Wednesday, April 01, 2026

Those Darn Sheep and Goats

On that Tuesday after the Triumphal Entry, Jesus taught the parable of the sheep and the goats (Matt 25:31–46). The parable is one of Jesus's most frequently quoted teachings—and also one of the most frequently misread. Much of the confusion comes from lifting the parable out of its context or assuming Jesus is giving a simple moral lesson. Several patterns of misunderstanding show up consistently.

Many readers assume Jesus is saying that people enter the kingdom because they fed the hungry, clothed the poor, or visited prisoners. This interpretation treats the parable as a checklist for earning eternal life. But this reading is obviously wrong because it contradicts Jesus's broader teaching on grace, because the parable's context points to something more specific, and because the primary teaching of the gospel is "saved by grace through faith apart from works." This is not a teaching on "saved by works" or "losing salvation if you don't help the poor."

A second major misunderstanding is assuming "the least of these" refers to all poor or marginalized people everywhere. While Scripture elsewhere commands compassion, this parable uses a more specific phrase: "the least of these my brothers." Clearly Jesus is referring not to the poor in general but to a particular group—His messengers or His people under persecution. It isn't a call for a "social gospel" (especially not as a means of salvation," but a call for changed lives that change how we love one another ... especially where "one another" refers to fellow believers (John 13:34-35).

Many assume this is a universal final judgment of every person who has ever lived. But some interpreters argue that Jesus is describing a specific judgment of the nations in a prophetic, end‑times context. I would argue it's a parable and isn't intended to refer to a specific "judgment event," but to God's general judgment of His people. They aren't "sheep" or "goats" because of what they do. They do what they do because they are either "sheep" or "goats." LIke James, it's saying that living faith acts (James 2:14-22).

When the parable is reduced to "be nice to the poor," its deeper force is lost. Several themes emerge when read in context:

1. Identification with Jesus's people

Jesus so closely identifies with His followers—especially the vulnerable, persecuted, or marginalized—that how others treat them reveals their true allegiance.

2. Evidence, not cause, of righteousness

The sheep are not surprised because they earned salvation; they are surprised because their acts of mercy flowed naturally from who they were. Their compassion was the fruit of belonging to the King, not the price of admission.

3. A revelation of hidden loyalties

Just as sheep and goats look similar in dim light, the righteous and unrighteous may appear similar outwardly. The judgment reveals what was true all along.

Why is this parable so often misundersood?
  • A Preference for Rules: We prefer simple rules—"help the poor"—over complex eschatological teaching. We still tend to think of “saved by works” even while extolling “saved by faith apart from works.” “Surely salvation must include some element of works … right?” The notion of “changed from within produces necessarily a change from without” just seems too difficult to take.
  • Cultural distance: We miss the significance of mixed flocks, the identity of "brothers," and the prophetic setting. We often fail to distinguish between “His sheep” and everyone else even though He clearly did (e.g., John 6:44-47; John 6:64-66; John 10:14-18; John 10:26-28; John 17:6-10).
  • Selective reading: The parable is often quoted without the surrounding chapters that frame it. Scripture must be read in context of itself and interpreted by Scripture and not personal preference.
When the parable is read within Matthew's narrative and Jesus's eschatological teaching, it becomes less about generic humanitarianism and more about how people respond to Jesus by how they treat His representatives—especially when doing so is costly. Do our actions demonstrate our new nature, or do they reflect the old nature? That's a critical quesstion.

No comments:

Post a Comment

We're always happy to have a friendly discussion with you readers. "Friendly" is the key word here. If it gets too heated or abusive, I'll have to block the comment. Let's keep it friendly, okay?