are few, my tendency is to interpret any interest in the gospel as an indicator of saving faith, but this story of Jesus and the RYR says otherwise. Our Lord tested this man’s enthusiastic question (18:18) to see if he understood what eternal life would cost him. Therefore, as we encounter those who appear curious about the gospel or about church or about Jesus, we would be wise to be cautiously optimistic. Does this person understand that Jesus demands everything from those who would be His disciples? Will you bow down to Jesus Christ as Lord and obey His commands? Do you acknowledge your sin and will you repent of it, knowing that Jesus has atoned for the sins of His people? These types of questions can be helpful in determining if this person asking about “eternal life” is also willing to pay the price to obtain it.

Soli Deo gloria            rmb                 1/18/2023                   #612