SALVATION
BY GRACE- Level 1 Lesson 2
Jesus many times
used parables, stories which illustrated spiritual truths. Luke 18:9-14 begins,
“And he spake this parable unto certain which trusted in themselves that they
were righteous, and despised others.” Jesus was targeting a certain audience:
those who trusted that they were righteous and automatically despised and
looked down on everyone else. He told this parable to these people who trusted
in the things they did. We would call them self-righteous, which is what Jesus
was speaking about when He said they looked down on everyone else saying, “I am
better than you!”
In verse 10, Jesus
says, “Two men went up into the temple to pray; the one a Pharisee, and the
other a publican.” We would say in modern language that they went to the church
to pray, and one was a Pharisee. A Pharisee was a very religious person. The
word actually means “separated one,” someone who was so religious that in a
sense they would say, “Don’t defile me! Don’t get too close to me. I’m not like
other men! I am better than everyone else!” The other man Jesus mentioned was a
publican. Publicans were tax collectors and were known to be very evil, sinful
people who cheated and defrauded. They collected taxes by any means they could,
stuck a lot of the money in their pockets, and gave some of it to the Roman
government, so they were not looked upon favorably by their peers.
The story continues
in verse 11, “The Pharisee stood and prayed thus with himself, God, I thank
thee, that I am not like other men are, extortioners, unjust, adulterers, or
even as this publican.” I want you to notice that. Who was he praying to? He
was actually praying to himself even though he was saying “God” and using the
right words. God was not acknowledging his prayer, and we’ll see later why that
was so. Notice that he prayed, “God, I thank You I am not like other men.” This
Pharisee, this religious man, said, “I am not like other men. I am not sinful.
I am not an extortioner, not unjust, not an adulterer, and I am not like this
publican right here who came to pray.” You see, he despised and looked down on
others because he thought he was better than them.
In verse 12, the
Pharisee said, “I fast twice in the week, I give tithes of all that I possess.”
He was saying, “Notice what I do?” Do you know what it means to fast? It
actually means to go without food. He also gave money to the church. He was one
of those people who say, “Don’t bother me! I live a good life! I give to
charity! I give money down at the church!”
Then we come to the
tax collector in verse 13: “And the publican, standing afar off, would not lift
up so much as his eyes unto heaven, but smote upon his breast, saying, God be
merciful to me a sinner.” Notice his body language: “standing afar off.” He
didn’t even go all the way into the church. He was so ashamed of his life and
the things that he had done that he stood afar off and wouldn’t even look up,
wouldn’t lift his eyesto heaven, but smote his breast. When the Bible talks of
smiting the breasts in the OldTestament, many times they also tore their
garments, which was a way of saying, “I amsorry, God, for what I have done!” It
was a sign of repentance, a contrite heart, and abroken spirit, which God would
not despise. This tax collector, sinful man that he was,cried out to God and
prayed, “God be merciful to me, I am a sinner!”
Verse 14 says, “I
tell you, this man went down to his house justified rather thanthe other: for
every one that exaltethhimself shall be abased; and he that humblethhimself
shall be exalted.” The publican went home justified, declared righteous
beforeGod, in right-standing with God, forgiven by God. Why was he forgiven?
Why did he goto his home in right standing before God and not the religious
Pharisee? It was becausethe Pharisee exalted himself, saying “I am better than
other people! I am not sinful! I amnot like other men,” while the tax collector
knew he had no standing before God, nothinghe could offer Him. He was a sinful
person. The Bible says Jesus didn’t come to saverighteous people but sinners,
and we have all sinned and come short of the glory of God.
This tax collector
humbled himself and found forgiveness and pardon.We’re talking about salvation
by grace. Grace is a wonderful word, and I amgoing to give you an accepted
definition of what it means, but grace means much more.
In the Greek
language in which the New Testament was written, grace is the word charis.An
accepted definition of grace is this: the free, unmerited favor of God toward
peoplewho don’t deserve it. This tax collector didn’t deserve anything from
God, but he foundGod’s favor because he humbled himself. There is another word
in the Greek, charisma,which is charis with the suffix ma on the end. It means
a specific manifestation or formof God’s grace, and this tax collector found
justification, right standing, before God as agift.
Romans
5:17 says, “They which receive abundance of grace and of the gift ofrighteousness
shall reign in life by one, Jesus Christ.” God offers you and me rightstanding
before Him as a gift and, according to our passage, the tax collector found
thatgift of justification, that gift of righteousness that only comes through
Jesus Christ. TheBible says in John 1:17, “For the law was given by Moses, but
grace and truth came byJesus Christ.” This grace is only offered to one kind of
person—those who humblethemselves and know they have no standing before God,
who cry for God’s mercy. Thesepeople will find God’s mercy and pardon.
Discipleship
Questions
1. Read Luke 18:9. What is a parable?
2. Read Luke 18:9. To whom did Jesus direct this
parable?
3. Read Luke 18:9 (the last part of the verse). People
that are self-righteous alwaysreveal an attitude toward others. According to
Luke 18:9, what is that attitude? A. Theylike others. B. They despise others or
look down on others. C. They love others.
4. Read Luke 18:10. Two people went to pray; in modern
language, where did they go to pray?
5. Read Luke 18:10. Who were these people?
6. Read Luke 18:11. What was the Pharisee’s prayer?
7. Read Luke 18:12. What does fasting mean?
8. Read Luke 18:12. What does it mean to give tithes?
9. Read Luke 18:13. Where was the tax collector
standing? Why?
10. Read Luke 18:13. Why did the tax collector hang
down his head and not look up?
11. Read Luke 18:13. What was this tax collector’s
prayer?
12. Read Luke 18:14. Which one of these men was
declared righteous before God when he went to his home?
13. Read Luke 18:14. Why was the tax collector declared
righteous and not the Pharisee?
15. Read Romans 10:13. If you right now got down on
your knees and cried out to God from your heart “God be merciful to me, a
sinner,” would God treat you the same way He treated the tax collector?

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