J.C. Ryle addresses the serious matter of hypocrisy and the danger of false teaching in the church, particularly as it pertains to the legalistic scribes and lawyers of Jesus' time. He highlights three specific woes pronounced by Jesus: the moral inconsistency of teachers who fail to practice what they preach, the danger of honoring dead prophets while rejecting their living counterparts, and the severe consequences that await those who persecute or hinder the faithful from gaining knowledge of God’s truth. Ryle supports his arguments with Scripture from Luke 11:45-54, illustrating how Jesus rebukes religious leaders for their oppressive legalism (verse 46), for their failure to honor living saints (verse 47), and for obstructing others from entering the kingdom of God (verse 52). The sermon serves as a dire warning to contemporary leaders and believers about the responsibility of teaching and the importance of aligning one’s life with God’s Word.
“He would have us know that the truest friend to our souls is not the man who always is speaking smooth things... but the man who tells us the most truth.”
“Woe to you, because you load people down with burdens they can hardly carry, and you yourselves will not lift one finger to help them.”
“When a man can see no beauty in living saints, but much in dead ones, then his soul is in a very rotten state.”
“Let us never check any of those around us in their religion, and especially in the matter of reading the Bible, hearing the gospel, and private prayer.”
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