Compassion (Matthew 9:36)

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We’ve all seen large groups of people. The stadium packed with fans. The  main  square/street in town completely filled with partiers or protestors. The line-up of cars stretched out to the horizon in a traffic jam. The great mob of people rushing to and fro in a mall in December. We’ve all looked out over a city from a high place, and wondered at the great numbers of people who call that place home. 

What do you think of when you see the crowds? Do you think of the great quantity of food that is needed to sustain them? Do you think of the ill intent of some among them? Do you think of the mindlessness of the mob and wonder if common sense has a home there? What emotions fill your heart when you see them? Wonderment? Frustration? Fear? Anger? Matthew recorded for us what Jesus saw when He looked at the crowds, “When he saw the crowds, he had compassion on them, because they were harassed and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd.”

God looks out at the crowds, and He knows the needs and hurts and disappointments of each one. He knows how sin has twisted and distorted life for every individual that the Spirit formed from conception. He looks and sees a vast graveyard of the walking dead of humanity. For they are all dead in their trespasses and sins. Completely helpless to do anything at all to rescue themselves. Worse, they are harassed. The enemy of their souls is not content to sit idly by and watch them stumble into eternal destruction. He and his minions do all they can all the time to further entangle them in sin and foolishness. He constantly lies to them, telling them they are not worthwhile, not loved, not noticed or cared for. Worse still, he constantly incites those he has oppressed and possessed toward ever more destructive behavior, furthering both their own misery and the misery of all around. 

Jesus looks out to the crowds and sees how the enemy is harassing them. He sees how unable they are to help themselves. He notes that they are but sheep being led to the slaughter, and those He Himself had appointed to shepherd them to safety are absent. Unaccounted for. The shepherds have chased after sin too. They have fed their pride, and in their arrogance they distain the crowd and care nothing for them. The crowd is shepherdless. 

Jesus sees these things, knows these facts, and is filled with compassion.

After you strip away the obvious, and after you look beyond the petty motivations, and after you look past the all too human faults, you see the true condition of people. 

That is a spiritual exercise. An exercise which does not yield a conclusion so much as it yields a feeling. A deep, entirely spiritual emotion, whelming up from the soul. It is not an emotion you can walk away from or shake off, because it is God’s heart for people. It is compassion, and as John Nolland said, “Compassion involves so identifying with the situation of others that one is prepared to act for their benefit.” 

Those who lead and those who govern must have this same compassion for the crowd they look upon. Without God’s heart for those we lead – without compassion – one’s behaviour becomes entirely motivated by one’s own condition. 

And that – well, that never works out for the best. 

We must learn to regard people less in the light of what they do or omit to do, and more in the light of what they suffer.

Dietrich Bonhoeffer

APPLICATION: Intentionality

What do you see when you look upon those you lead? Does God’s heart for them well up within you? Ask God for more of His heart for those you influence, that you might lead well. 

Here (Matthew 9:35)

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In Matthew 4, the Gospel writer summarized Jesus’ early ministry; “Jesus
Photo by James Ahlberg on Unsplash went throughout Galilee, teaching in their synagogues, preaching the good news of the kingdom, and healing every disease and sickness among the people.” Now he writes, “Jesus went through all the towns and villages, teaching in their synagogues, preaching the good news of the kingdom and healing every disease and sickness.”

Between those two summaries, Jesus has done much. He provided the bulk of His teaching to the crowds, healed diseases, demonstrated sovereignty over the wind and waves, casted out the demonic, forgave sin, called Matthew into ministry, raised the dead and restored sight to the blind and speech to the mute. In short, between those two summaries Jesus has completely fulfilled Isaiah’s prophesy of Messiah.

For Isaiah had prophetically written, “The Spirit of the Sovereign Lord is on me, because the Lord has anointed me to preach good news to the poor.” Truly, chapters 5-7 of Matthew are good news, and all of it was preached to the poor! Every time Jesus saw a point of Law He saw something of the character of God. So all of Jesus’ teaching – whether beatitudes or greater explanation of the Law – points to a God who loves His created children and wants the very best for them. So much so, that He calls us to be His reflection for others.

Isaiah had written, “He has sent me to bind up the brokenhearted.” So Jesus has ministered to those who were crushed in spirit. He healed the leper. He healed the centurion’s servant. He healed Peter’s mother-in-law. He healed the paralytic. He healed the woman who had almost lost hope on account of her persistent bleeding. He raised Jarius’ daughter – who was dead and beyond hope – to life.

Isaiah had written, “He has sent me to […] proclaim freedom for the captives.” So Jesus freed those who were captive to demonic oppression and possession. He ministered to the demon-possessed at the beginning of His teaching, and again at Peter’s house, “When evening came, many who were demon-possessed were brought to him, and he drove out the spirits with a word.” He cast out the demons from the two demon-possessed men in the Gadarenes, and also from the man who was mute.

Finally, Isaiah had written, “He has sent me to […] proclaim […] release from darkness for the prisoners.” To that point, Jesus restored sight to the blind and speech to the man who was mute. From the absence of sensory input to the absence of ability, Jesus has released, freed and restored.

Matthew is not even halfway done writing his Gospel, but already we can see how Jesus truly and fully fulfilled the prophetic mandate of Messiah!

Did I offer peace today? Did I bring a smile to someone’s face? Did I say words of healing? Did I let go of my anger and resentment? Did I forgive? Did I love? These are the real questions. I must trust that the little bit of love that I sow now will bear many fruits, here in this world and the life to come.

Henri Nouwen

APPLICATION: Intentionality

We are Christians. The word means literally, ‘little Christs’. How are we fulfilling the Messianic agenda? Are we bringing the Kingdom of God to others today and celebrating that the Kingdom of God can come through us, or are we about our own agenda and still waiting till He appears in power?