"Strive to enter through the narrow door"
The
image of the narrow way, or gate, is treated in both Matthew and Luke;
however, Luke’s account, the one we are reading today, provides a fuller
context than Matthew’s gospel, but Matthew’s gospel is important to consider as
well when trying to understand what Jesus is saying.
In
Matthew, Jesus adds: “For wide is the gate and broad is the road that
leads to destruction, and many enter through it. 14 But small is the gate and narrow the road
that leads to life, and only a few find it.” In this gospel, it
seems the restriction isn’t so much the size of the opening but that it's difficult to find. They both have an image of struggle
associated with salvation. The context in Luke is Jesus answering the question, “Lord, are only a few people going to be saved?” Such a question was part of a
current theological concern of Jesus’ time among the Jews as to who among the
Jewish people were the “chosen ones,” the remnant to be saved.
Typical
of Jesus’ style of turning questions in an unexpected direction, he responds
with an answer directed towards the questioner as a person rather than to the
question with an abstract answer. Jesus uses the image of one
knocking on a door and the master of the house not opening the door because he
does not recognize the petitioner’s voice. What began with a question of
abstraction has become personal. Despite the petitioner's protests, who identifies himself as part of a crowd who “ate and drank” with Jesus and witnessed Jesus in the streets, this casual association was not
enough. It is rather difficult to make it through a narrow door when part of a crowd. Again, Jesus reinforces the personal
dimension of salvation; crowds aren’t saved; individuals are saved.
The
protection of membership in a particular group, the Essenes, the Pharisees or
Sadducees or whatever, isn’t enough. Salvation is recognition,
personal recognition by Christ. If the master of the house did not open the
door because he didn’t recognize the voice of the petitioner, we also keep
our hearts closed to the voice of God who is trying to enter our
hearts. How many times has Christ stood patiently at the door of our
hearts knocking, and we have kept him out? Is it any wonder then he
cannot recognize our voice as part of a crowd? The narrow door isn’t narrow
because God wants to keep people out; it is narrow because salvation is
realized one person at a time; it is a relationship, not a theological
abstraction, that is the way to salvation.
Finally,
Jesus adds the paradox that many who consider themselves first will be last,
and the ones who are least will be first. The pride that results
from considering one's salvation guaranteed through association seems to Christ,
at best, suspect. All of us who enter the narrow door do it one at a time,
clinging on the hem of Christ’s robe who recognizes us because we recognized
him when he knocked, and we opened the door of our hearts. Ultimately,
though the door may be narrow, as the hymn reassures us, "There's a
wideness in God's mercy." We approach the narrow door alone but walk through it with Christ.