Main Navigation

Blog Post

Face Against the Glass

Posted by Dion Todd November 25th, 2018 8,719 Views 0 Comments

RHM Devotional: Face Against the Glass from Refreshing Hope Ministries on Vimeo.

Today I want to talk about Jesus choosing Matthew the tax collector as one of His twelve Apostles, and why that would have been unthinkable at the time.

Mark 2:13–17 ESV He went out again beside the sea, and all the crowd was coming to him, and he was teaching them. And as he passed by, he saw Levi the son of Alphaeus sitting at the tax booth, and he said to him, “Follow me.” And he rose and followed him.

And as he reclined at table in his house, many tax collectors and sinners were reclining with Jesus and his disciples, for there were many who followed him. And the scribes of the Pharisees, when they saw that he was eating with sinners and tax collectors, said to his disciples, “Why does he eat with tax collectors and sinners?” And when Jesus heard it, he said to them, “Those who are well have no need of a physician, but those who are sick. I came not to call the righteous, but sinners.”

For most of Jesus’ ministry, His home base was in Capernaum, a fishing village on the northwest side of the sea of Galilee with a population of about 1,500 people. One day He walked up to a tax collector’s booth and told the man sitting there: “Follow Me”. The tax collector, named Levi, got up, left everything, and followed Jesus. This tax collector became an Apostle of Jesus and later wrote the gospel of Matthew (Matthew 9:9). Like Simon was called Peter, Levi became Matthew.

For the outlook of the time, this was remarkable. Tax collectors were usually local Jewish men who worked with the Roman occupiers to enforce taxes on their conquered territory. The local people despised them and saw them as traitors.

The Romans collected their taxes through a system called “tax farming” which was similar to a fast food franchise. Rome assessed a district a fixed tax figure, and then sold the right to collect those taxes to the highest bidder. The buyer had to hand over the assessed figure at the end of the year, and they could keep whatever he gathered above that for themselves. Extortion was compounded by the poor communication of ancient times, and the people had no exact record of what they were to pay.

Tax collectors like Matthew, could stop anyone on the road, make them unpack their bundles, and charge just about anything they wanted. If the person could not pay, the tax collectors sometimes would offer to loan them money at an enormous interest rate, putting the people even further into their greedy hands. They were trained extortionists, and quite naturally, it attracted a criminal element of thugs and enforcers.

Tax collectors could not serve as a judge or a witness in a court session, and they were excommunicated from the synagogues. They had their own special social status well below prostitutes, thieves, and sinners. They were the lowest of the low. This is why Jesus’ calling Levi, the tax collector, is so remarkable.

Jesus saw the heart of the Apostle Matthew beating inside of Levi the tax collector, while others did not. When Jesus called, Matthew immediately rose up and followed Him, even though he had a lucrative position. Matthew would have been the wealthiest of the Apostles.

After this, Matthew made a great feast for Jesus, and he invited a large crowd of tax collectors to come join them. While Jesus reclined at the table with them, the Pharisees stood outside and complained to His disciples saying: “Why does He eat and drink with tax collectors and sinners? (Luke 5:30). Jesus answered, “Those who are healthy have no need for a physician, but those who are sick. I came not to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance.”

The religious Pharisees shunned such people and threw them out of their synagogues, while Jesus intentionally sought them out. Jesus looked forward to spending time with the lowest of the low, the lost, the outcast, the black sheep. He touched the lepers and healed them. According to Mark 2:15, there were a large number of tax collectors who followed Him.

Zacchaeus was a chief tax collector that Jesus found on another day. He was too short to see Jesus over the crowd, so he climbed up a tree to get a better view. Jesus walked right up to the tree, looked up, and said “Zacchaeus, hurry and come down, for today I must stay at your house” (Luke 19:5). Out of all the places Jesus could have eaten, He chose to eat with the tax collectors. He had friends in low places.

Again, the sanctified onlookers grumbled about Jesus: “He has gone in to be the guest of a man who is a sinner.” Being that they could not eat with sinners, because they had excommunicated them, they now stood on the outside of the house, looking in at Jesus, and watching Him eat another great feast.

What happened to cause people to look down on God’s behavior with disdain? This group of people had become so holy and religious, that they felt like the Son of God did not meet their standards. Jesus was not good enough for them. They did not approve of His behavior. I am not sure what is wrong there, but I know something ain’t right.

Jesus came to seek and to save the lost, but we sometimes lose sight of this unchangeable fact. The Pharisees found that when they excommunicated the tax collectors, God chose to go and eat with them anyway. So they in effect, excommunicated themselves from His presence. Instead of shutting them out, they shut themselves in.

Let us never think that God is on our side; instead let us remember that we are to be on His side. God hates sin, but He loves sinners, and He welcomes us all with wide open arms. His Holy Spirit actively seeks out the lost wherever we are.

When sheep are lost, He goes after them, and where He finds them does not matter. If He finds them in a canyon, or a pit, or a brothel, it is irrelevant. All heaven rejoices because the sheep was found. I once was lost, and now I am found, because He sought me out.

So let us welcome everyone, and God will wash them as needed. The Holy Spirit will convict the heart of sin when the right time comes. If we choose to exclude groups of people from our religion, we may find one day that God is actually over there eating with them. We could easily end up on the outside looking in, with our face pressed against the glass.

You can pray this with me if you like:

Prayer: Heavenly Father please help me see those in my path that I can show Your love to. Protect me, guide me, give me the wisdom and tact to know when and where. Speak to me and through me. Share Your heart with me, in the name of Jesus Christ I pray.

Join the discussion! Please sign in to comment, like, and share.

Post from Dion Todd

Dion Todd posted a comment:

2 days ago


Site update #586: I completed a large update to the Audio Library on the left sidebar. There is now a live service archive of all past services, full-length in case you miss a service and want to catch up, as well as all of our original music. You can download the .mp3 files directly to your device now to listen when you don't have internet. I also added a pop-out player so you can listen without remaining on the page. Give it a try and let me know if you have any problems. 😀



Avatar image
Comment from Tyler Velau

22 hours ago

Thank you for your continuing work on the site and your efforts to bring the truth of the Gospels to people around the world via the internet. Your hard work and dilligence is appreciated.


Avatar image
Comment from Liesel aka lisa Wardle

22 hours ago

Thank you so much, Pastor Dion, for all that you do, it sounds to me like non-stop "24-7"! God bless you and Sylvia abundantly, above and beyond! 🙏🤗


Avatar image
Comment from Nell Neathery

1 day ago

sounds great. I know that will be useful for me...need to write that down. Hope the Todd family have a blessed Saturday and Sunday. I do believe God gave us those 2 special days for His sake and our sake! Work hard or volunteer (myself) hard through the week. We get our rewards here on Earth and rewards in Heaven.


Avatar image
Comment from Lynn Brown

2 days ago

That sounds amazing Pastor Dion, thank you!!!




RHM Eco System Version: 0.586 @ Refreshing Hope Ministries . Page rendered in 0.2003 seconds.
Theme Settings
1. Set Background Color:
Light
Dark
2. Set Top Bar Color:
Light
Dark
The Blues
Rose
Emerald
Deep Purple
Gold Dust
Silver Mist
3. Set Navigation Sidebar Color:
Light
Dark
The Blues
Rose
Emerald
Deep Purple
Gold Dust
Silver Mist
Side Navigation Fixed or Scrollable: