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Jesus teaches in a one-line parable commonly called the Parable of the Hidden Treasure that you must be willing to sacrifice all that you have in this world to acquire the kingdom. A better name for the parable is the Parable of the Purchase of the Field. This name will help keep in our mind the price to be paid for the kingdom, as Jesus intends us to see as the main point.
Jesus gives this parable in succinct but powerful terms:
The kingdom of heaven is like unto a treasure hidden in the field; which a man found, and hid; and in his joy he goeth and selleth all that he hath, and buyeth that field. (Matt. 13:44, ASV.)
What underscores this verseâs meaning is the next verse. In the immediately following verse, Jesus repeats the same idea in another single-sentence parable. This is known as the Parable of the Pearl of Great Price:
Again, the kingdom of heaven is like unto a man that is a merchant seeking goodly pearls: and having found one pearl of great price, he went and sold all that he had, and bought it. (Matt. 13:45-46.)
Both parables are identical to the message Jesus gives the rich young man.1 Jesus told the young rich man that he should have exchanged all that he had in this life as worldly riches to obtain eternal life.
The German evangelical minister, Frederick Lisco, in The Parables of Jesus (trans. Rev. Fairbairn)(Philadelphia:1850) agrees. He cites Calvin in support. Lisco says the meaning of the Parable of the Treasure is obvious. It is like the âmariner in a tempestuous seaâ who âreadily parts with it all, that he may save his life.â Id. at 93. The âhighest goodâ is possessed by âself-denial;â hence, sinful attachments are âall abandoned.â Id. Lisco quotes Calvin saying this verse means that âChrist exhorts his people [to] the renouncement...of those things contrary to piety...â and âpostponing every other objectâ that interferes with the âzeal to obtainâ possession of eternal life. Id. This self-sacrifice of all that we have in exchange for the kingdom was Jesusâ blunt way to identify the cost to acquire the kingdom.
As we shall see below, many famous Christian thinkers concur on this interpretation of the Parable of the Purchase of the Field: Bonhoeffer, MacArthur, and, as Lisco says, even Calvin. It is surprising to think Calvin agrees. So many times his doctrines sowed the seed for the gospel of cheap grace. But when it came to this parable, Calvin saw it the same way as did Bonhoeffer, and as does MacArthur.
John MacArthur in The Gospel According to Jesus says that the clear meaning of this parable is that grace is costly. Jesus is telling us what to do when confronted with the offer to acquire the kingdom. MacArthur says the Purchase of the Field parable is no different than numerous other messages by Jesus on the same issue.
Forsaking oneself for Christâs sake is not an optional step of discipleship subsequent to conversion: it is the sine qua non of saving faith. The Savior consistently set forth his gospel on those terms. Faith as he categorized it is nothing less than a complete exchange of all that we are for all that he is. Two brief parables in Matthew 13:44-46 [including the parable of the purchase of the field] illustrate precisely this truth. (Id., at 142.)2
MacArthur says the purchase of the field symbolizes that a sinner who wants the kingdom âwill gladly yield everything else he cherishes to obtain it.â The corresponding truth is that those who hold onto their earthly treasured sinful attachments âforfeitâ the treasure of obtaining the kingdom.
The Lutheran pastor Dietrich Bonhoeffer is a modern Protestant Christian pastor. He claimed that he was teaching the authentic Gospel of Jesus Christ. He said somehow it had been lost in the post-reformation period. Bonhoeffer insisted the modern gospel of free grace, with its emphasis on faith alone, gave us a crippled gospel. It is a Cheap Grace. He claimed it actually denies the Words of Jesus.
One of the many key proofs for Bonhoefferâs claim was, in fact, the Parable of the Purchase of the Field. In his chapter entitled Costly Grace, Bonhoeffer first defines what he means by Cheap Grace â a term he first coined.
Yet it is imperative for the Christian to achieve renunciation, to practice self-effacement, to distinguish his life from the life of the world.....[If free grace is all there is, then let] him rest assured in his possession of this grace-for grace alone does everything. Instead of following Christ, let the Christian enjoy the consolation of his grace! This is what we mean by cheap grace, the grace which amounts to justification of sin without justification of the repentant sinner who departs from sin and from whom sin departs....Cheap grace is the grace we bestow on ourselves. (Cost of Discipleship, supra, at 44.)(Emphasis added.)
Accordingly, Bonhoeffer starts out saying there is a high cost to grace. It requires achieving renunciation. It requires a departure from sin. Any other kind of grace is a false consolation that we simply are bestowing on ourself. Jesus did not promise salvation without cost.
Bonhoeffer later will say the doctrine of cheap grace has been âdisastrous to our spiritual lives.â For âinstead of opening up the way to Christ it has closed it.â (Id., at 54.) Because this cheap grace doctrine so abandons the actual words of Jesus, Bonhoeffer calls this a âChristianity without Christ.â (Id., at 59.) He claims those who oppose what Jesus teaches are infected with an âexcess of Protestant zeal.â (Id., at 68.) What are his Biblical proofs?
The first proof he cites is the Parable of the Purchase of the Field.
Costly grace is the treasure hidden in the field; for the sake of it a man will gladly go and sell all that he has. (Id., at 45.) The second proof is the Parable of the Pearl of Great Price. It is the pearl of great price which the merchant will sell all his goods. (Id.)
The third proof is the Heaven-Maimed or Hell-Whole statement of Jesus in Matthew 5:29-30 and Mark 9:42 et seq.:
[Costly grace] is the kingly rule of Christ, for whose sake a man will pluck out the eye which causes him to stumble. (Id.)
The fourth is the Parable of the Nets. The disciples will leave their nets and follow the call of their master.
Another proof Bonhoeffer cites is Jesusâ message that he who gains his life in this world shall loose it in the next, but he who looses it for Jesusâ sake in this life will gain his life in the next world. (Mark 8:31-38.) Bonhoeffer says those who teach to the contrary that Jesus âmakes no costly demandsâ are merely giving you an emotional lift. They are not giving you the Gospel as Jesus proclaimed it. (Id., at 88.)
The next proof was the story of Jesusâ answering the young rich manâs question on how to have eternal life. (Matt. 19:16-22.) We discussed Bonhoefferâs comments on this previously.3
Calvin (1509-1564) interestingly agrees with John MacArthur and Bonhoeffer. Calvin first says Jesus makes clear this parableâs meaning by means of the immediately following Parable of the Pearl of Great Price. They are the same message. Calvin explains that âin the same manner as a treasure, though it be hidden, [acquiring the kingdom] is preferred to a vain appearance of wealth.â 4 Then Calvin directly concurs with MacArthur and Bonhoeffer:
We now perceive the leading object of both parables. It is to inform us, that none are qualified for receiving the grace of the Gospel but those who disregard all other desires, and devote all their exertions, and all their faculties, to obtain it. (Id.)
Clearly, Calvin just said that those who wish to âobtainâ the object of the kingdom of God must be âqualified for receiving the graceâ of God by complying with the costs to do so laid down by Jesus in this parable.
Then Calvin directly deals with the hard question whether this means we really and truly must turn away from ourselves, including our material possessions, to obtain salvation. Calvin does not run to the Modern Gospel of Cheap Grace for his answer. Instead, Calvin says it is unmistakable that Jesus taught elsewhere that the answer is yes, that is what we must do â we must turn away from our greed and sinfulness. This means there is no avoiding this parableâs meaning about the costliness of grace. Calvin explains this as an unavoidable meaning if we use the ânatural meaningâ of words:
But it is asked, is it necessary that we abandon every other possession, in order that we may enjoy eternal life? I answer briefly. The natural meaning of the words is, that the Gospel does not receive from us the respect which it deserves, unless we prefer it to all the riches, pleasures, honors, and advantages of the world, and to such an extent, that we are satisfied with the spiritual blessings which it promises, and throw aside every thing that would keep us from enjoying them; for those who aspire to heaven must be disengaged from every thing that would retard their progress. Christ exhorts those who believe in him to deny those things only which are injurious to godliness; and, at the same time, permits them to use and enjoy Godâs temporal favors, as if they did not use them. (Id.)
Calvin, a prominent voice within the Protestant Reformation, here refused to change Jesusâ obvious meaning into a teaching that salvation can come without âthrowing aside everything that would keep us from enjoyingâ it, including all things âinjurious to godliness.â
However, then in the next note on the text, Calvin tries to reconcile this with the doctrine of free-grace. In essence, Calvin argues that Jesus means the gift of salvation belongs freely to everyone who buys it by relinquishing their sinful life. This rationale is how Calvin held onto Jesusâ gospel while not relinquishing the key verbiage of âfree-grace.â Calvin writes:
[Matt. 13:]46. And bought it. By the word buy Christ does not mean, that men bring any price, with which they may purchase for themselves the heavenly life; for we know on what condition the Lord invites believers in the book of Isaiah, (55:1,) âCome and buy wine and milk without money and without price.â5 But though the heavenly life, and every thing that belongs to it, is the free gift of God, yet we are said to buy it, when we cheerfully relinquish the desires of the flesh, that nothing may prevent us from obtaining it; as Paul says, that he âreckoned all things to be loss and dung, that he might gain Christâ (Philippians 3:8.)
What Calvin appears to imply, which is correct, is that the atonement of Christ pays for sin. None of us can pay anything to redeem ourselves from sin. None of us is a sinless lamb. However, if we claim Calvin was agreeing with the Modern Gospel of Cheap Grace, this would be wrong. The next sentence in the above quote makes this clear.
Calvin cites Paul as someone who actually repeats Jesusâ principle that to gain Christ, Paul âreckoned all things [he had] to be loss and dung....â (Phil. 3:8.) Calvin then returns to agreeing that in some sense we do âbuyâ salvationâ âwe are said to buy it, when we cheerfully relinquish the desires of the flesh, that nothing may prevent us from obtaining it....â
John MacArthur says the same thing â Jesus speaks of our âbuyingâ the kingdom, but MacArthur tries to insist He is not contradicting the Modern Gospelâs doctrine of grace:
In a sense, the parables [of the Purchase of the Field and Pearl of Great Price] say the men did buy their salvation, but you have to understand what is meant by that.6
Then what is meant by this âbuyingâ of which Jesus speaks? MacArthur says we know a rich man cannot buy his way into heaven, citing Matthew 19:24. But that is not what that verse said. In fact, Jesus said, in effect, the sacrifice of money would, for that rich man, have a saving effect in Matthew 19:24. When the rich man was sorrowful and unwilling to give up all his wealth to the poor as one part of his price to enter heaven, Jesus in 19:24 said âit is hard for a rich man to enter heaven.â The man also had to follow Jesus and take up his cross, but one unmistakable element was the cost of giving away all his possessions to the poor (due to greed).
There is no escaping Jesusâ point: grace is costly. For men wed to mammon, Jesus has a steep price for repentance.
Corroborating proof of what the Parable of the Purchase of the Field means comes from comparing it to other messages of Jesus about the cost to follow Him. If we find a persistent doctrine of Jesus about taking the call from Him as involving serious cost and deprivation, then we know more certainly Jesusâ meaning in this parable.
For example, in Luke 9:57, a man came to Jesus and called him Lord and wanted to follow Jesus. Yet Jesus responds that the cost is very high. Jesus is seeking to dissuade the man from a light-hearted decision. For the man said: âLord, I will follow Thee wherever Thou goest.â But Jesus responded: âFoxes have holes, and birds of the air have nests, but the Son of man hath not where to lay His head.â (v. 58).
In other words, Jesus says âHereâs the price for following Me: You give up your comfort of a nice place to sleep and Iâll give you My Kingdom.â The man did not like the costs. He did not make the transaction. Jesus told him the costs were higher than the man assumed, and the man backed off from a serious costly step of following Jesus.
In verse 59, Jesus asked another man to follow Him. The man said, âLord, permit me first to go and bury my father.â (v. 59.) However, the manâs father was not even dead yet. The manâs words meant he wanted to wait for his inheritance. Jesus said, âLet the dead bury their dead; but go thou and preach the kingdom of God.â (v. 60.) That man did not want to give up his inheritance. Thus, he did not make the transaction. The manâs intentions were good, but his interest was not serious enough to sacrifice now his opportunities for wealth and comfort.
Finally, a third man, mentioned in verse 61, said, âLord, I will follow Thee; but let me first go bid them farewell, who are at home at my house.â This even appeared to be a reasonable request to act sociable to those at his home. However, Jesus said, âNo man, having put his hand to the plough, and looking back, is fit for the kingdom of God.â (v. 62.). In other words, âYou canât plow a straight furrow while looking in the opposite direction and expect to enter the kingdom of God.â That man was not willing to walk away from his life with his parents to serve the kingdom, which Jesus repeatedly said was a cost, which if paid, means you will âinherit eternal life.â (Matt.19:29.)
Thus, we learn from these true-life examples that Jesus rejected light-hearted acceptance of Himself. Jesus wanted to make sure that each person knew the high cost in human terms of what it really means to accept Him. For if you looked back longingly at what you gave up, you were not fit for (worthy of) the kingdom of God. You would fail. You would lose the kingdom. You will not have escaped the kingdom that leads to spiritual death. Thus, every time someone tried to come on board the Jesus-ship, Jesus tried to dissuade them unless they understood and accepted the high human cost of doing so.
What is the message of the Gospel of Cheap Grace? The exact opposite message of what Jesus taught. There is supposedly no cost in human terms of accepting Jesus. It is merely acceptance of a belief that Christ died for sins and rose from the dead. (See 1 Cor.15:1-5.) The cheap grace gospel is emphatic that there is no moral cost involved. Because nothing is supposedly sacrificed, you never are looking back feeling sorry for anything you gave up! As a result, in the Gospel of Cheap Grace, you can never become unfit for the kingdom by missing the things that you did before following Christ. Why? Because you never had to give them up in the first place! You are supposedly always safe and secure, and loved and accepted âjust as I am.â
Hopefully, one can now see how stark the difference is between Jesusâ words and the gospel that most of us evangelicals have been assuming was true.
Another series of verses repeat the meaning of the Parable of the Purchase of the Field. These passages emphasize the duty to deny yourself and commit your way to obeying Jesus as ruler of your life to receive life â a synonym for salvation.
In Matthew 10:37-39, the issue is whether a person is willing to give up everything he has to receive Jesus. The Lord says in Matthew 10:37:
He that loveth father or mother more than Me, is not worthy of Me; and he that loveth son or daughter more than Me, is not worthy of Me.
Jesus goes on to explain what worthy means. If you are not willing to give up something that needs to be given up, such as your family, then you are not going to have life. Instead, you will lose it. Life is a synonym here for eternal life in the Kingdom. Jesus next said: âAnd he that taketh not his cross and followeth after Me, is not worthy of Me. He that findeth his life shall lose it; and he that loseth his life for My sake shall find it.â (Matt. 10:38-39.)
That is the simple transaction: you give up all that you hold dear in this life and receive all that He offers: life in the world to come. If you cling to your life here instead, you will lose life in the world to come.
In Matthew 16:24, Jesus likewise said to His disciples, âIf any man will come after Me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow Me.â The basic principle in salvation is that a person gives himself up to follow Christ.
Finally, in Matthew 19, as we discuss elsewhere,7 a rich young ruler came to Jesus and said, â...what good thing shall I do, that I may have eternal life?â (v. 16). Jesus said, âIf thou wilt be perfect, go and sell what thou hast, and give to the poor, and thou shalt have treasure in heaven; and come and follow Meâ (v. 21). Jesus was saying, in effect, âIf you want My treasure of life in the kingdom, then give away all you hold dear.â
Are these repetitive messages meant to instill obeying only one command of Jesus to believe in Him? Hardly. Yet, that is what some insist is the case. However, in none of these examples was Jesus talking to a person who did not already want to believe in Jesus. Rather, each was a person who was hesitating treating Jesus as his immediate ruler â they were reluctant to obey Jesus if it involved too much personal cost.
Jesus was saying that salvation depended on more than a desire to believe. You had to pay the personal cost that Jesus required. You had to relinquish all the sin-life which you held dear that could hold you back from obeying Jesus.
Thus, it is no wonder that Bonhoeffer started his book Cost of Discipleship by emphasizing the Parable of the Purchase of the Field (the Hidden Treasure). It spells out clearly the costliness of grace.
The moral ideal behind Jesusâ message on counting the cost is to sacrifice self to God. The opposite vice is protecting yourself from Godâs demands. Jesus thus impliedly says the kingdom can only be acquired by sacrificing your selfish desires so as to obey Godâs commands. Succinctly, we must lose self-centered principles or we lose the kingdom.
Is it possible to craft a message of salvation which endorses the same selfishness which Jesus condemns? A very insightful article from 1868 explains this takes place when you teach a repentance-free salvation. The salvation message then becomes all about what you get. There is nothing about what you must give up to God and His creation. Such a message is solely selfishness! Here is a snippet from this astute article from 1868 entitled: âThe Place of Repentance in Religion and Theology,â The Congregational Review (Boston: Broughton & Wyman, 1868) Vol. 8, May 1868, at 201,212:
That faith in his Son which he requires is a holy faith, and this makes it necessary that the soul should first go over to holiness from sin [i.e., repentance]. As it [i.e., faith] is good for nothing if works do not follow it, so it is if repentance does not precede it. It is dead being alone. It is no ground of pardon. It has no holiness in itself. Its validity and vitality comes from a moral change elsewhere than in the believing faculties. As a new exercise of the soul it is, without repentance, simply putting confidence in God in respect to oneâs well-being because of the love and work of Christ, our well-being remaining the supreme object of regard. It is utterly selfish. A sinnerâs trust in everybody and in everythingâGod includedâis selfish, until selfishness is dethroned by a change of mind [i.e., repentance from sin].
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1. Matthew 19:16-26; Mark 10:17-31; Luke 18:18-26. For discussion, see et seq.
2. MacArthur teaches this requirement of giving up all to obey Jesus is essential to âsaving faith.â But MacArthur does not see this as an additional component, but part of the meaning of saving faith. Thus, MacArthur imagines repentance-from-sin is indistinguishable from faith alone. MacArthur has thereby tried to defend his views are compatible with âfaith alone.â However, is it really correct to say Jesus taught faith alone for salvation? To say so would appear disingenuous to anyone who later learns you mean by faith that it includes repentance from sin, sacrificing all that you hold dear in this world, obedience to the commandments which Jesus endorsed, etc. Isnât Jesusâ gospel of costly grace compromised by using a misleading label of âfaith aloneâ? Using such a label matches our prevailing notions and gives room to deflect charges of heresy, but it mismatches Jesusâ teachings. One must use labels with precision, or otherwise old wrong-headed notions are never cleared away.
3. See et seq.
4. http://www.ccel.org/c/calvin/comment3/comm_vol32/htm/xxiii.htm (last accessed 7/2/06).
5. This Isaiah passage is often read out of context to make it appear salvation is without costly repentance. However, it reads to the contrary in the fuller context: âHo, every one that thirsteth, come ye to the waters, and he that hath no money; come ye, buy, and eat; yea, come, buy wine and milk without money and without price. (2) Wherefore do ye spend money for that which is not bread? and your labor for that which satisfieth not? hearken diligently unto me, and eat ye that which is good, and let your soul delight itself in fatness. (3) Incline your ear, and come unto me; hear, and your soul shall live: and I will make an everlasting covenant with you, even the sure mercies of David. (4) Behold, I have given him [Messiah] for a witness to the peoples, a leader and commander to the peoples. (5) Behold, thou shalt call a nation that thou knowest not; and a nation that knew not thee shall run unto thee, because of Jehovah thy God, and for the Holy One of Israel; for he hath glorified thee. (6) Seek ye Jehovah while he may be found; call ye upon him while he is near: (7) let the wicked forsake his way, and the unrighteous man his thoughts; and let him return unto Jehovah, and he will have mercy upon him; and to our God, for he will abundantly pardon. (8) For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways, saith Jehovah.â Isa 55:1-8 ASV.
Read out of context, the âwithout priceâ is typically interpreted to mean one is saved by faith without repentance from sin. Grace is said to be free. However, verse seven erases that notion. Instead, âwithout priceâ means the items for sale have no price on them you can buy with the worldâs money. These are spiritual possessions. How are spiritual blessings purchased? Without money and without price. The exchange, instead, is in verse seven. If the âwicked forsake his way, and the unrighteous man his thoughts and return to....Jehovah,â then God âwill have mercy upon him...and abundantly pardon.â There is a spiritual price, not a worldly price. Thus, grace is costly spiritually. Yet, it is without a price in worldly terms. Cf. Exodus 20:6.
6. http://www.biblebb.com/files/MAC/sg2303.htm (last accessed 7/2/06)
7. See et seq.