“Let your light so shine before men, that they may
see your good works, and glorify your Father which is in heaven. (Matthew 5:16)
It has never occurred to some that the believers light
and his works are two different things. They are not the same at all, though
you often hear preachers equating them. Not infrequently does someone say, “I
believe in letting my light shine.” What does he mean by this? Usually, that he
tries to live a good life before others. But a good life has to do with works,
not light. Let me give you an example.
A brother was driving home one night when his car
began to sputter. He stopped at a gas station to have it checked out. A
mechanic came with his helper to take a look at it. They looked under the hood
until they found the problem. It was the fuel pump that had gone bad.
The mechanic started right away to replace the pump
with a new one. As he worked on the car, his helper looked on. As the mechanic
worked on the car, his helper held a flashlight so he could see as he worked.
The helper’s attention wandered and the light moved and the mechanic could not
see what he was doing. The mechanic: shouted to his helper, “Hey! Shine the
light on my work so I can see what I’m doing!
From this illustration we can see that there is a
difference between light and works. The mechanic’s work was one thing, but the
light was something else. Without the light neither the mechanic nor anyone
watching could see what he was doing. The light was necessary to illuminate the
work so it could be seen.
This scripture speaks about two things, light and
works, we need to see what constitutes the believers light. What is it? What
does Jesus mean when He says, “Let your light shine?”
Most of us have stumbled around in the dark looking,
for the light switch. When we turn on the switch the light comes on and then we
can see everything around us. We can see what we’re doing and where we are
going. Light brings illumination.
There is another kind of illumination. It’s the kind
meant by the common expression, “Shed light on the subject.”With this we mean
information, intelligence or knowledge which opens up or explains an otherwise
unrevealed matter. We know what the corresponding darkness is too. It is
ignorance. When an obscure subject is illuminated to us with information we
often say, “Oh, I see now”. That means we have just acquired insight. Physical
light exposes things outside, information explains things inside. That’s why we
call it insight.
It is in this sense that Jesus uses the word
“light”. Just as sunlight scatters the darkness of the night, so does God’s
Word dispel the inner or spiritual darkness of this world! God’s Word is His
light! The Psalmist said the same thing: “The entrance of thy words (Psalm 119:130),
and again, “Thy Word is a lamp unto my feet and a light unto my path”
(119:105).
God’s Word shines. It’s like a street light
scattering the spiritual darkness of this world. And those who use or declare
God’s Word are illuminators. They are informers who bring insight to people so
they can see what ‘God is doing in their lives. They are like helpers holding
the light, so that God can be seen. Now if God’s Word is His light, what is
“Your light” that is to shine?
If God’s light is His Word, then your light is your
word. Just as God’s Word shines on His works to illuminate them, so can your
light shine on your works, and what will men see, God’s hand working in your
life. Without this light they will not see what God is doing, no matter how
startling or dramatic it may be. No matter how spectacular the working of God
is in your life, people will neither see it nor credit God for it.
Take the sun for example. Here is an amazing thing
God provides. It rises each morning to fill the sky with its glory. There is no
place a person can go to escape its witness. But do people wonder about it?
Does it occur to them how such a thing came to be? No! If people can behold
such a wonder in the sky and fail to see God’s hand, they will never credit Him
for a small wonder in your life, unless we say something.
There was a brother whose wife was hospitalized with
polio. For years she lay in an iron lung until she passed away. Faithfully,
three times a week, year in and year out, this brother would go to the hospital
to be with her. People saw his faithfulness and said what a good husband he
was. Beyond that, he did a great job caring of his children by himself. People
saw this and said, “He is a wonderful father”.
He was a good and faithful Christian and the people
said, “What a fine man he was.” But the only thing the people saw was this
brother and his devotion to his wife, family and his church. They didn’t once
consider that it was Jesus who made it all possible. They only thought, “What a
wonderful person, I could never do that”.
Tell me, who got the credit, who got the praise? The
people saw his good works but who did they glorify” They praised the brother,
but they did not give the praise to God. Why not? His light was not shining.
There were no words to illuminate the working of God in his life. Nothing from
him indicated the Lord was responsible. Until he opened his mouth to credit the
Lord specifically, no one was about to acknowledge the goodness of the Lord.
Sometime later his pastor went to visit with this brother
and counsel with him about his situation. The pastor spoke to him of the
goodness and mercy of God in his life. He spoke to him about how God had
provided for him and his family throughout all the years his wife had been sick
and how God had strengthen him so he was able to fulfill his obligations
faithfully to his wife and family. The pastor mention to him that throughout
all these year’s God had never left him but, that he was with him when he felt
weak and all alone. He told him that he should always give thanks and rejoice
in the Lord, in the good times and the bad. The father was able to understand
that the joy of the Lord was his strength and that if it had not been for God
in his life he would not be able to fulfill his obligations. He was able to see
that it was not because of himself but because God was moving in his life.
After the pastor’s visit at he began to talk about
what God was doing in his life. After that everyone who commented on his good
works leaned from him that it was Jesus who made it all possible. He gave God all
the glory credit for everything. Then a new stream of comment arose, “If God
can do that for him, maybe He can do it for me”.
People were forced to behold the grace of God,
because of the words of this brother. His words illuminated his works
compelling people to credit God for them, whether they wanted to or not. Without
his words, he got all the praise and credit. It is vital and critical that we
separate our light from our works. When we do this, we have a mighty tool for
exalting Christ and witnessing.
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